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Jhead is a command line driven program for manipulating the non image parts of Exif flavour Jpeg files that most digital cameras produce.

Windows users: Jhead has no Graphical User Interface. Clicking on it with the mouse from Windows won't do anything for you - you have to use it from the Command prompt (or Dos prompt under Win95/98)

Jhead v1.8 program Features

  • Extracting camera settings from exif image files
  • Removing of integral exif thumbnails for compacting Jpegs without loss of other jpeg header info
  • Able to manage running programs on large batches of Jpegs and restoring exif header information afterwards.
  • Transplant Exif image header from one Jpeg to another
  • Save integral Exif thumbnails as separated images
  • Able to set and/or adjust the exif time field
  • Edit Jpeg comment fields

Command line options

-dt Delete thumbnails and other extraneous information in the Exif header, but leave the interesting parts intact. This option deletes everything in the exif header after the normally referenced data in the exif header. Exif headers have a built-in thumbnail, which typically occupies around 10k of space. As far as I can tell, this thumbnail is only used by the digital cameras to display several really small thumbnails at a time. The thumbnails are too small to use even full screen on the digicam's LCD. I have not encountered any adverse side effects of deleting the thumbnails, even from the software provided with my old olympus digicam. Use with caution.
-de Delete the Exif header entirely. This leaves comments in the comment section intact.
-dc Delete comment field from the JPEG header. Note that the comment is not part of the Exif header.
-ce Edit the jpeg hader comment field (note, this comment field is outside the exif structure and can be part of exif and non exif style Jpeg images).
A temporary file containing the comment is created and Notepad launched to edit it under Windows. Under Unix, vi is used to edit the temprary file. After the file is edited, the comments are put back into the file, and the temporary file is deleted.
-st <name> Save the built in thumbnail from jpegs that came from a digital camera. The thumbnail lives inside the Exif header, and is a very low-res Jpeg image. Note that making any changes to a photo, except for with some programs, generally wipes out the exif header and with it the thumbnail.
I implemented this option because I kept getting asked about having such an option. I don't consider the built in thumbnails to be all that useful - too low res. However, now you can see for yourself. I always generate my thumbnails using ImageMagic (see end of this page).
This feature has an interesting 'relative path' option for specifying the thumbnail name. Whenever the <name> contains the characters '&i', jhead will substitute the original filename for this name. This allows creating a 'relative name' when doing a whole batch of files. For example, the incantation:
    jhead -st "thumbnails\&i" *.jpg
would create a thumbnail for each .jpg file in the thumbnails directory by the same name, (provided that the thumbnails directory exists, of course). Both Win32 and most Unix shells treat the '&' character in a special way, so you have to put quotes around that command line option for the '&' to even be passed to the program.

If a '-' is specified for the output file, the thumbnail is sent to stdout. (Unix build only)

-te <name> Transplant exif header from image <name> into specified image. This option is useful if you like to edit the photos but still want the exif header on your photos. As most photo editing programs will wipe out the exif header, this option can be used to re-transmplant them back in after editing the photos.
Like the '-st' option, this option uses a 'relative path', which is useful for doing a batch of photos at a time. For example, if you have a directory full of digital camera photos, before editing them, you could copy them into the subdirectory 'originals'. Then edit them (or batch convert them using mogrify). After editing, you can put the original exif headers back in to the whole directory of images at a time using the incantation:
    jhead -te "originals\&i" *jpg
-h Displays summary of command line options.
-v Makes the program even more verbose than it already is. Like dos programs, and unlike Unix programs, Jhead gives feedback as to what it is doing, even when nothing goes wrong. Windows user that I am, when something doesn't give me feedback for 20 seconds, I assume its crashed.
-se Supress error messages relating to corrupt exif header structure.
-V Print version info and compilation date.
-c Concise output. This causes picture info to be summarized on one line instead of several. Useful for grepping through images, as well as importing into spread sheets (data is space delimited with quotes as text qualifier).
-model Restricts processing of files to those whose camera model, as indicated by the exif image information, contains the substring specified in the argument after '-model'. For example, the following command will list only images that are from an S100 camera:

jhead -model S100 *.jpg

I use this option to restrict my JPEG re-compressing to those images that came from my Cannon S100 digicam, (see the -cmd option).

