PHP has built in support for reading EXIF and IPTC metadata, but I can't find any way to read XMP?

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5 Answers

up vote 8 down vote accepted

XMP data is literally embedded into the image file so can extract it with PHP's string-functions from the image file itself.

The following demonstrates this procedure (I'm using SimpleXML but every other XML API or even simple and clever string parsing may give you equal results):

$content = file_get_contents($image);
$xmp_data_start = strpos($content, '<x:xmpmeta');
$xmp_data_end   = strpos($content, '</x:xmpmeta>');
$xmp_length     = $xmp_data_end - $xmp_data_start;
$xmp_data       = substr($content, $xmp_data_start, $xmp_length + 12);
$xmp            = simplexml_load_string($xmp_data);

Just two remarks:

  • XMP makes heavy use of XML namespaces, so you'll have to keep an eye on that when parsing the XMP data with some XML tools.
  • considering the possible size of image files, you'll perhaps not be able to use file_get_contents() as this function loads the whole image into memory. Using fopen() to open a file stream resource and checking chunks of data for the key-sequences <x:xmpmeta and </x:xmpmeta> will significantly reduce the memory footprint.
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That would explain why there is no XMP specific functions in PHP. – Liam Oct 16 '09 at 14:32
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I've developped the Xmp Php Tookit extension : it's a php5 extension based on the adobe xmp toolkit, which provide the main classes and method to read/write/parse xmp metadatas from jpeg, psd, pdf, video, audio... This extension is under gpl licence. A new release will be available soon, for php 5.3 (now only compatible with php 5.2.x), and should be available on windows and macosx (now only for freebsd and linux systems). http://xmpphptoolkit.sourceforge.net/

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A simple way on linux is to call the exiv2 program, available in an eponymous package on debian.

$ exiv2 -e X extract image.jpg

will produce image.xmp containing embedded XMP which is now yours to parse.

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I'm only replying to this after so much time because this seems to be the best result when searching Google for how to parse XMP data. I've seen this nearly identical snippet used in code a few times and it's a terrible waste of memory. Here is an example of the fopen() method Stefan mentions after his example, reading 1024 bytes at a time (of course, you could make the chunk size a parameter, just be sure to validate it!):

function getXmpData($filename)
{
   $chunk_size = 1024;
   $buffer = NULL;

   if (($file_pointer = fopen($filename, 'r')) === FALSE)
   {
      throw new RuntimeException('Could not open file for reading');
   }

   $found_start = FALSE;

   while (($chunk = fread($file_pointer, $chunk_size)) !== FALSE) 
   {
      if (($pos = strpos($chunk, '<x:xmpmeta')) !== FALSE)
      {
         $found_start = TRUE;
         $buffer .= substr($chunk, $pos); 
      }
      elseif (($pos = strpos($chunk, '</x:xmpmeta>')) !== FALSE)
      {
         $buffer .= substr($chunk, 0, $pos + 12);
         break; 
      }
      elseif ($found_start)
      {
         $buffer .= $chunk;
      }
      else
      {
         break;
      }
      // end else //
   }
   // end while // (($chunk = fread($file_pointer, $chunk_size) !== FALSE) //

   fclose($file_pointer);

   return $buffer;
}
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it is worth noting that this hangs when the image contains no XMP data, although I'm sure that this can be easily solved by one who knows how. – Nico Burns May 22 '11 at 18:09
I added an else\break condition to the while loop which kills the loop if no XMP elements exist in the file – Bryan Geraghty Apr 30 at 18:14
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Bryan's solution was the best one so far, but it had a few issues so I modified it to simplify it, and remove some functionality.

There were three issues I found with his solution:

A) If the chunk extracted falls right in between one of the strings we're searching for, it won't find it. Small chunk sizes are more likely to cause this issue.

B) If the chunk contains both the start AND the end, it won't find it. This is an easy one to fix with an extra if statement to recheck the chunk that the start is found in to see if the end is also found.

C) The else statement added to the end to break the while loop if it doesn't find the xmp data has a side effect that if the start element isn't found on the first pass, it will not check anymore chunks. This is likely easy to fix too, but with the first issue it's not worth it.

My solution below isn't as powerful, but it's more robust. It will only check one chunk, and extract the data from that. It will only work if the start and end are in that chunk, so the chunk size needs to be large enough to ensure that it always captures that data. From my experience with Adobe Photoshop/Lightroom exported files, the xmp data typically starts at around 1kB, and ends at around 2kB. My chunk size of 4k seems to work nicely for my images.

function getXmpData($filename)
{
    $chunk_size = 4096;
    $buffer = NULL;

    if (($file_pointer = fopen($filename, 'r')) === FALSE) {
        throw new RuntimeException('Could not open file for reading');
    }

    $chunk = fread($file_pointer, $chunk_size);
    if (($posStart = strpos($chunk, '<x:xmpmeta')) !== FALSE) {
        $buffer = substr($chunk, $posStart);
        $posEnd = strpos($buffer, '</x:xmpmeta>');
        $buffer = substr($buffer, 0, $posEnd + 12);
    }
    fclose($file_pointer);
    return $buffer;
}
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