mos/cimage

Process, scale, resize, crop and filter images.

v0.8.6 2023-10-27 08:20 UTC

README

Join the chat at https://gitter.im/mosbth/cimage

About

CImage is a PHP class enabling resizing of images through scaling, cropping and filtering effects -- using PHP GD. The script img.php uses CImage to enable server-side image processing utilizing caching and optimization of the processed images.

Server-side image processing is a most useful tool for any web developer, img.php has an easy to use interface and its powerful when you integrate it with your website. Using it might decrease the time and effort for managing images and it might improve your workflow for creating content for websites.

This software is free and open source, licensed according MIT.

Documentation

Read full documentation at: http://dbwebb.se/opensource/cimage

New website is being setup at cimage.se, to improve documentation (work is ongoing).

Requirements

CImage and img.php supports GIF (with transparency), JPEG and PNG (8bit transparent, 24bit semi transparent) images. It requires PHP 5.3 and PHP GD. You optionally need the EXIF extension to support auto-rotation of JPEG-images.

Version v0.7.x will be the last version to support PHP 5.3. Coming version will require newer version of PHP.

Installation

There are several ways of installing. You either install the whole project which uses the autoloader to include the various files, or you install the all-included bundle that -- for convenience -- contains all code in one script.

Install source from GitHub

The sourcode is available on GitHub. Clone, fork or download as zip.

Latest stable version is v0.7.18 released 2016-08-09.

I prefer cloning like this. Do switch to the latest stable version.

git clone git://github.com/mosbth/cimage.git
cd cimage
git checkout v0.7.18

Make the cache-directory writable by the webserver.

chmod 777 cache

Install all-included bundle

There are some all-included bundles of img.php that can be downloaded and used without dependency to the rest of the sourcecode.

Dowload the version of your choice like this.

wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/mosbth/cimage/v0.7.18/webroot/imgp.php

Open up the file in your editor and edit the array $config. Ensure that the paths to the image directory and the cache directory matches your environment, or create an own config-file for the script.

Install from Packagist

You can install the package mos/cimage from Packagist using composer.

Use cases

Lets take some use cases to let you know when and how img.php might be useful.

Make a thumbnail

Lets say you have a larger image and you want to make a smaller thumbnail of it with a size of 80x80 pixels. You simply take the image and add constraints on width, height and you use the resize strategy crop-to-fit to crops out the parts of the image that does not fit.

To produce such a thumbnail, create a link like this:

img.php?src=kodim04.png&width=80&height=80&crop-to-fit

Slightly complexer use case

Perhaps you got an image from a friend. The image was taken with the iPhone and thus rotated.

The original image is looking like this one, scaled down to a width of 250 pixels.

So, you need to rotate it and crop off some parts to make it intresting.

To show it off, I'll auto-rotate the image based on its EXIF-information, I will crop it to a thumbnail of 100x100 pixels and add a filter to make it greyscale finishing up with a sharpen effect. Just for the show I'll rotate the image 25 degrees - do not ask me why.

Lets call this the URL-Photoshopper. This is how the magic looks like.

img.php?src=issue36/me-270.jpg&w=100&h=100&cf&aro &rb=-25&a=8,30,30,38&f=grayscale&convolve=sharpen-alt

For myself, I use img.php to put up all images on my website, it gives me the power of affecting the resulting images - without opening up a photo-editing application.

Get going quickly

Check out the test page

Try it out by pointing your browser to the test file webroot/test/test.php. It will show some example images and you can review how they are created.

Process your first image

Try it yourself by opening up an image in your browser. Start with

webroot/img.php?src=kodim04.png

and try to resize it to a thumbnail by adding the options

&width=100&height=100&crop-to-fit

What does "processing the image" involves?

Add &verbose to the link to get a verbose output of what is happens during image processing. This is useful for developers and those who seek a deeper understanding on how it works behind the scene.

Check your system

Open up webroot/check_system.php if you are uncertain that your system has the right extensions loaded.

How does it work?

Review the settings in webroot/img_config.php and check out webroot/img.php on how it uses CImage.

The programatic flow, just to get you oriented in the environment, is.

  1. Start in img.php.
  2. img.php reads configuration details from img_config.php (if the config-file is available).
  3. img.php reads and processes incoming $_GET arguments to prepare using CImage.
  4. img.php uses CImage.
  5. CImage processes, caches and outputs the image according to how its used.

Read on to learn more on how to use img.php.

Basic usage

Select the source

Open an image through img.php by using its src attribute.

img.php?src=kodim13.png

It looks like this.

All images are stored in a directory structure and you access them as:

?src=dir1/dir2/image.png

Resize using constraints on width and height

Create a thumbnail of the image by applying constraints on width and height, or one of them.

By setting width, height or both, the image gets resized to be not larger than the defined dimensions and keeping its original aspect ratio.

