dwww Home | Manual pages | Find package

TIFFCROP(1)                         LibTIFF                        TIFFCROP(1)

NAME
       tiffcrop  - select, copy, crop, convert, extract, and/or process one or
       more TIFF files

SYNOPSIS
       tiffcrop [ options ] src1.tifsrcN.tif dst.tif

DESCRIPTION
       tiffcrop processes one or more files created according to the Tag Image
       File Format, Revision 6.0, specification into one or more TIFF file(s).
       tiffcrop is most often used to extract portions of an  image  for  pro-
       cessing  with  bar  code  recognizer or OCR software when that software
       cannot restrict the region of interest to a specific portion of the im-
       age  or  to improve efficiency when the regions of interest must be ro-
       tated.  It can also be used to subdivide all or part of a processed im-
       age  into  smaller sections and export individual images or sections of
       images as separate files or separate images within one  or  more  files
       derived from the original input image or images.

       The available functions can be grouped broadly into three classes:

       1. Those  that  select individual images or sections of images from the
          input files.  The options -N for sequences or  lists  of  individual
          images  in  the input files, -Z for zones, -z for regions, -X and -Y
          for fixed sized selections, -m for margins, -U for units, and -E for
          edge  reference provide a variety of ways to specify portions of the
          input image.

       2. Those that allow the individual images or selections to be  exported
          to  one  or more output files in different groupings and control the
          organization of the data in the output images. The  options  -P  for
          page  size grouping, -S for subdivision into columns and rows and -e
          for export mode options that produce one or more files from each in-
          put image. The options -r, -s, -t, -w  control strip and tile format
          and sizes while -B, -L, -c, -f modify the endian addressing  scheme,
          the compression options, and the bit fill sequence of images as they
          are written.

       3. Those that perform some action on each image that is  selected  from
          the input file.  The options include -R for rotate, -I for inversion
          of the photometric interpretation and/or data values, and -F to flip
          (mirror) the image horizontally or vertically.

       Functions  are  applied  to  the input image(s) in the following order:
       cropping, fixed area extraction, zone and region extraction, inversion,
       mirroring, rotation.

       Functions  are  applied  to the output image(s) in the following order:
       export mode options for grouping zones, regions, or images into one  or
       more  files,  or  row and column divisions with output margins, or page
       size divisions with page orientation options.

       Finally, strip, tile, byte order, output  resolution,  and  compression
       options are applied to all output images.

       The  output  file(s)  may be organized and compressed using a different
       algorithm from the input files.  By default, tiffcrop will copy all the
       understood  tags in a TIFF directory of an input file to the associated
       directory in the output file.  Options can be used to force the  resul-
       tant image to be written as strips or tiles of data, respectively.

       tiffcrop  can be used to reorganize the storage characteristics of data
       in a file, and to reorganize, extract, rotate,  and  otherwise  process
       the  image  data  as specified at the same time whereas tiffcp does not
       alter the image data within the file.

       Using the options for selecting individual input images and the options
       for  exporting  images  and/or  segments defined as zones or regions of
       each input image, tiffcrop can perform  the  functions  of  tiffcp  and
       tiffsplit  in a single pass while applying multiple operations to indi-
       vidual selections or images.

OPTIONS
       -h     Display the syntax summary for tiffcrop.

       -v     Report the  current  version  and  last  modification  date  for
              tiffcrop.

       -N odd|even|#,#-#,#|last
              Specify  one  or  more  series or range(s) of images within each
              file to process.  The words odd or even may be used  to  specify
              all  odd  or  even numbered images counting from one.  Note that
              internally, TIFF images are numbered from zero rather  than  one
              but since this convention is not obvious to most users, tiffcrop
              used 1 to specify the first image in a multipage file.  The word
              last  may  be used in place of a number in the sequence to indi-
              cate the final image in the file without knowing how many images
              there  are.   Ranges  of images may be specified with a dash and
              multiple sets can be indicated by joining them in a  comma-sepa-
              rated  list.  eg.  use  -N  1,5-7,last  to  process the 1st, 5th
              through 7th, and final image in the file.

