26

How can I get dimensions of image without actually downloading it? Is it even possible? I have a list of urls of images and I want to assign width and size to it.

I know there is a way of doing it locally (How to check dimensions of all images in a directory using python?), but I don't want to download all the images.

Edit:

Following ed. suggestions, I edited the code. I came up with this code. Not sure weather it downloads whole file or just a part (as I wanted).

1

11 Answers 11

24

I found the solution on this site to work well:

import urllib
import ImageFile

def getsizes(uri):
    # get file size *and* image size (None if not known)
    file = urllib.urlopen(uri)
    size = file.headers.get("content-length")
    if size: size = int(size)
    p = ImageFile.Parser()
    while 1:
        data = file.read(1024)
        if not data:
            break
        p.feed(data)
        if p.image:
            return size, p.image.size
            break
    file.close()
    return size, None

print getsizes("http://www.pythonware.com/images/small-yoyo.gif")
# (10965, (179, 188))
9
  • 1
    Where does ImageFile comes from?
    – Gocht
    Feb 11, 2016 at 20:54
  • 1
    PIL -- python imaging library
    – jedierikb
    Feb 11, 2016 at 20:57
  • 5
    Take care with the file descriptor in this code: if the image size is retrieved the file is not closed. Oct 3, 2016 at 9:12
  • Can you elaborate @IvanDePazCenteno? Wouldn't a "file.close()" before the return size, p.image.size fix that? And also, is this even a problem? Jul 16, 2018 at 7:36
  • @FabianBosler yes, adding a file.close() before that line would do the trick, even though I would recommend using the with keyword to manage it, as it is a good practice. Definitely yes, it is a problem. Not closing allocated resources will potentially become a disaster in certain contexts, for example in big loops. An allocated resource should always be closed, even if the OS or the interpreter itself can get rid of it. Jul 16, 2018 at 7:58
16

This is based on ed's answer mixed with other things I found on the web. I ran into the same issue as grotos with .read(24). Download getimageinfo.py from here and download ReSeekFile.py from here.

import urllib2
imgdata = urllib2.urlopen(href)
image_type,width,height = getimageinfo.getImageInfo(imgdata)

Modify getimageinfo as such...

import ReseekFile

def getImageInfo(datastream):
    datastream = ReseekFile.ReseekFile(datastream)
    data = str(datastream.read(30))

#Skipping to jpeg

# handle JPEGs
elif (size >= 2) and data.startswith('\377\330'):
    content_type = 'image/jpeg'
    datastream.seek(0)
    datastream.read(2)
    b = datastream.read(1)
    try:
        while (b and ord(b) != 0xDA):
            while (ord(b) != 0xFF): b = datastream.read(1)
            while (ord(b) == 0xFF): b = datastream.read(1)
            if (ord(b) >= 0xC0 and ord(b) <= 0xC3):
                datastream.read(3)
                h, w = struct.unpack(">HH", datastream.read(4))
                break
            else:
                datastream.read(int(struct.unpack(">H", datastream.read(2))[0])-2)
            b = datastream.read(1)
        width = int(w)
        height = int(h)
    except struct.error:
        pass
    except ValueError:
        pass
2
16

This is just a Python 3+ adaptation of an earlier answer here.

from urllib import request as ulreq
from PIL import ImageFile
 
def getsizes(uri):
    # get file size *and* image size (None if not known)
    file = ulreq.urlopen(uri)
    size = file.headers.get("content-length")
    if size: 
        size = int(size)
    p = ImageFile.Parser()
    while True:
        data = file.read(1024)
        if not data:
            break
        p.feed(data)
        if p.image:
            return size, p.image.size
            break
    file.close()
    return(size, None)
1
  • you should obviously use finally for file.close (or better context manager) and not bother anyone with using "break" after return. Jan 9, 2023 at 22:21
10

If you're willing to download the first 24 bytes of each file, then this function (mentioned in johnteslade's answer to the question you mention) will work out the dimensions.

That's probably the least downloading necessary to do the job you want.

import urllib2
start = urllib2.urlopen(image_url).read(24)

Edit (1):

In the case of jpeg files it seems to need more bytes. You could edit the function so that instead of reading a StringIO.StringIO(data) it instead reads the file handle from urlopen. Then it will read exactly as much of the image as it needs to find out the width and height.