Think of the constraints as a imaginary box where the image should fit. With width=150 and height=150 the box would have the dimension of 150x150px. A landscape image would fit in that box and its width would be 150px and its height depending on the aspect ratio, but for sure less than 150px. A portrait image would fit with a height of 150px and the width depending on the aspect ratio, but surely less than 150px.

Resize to fit a certain dimension

Creating a thumbnail with a certain dimension of width and height, usually involves stretching or cropping the image to fit in the selected dimensions. Here is how you create a image that has the exact dimensions of 300x150 pixels, by either stretching, cropping or fill to fit.

Learn to crop your images, creative cropping can make wonderful images from appearingly useless originals.

Stretching might work, like in the above example where you can not really notice that the image is stretched. But usually, stretching is not that a good option since it distorts the ratio. Stretching a face may not turn out particularly well.

Fill to fit is useful when you have some image that must fit in a certain dimension and stretching nor cropping can do it. Carefully choose the background color to make a good resulting image. Choose the same background color as your website and no one will notice.

List of parameters

img.php supports a lot of parameters. Combine the parameters to get the desired behavior and resulting image. For example, take the original image, resize it using width, aspect-ratio and crop-to-fit, apply a sharpen effect, save the image as JPEG using quality 30.

img.php?src=kodim13.png&w=600&aspect-ratio=4 &crop-to-fit&sharpen&save-as=jpg&q=30

<img src=https://cimage.se/cimage/imgd.php?src=example/kodim13.png&w=600&aspect-ratio=4&crop-to-fit&sharpen&save-as=jpg&q=30 alt=''>

Here is a list of all parameters that you can use together with img.php, grouped by its basic intent of usage.

Mandatory options and debugging

Option src is the only mandatory option. The options in this section is useful for debugging or deciding what version of the target image is used.

Options for deciding width and height of target image

These options are all affecting the final dimensions, width and height, of the resulting image.

Options for resize strategy

These options affect strategy to use when resizing an image into a target image that has both width and height set.

Options for cropping part of image

These options enable to decide what part of image to crop out.

General processing options

These options are general options affecting processing.

Processing of image before resizing

This option are executed before the image is resized.

Processing of image after resizing

These options are executed after the image is resized.

Saving image, affecting quality and file size

Options for saving the target image.

Carry on reading to view examples on how to use and combine the parameters to achieve desired effects and target images.

The configuration settings in _config.php

There are several configurations settings that can be used to change the behaviour of img.php. Here is an overview, listed as they appear in the default config-file.

Consult the file webroot/img-config.php for a complete list together with the default values for each configuration setting. There is an appendix where you can see the default config-file.

Create and name the config file

The file img.php looks for the config-file img_config.php, and uses it if its found. The three files where everything is included -- imgd.php, imgp.php and imgs.php -- includes an empty $config-array which can be overridden by saving a config-file in the same directory. If the script is imgp.php then name the config-file imgp_config.php and it will find it and use those settings.

Debugging image processing

You can visualize what happens during image processing by adding the v, verbose parameter. It will then display the resulting image together with a verbose output on what is actually happening behind the scene.

This can be most useful for debugging and to understand what actually happen.

The parameter nc, no-cache ignores the cached item and will always create a new cached item.

The parameter so, skip-original skips the original image, even it that is a best fit. As a result a cached image is created and displayed.

A JSON representation of the image

You can ge a JSON representation of the image by adding the option json. This can be useful if you need to know the actual dimension of the image.

For example, the following image is created like this:

&w=300&save-as=jpg

Its JSON-representation is retrieved like this:

&w=300&save-as=jpg&json

Which gives the following result.

{  
    "src":"kodim24.png",
    "srcGmdate":"Wed, 12 Feb 2014 13:46:19",
    "cache":"_._kodim24_300_200_q60.jpg",
    "cacheGmdate":"Sat, 06 Dec 2014 14:09:50",
    "filename":"_._kodim24_300_200_q60.jpg",
    "width":300,
    "height":200,
    "aspectRatio":1.5,
    "size":11008,
    "colors":25751
}

I'll use this feature for ease testing of img.php and CImage. But the feature can also be useful when one really want complete control over the resulting dimension of an image.

Implications and considerations

Here are some thoughts when applying img.php on a live system.

Select the proper mode

Select the proper mode for img.php. Set it to "strict" or "production" to prevent outsiders to get information about your system. Use only "development" for internal use since its quite verbose in its nature of error reporting.

Put the installation directory outside web root

Edit the config file to put the installation directory -- and the cache directory -- outside of the web root. Best practice would be to store the installation directory and cache, outside of the web root. The only thing needed in the web root is img.php and img_config.php (if used) which can be placed, for example, in /img/img.php or just as /img.php.

Friendly urls through .htaccess

Use .htaccessand rewrite rules (Apache) to get friendly image urls. Put img.php in the /img directory. Put the file .htaccess in the web root.

.htaccess for img.php.

