22

I need to optimize some images, but not change their name.

jpegtran -copy none -optimize image.jpg > image.jpg 

However, this seems to create an filesize of 0. When i do it to a different filename, the size is still exactly the same.

1

6 Answers 6

33

how about:

jpegtran -copy none -optimize -outfile image.jpg image.jpg

I'm not a shell expert by any means, but I think that with your original command, as soon as it is executed, the redirect is set up which overwrites your image.jpg. Then when jpegtran tries to read it in it finds an empty file.

7
  • Clement please provide details, this works for me (and apparently for the poster.)
    – so12311
    May 27, 2011 at 0:04
  • Well, Jpegtran only accept 1 parameter, the original filename. Giving him a 2nd parameter, like you do, makes him throw an exception. This code would work on windows, but not on linux. You'd have to use jpegtran -copy none -optimize -outfile image.jpg > newimage.jpg as OP said, but then, it's not a file replacement. Precision: I tested it on Ubuntu/Jpegtran version 8b , maybe other version would work with your code. May 27, 2011 at 13:36
  • Also the jpegtran -optimize image.jpg > image.jpg doesn't work, as linux first clear and recreate the image.jpg (> image.jpg), and only then launch the command (jpegtran -optimize image.jpg). May 27, 2011 at 13:38
  • 4
    Oh gosh just realized that I typed the command wrong, about 5 times -_-. This is working, I'm sorry. I edited the answer to be able to upvote your answer =) May 31, 2011 at 8:57
  • 3
    A heads-up for anyone else looking at this, it seems this works with version 8d of jpegtran but NOT 6b. Mar 16, 2012 at 12:38
11

I use this script. Works flawlessly. I hope this helps.

https://gist.github.com/iimos/7424025

#! /bin/sh

EXTENSIONS="jpe?g"

if [ -z "$1" ]; then
    DIR="`pwd`"
else
    DIR="$1"
fi

# Optimize JPEG images
find "$DIR" -regextype posix-egrep -regex ".*\.($EXTENSIONS)\$" -type f | xargs -I{} jpegtran -optimize -progressive -outfile "{}.optimized" "{}"

# Rename xxx.jpg.optimized -> xxx.jpg
find "$DIR" -name '*.optimized' -print0 | while read -d $'\0' file; do 
    chown $(stat -c "%U:%G" "${file%.optimized}") "$file"
    chmod $(stat -c "%a" "${file%.optimized}") "$file"
    mv -f "$file" "${file%.optimized}"; 
done

Usage 1:

optimize-images.sh /images/dir

Usage 2:

cd /images/dir
optimize-images.sh 
3
  • Thanks but the script does not work when run inside directories with spaces in their name (it's bad but it happens).
    – kursus
    Nov 11, 2013 at 21:54
  • @kursus Fixed. Thank you for report
    – iimos
    Nov 12, 2013 at 1:20
  • @iMos Thank you! you save my day! #!bin/bash would fix 'Illegal option -d' error
    – sondoha
    Mar 13, 2015 at 20:12
2

I did it in three lines:

jpegtran -optimize image.jpg > image.jpg-opt
cp image.jpg-opt image.jpg
rm image.jpg-opt

Works well.

[edit:] This works only for one file at a time.

1
  • 8
    jpegtran -optimize image.jpg > image.jpg-opt && mv image.jpg-opt image.jpg
    – MarutiB
    Jul 4, 2012 at 5:49
2
jpegtran -copy none -progressive -optimize -outfile filename filename

For comprehensive optimization: -copy none tells jpegtran to suppress all comments and other excess baggage present in the source jpeg, progressive generates a progressive jpeg, -optimize performs the actual optimizations, and -outfile sets the output file name. The last parameter is the input file name: if they are the same, your file is optimized in place.

Edit: you might want to also try mozjpeg, according to this article on lossless jpeg compression tools http://blarg.co.uk/blog/comparison-of-jpeg-lossless-compression-tools

1
1

Without sponge, another alternative with lower HDD or SSD writing access is to use the /dev/shm to save the temporary file and then overwrite it locally right away.

jpegtran -copy none -optimize image.jpg > /dev/shm/tmp.jpg &&  cat /dev/shm/tmp.jpg > ./image.jpg

The concept can be easily adapted into any script, perhaps with caveats about the temporary filename not being the same, in order to avoid collisions if there are multiple instances running at the same time. It's possibly interesting to think about some unique filename pattern generation scheme, perhaps something along the lines of ${originalfilename}-jpgtrantmp-$$.

0

Another option if -outfile is not supported:

jpegtran -copy none -optimize image.jpg | sponge image.jpg

sponge is part of moreutils.

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