-exonly Skip all files that don't have an exif header. This skips all files that did not come directly from the digital camera, as most photo editing software does not preserve the exif header when saving pictures.

-n[fmt-string] This option causes files to be renamed according to the exif header "DateTimeOriginal" field. Renaming is restricted to files whose names consist largely of digits. This effectively restricts renaming to files that have not already been manually renamed, as the default sequential names from digital cameras consist largely of digits. Use the -nf option to force renaming of all files.

If the [fmt-string] is omitted, the file will be renamed to MMDD-HHMMSS. Note that this scheme doesn't include the year (I never have photos from different years together anyways).
If a [fmt-string] is provided, the fmt-will be passed directly to the strftime function for formatting. Lookup the strftime function to see what format parameters can be used. No checking is done on the format string before passing it to strftime..
If the target name already exists, the name will be appended with "a", "b", "c", etc, unless the name ends with a letter, in which case it will be appended with "0", "1", "2", etc.
This feature is especially useful if more than one digital camera was used to take pictures of an event. By renaming them to a schem according to date, they will automatically appear in order of taking when viewed with some sort of viewer like Compupic or AcdSee, and sorted by name.

Some of the more useful arguments for strftime are:
%d   Day of month as decimal number (01 – 31)
%HHour in 24-hour format (00 – 23)
%jDay of year as decimal number (001 – 366)
%mMonth as decimal number (01 – 12)
%MMinute as decimal number (00 – 59)
%SSecond as decimal number (00 – 59)
%UWeek of year as decimal number, with Sunday as first day of week (00 – 53)
%wWeekday as decimal number (0 – 6; Sunday is 0)
%yYear without century, as decimal number (00 – 99)
%YYear with century, as decimal number

Example:
    jhead -n%Y%m%d-%H%M%S *.jpg

This will rename files matched by *.jpg according to YYYYMMDD-HHMMSS

For a full listing of strftime arguments, look up the strftime function. Note that some arguments to the strftime function (not listed here) produce strings with charactrers such as '/' and ':' that may not be valid as part of a filename on various systems.

-nf Same as '-n' but renames files regardless of original file name.

-ta Adjust time stored in the exif header by h:mm backwards of forwards. Useful when having taken picutres with the wrong time set on the camera, such as afte travelling across time zones, or when daylight savings time has changed. This option only changes the "DateTimeOriginal" (tar 0x9003) field, but leaves the "DateTimeDigitized" (tag 0x9004) field alone.
-ts Sets the time stored in the exif header to what is specified on the command line. This option only changes the "DateTimeOriginal" (tar 0x9003) field, but leaves the "DateTimeDigitized" (tag 0x9004) field alone. Time must be specified as:
    yyyy:mm:dd-hh:mm:ss
-ft Sets the file's system time stamp to what is stored in the exif header.
-fd When using -ft, and the exif header time is bogus, sets the file's system time stamp to what is specified on the command line. Time must be specified as:
    yyyy:mm:dd-hh:mm:ss
-cmd Executes the specified command on each Jepg file to be processed.

The Exif section of each file is read before running the command, and re-inserted after the command finishes.

The specified command invoked separately for each Jpeg that is processed, even if multiple files are specified (explicitly or by wild card). I use this option to process whole directory trees of Jpegs from my digital camera with JPEGTRAN (Independent Jpeg group) and Image-Magic's 'MOGRIFY' command without loosing the camera settings and other info stored in the Exif headers.

JPEGTRAN is useful for lossless rotation, as well as for converting Jpegs to progressive Jpegs (also a lossless process, but results in typically 5% smaller files) I use mogrify for re-compressing the images I get from my Canon PowerShot S100 to 80% quality. The Canon Jpegs are either way too 'high quality' for the resolution, or are suboptimally encoded. Using mogrify to 80% produces no detectable loss in quality, with files about half the size.

