NAME
exiftool - Read/write meta information in images
SYNOPSIS
exiftool [OPTIONS] [-TAG[[+-<]=[VALUE]] or --TAG...] FILE ...
DESCRIPTION
A command-line interface to Image::ExifTool used for reading and writing meta information in image files. FILE
may be an image file name, a directory name, or -
for the standard input. Information is read from the specified file and output in readable form to the console (or written to an output text file with the -w
option).
To write information in an image file, specify new values using either the -TAG=[VALUE]
syntax or the -TagsFromFile
option. This causes exiftool to rewrite FILE
with the specified information, preserving the original file by renaming it to FILE_original
. (Note: Be sure to verify that the new file is OK before erasing the original.)
Below is a list of meta information formats and file types currently supported by exiftool (r = read support, w = write support):
Meta Information File Type
------------------ -----------------------------------
EXIF r/w JPEG r/w JP2 r PDF r
GPS r/w TIFF r/w BMP r PSD r
IPTC r/w GIF r/w PNG r MRW r
XMP r/w THM r/w MNG r ORF r
MakerNotes r/w CRW r/w JNG r
Photoshop IRB r/w CR2 r/w MIFF r
GeoTIFF r DNG r/w EPS r
ICC Profile r NEF r/w PS r
PrintIM r PEF r/w AI r
OPTIONS
Note: Case is not significant for any command-line option (including tag and group names), except for single-character options where the corresponding upper case option is defined. Multiple options can NOT be combined into a single argument, because this would be interpreted as a tag name.
- -TAG
-
Extract information for specified tag. See Image::ExifTool::TagNames for documentation on available tag names. The tag name may begin with an optional group name followed by a colon. (ie.
-TAG:GROUP
, whereGROUP
is any valid family 0 or 1 group name. Use the-group
option to list valid group names.) If no tags are specified, all available information is extracted.A special tag name of
All
may be used to indicate all meta information. This is particularly useful when a group name is specified to extract all information in a group. (*
is a synonym forAll
, but must be quoted if used on the command line to prevent shell globbing.) - --TAG
-
Exclude specified tag from extracted information. Same as the
-x
option. May also be used following a-TagsFromFile
option to exclude tags from being extracted from the source file. - -TAG[+-<]=[VALUE]
-
Writes a new value for the specified tag, or deletes the tag if
VALUE
is not specified. Use+=
to add a value to a list without replacing existing values, and-=
to delete the specifiied value only. Use<=
to set the value of a tag from the contents of a file with nameVALUE
. (Note: Quotes are required around the argument in this case to prevent shell redirection.)If a group name is not specified for
TAG
, then the information is written to the preferred group, which is the first group in the following list whereTAG
is valid: 1) EXIF, 2) GPS, 3) IPTC, 4) XMP, 5) MakerNotes.The special
All
tag may be used in this syntax only if aVALUE
is NOT given. This causes all meta information to be deleted (or all information in a group if-GROUP:All=
is used). Note that not all groups are deletable. Also, within an image some groups may be contained within others, and these groups are removed if the super group is deleted. Below are lists of these group dependencies:JPEG Image: - Deleting EXIF or IFD0 also deletes ExifIFD, GlobParamIFD, GPS, IFD1, InteropIFD, MakerNotes, PrintIM and SubIFD. - Deleting ExifIFD also deletes InteropIFD and MakerNotes. - Deleting Photoshop also deletes IPTC. TIFF Image: - Deleting EXIF only removes ExifIFD which also deletes InteropIFD and MakerNotes.
- -@ ARGFILE
-
Read command-line arguments from the specified file. The file contains one argument per line. Blank lines and lines beginning with
#
and are ignored.ARGFILE
may exist relative to either the current directory or the exiftool directory unless an absolute pathname is given. - -a
-
Allow duplicate tag names in the output (otherwise duplicates are suppressed).
