exiftool-vendored
Fast, cross-platform Node.js access to ExifTool.

Features
-
Best-of-class cross-platform performance and reliability.
Expect an order of magnitude faster performance than other packages.
-
Proper extraction of
-
Support for writing tags
-
Type definitions of the top 99.5% tags used by over 6,000
different camera makes and models
-
Auditable ExifTool source code (the vendored code is
checksum verified)
-
Automated updates to ExifTool (as new versions come out
monthly)
-
Robust test coverage, performed with the latest Node v4, v6, v8, and v9 on Linux,
Mac, &
Windows.
Installation
yarn add exiftool-vendored
or
npm install --save exiftool-vendored
Note that exiftool-vendored
provides an installation of ExifTool relevant
for your local platform through
optionalDependencies.
You shouldn't include either the exiftool-vendored.exe
or
exiftool-vendored.pl
as direct dependencies to your project.
Usage
There are many configuration options to ExifTool, but all values have defaults.
Please review the ExifTool constructor parameters
and override default values where appropriate.
const { ExifTool } = require("exiftool-vendored");
const exiftool = new ExifTool();
exiftool.version().then(version =>
console.log(`We're running ExifTool v${version}`)
);
General API
ExifTool.read()
returns a Promise to a Tags instance. Note
that errors may be returned either by rejecting the promise, or for less
severe problems, via the errors
field.
All other public ExifTool methods return Promise<void>
, and will reject
the promise if the operation is not successful.
Reading tags
exiftool
.read("path/to/image.jpg")
.then((tags ) => console.log(`Make: ${tags.Make}, Model: ${tags.Model}, Errors: ${tags.errors}`))
.catch(err => console.error("Something terrible happened: ", err))
Extract the low-resolution thumbnail in path/to/image.jpg
, write it to
path/to/thumbnail.jpg
, and return a Promise<void>
that is fulfilled
when the image is extracted:
exiftool.extractThumbnail("path/to/image.jpg", "path/to/thumbnail.jpg");
Extract the Preview
image (only found in some images):
exiftool.extractPreview("path/to/image.jpg", "path/to/preview.jpg");
Extract the JpgFromRaw
image (found in some RAW images):
exiftool.extractJpgFromRaw("path/to/image.cr2", "path/to/fromRaw.jpg");
Extract the binary value from "tagname" tag in path/to/image.jpg
and write it to dest.bin
(which cannot exist already
and whose parent directory must already exist):
exiftool.extractBinaryTag("tagname", "path/to/file.exf", "path/to/dest.bin");
Writing tags
Note that only a portion of tags are writable. Refer to the
documentation
and look under the "Writable" column.
If you apply malformed values or ask to write to tags that aren't
supported, the returned Promise
will be rejected.
Only string and numeric primitive are supported as values to the object
Write a comment to the given file so it shows up in the Windows Explorer
Properties panel:
exiftool.write("path/to/file.jpg", { XPComment: "this is a test comment" });
Change the DateTimeOriginal, CreateDate and ModifyDate tags (using the
AllDates
shortcut) to 4:56pm UTC on February 6, 2016:
exiftool.write("path/to/file.jpg", { AllDates: "2016-02-06T16:56:00" });
Always Beware: Timezones
If you edit a timestamp tag, realize that the difference between the
changed timestamp tag and the GPS value is used by exiftool-vendored
to
infer the timezone.
In other words, if you only edit the CreateDate
and don't edit the GPS
timestamps, your timezone will either be incorrect or missing. See the
section about Dates below for more information.
Resource hygene
Remember to call .end()
.
ExifTool processes consume system resources. If you're done with it, turn
it off with .end()
, which returns a Promise<void>
if you want to wait
for the shutdown to be complete.
Mocha v4.0.0
If you use mocha v4 or later, and you don't call
exiftool.end()
, you will find that your test suite hangs. The relevant
change is described here,
and can be solved by adding an after
block that shuts down the instance
of ExifTool that your tests are using:
after(() => exiftool.end())
Dates
Generally, EXIF tags encode dates and times with no timezone offset.
Presumably the time is captured in local time, but this means parsing the
same file in different parts of the world results in a different absolute
timestamp for the same file.
Rather than returning a
Date
which always includes a timezone, this library returns classes that encode the
date, the time of day, or both, with an optional tzoffset. It's up to you, then,
to do what's right.
In many cases, though, a tzoffset can be determined, either by the composite
TimeZone
tag, or by looking at the difference between the local
DateTimeOriginal
and GPSDateTime
tags. GPSDateTime
is present in most
smartphone images.
If a tzoffset can be determined, it is encoded in all related ExifDateTime
tags for those files.
Note also that some smartphones record timestamps with microsecond precision (not just millis!),
and both ExifDateTime
and ExifTime
have floating point milliseconds.
Tags
Official EXIF tag names
are PascalCased, like
AFPointSelected
and ISO
. ("Fixing" the field names to be camelCase, would
result in ungainly aFPointSelected
and iSO
atrocities).
The Tags.ts file is autogenerated by parsing through
images of more than 3,000 different camera makes and models taken from the
ExifTool site. It groups tags, their type, popularity, and example values such
that your IDE can autocomplete.
Note that if parsing fails (for, example, a datetime string), the raw string
will be returned. Consuming code should verify both existence and type as
reasonable for safety.
Performance
The npm run mktags
target reads all tags found in a batch of sample images and
parses the results.
Using exiftool-vendored
:
Read 2236 unique tags from 3011 files.
Parsing took 16191ms (5.4ms / file)
Parsing took 27141ms (9.0ms / file)
Parsing took 12545ms (4.2ms / file)
Using the exiftool
npm package takes 7x longer (and doesn't work on Windows):
Reading 3011 files...
Parsing took 85654ms (28.4ms / file)
Batch mode
Starting the perl version of ExifTool is expensive, and is especially
expensive on the Windows version of ExifTool.
On Windows, for every invocation, exiftool
installs a distribution
of Perl and extracts the ~1000 files that make up ExifTool, and
then runs the perl script. Windows virus scanners prevent reads on
these files while they are scanned, which makes this approach even more
costly.
Using ExifTool's -stay_open
batch mode means we can reuse a single
instance of ExifTool across many requests, dropping response latency
dramatically as well as reducing system load.
Parallelism
The exiftool
singleton is configured with a maxProcs
set to the number of
CPUs on the current system; no more than maxProcs
instances of exiftool
will
be spawned.
Note that each child process consumes between 10 and 50 MB of RAM. If you have
limited system resources you may want to use a smaller maxProcs
value.
Changelog
See CHANGELOG.md.
Author
Contributors 🎉