Example use:
Having a whole directory tree of photos from my S100, I run the following commands:

    jhead -cmd "mogrify -quality 80 &i" -model S100 -r *.jpg
    jhead -cmd "jpegtran -progressive &i &o" -r *.jpg

The first command mogrifies all jpegs in the tree that indicate that they are from a Cannon S100 in their exif header to 80% quality at the same resolution. This is a 'lossy' process, so I only run it on files that are from the Canon, and only run it once. The next command then takes all jpegs and converts them to progressive Jpegs. The result is the same images, with no discernible differences, stored in half the space. This only produces substantial savings on some cameras, such as the Canon S100. The newer S110 and S300 cameras are smarter about how they compress Jpeg images, so re-mogrifying them may not give you any savings unless you crank the quality way down. However, turning them into progressive jpeg images is a lossless process that typically makes image files 5% smaller.

Keeping the Exif header information is important to me, as I like to check things like the shutter speed for some of my photos, and my HTML index generating program uses the exif tags to display the Jpeg images in order of taking.

Newer version of "mogrify" already preserve exif informationm, so with some clever shell scripting, you could do these two steps without using jhead and still keep the exif headers.

-r The recursive feature of version 1.0 never worked to my satisfaction, and I replaced it with my recursive file globbing code in the Windows version. See below.

Name globbing and recursive directories under Windows

    Name globbing means matching wildcard patterns to actual file names. If you know what this term means, you are probably annoyed at how programs on Windows typically handle this. The Win32 version of this program goes beyond the pattern matching that Windows provides, and allows you to specify fancy unix-like patterns such as:

      jhead c:\pix\199*\*\*.jpg

    This program goes one step beyond beyond that in that "**" as a path component means any level of subdirectories. The invocation

      jhead c:\**\*.jpg

    will find ALL Jpegs files on the c: drive, including those in the root directory. The ** only works if it is the only part of that path component. For example, the path 'c:\a**\*.jpg' will not recurse. The '**' recursive expansion is ONLY supportedd on the Windows version. The code is in the module 'myglob.c', if you want to reuse it (I certainly intend to reuse that code for other applications). Under Unix, the shell's wildcard expansion is pretty decent already, and dealing with the convoluted nature of some Unix file layouts, doing better would have been much more of a challenge.

Programs I use with Jhead

ImageMagic
    I use the MOGIRIFY command from ImageMagick to do batch conversions and re-compresses of images. If you use Linux, you probably already have ImageMagic on your system (just type 'mogrify' at the command prompt to see if you have it). For Windows users, you have to download it from: http://www.imagemagick.org

    Image Magick is one of the few programs that preserves comment and exif headers, although older versions do not.

JPEGTRAN
    If you use Linux you probably also already have this program. For windows, its hard to find a pre-built binary on the web. The Independent Jpeg Group's website only has the source code.

    There's a fancier version, with pre-built Windows binaries and a lossless cropping feature added at: http://sylvana.net/jpegcrop. I have a Compiled Windows Binary of Jpegtran on my website. I got this one by taking the source code for Jpegtran out of the RedHat 6.1 Linux distribution, and compiling it with Microsoft Visual C 5.0.

CompuPic
    I also use CompuPic to organize my photos. I especially like the built in lossless Jpeg rotation feature (which also preserves the Exif header). This unfortunately is payware, but its a pretty good program. It has a free two week evaluation period. After this period, it is still semi-usable but annoying. I ended up paying for it. Or you can then use ACDsee, which has a longer free evaluation period, but costs more. There's also infranview for windows. There's also a free version of Compupic 5.1 for Linux and other platforms. Version 5.1 is a bit out of date, but still works. Lacks lossles rotation though.
wrjpgcom / rdjpgcom
    You can use these program to write and extract COM markers from jpeg images respectively. Although I always use my jhead program for this feature, the wrjpgcom and rdjpgcom programs are extremely simple and very suitable for use with perl or shell scripts to process lots of images. Thes programs are part of most linux distributions as part of the libjpg package (along with jpegtran)