       -E top|bottom|left|right
              Specify the top, bottom, left, or right edge  as  the  reference
              from  which to calculate the width and length of crop regions or
              sequence of positions for zones. When used with  the  -e  option
              for  exporting  zones  or regions, the reference edge determines
              how composite images are arranged. Using -E  left  or  -E  right
              causes  successive  zones  or  regions to be merged horizontally
              whereas using -E top or -E bottom causes successive zones or re-
              gions  to  be  arranged vertically. This option has no effect on
              export layout when multiple zones or regions are not  being  ex-
              ported  to  composite  images.  Edges  may be abbreviated to the
              first letter.

       -e combined|divided|image|multiple|separate
              Specify the export mode for images and selections from input im-
              ages.   The  final filename on the command line is considered to
              be the destination file or filename stem for automatically  gen-
              erated sequences of files. Modes may be abbreviated to the first
              letter.

EXPORT MODES
                     ┌────────────┬────────────────────────────┐
                     │Export mode │ Description                │
                     ├────────────┼────────────────────────────┤
                     │combined    │ All images and  selections │
                     │            │ are  written  to  a single │
                     │            │ file with multiple  selec- │
                     │            │ tions  from one image com- │
                     │            │ bined into a single  image │
                     │            │ (default)                  │
                     └────────────┴────────────────────────────┘

                     │divided     │ All  images and selections │
                     │            │ are written  to  a  single │
                     │            │ file  with  each selection │
                     │            │ from one image written  to │
                     │            │ a new image                │
                     ├────────────┼────────────────────────────┤
                     │image       │ Each  input image is writ- │
                     │            │ ten to a new file (numeric │
                     │            │ filename   sequence)  with │
                     │            │ multiple  selections  from │
                     │            │ the  image  combined  into │
                     │            │ one image                  │
                     ├────────────┼────────────────────────────┤
                     │multiple    │ Each input image is  writ- │
                     │            │ ten to a new file (numeric │
                     │            │ filename  sequence)   with │
                     │            │ each  selection  from  the │
                     │            │ image written to a new im- │
                     │            │ age                        │
                     ├────────────┼────────────────────────────┤
                     │separate    │ Individual selections from │
                     │            │ each image are written  to │
                     │            │ separate files             │
                     └────────────┴────────────────────────────┘

       -U in|cm|px
              Specify the type of units to apply to dimensions for margins and
              crop regions for input and output images. Inches or  centimeters
              are  converted  to pixels using the resolution unit specified in
              the TIFF file (which defaults to inches if not specified in  the
              IFD).

       -m top,left,bottom,right
              Specify  margins  to  be removed from the input image. The order
              must be top, left, bottom, right with only commas separating the
              elements  of  the list. Margins are scaled according to the cur-
              rent units and removed before any  other  extractions  are  com-
              puted.

       -X #   Set  the  horizontal  (X-axis)  dimension of a region to extract
              relative to the specified origin reference. If the origin is the
              top or bottom edge, the X axis value will be assumed to start at
              the left edge.

       -Y #   Set the vertical (Y-axis) dimension of a region to extract rela-
              tive  to  the  specified  origin reference. If the origin is the
              left or right edge, the Y axis value will be assumed to start at
              the top.

       -Z #:#,#:#
              Specify  zones  of the image designated as position X of Y equal
              sized portions measured from the reference edge,  eg  1:3  would
              be first third of the image starting from the reference edge mi-
              nus any margins specified  for  the  confining  edges.  Multiple
              zones  can  be specified as a comma separated list but they must
              reference the same edge. To extract the top quarter and the bot-
              tom third of an image you would use -Z 1:4,3:3.

       -z x1,y1,x2,y2: ... :xN,yN,xN+1,yN+1
              Specify a series of coordinates to define regions for processing
              and exporting.  The coordinates represent the top left and lower
              right  corners of each region in the current units, eg inch, cm,
              or pixels. Pixels are counted from one to width  or  height  and
              inches or cm are calculated from image resolution data.

              Each  colon delimited series of four values represents the hori-
              zontal and vertical offsets from the top and left edges  of  the
              image,  regardless of the edge specified with the -E option. The
              first and third values represent the horizontal offsets  of  the
              corner  points  from  the  left edge while the second and fourth
              values represent the vertical offsets from the top edge.

       -F horiz|vert
              Flip, ie mirror, the image or extracted region  horizontally  or
              vertically.

