Reputation: 1557
Background: I am writing a camera app for a messenger program. I cannot save the captured image to persistent disk at any time. The camera must support all orientations. My implementation is that of the familiar Surfaceview examples. I use the Display class to detect orientation and rotate the camera accordingly. In the takePicture jpeg callback, I construct a bitmap from the byte[] in order to get around some aspect ratio issues I was having: Camera API: Cross device issues
Problem Description: On some devices, the constructed Bitmap taken at ROTATION_270 (device rotated 90 degrees clockwise) comes in upside down. So far, it seems to be Samsung. I can only assume that maybe the camera is soldered on the other way or something to that affect but that's neither here nor there. While I can check if a Bitmap is sideways I can't logically check if it is upside down by dimensions so I need access to the EXIF data.
Android provides a parser for this http://developer.android.com/reference/android/media/ExifInterface.html but unfortunately it has a single constructor which accepts a file... which I don't have and don't want. Intuitively I could write a constructor for a byte array but that seems really painful given their calls into native code http://grepcode.com/file/repository.grepcode.com/java/ext/com.google.android/android/2.2.1_r1/android/media/ExifInterface.java
My question then has two parts:
Does anyone know if the byte[] array contains full EXIF jpeg header data as is or is the path through the BitmapFactory.decode(...) / BitmapFactory.compress(...) adding that somehow?
If this EXIF data exits in the byte array how can I parse out the orientation information in a dependable manner?
Edit 10/18/12
pcans' answer below involves part 2 of my question. As I pointed to in the comments below his answer, if you want to use that parser you'll have to incorporate the source into your project. The changes mentioned in that linked SO post have already been made and reposted here: https://github.com/strangecargo/metadata-extractor
NOTE newer versions of metadata-extractor work directly on Android without modification, and are available via Maven.
However, as to part 1, I'm getting 0 tags back from the parser when I run it with the byte array I get from takePicture. I'm becoming concerned that the byte array doesn't have the data I need. I will continue to look into this but welcome any further insight.
Upvotes: 36
Views: 59142
Reputation: 3134
AndroidX ExifInterface supports reading EXIF information from an inputstream:
implementation "androidx.exifinterface:exifinterface:1.1.0"
You can then just pass the inputstream into the constructor like that:
val exif = ExifInterface(inputStream)
val orientation =
exif.getAttributeInt(ExifInterface.TAG_ORIENTATION, ExifInterface.ORIENTATION_NORMAL)
Upvotes: 7
Reputation: 3916
If you want a way to read EXIF data that wont be so dependent on where your URI came from you you could use the exif support library and read it from a stream. For example this is how I get the orientation of the image.
build.gradle
dependencies {
...
compile "com.android.support:exifinterface:25.0.1"
...
}
Example code:
import android.support.media.ExifInterface;
...
try (InputStream inputStream = context.getContentResolver().openInputStream(uri)) {
ExifInterface exif = new ExifInterface(inputStream);
int orientation = exif.getAttributeInt(ExifInterface.TAG_ORIENTATION, ExifInterface.ORIENTATION_NORMAL);
} catch (IOException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
The reason I had to do it this way once we started targeting api 25 (maybe a problem on 24+ also) but still supporting back to api 19, on android 7 our app would crash if I passed in a URI that was just referencing a file. Hence I had to create a URI to pass to the camera intent like this.
FileProvider.getUriForFile(context, context.getApplicationContext().getPackageName() + ".fileprovider", tempFile);
The issue there is that file its not possible to turn the URI into a real file path (other than holding on to the temp file path).
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 7641
The bad news:
Android Api sadly won't allow you to read exif data from a Stream
, only from a File
.
ExifInterface don't have a constructor with an InputStream
.
So you must parse jpeg content by yourself.
The good news:
API exists in pure Java for this. You can use this one: https://drewnoakes.com/code/exif/
It's Open Source, published under Apache Licence 2 and available as a Maven package.
There is a constructor with an InputStream
:
public ExifReader(java.io.InputStream is)
You can build an InputStream
backed by your byte[]
using a ByteArrayInputStream
like this:
InputStream is = new ByteArrayInputStream(decodedBytes);
Upvotes: 20
Reputation: 10111
To read metadata/EXIF from image byte[]
(useful for Camera.takePicture()
) using version 2.9.1 of the metadata extraction library in Java by Drew Noakes:
try
{
// Extract metadata.
