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exifreader
Advanced tools
ExifReader is a JavaScript library that parses image files and extracts the metadata. It can also extract an embedded thumbnail. It can be used either in a browser or from Node. Supports JPEG, TIFF, PNG, HEIC, and WebP files with Exif, IPTC, XMP, ICC, and MPF metadata (depending on file type).
ExifReader is highly and easily configurable and the resulting bundle can be as small as 3 KiB (gzipped) if you're only interested in a few tags (e.g. date and/or GPS values). See section below on making a custom build.
ExifReader supports module formats ESM, AMD, CommonJS, and globals and can therefore easily be used from Webpack, RequireJS, Browserify, Node etc.
You can try it out on the examples site.
Support table
File type | Exif | IPTC | XMP | ICC | MPF | Thumbnail |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
JPEG | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes |
TIFF | yes | yes | yes | yes | ??? | no |
PNG | no | no | yes | no | no | no |
HEIC/HEIF | yes | no | no | yes | ??? | no |
WebP | yes | no | yes | yes | ??? | yes |
??? = MPF may be supported in any file type using Exif since it's an Exif extension, but it has only been tested on JPEGs.
If you're missing something that you think should be supported, file an issue with an attached example image and I'll see what I can do.
Notes for exif-js users
If you come here from the popular but now dead exif-js package, please let me know if you're missing anything from it and I will try to help you. Some notes:
Monetary support is not necessary for me to continue working on this, but in case you like this library and want to support its development you are very welcome to click the button below.
Easiest is through npm or Bower:
npm install exifreader --save
bower install exifreader --save
If you want to clone the git repository instead:
git clone git@github.com:mattiasw/ExifReader.git
cd ExifReader
npm install
After that, the transpiled, concatenated and minified ES5 file will be in the
dist
folder together with a sourcemap file.
Type definitions for TypeScript are included in the package. If you're missing any definitions for tags or something else, a pull-request would be very much welcome since I'm not using TypeScript myself.
NOTE: See React Native instructions below.
ES module syntax:
import ExifReader from 'exifreader';
NOTE: TypeScript/Angular seems to sometimes have problems when using the default export. If you're seeing issues, use this syntax instead:
import * as ExifReader from 'exifreader';
CommonJS/Node modules:
const ExifReader = require('exifreader');
AMD modules:
requirejs(['/path/to/exif-reader.js'], function (ExifReader) {
...
});
script
tag:
<script src="/path/to/exif-reader.js"></script>
There are two ways to load the tags. Either have ExifReader do the loading of the image file, or load the file yourself first and pass in the file buffer. The main difference is that the first one is asynchronous and the second one is synchronous.
const tags = await ExifReader.load(file);
const imageDate = tags['DateTimeOriginal'].description;
const unprocessedTagValue = tags['DateTimeOriginal'].value;
Where file
is one of
const tags = ExifReader.load(fileBuffer);
Where fileBuffer
is one of
ArrayBuffer
or SharedArrayBuffer
(browser)Buffer
(Node.js)See the examples site for more directions on how to use the library.
Import ExifReader like this:
import ExifReader from './node_modules/exifreader/src/exif-reader.js';
Make sure to update the path to point to where your node_modules
is located.
For local files on the device you need to load the file yourself first, then pass in the buffer to ExifReader. Here is a template from user @hungdev:
import RNFS from 'react-native-fs';
import {decode} from 'base64-arraybuffer';
import ExifReader from 'exifreader';
const b64Buffer = await RNFS.readFile('YOUR IMAGE URI', 'base64') // Where the URI looks like this: "file:///path/to/image/IMG_0123.HEIC"
const fileBuffer = decode(b64Buffer)
const tags = ExifReader.load(fileBuffer, {expanded: true});
If you're having trouble getting the GPS location, see this comment and thread for more details.
By default, Exif, IPTC and XMP tags are grouped together. This means that if
e.g. Orientation
exists in both Exif and XMP, the first value (Exif) will be
overwritten by the second (XMP). If you need to separate between these values,
pass in an options object with the property expanded
set to true
:
const tags = ExifReader.load(fileBuffer, {expanded: true});
Tags that are unknown, either because they have been excluded by making a custom build or they are yet to be added into ExifReader, are by default not included in the output. If you need to see them there is an option that can be passed in:
const tags = ExifReader.load(fileBuffer, {includeUnknown: true});
If you discover an unknown tag that should be handled by ExifReader, please reach out by filing an issue.
If expanded: true
is specified in the options, there will be a gps
group.
This group currently contains Latitude
, Longitude
, and Altitude
which will
be negative for values that are south of the equator, west of the IRM, or below
sealevel. These are often more convenient values for regular use. For some
elaboration or if you need the original values, see Notes below.
The thumbnail and its details will be accessible through tags['Thumbnail']
.
There is information about e.g. width and height, and the thumbnail image data
is stored in tags['Thumbnail'].image
.
How you use it is going to depend on your environment. For a web browser you can
either use the raw byte data in tags['Thumbnail'].image
and use it the way you
want, or you can use the helper property tags['Thumbnail'].base64
that is a
base64 representation of the image. It can be used for a data URI like this:
const tags = ExifReader.load(fileBuffer);
imageElement.src = 'data:image/jpg;base64,' + tags['Thumbnail'].base64;
If you're using node, you can store it as a new file like this:
const fs = require('fs');
const tags = ExifReader.load(fileBuffer);
fs.writeFileSync('/path/to/new/thumbnail.jpg', Buffer.from(tags['Thumbnail'].image));
See the examples site for more details.