       -R 90|180|270
              Rotate  the  image  or  extracted region 90, 180, or 270 degrees
              clockwise.

       -I [black|white|data|both]
              Invert color space, eg dark to light for bilevel  and  grayscale
              images.   This can be used to modify negative images to positive
              or to correct images that  have  the  PHOTOMETRIC_INTERPRETATION
              tag set incorrectly.  If the value is black or white, the PHOTO-
              METRIC_INTERPRETATION tag is set to  MinIsBlack  or  MinIsWhite,
              without  altering  the  image  data.  If the argument is data or
              both, the data values of the image are modified. Specifying both
              inverts the data and the PHOTOMETRIC_INTERPRETATION tag, whereas
              using data inverts the data but not the  PHOTOMETRIC_INTERPRETA-
              TION tag.  No support for modifying the color space of color im-
              ages in this release.

       -H #   Set the horizontal resolution of output images to  #,  expressed
              in the current units.

       -V #   Set  the vertical resolution of the output images to # expressed
              in the current units.

       -J #   Set the horizontal margin of an output page size to #  expressed
              in  the  current units when sectioning image into columns × rows
              subimages using the -S cols:rows option.

       -K #   Set the vertical margin of an output page size to # expressed in
              the  current  units  when  sectioning  image into columns × rows
              subimages using the -S cols:rows option.

       -O portrait|landscape|auto
              Set the output orientation of the pages or sections.  Auto  will
              use the arrangement that requires the fewest pages.  This option
              is only meaningful in conjunction with the -P option  to  format
              an image to fit on a specific paper size.

       -P page
              Format  the output images to fit on page size paper. Use -P list
              to show the supported page sizes and dimensions.  You can define
              a  custom page size by entering the width and length of the page
              in the current units with the following format #.#x#.#.

       -S cols:rows
              Divide each image into cols across and rows down equal sections.

       -B     Force output to be written with Big-Endian byte order.  This op-
              tion only has an effect when the output file is created or over-
              written and not when it is appended to.

       -C     Suppress the use of "strip chopping" when  reading  images  that
              have a single strip/tile of uncompressed data.

       -c     Specify  the  compression  to use for data written to the output
              file: -c none for no compression, -c packbits for PackBits  com-
              pression, -c lzw for Lempel-Ziv & Welch compression, -c jpeg for
              baseline JPEG compression.  -c zip for Deflate  compression,  -c
              g3  for CCITT Group 3 (T.4) compression, -c g4 for CCITT Group 4
              (T.6) compression.  By default tiffcrop will compress  data  ac-
              cording  to the value of the Compression tag found in the source
              file.

              The CCITT Group 3 and Group 4 compression algorithms can only be
              used with bilevel data.

              Group  3  compression  can  be  specified  together with several
              T.4-specific options: 1d  for  1-dimensional  encoding,  2d  for
              2-dimensional  encoding,  fill to force each encoded scanline to
              be zero-filled so that the terminating EOL code lies on  a  byte
              boundary.  Group 3-specific options are specified by appending a
              :-separated list to the g3 option; e.g.  -c  g3:2d:fill  to  get
              2D-encoded data with byte-aligned EOL codes.

              LZW  compression  can  be  specified  together  with a predictor
              value. A predictor value of 2 causes each scanline of the output
              image to undergo horizontal differencing before it is encoded; a
              value of 1 forces each scanline to be encoded without differenc-
              ing.   LZW-specific options are specified by appending a :-sepa-
              rated list to the lzw option; e.g. -c lzw:2 for LZW  compression
              with horizontal differencing.

       -f     Specify  the  bit  fill order to use in writing output data.  By
              default, tiffcrop will create a new file with the same fill  or-
              der  as  the original.  Specifying -f lsb2msb will force data to
              be written with the FillOrder  tag  set  to  LSB2MSB,  while  -f
              msb2lsb will force data to be written with the FillOrder tag set
              to MSB2LSB.

       -i     Ignore non-fatal read errors and continue processing of the  in-
              put file.

       -k size
              Set  maximum  memory  allocation  size  (in MiB). The default is
              256MiB.  Set to 0 to disable the limit.