5
  • Using this solution, especially .read(24), breaks that script. All works when I use read().
    – grotos
    Sep 18, 2011 at 8:56
  • It's basically the same as an example in the python docs (docs.python.org/library/urllib2.html). What error do you get using (24)? Just using read() (I guess you know) will download the whole file...
    – ed.
    Sep 18, 2011 at 9:02
  • If I run with read(24) ther is some error in getImageInfo function: UnboundLocalError: local variable 'w' referenced before assignment
    – grotos
    Sep 18, 2011 at 9:05
  • Hmm. Try running it with read(50) and see if it works. I think the error must be coming from the jpeg part of the function, so maybe it needs a few more bytes.
    – ed.
    Sep 18, 2011 at 9:07
  • It is the same. I think it only works with read(X), where X is so large that it covers the whole file.
    – grotos
    Sep 18, 2011 at 9:10
7

Since getimageinfo.py mentioned above doesn't work in Python3. Pillow is used instead of it.

Pillow can be found in pypi, or installed by using pip: pip install pillow.


from io import BytesIO
from PIL import Image
import requests
hrefs = ['https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3894/15008518202_b016d7d289_m.jpg','https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3920/15008465772_383e697089_m.jpg','https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3902/14985871946_86abb8c56f_m.jpg']
RANGE = 5000
for href in hrefs:
    req  = requests.get(href,headers={'User-Agent':'Mozilla5.0(Google spider)','Range':'bytes=0-{}'.format(RANGE)})
    im = Image.open(BytesIO(req.content))

    print(im.size)
2
  • 2
    Doesn't this actually download the image? I believe that's what OP is trying to avoid Mar 29, 2017 at 16:01
  • 1
    I'd suggest to use requests' session to reuse TCP connection and use plain HTTP instead of HTTPS if possible. It may dramatically increase performance in some cases.
    – viator
    Nov 30, 2018 at 8:46
6

By using the requests library:

To get the image size in bytes:

Only by getting the headers data from the website: (without downloading the image)

import requests

url = r"https://www.sulitest.org/files/source/Big%20image%20HD/elyx.png"

size = requests.get(url, stream = True).headers['Content-length']
print(size)
## output: 437495

## to see what other headers data you can get:
allheaders = requests.get(url, stream = True).headers
print(allheaders)

To get the image (Width, Height):

We have to download part of the image and let an image library read the image header and retrieve/parse the (Width, Height). here i'm using Pillow.

import requests
from PIL import ImageFile

resume_header = {'Range': 'bytes=0-2000000'}    ## the amount of bytes you will download
data = requests.get(url, stream = True, headers = resume_header).content

p = ImageFile.Parser()
p.feed(data)    ## feed the data to image parser to get photo info from data headers
if p.image:
    print(p.image.size) ## get the image size (Width, Height)
## output: (1400, 1536)
1
  • 2
    This worked like charm! Jan 27, 2022 at 13:58
1

It's not possible to do it directly, but there's a workaround for that. If the files are present on the server, then implement the API endpoint that takes image name as an argument and returns the size.

But if the files are on the different server, you've got no other way but to download the files.

2
  • Based on the other answer for this question this seems to be an incorrect assertion. Aug 26, 2015 at 17:38
  • @SlaterTyranus No, all the other answers just suggest downloading the image (or parts of the image). This answer is the most correct, but the others are valid work-arounds.
    – GreySage
    Mar 3, 2017 at 18:27
1

Unfortunately I can't comment, so this is as an answer:

Use a get query with the header

"Range": "bytes=0-30"

And then simply use

http://code.google.com/p/bfg-pages/source/browse/trunk/pages/getimageinfo.py

If you use python's "requests", it's simply

r = requests.get(image_url, headers={
    "Range": "bytes=0-30"
})
image_info = get_image_info(r.content)

This fixes ed.'s answer and doesn't have any other dependencies (like ReSeekFile.py).