- -b
-
Output requested data in binary format. Mainly used for extracting embedded images. Suppresses output of tag names and descriptions.
- -d FMT
-
Set date/time format (consult
strftime
man page for FMT syntax). - -D
-
Show tag ID number in Decimal.
- -e
-
Print existing tags only -- don't calculate composite tags.
- -E
-
Escape characters in output values for HTML (implied with the
-h
option). - -ext EXT (or --ext EXT)
-
Process only files with the specified extension, or use
--ext
to exclude files. There may be multiple-ext
or--ext
options. Extensions may begin with a leading '.', and case is not significant. For example:exiftool -ext .JPG * # process only JPG files exiftool --ext crw --ext dng * # process all but CRW and DNG exiftool --ext . * # ignore if no extension
- -f
-
Force printing of tags even if their values are not found.
- -g[#]
-
Organize output by tag group.
#
specifies the group family number, and may be 0 (general location), 1 (specific location) or 2 (category). If not specified,-g0
is assumed. Use the-group
option to list all group names for a specified family. - -G[#]
-
Same as
-g
but print Group name for each tag. - -H
-
Show tag ID number in Hexadecimal.
- -group[#]
-
List all tag groups for family #. Family 0 assumed if # not specified.
- -h
-
Use HTML formatting for output (implies
-E
option). - -i DIR
-
Ignore specified directory name. May be multiple
-i
options. - -l
-
Use long output format (2-line Canon-style output).
- -L
-
Convert Unicode characters in output to Windows Latin1 (cp1252) instead of the default UTF-8.
- -list
-
List all valid tag names.
- -listw
-
List all writable tag names.
- -m
-
Ignore minor errors (allows writing if some minor errors occur, or extraction of embedded images that aren't in standard JPG format).
- -n
-
Read and write values as numbers instead of words. This option disables the print conversion that is applied when extracting values to make them more readable, and the inverse print conversion when writing. For example:
> exiftool -Orientation -S a.jpg Orientation: Rotate 90 CW > exiftool -Orientation -S -n a.jpg Orientation: 6
and the following two writing commands have the same effect
> exiftool -Orientation='Rotate 90 CW' a.jpg > exiftool -Orientation=6 -n a.jpg
- -o OUTFILE
-
Set output file or directory name when writing information (otherwise the source file is renamed to
FILE_original
and the output file isFILE
in the original directory). - -overwrite_original
-
Overwrite the original file instead of renaming it to
FILE_original
when writing information to an image. Caution: This option should only be used if you already have separate backup copies of your image files. - -p FMTFILE
-
Print output in the format specified by the given file (and ignore other format options). Tag names in the format file begin with a
$
symbol and may contain an optional group name. Case is not significant. Lines beginning with#
are ignored. For example, this format file:# this is a comment line File $FileName was created on $DateTimeOriginal (f/$Aperture, $ShutterSpeed sec, ISO $EXIF:ISO)
produces output like this:
File test.jpg was created on 2003:10:31 15:44:19 (f/5.6, 1/60 sec, ISO 100)
- -P
-
Preserve date/time of original file when writing.
- -q
-
Quiet processing. One
-q
suppresses normal informational messages, and a second-q
suppresses warnings as well. Error messages can not be suppressed. - -r
-
Recursively scan subdirectories (only meaningful if
FILE
is a directory name). - -s
-
Use short output format (add up to 3
-s
options for even shorter formats). - -S
-
Print tag names instead of descriptions (very short format, same as two -s options).
- -t
-
Output a tab-delimited list of description/values (useful for database import).
