75

I want to convert an image to byte array and vice versa. Here, the user will enter the name of the image (.jpg) and program will read it from the file and will convert it to a byte array.

3
  • 7
    Likely not a duplicate: The question asker means compressed image file to raster, not how to read compressed bytes.
    – Alex I
    Aug 15, 2015 at 7:52
  • 7
    Agree, this is not a duplicate of the marked question (at least not by referring to the accepted answer). Voting to reopen.
    – Harald K
    Aug 29, 2015 at 13:35
  • 3
    This is not a duplicate, as File is very different from Image. Feb 5, 2016 at 23:31

9 Answers 9

83

If you are using JDK 7 you can use the following code..

import java.nio.file.Files;
import java.io.File;

File fi = new File("myfile.jpg");
byte[] fileContent = Files.readAllBytes(fi.toPath())
0
72

BufferedImage consists of two main classes: Raster & ColorModel. Raster itself consists of two classes, DataBufferByte for image content while the other for pixel color.

if you want the data from DataBufferByte, use:

public byte[] extractBytes (String ImageName) throws IOException {
 // open image
 File imgPath = new File(ImageName);
 BufferedImage bufferedImage = ImageIO.read(imgPath);

 // get DataBufferBytes from Raster
 WritableRaster raster = bufferedImage .getRaster();
 DataBufferByte data   = (DataBufferByte) raster.getDataBuffer();

 return ( data.getData() );
}

now you can process these bytes by hiding text in lsb for example, or process it the way you want.

7
  • if the image is backen by a short array (which was the case for me and a tif image) it will give you a DataBufferShort resulting in a cast exception
    – Karussell
    Jun 21, 2014 at 8:55
  • for this classes do i need any extra jars?
    – praveen
    Jun 30, 2014 at 5:36
  • No, in Eclipse just use Ctrl + Shift + o.
    – RichardK
    Feb 3, 2015 at 8:54
  • 12
    Sorry, but this answer is nonsense. Getting bytes from an image file is not different from getting bytes from an arbitrary file. You don't need Java 2D API for this at all. This approach is clumsy and would only be necessary when you're actually interested in manipulating the image in some way (resizing, cropping, colorizing, etc). Just use Files#readAllBytes() or any other sane way you'd usually use on any arbitrary file.
    – BalusC
    May 10, 2015 at 17:21
  • 5
    the context for image processing. Aug 15, 2015 at 15:59
34
File fnew=new File("/tmp/rose.jpg");
BufferedImage originalImage=ImageIO.read(fnew);
ByteArrayOutputStream baos=new ByteArrayOutputStream();
ImageIO.write(originalImage, "jpg", baos );
byte[] imageInByte=baos.toByteArray();
0
7

Try this code snippet

BufferedImage image = ImageIO.read(new File("filename.jpg"));

// Process image

ImageIO.write(image, "jpg", new File("output.jpg"));
6

Here is a complete version of code for doing this. I have tested it. The BufferedImage and Base64 class do the trick mainly. Also some parameter needs to be set correctly.

public class SimpleConvertImage {
    public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException{
        String dirName="C:\\";
        ByteArrayOutputStream baos=new ByteArrayOutputStream(1000);
        BufferedImage img=ImageIO.read(new File(dirName,"rose.jpg"));
        ImageIO.write(img, "jpg", baos);
        baos.flush();

        String base64String=Base64.encode(baos.toByteArray());
        baos.close();

        byte[] bytearray = Base64.decode(base64String);

        BufferedImage imag=ImageIO.read(new ByteArrayInputStream(bytearray));
        ImageIO.write(imag, "jpg", new File(dirName,"snap.jpg"));
    }
}

Reference link

3

Check out javax.imageio, especially ImageReader and ImageWriter as an abstraction for reading and writing image files.

BufferedImage.getRGB(int x, int y) than allows you to get RGB values on the given pixel, which can be chunked into bytes.

Note: I think you don't want to read the raw bytes, because then you have to deal with all the compression/decompression.

2

Using RandomAccessFile would be simple and handy.

RandomAccessFile f = new RandomAccessFile(filepath, "r");
byte[] bytes = new byte[(int) f.length()];
f.read(bytes);
f.close();
1

java.io.FileInputStream is what you're looking for :-)

0

I think the best way to do that is to first read the file into a byte array, then convert the array to an image with ImageIO.read()

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