       -l     Specify the length of a tile (in pixels).  tiffcrop attempts  to
              set the tile dimensions so that no more than 8 kilobytes of data
              appear in a tile.

       -L     Force output to be written with Little-Endian byte order.   This
              option  only  has  an  effect when the output file is created or
              overwritten and not when it is appended to.

       -M     Suppress the use of memory-mapped files when reading images.

       -p     Specify the planar configuration to use in  writing  image  data
              that  has  more than one sample per pixel.  By default, tiffcrop
              will create a new file with the same planar configuration as the
              original.   Specifying  -p  contig will force data to be written
              with multi-sample data packed together, while -p  separate  will
              force samples to be written in separate planes.

       -r     Specify  the  number  of  rows (scanlines) in each strip of data
              written to the output file.  By default  (or  when  value  0  is
              specified), tiffcrop attempts to set the rows/strip that no more
              than 8 kilobytes of data appear in a strip. If you  specify  the
              special  value -1 it will results in infinite number of the rows
              per strip. The entire image will be the one strip in that case.

       -s     Force the output file to  be  written  with  data  organized  in
              strips (rather than tiles).

       -t     Force the output file to be written with data organized in tiles
              (rather than strips).

       -w     Specify the width of a tile (in pixels).  tiffcrop  attempts  to
              set the tile dimensions so that no more than 8 kilobytes of data
              appear in a tile.

       -D opt1:value1,opt2:value2,opt3:value3:opt4:value4
              Debug and dump facility

              Display program progress and/or dump raw data to non-TIFF files.
              Options include the following and must be joined as a comma sep-
              arated list. The use of this option is generally limited to pro-
              gram  debugging and development of future options. An equal sign
              may be substituted for the colon in option:value pairs.

              debug:N:
                 Display limited program progress indicators  where  larger  N
                 increases the level of detail.

              format:txt|raw:
                 Format  any  logged  data as ASCII text or raw binary values.
                 ASCII text dumps include strings of ones  and  zeroes  repre-
                 senting  the binary values in the image data plus identifying
                 headers.

              level:N:
                 Specify the level of detail  presented  in  the  dump  files.
                 This  can vary from dumps of the entire input or output image
                 data to dumps of data processed by specific  functions.  Cur-
                 rent range of levels is 1 to 3.

              input:full-path-to-directory/input-dumpname:

              output:full-path-to-directory/output-dumpname:
                 When dump files are being written, each image will be written
                 to a separate file with the name built by  adding  a  numeric
                 sequence  value  to the dumpname and an extension of .txt for
                 ASCII dumps or .bin for binary dumps.

              The four debug/dump options are  independent,  though  it  makes
              little  sense to specify a dump file without specifying a detail
              level.

              Note: tiffcrop may be compiled with -DDEVELMODE to enable  addi-
              tional very low level debug reporting.

       However, not all option combinations are permitted.
          Note  1:  The (-X|-Y), -Z, -z and -S options are mutually exclusive.
          In no case should the options be applied to a given  selection  suc-
          cessively.

          Note  2:  Any  of  the -X, -Y, -Z and -z options together with other
          PAGE_MODE_x options such as -H, -V, -P, -J or -K are  not  supported
          and may cause buffer overflows.

EXAMPLES
       The  following  concatenates  two files and writes the result using LZW
       encoding:

          tiffcrop -c lzw a.tif b.tif result.tif

       To convert a G3 1d-encoded TIFF to a single strip  of  G4-encoded  data
       the following might be used:

          tiffcrop -c g4 -r 10000 g3.tif g4.tif

       (1000  is  just  a number that is larger than the number of rows in the
       source file.)