Metadata metadata = ImageMetadataReader.readMetadata(new BufferedInputStream(new ByteArrayInputStream(imageData)), imageData.length);
// Log each directory.
for(Directory directory : metadata.getDirectories())
{
Log.d("LOG", "Directory: " + directory.getName());
// Log all errors.
for(String error : directory.getErrors())
{
Log.d("LOG", "> error: " + error);
}
// Log all tags.
for(Tag tag : directory.getTags())
{
Log.d("LOG", "> tag: " + tag.getTagName() + " = " + tag.getDescription());
}
}
}
catch(Exception e)
{
// TODO: handle exception
}
To read the EXIF orientation of the image (not the orientation of the thumbnail):
try
{
// Get the EXIF orientation.
final ExifIFD0Directory exifIFD0Directory = metadata.getFirstDirectoryOfType(ExifIFD0Directory.class);
if(exifIFD0Directory.containsTag(ExifIFD0Directory.TAG_ORIENTATION))
{
final int exifOrientation = exifIFD0Directory.getInt(ExifIFD0Directory.TAG_ORIENTATION);
/* Work on exifOrientation */
}
else
{
/* Not found */
}
}
catch(Exception e)
{
// TODO: handle exception
}
The orientation is from 1 to 8. See here, here, here or here.
To transform a bitmap based on its EXIF orientation:
try
{
final Matrix bitmapMatrix = new Matrix();
switch(exifOrientation)
{
case 1: break; // top left
case 2: bitmapMatrix.postScale(-1, 1); break; // top right
case 3: bitmapMatrix.postRotate(180); break; // bottom right
case 4: bitmapMatrix.postRotate(180); bitmapMatrix.postScale(-1, 1); break; // bottom left
case 5: bitmapMatrix.postRotate(90); bitmapMatrix.postScale(-1, 1); break; // left top
case 6: bitmapMatrix.postRotate(90); break; // right top
case 7: bitmapMatrix.postRotate(270); bitmapMatrix.postScale(-1, 1); break; // right bottom
case 8: bitmapMatrix.postRotate(270); break; // left bottom
default: break; // Unknown
}
// Create new bitmap.
final Bitmap transformedBitmap = Bitmap.createBitmap(imageBitmap, 0, 0, imageBitmap.getWidth(), imageBitmap.getHeight(), bitmapMatrix, false);
}
catch(Exception e)
{
// TODO: handle exception
}
Upvotes: 34
Reputation: 25194
If you have a content://
type of Uri
, android provides APIs through ContentResolver
and there’s no need to use external libraries:
public static int getExifAngle(Context context, Uri uri) {
int angle = 0;
Cursor c = context.getContentResolver().query(uri,
new String[] { MediaStore.Images.ImageColumns.ORIENTATION },
null,
null,
null);
if (c != null && c.moveToFirst()) {
int col = c.getColumnIndex( MediaStore.Images.ImageColumns.ORIENTATION );
angle = c.getInt(col);
c.close();
}
return angle;
}
You can also read any other value you find in MediaStore.Images.ImageColumns
, like latitude and longitude.
This currently doesn’t work with file:///
Uris but can be easily tweaked.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 851
If you are using Glide library you can get the Exif orientation from an InputStream:
InputStream is=getActivity().getContentResolver().openInputStream(originalUri);
int orientation=new ImageHeaderParser(is).getOrientation();
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 3100
For anybody who might be interested, here is how to get the Orientation tag using the 2.3.1 interface from https://github.com/strangecargo/metadata-extractor
Metadata header;
try {
ByteArrayInputStream bais= new ByteArrayInputStream(data);
ExifReader reader = new ExifReader(bais);
header = reader.extract();
Directory dir = header.getDirectory(ExifDirectory.class);
if (dir.containsTag(ExifDirectory.TAG_ORIENTATION)) {
Log.v(TAG, "tag_orientation exists: " + dir.getInt(ExifDirectory.TAG_ORIENTATION));
}
else {
Log.v(TAG, "tag_orietation doesn't exist");
}
} catch (JpegProcessingException e) {
// TODO Auto-generated catch block
e.printStackTrace();
} catch (MetadataException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1557
So using my edit and pcans suggestion, I got the image data but it was not what I expected. Specifically, not all devices will give an orientation at all. If you follow this path note that
The "Android fixed" ExifReader library I point to is actually the edited 2.3.1 which is a few releasees old. The new examples on the website and in the source pertain to the newest 2.6.x where he changes the API significantly. Using the 2.3.1 interface, you can dump all EXIF data from a byte[] by doing the following:
Metadata header;
try {
ByteArrayInputStream bais= new ByteArrayInputStream(data);
ExifReader reader = new ExifReader(bais);
header = reader.extract();
Iterator<Directory> iter = header.getDirectoryIterator();
while(iter.hasNext()){
Directory d = iter.next();
Iterator<Tag> iterTag = d.getTagIterator();
while(iterTag.hasNext()){
Tag t = iterTag.next();
Log.e("DEBUG", "TAG: " + t.getTagName() + " : " + t.getDescription());
}
}
} catch (JpegProcessingException e) {
// TODO Auto-generated catch block
e.printStackTrace();
} catch (MetadataException e) {
// TODO Auto-generated catch block
e.printStackTrace();
}
if you want numerical tag values, simply replace
t.getDescription()
with
d.getInt(t.getTagType())
I really didn't add much as far as the answer is concerned so I'm accepting pcans' answer.
Upvotes: 4