- -TagsFromFile SRCFILE
-
Set the value of writable tags from information in the specified source file. Tag names on the command line after this option specify information to be extracted (or excluded) from the source file. If no tags are specified, then all tags found in the source file are used. More than one
-TagsFromFile
option may be specified to set tag values from information in different files.By default, this option will commute information between same-named tags in different groups, allowing information to be translated between images with different formats. This behaviour may be modified by specifying a group name for extracted tags (even if
All
is used as a group name), in which case the information is written to the original group, unless redirected to a different group.A powerful information redirection feature allows a destination tag to be specified for each extracted tag. With this feature, information may be written to a tag with a different name or group. This is done using "
'-SRCTAG>DSTTAG'
" on the command line after-TagsFromFile
("'-DSTTAG<SRCTAG'
" also works). Note that this argument must be quoted to prevent shell redirection, and there is no=
sign as there is when setting new values. Both source and destination tags may be prefixed by a group name, andAll
or*
may be used as a tag or group name. If no destination group is specified, then the information is written to the preferred group.SRCFILE
may be the same as the target file to move information around within a file.@
may be used to represent the target file name (ie.-TagsFromFile @
), permitting this feature to be used when batch processing multiple files. Specified tags are then copied from each target file in turn as it is rewritten. As a convenience,-TagsFromFile @
is assumed for any redirected tags which are specified without a prior-TagsFromFile
option.See "COPYING EXAMPLES" for examples of how to use this option.
Be aware of the difference between excluding a tag from being copied (
--TAG
), and deleting a tag (-TAG=
). Excluding a tag will prevent it from being copied to the destination image, but deleting a tag will remove it if it already exists.Note that the maker note information is set as a block, so it isn't effected like other information by subsequent tag assignments on the command line. For example, to copy all information but the thumbnail image, use
-ThumbnailImage=
after-TagsFromFile
on the command line. Since the preview image is referenced from the maker notes and may be rather large, it is not copied. Instead, the preview image must be transferred separately if desired. - -u
-
Extract values of unknown tags (add another
-u
to also extract unknown information from binary data blocks). - -U
-
Extract values of unknown tags as well as unknown information from binary data blocks (same as two
-u
options). - -v[#]
-
Print verbose messages (# may be 1-5, higher is more verbose). This option suppresses normal console output unless specific tags are being extracted.
- -ver
-
Print version number and exit.
- -w EXT
-
Write console output to a file with name ending in
EXT
for each source file. The output file name is obtained by replacing the source file extension (including the.
) with the specified extension. - -x TAG
-
Exclude the specified tag. There may be multiple
-x
options. This has the same effect as--TAG
on the command line. May also be used following a-TagsFromFile
option to exclude tags from being extracted from the source file. - -z
-
Extract information from .gz and .bz2 compressed images.
READING EXAMPLES
- exiftool -g a.jpg
-
Print all EXIF information sorted by group (for family 0).
- exiftool -common dir
-
Print common EXIF information for all images in
dir
. - exiftool -S -ImageSize -ExposureTime b.jpg
-
Print ImageSize and ExposureTime tag names and values.
- exiftool -l -canon c.jpg d.jpg
-
Print standard Canon information from 2 image files.
- exiftool -r -w .txt -common pictures
-
Recursively save common EXIF information for files in
pictures
directory into files with the same names as the images but with a.txt
extension. - exiftool -b -ThumbnailImage image.jpg > thumbnail.jpg
-
Save thumbnail image from
image.jpg
to a file calledthumbnail.jpg
. - exiftool -b -JpgFromRaw -w _JFR.JPG -r .
-
Recursively extract JPG image from all Canon RAW files in the current directory, adding '_JFR.JPG' for the name of the output JPG files.
- exiftool -b -PreviewImage 118_1834.JPG > preview.jpg
-
Extract preview image from JPG file and write it to
preview.jpg
. - exiftool -d '%r %a, %B %e, %Y' -DateTimeOriginal -S -s *.jpg
-
Print formatted date/time for all JPG files in a directory.
- exiftool -IFD1:XResolution -IFD1:YResolution
-
Extract image resolution from IFD1.