1
  • The provided url is invalid Apr 27, 2018 at 7:24
1

My fixed "getimageInfo.py", work with Python 3.4+, try it, just great!

import io
import struct
import urllib.request as urllib2

def getImageInfo(data):
    data = data
    size = len(data)
    #print(size)
    height = -1
    width = -1
    content_type = ''

    # handle GIFs
    if (size >= 10) and data[:6] in (b'GIF87a', b'GIF89a'):
        # Check to see if content_type is correct
        content_type = 'image/gif'
        w, h = struct.unpack(b"<HH", data[6:10])
        width = int(w)
        height = int(h)

    # See PNG 2. Edition spec (http://www.w3.org/TR/PNG/)
    # Bytes 0-7 are below, 4-byte chunk length, then 'IHDR'
    # and finally the 4-byte width, height
    elif ((size >= 24) and data.startswith(b'\211PNG\r\n\032\n')
          and (data[12:16] == b'IHDR')):
        content_type = 'image/png'
        w, h = struct.unpack(b">LL", data[16:24])
        width = int(w)
        height = int(h)

    # Maybe this is for an older PNG version.
    elif (size >= 16) and data.startswith(b'\211PNG\r\n\032\n'):
        # Check to see if we have the right content type
        content_type = 'image/png'
        w, h = struct.unpack(b">LL", data[8:16])
        width = int(w)
        height = int(h)

    # handle JPEGs
    elif (size >= 2) and data.startswith(b'\377\330'):
        content_type = 'image/jpeg'
        jpeg = io.BytesIO(data)
        jpeg.read(2)
        b = jpeg.read(1)
        try:
            while (b and ord(b) != 0xDA):
                while (ord(b) != 0xFF): b = jpeg.read(1)
                while (ord(b) == 0xFF): b = jpeg.read(1)
                if (ord(b) >= 0xC0 and ord(b) <= 0xC3):
                    jpeg.read(3)
                    h, w = struct.unpack(b">HH", jpeg.read(4))
                    break
                else:
                    jpeg.read(int(struct.unpack(b">H", jpeg.read(2))[0])-2)
                b = jpeg.read(1)
            width = int(w)
            height = int(h)
        except struct.error:
            pass
        except ValueError:
            pass

    return content_type, width, height



#from PIL import Image
#import requests
#hrefs = ['http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3894/15008518202_b016d7d289_m.jpg','https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3920/15008465772_383e697089_m.jpg','https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3902/14985871946_86abb8c56f_m.jpg']
#RANGE = 5000
#for href in hrefs:
    #req  = requests.get(href,headers={'User-Agent':'Mozilla5.0(Google spider)','Range':'bytes=0-{}'.format(RANGE)})
    #im = getImageInfo(req.content)

    #print(im)
req = urllib2.Request("http://vn-sharing.net/forum/images/smilies/onion/ngai.gif", headers={"Range": "5000"})
r = urllib2.urlopen(req)
#f = open("D:\\Pictures\\1.jpg", "rb")
print(getImageInfo(r.read()))
# Output: >> ('image/gif', 50, 50)
#print(getImageInfo(f.read()))

Source code: http://code.google.com/p/bfg-pages/source/browse/trunk/pages/getimageinfo.py

3
  • Hey this is very interesting. Just curious what the RANGE variable is doing... does that limit how many bytes get downloaded? Jun 3, 2016 at 17:03
  • This wasn't working with many JPEGs for me. I found an alternative function (posted as answer) Jun 8, 2016 at 17:36
  • Failed to work on many files. First 5Kb isn't enough
    – TomSawyer
    Sep 10, 2020 at 7:14
0

The shortest code I have come up with downloads only the first 1024 bytes. This can be set lower if you need it to but could give problems with some image types

from io import BytesIO
from urllib.request import urlopen
from PIL import Image
Image.MAX_IMAGE_PIXELS = None # My problem had really big images

def get_image_size_from_url(url):
    response = urlopen(url)
    r = response.read(1024)
    img = Image.open(BytesIO(r))
    return img.size
-1
import requests
from PIL import Image
from io import BytesIO

url = 'http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3488/4051378654_238ca94313.jpg'

img_data = requests.get(url).content    
im = Image.open(BytesIO(img_data))
print (im.size)
1
  • 5
    part of the question was "without actually downloading it". requests.get(url).content will download the image.
    – user3064538
    Sep 12, 2019 at 14:42

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