#
# Rewrite to have friendly urls to img.php, edit it to suite your environment.
#
# The example is set up as following.
#
#  img                 A directory where all images are stored
#  img/me.jpg          Access a image as usually.
#  img/img.php         This is where I choose to place img.php (and img_config.php).
#  image/me.jpg        Access a image though img.php using htaccess rewrite.
#  image/me.jpg?w=300  Using options to img.php.
# 
# Subdirectories also work.
#  img/me/me.jpg          Direct access to the image.
#  image/me/me.jpg        Accessed through img.php.
#  image/me/me.jpg?w=300  Using options to img.php.
#
RewriteRule ^image/(.*)$        img/img.php?src=$1 [QSA,NC,L]

You can now access all images through either /image/car.jpg (which uses img.php) or as usual through /img/car.jpg without passing through img.php. You send the arguments as usual.

/image/car.jpg?w=300&sharpen

Or a image that resides in a subdirectory.

/image/all-cars/car.jpg?w=300&sharpen

The result is good readable urls to your images. Its easy for the search engine to track and you can use the directory structure already existing in /img. Just like one wants to have it.

Monitor cache size

There is a utility cache.bash included for monitoring the size of the cache-directory. It generates an output like this.

$ ./cache.bash
Usage: ./cache.bash [cache-dir]   

$ ./cache.bash cache                         
Total size:       27M                                            
Number of files:  225                                            
                                                                 
Top-5 largest files:                                             
1032    cache/_._kodim08_768_512_q60convolvesharpen.png          
960     cache/_._kodim08_768_512_q60convolveemboss.png           
932     cache/_._kodim08_768_512_q60_rb45.png                    
932     cache/_._kodim08_768_512_q60_ra45.png                    
856     cache/_._kodim08_768_512_q60_rb90.png                    
                                                                 
Last-5 created files:                                            
2014-11-26 16:51 cache/_._kodim08_768_512_q60convolvelighten.png 
2014-11-26 16:51 cache/_._kodim08_768_512_q60convolveblur.png    
2014-11-26 16:48 cache/_._kodim08_400_267_q60convolvesharpen.png 
2014-11-26 16:48 cache/_._kodim08_400_267_q60convolvelighten.png 
2014-11-26 16:48 cache/_._kodim08_400_267_q60convolveemboss.png  
                                                                 
Last-5 accessed files:                                           
2014-11-27 16:12 _._wider_900_581_q60.jpg                        
2014-11-27 16:12 _._wider_750_484_q60.jpg                        
2014-11-27 16:12 _._wider_640_413_q60.jpg                        
2014-11-27 16:12 _._wider_640_200_c640-200-0-100_q60.jpg         
2014-11-27 16:12 _._wider_600_387_q60.jpg                        

Use it as a base if you feel the need to monitor the size och the cache-directory.

Read-only cache

The cache directory need to be writable for img.php to create new files. But its possible to first create all cache-files and then set the directory to be read-only. This will give you a way of shutting of img.php from creating new cache files. img.php will then continue to work for all images having a cached version but will fail if someone tries to create a new, not previously cached, version of the image.

Post-processing with external tools

You can use external tools to post-process the images to optimize the file size. This option is available for JPEG and for PNG images. Post-processing is disabled by default, edit img_config.php to enable it.

It takes additional time to do post processing, it can take up to a couple of seconds. This is processing to create the cached image, thereafter the cached version will be used and no more post processing needs to be done.

These tools for post processing is not a part of CImage and img.php, you need to download and install them separately. I use them myself on my system to get an optimal file size.

Allowing remote download of images

You can allow img.php to download remote images. That can be enabled in the config-file. However, before doing so, consider the implications on allowing anyone to download a file, hopefully an image, to your server and then the possibility to access it through the webserver.

That sounds scary. It should.

For my own sake I will use it like this, since I consider it a most useful feature.

  • Create a special version of img.php that has remote download allowed, hide it from public usage.
  • Always use a password.
  • Download and process the image and save it as an alias.
  • Integrate the image into your webpage and use the image in the alias directory.

This is an easy way to quickly download a remote image, process and share it.

So, its a scary feature and I might regret I did put it in. Still, its disabled by default and you enable it on your own risk. I have tried to make it as secure as I can, but I might have missed something. I will run it on my own system so I guess I'll find out how secure it is.

Community

There is a Swedish forum where you can ask questions, even in English. The forum is a general forum for education in web development, it is not specific for this software.

Ask questions on CImage and img.php in the PHP sub forum.

Or ask it on GitHub by creating an issue -- that would be the best place to ask questions.

Or if you fancy irc.

  • irc://irc.bsnet.se/#db-o-webb
  • irc://irc.freenode.net/#dbwebb

Trouble- and feature requests

Use GitHub to report issues. Always include the following.

  1. Describe very shortly: What are you trying to achieve, what happens, what did you expect.
  2. Parameter list used for img.php.
  3. The image used.

If you request a feature, describe its usage and argument for why you think it fits into CImage and img.php.

Feel free to fork, clone and create pull requests.

 .
..:  Copyright 2012-2015 by Mikael Roos (me@mikaelroos.se)