The most important step will be to use a custom build so please do that.
If you are using Webpack 4 or lower and are only targeting web browsers, make
sure to add this to your Webpack config (probably the webpack.config.js
file):
node: {
Buffer: false
}
Buffer
is only used in Node.js but if Webpack sees a reference to it it will
include a Buffer
shim for browsers. This configuration will stop Webpack from
doing that. Webpack 5 does this automatically.
Configuring a custom build can reduce the bundle size significantly.
NOTE 1: This functionality is in beta but should work fine. Please file an issue if you're having problems or ideas on how to make it better.
NOTE 2: This only changes the built file (exifreader/dist/exif-reader.js
),
not the source code. That means it's not possible to use the ES module (from the
src
folder) or any tree shaking to get the benefit of a custom build. Tree
shaking will actually have close to no effect at all here so don't rely on it.
This is for npm users that use the built file. To specify what functionality you want you can either use include pattern (start with an empty set and include) or exclude pattern (start with full functionality and exclude). If an include pattern is set, excludes will not be used.
For Exif and IPTC it's also possible to specify which tags you're interested in. Those tag groups have huge dictionaries of tags and you may not be interested in all of them. (Note that it's not possible to specify tags to exclude.)
The configuration is added to your project's package.json
file.
Example 1: Only include JPEG files and Exif tags (this makes the bundle almost half the size of the full one (non-gzipped)):
"exifreader": {
"include": {
"jpeg": true,
"exif": true
}
}
Example 2: Only include TIFF files, and the Exif DateTime
tag and the GPS
tags (resulting bundle will be ~16 % of a full build):
"exifreader": {
"include": {
"tiff": true,
"exif": [
"DateTime",
"GPSLatitude",
"GPSLatitudeRef",
"GPSLongitude",
"GPSLongitudeRef",
"GPSAltitude",
"GPSAltitudeRef"
]
}
}
Example 3: Exclude XMP tags:
"exifreader": {
"exclude": {
"xmp": true
}
}
Then, if you didn't install ExifReader yet, just run npm install exifreader
.
Otherwise you have to re-build the library:
npm rebuild exifreader
If you use yarn
, simply run yarn add exifreader
to rebuild the library.
After that the new bundle is here: node_modules/exifreader/dist/exif-reader.js
If you are using vite
, you will need to clear the dependency cache
after a rebuild.
If you're using the include pattern config, remember to include everything you
want to use. If you want xmp
and don't specify any file types, you will get
"Invalid image format", and if you specify jpeg
but don't mention any tag
types no tags will be found.
Possible modules to include or exclude:
Module | Description |
---|---|
jpeg | JPEG images. |
tiff | TIFF images. |
png | PNG images. |
heic | HEIC/HEIF images. |
webp | WebP images. |
file | JPEG file details: image width, height etc. |
jfif | JFIF details in JPEG files: resolution, thumbnail etc. |
png_file | PNG file details: image width, height etc. |
exif | Regular Exif tags. If excluded, will also exclude mpf and thumbnail . For TIFF files, excluding this will also exclude IPTC, XMP, and ICC. |
iptc | IPTC tags. |
xmp | XMP tags. |
icc | ICC color profile tags. |
mpf | Multi-picture Format tags. |
thumbnail | Thumbnail. Needs exif . |
GPSLatitude
, GPSLongitude
) and the
reference value (GPSLatitudeRef
, GPSLongitudeRef
). Use the references to
know whether the coordinate is north/south and east/west. Often you will see
north and east represented as positive values, and south and west
represented as negative values (e.g. in Google Maps). This setup is also
used for the altitude using GPSAltitude
and GPSAltitudeRef
where the
latter specifies if it's above sea level (positive) or below sea level
(negative). If you don't want to calculate the final values yourself, see
the section on GPS for pre-calculated ones.Orientation
value of 3
will have Rotate 180
in the description
property. If you would like more XMP tags to have a processed description,
please file an issue or create a pull request.description
property of tags can change in a minor update. If you
want to process a tag's value somehow, use the value
property to be sure
nothing breaks between updates.The library makes use of the DataView API which is supported in Chrome 9+, Firefox 15+, Internet Explorer 10+, Edge, Safari 5.1+, Opera 12.1+. For Node.js at least version 10 is required if you want to parse XMP tags, otherwise earlier versions will also work.
Full HTML example pages and a Node.js example are located on the examples site.
Testing is done with Mocha and Chai. Run with:
npm test
Test coverage can be generated like this:
npm run coverage
See CONTRIBUTING.md.
This project is released with a Contributor Code of Conduct. By participating in this project you agree to abide by its terms.
ExifReader uses the Mozilla Public License 2.0 (MPL-2.0). In short that means you can use this library in your project (open- or closed-source) as long as you mention the use of ExifReader and make any changes to ExifReader code available if you would to distribute your project. But please read the full license text to make sure your specific case is covered.
Regions
(see issue #129
for more details).value
on
rational tags). Rational values are now kept in their original
numerator/denominator pair instead of being calculated into a float.
In addition to .value
on rational tags some descriptions have also
changed into better ones, e.g. ExposureTime now looks like 1/200
instead of 0.005
.FAQs
Library that parses Exif metadata in images.
We found that exifreader demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 0 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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