       To extract a selected set of images from a multi-image  TIFF  file  use
       the  -N option described above. Thus, to copy the 1st and 3rd images of
       image file album.tif to result.tif:

          tiffcrop -N 1,3 album.tif result.tif

       Invert a bilevel image scan of a microfilmed document and crop off mar-
       gins  of  0.25  inches  on the left and right, 0.5 inch on the top, and
       0.75 inch on the bottom. From the remaining portion of the  image,  se-
       lect  the second and third quarters, ie, one half of the area left from
       the center to each margin:

          tiffcrop -U in -m 0.5,0.25,0.75,0.25 -E left -Z 2:4,3:4 -I both MicrofilmNegative.tif MicrofilmPostiveCenter.tif

       Extract only the final image of a large Architectural E sized multipage
       TIFF  file  and  rotate  it 90 degrees clockwise while reformatting the
       output to fit on tabloid sized sheets with one quarter of  an  inch  on
       each side:

          tiffcrop -N last -R 90 -O auto -P tabloid -U in -J 0.25 -K 0.25 -H 300 -V 300 Big-PlatMap.tif BigPlatMap-Tabloid.tif

       The  output  images will have a specified resolution of 300 dpi in both
       directions. The orientation of each page will be determined  by  which-
       ever  choice  requires the fewest pages. To specify a specific orienta-
       tion, use the portrait or landscape option. The paper size option  does
       not  resample the image. It breaks each original image into a series of
       smaller images that will fit on the target paper size at the  specified
       resolution.

       Extract two regions 2048 pixels wide by 2048 pixels high from each page
       of a multi-page input file and write each region to a  separate  output
       file:

          tiffcrop -U px -z 1,1,2048,2048:1,2049,2048,4097 -e separate  CheckScans.tiff Check

       The  output  file  names  will use the stem Check with a numeric suffix
       which is incremented for each region of each image, eg  Check-001.tiff,
       Check-002.tiffCheck-NNN.tiff. To produce a unique file for each page
       of the input image with one new image for each region of the input  im-
       age on that page change the export option to -e multiple.

NOTES
       In general, bilevel, grayscale, palette and RGB(A) data with bit depths
       from 1 to 32 bits should work in both interleaved  and  separate  plane
       formats.  Unlike  tiffcp, tiffcrop can read and write tiled images with
       bits per sample that are not a multiple of 8 in  both  interleaved  and
       separate  planar format. Floating point data types are supported at bit
       depths of 16, 24, 32 and 64 bits per sample.

       Not all images can be converted from one compression scheme to another.
       Data  with  some photometric interpretations and/or bit depths are tied
       to specific compression schemes and vice-versa, e.g. Group 3/4 compres-
       sion  is  only usable for bilevel data. JPEG compression is only usable
       on 8 bit per sample data (or 12 bit if libtiff was compiled with 12 bit
       JPEG  support).  Support  for OJPEG compressed images is problematic at
       best. Since OJPEG compression is no longer supported for writing images
       with  LibTIFF,  these images will be updated to the newer JPEG compres-
       sion when they are copied or processed. This may cause the image to ap-
       pear color shifted or distorted after conversion.  In some cases, it is
       possible to remove the original compression from image data  using  the
       option -c none.

       tiffcrop does not currently provide options to up or downsample data to
       different bit depths or convert data from one  photometric  interpreta-
       tion to another, e.g. 16 bits per sample to 8 bits per sample or RGB to
       grayscale.

       tiffcrop is very loosely derived from code  in  tiffcp  with  extensive
       modifications  and  additions  to support the selection of input images
       and regions and the exporting of them to one or more  output  files  in
       various groupings. The image manipulation routines are entirely new and
       additional ones may be added in the future. It will handle tiled images
       with bit depths that are not a multiple of eight that tiffcp may refuse
       to read.

       tiffcrop was designed to handle large files  containing  many  moderate
       sized images with memory usage that is independent of the number of im-
       ages in the file.  In order to support compression modes that  are  not
       based  on individual scanlines, e.g. JPEG, it now reads images by strip
       or tile rather than by individual scanlines. In addition to the  memory
       required by the input and output buffers associated with libtiff one or
       more buffers at least as large as the largest image to be read are  re-
       quired.  The  design  favors large volume document processing uses over
       scientific or graphical manipulation of  large  datasets  as  might  be
       found in research or remote sensing scenarios.

SEE ALSO
       pal2rgb  (1),  tiffinfo  (1), tiff2cmp (1), tiffcp (1), tiffmedian (1),
       tiffsplit (1), libtiff (3tiff)

AUTHOR
       LibTIFF contributors

COPYRIGHT
       1988-2023, LibTIFF contributors

4.5                              Nov 23, 2023                      TIFFCROP(1)

Generated by dwww version 1.15 on Tue Jun 25 08:15:15 CEST 2024.