- exiftool -xmp -b a.jpg > xmp.out
-
Extract complete XMP data record intact from a.jpg and write it to xmp.out using the special
XMP
tag (see the Extra tags in Image::ExifTool::TagNames).
WRITING EXAMPLES
- exiftool -Comment='This is a new comment' dst.jpg
-
Set comment in file (replaces any existing comment).
- exiftool -comment= -o newdir *.jpg
-
Remove comment from all JPG files in the current directory, writing the modified files to a new directory.
- exiftool -keywords=EXIF -keywords=editor dst.jpg
-
Replace existing keyword list with two new keywords (
EXIF
andeditor
). - exiftool -Keywords+=word -o newfile.jpg src.jpg
-
Copy a source image to a new file, and add a keyword (
word
) to the current list of keywords. - exiftool -category-=xxx dir
-
Delete only the specified category (
xxx
) from all files in directory. - exiftool -all= dst.jpg
-
Delete all meta information from an image.
- exiftool -Photoshop:All= dst.jpg
-
Delete Photoshop meta information from an image (note that the Photoshop information also includes IPTC).
- exiftool '-ThumbnailImage<=thumb.jpg' dst.jpg
-
Set the thumbnail image from specified file (Note: The quotes are neccessary to prevent shell redirection).
- exiftool -xmp:city=Kingston dst.jpg
-
Write a tag to the XMP group (otherwise in this case the tag would get written to the IPTC group since
City
exists in both, and IPTC has priority). - exiftool -Canon:ISO=100 dst.jpg
-
Set
ISO
only in the Canon maker notes. - exiftool -LightSource-='Unknown (0)' dst.tiff
-
Delete
LightSource
tag only if it is unknown with a value of 0. - exiftool -whitebalance-=auto -WhiteBalance=tung dst.jpg
-
Set
WhiteBalance
toTungsten
only if it was previouslyAuto
.
COPYING EXAMPLES
- exiftool -TagsFromFile src.crw dst.jpg
-
Copy the values of all writable tags from
src.crw
todst.jpg
, writing the information to the preferred groups. - exiftool -TagsFromFile -all:all src.crw dst.jpg
-
Copy the values of all writable tags from
src.crw
todst.jpg
, preserving the original tag groups. -
Copy all meta information from a.jpg to b.jpg, but do not write the thumbnail image or XMP information.
-
Copy title from one image to another and set a new author name.
- exiftool -TagsFromFile a.jpg -ISO -TagsFromFile b.jpg -comment dst.jpg
-
Copy ISO from one image and Comment from another image to a destination image.
-
Copy only the EXIF information from one image to another, excluding SubIFD tags.
- exiftool '-DateTimeOriginal>FileModifyDate' dir
-
Use the original date from the meta information to set the same file's filesystem modification date for all images in a directory. (Note that
-TagsFromFile @
has been omitted from this command since it is assumed when redirecting information unless another-TagsFromFile
is specified.) - exiftool -TagsFromFile src.jpg '-all>xmp:all' dst.jpg
-
Translate all possible information into XMP format, and update dst.jpg with the new information.
-
Translate IPTC information to XMP with appropriate tag name conversions, and delete the original IPTC information from an image. This example uses iptc2xmp.args, which is a file included with the ExifTool distribution that contains the required arguments to convert IPTC information to XMP format. Also included with the distribution is xmp2iptc.args, which performs the inverse conversion.
PIPING EXAMPLES
- cat a.jpg | exiftool -
-
Extract information from stdin.
- exiftool image.jpg -thumbnailimage -b | exiftool -
-
Extract information from an embedded thumbnail image.
- cat a.jpg | exiftool -iptc:keywords+=fantastic - > b.jpg
-
Add an IPTC keyword in a pipeline, saving output to a new file.
AUTHOR
Copyright 2003-2005, Phil Harvey
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
SEE ALSO
Image::ExifTool(3pm), Image::ExifTool::TagNames(3pm), Image::ExifTool::Shortcuts(3pm)