5.2 KiB
Ordigi
Description
This tool aims to make media files organized among giving pattern. It is based on exif metadata and use Sqlite database.
Goals:
- Organize your existing collection of photos or others media types into a customizable folder structure.
- Record metadata and other file data to an Sqlite database
- Ability to edit metadata
Install
Ordigi relies on the great ExifTool library by Phil Harvey. Make sure is installed.
Clone this repository and install ordigi:
pip install .
Usage Instructions
Client interface
You can invoke several commands from the client interface.
Use ordigi --help
and ordigi [command] --help
for usage
instructions. For each command there are several options that can be invoked.
Import photos to collection
The default behavior is to move files from one or several sources directories
to your destination directory. However, if you want to copy use -c
or
--copy
flag.
ordigi import -c /source1 /source2 /collection
Sort photos into collection
The sort
command is essentially the same as import but restricted to the files already into the
collection.
ordigi sort /subdir1 /subdir2 /collection
Compare images into collection
Sort file by similarity:
ordigi compare /subdir1 /subdir2 /collection
Undo sort files:
ordigi compare --revert-compare /subdir1 /subdir2 /collection
Verify collection against bit rot / data rot
ordigi check
Edit metadata and Reorganize by changing location and dates (WIP)
ordigi edit --location="Las Vegas, NV" --sort
ordigi edit --time="2015-04-15" --sort
Configuration
Config file
The sample configuration file ordigi.conf
can be copied to ~/.config/ordigi/ordigi.conf
(default location).
Numerous of option like the folder structure, exclusions and other options can be configured in this file.
Folder structure and name
The folder structure and name can be customized via placeholders, a f-String like bracket keywords. Each keyword can be freely combined in any part of the path pattern.
Default folder structure:
dirs_path=<%Y>/<%m-%b>-<city>-<folder>
name=<%Y%m%d-%H%M%S>-<%u<original_name>|%u<basename>>.%l<ext>
Example folder structure:
├── 2015
│ ├── 06-Jun-California
│ │ ├── 20150629_163414-img_3900.jpg
│ │ └── 20150629_170706-img_3901.jpg
│ └── Paris
│ └── 20150630_024043-img_3903.jpg
├── 2015
│ ├── 07-Jul-Mountain View
│ │ ├── 20150719_171637-img_9426.jpg
│ │ └── 20150724_190633-img_9432.jpg
└── 2015
│ ├── 09-Sep
│ ├── 20150927_014138-_dsc8705.dng
│ └── 20150927_014138-_dsc8705.nef
The folder structure use standard unix path separator (/
). Fallback folder part can be optionally specified using a pipe separator and brackets (<.*|.*>
).
Valid keywords are:
-
Date string like %Y%m%d pattern For details of the supported formats see strftime.org.
-
Geolocation info from OpenStreetMap: country, city, location, state
-
Folder structure of source subdirectories like folder or folders[1:] pattern, similar to python list syntax.
-
File data : basename, ext, name, original_name
-
Exif metadata info: album, camera_make, camera_model, title.
-
custom string using custom keyword.
-
Special modifiers %u/%l for upper/lower case respectively.
The default file path structure would look like 2015/07-Jul-Mountain_View/20150712-142231-original_name.jpg
.
Retrieving data from media
EXIF and XMP tags
Ordigi use embedded Exif metadata to organize media files and store them in a Sqlite database.
Data type | Tags | Notes |
---|---|---|
Date Original | EXIF:DateTimeOriginal, H264:DateTimeOriginal, EXIF:ModifyDate, file created, file modified | |
Date Created | EXIF:CreateDate, QuickTime:CreationDate, QuickTime:CreateDate, QuickTime:CreationDate-und-US, QuickTime:MediaCreateDate | |
Date Modified | 'File:FileModifyDate', 'QuickTime:ModifyDate' | |
Location | EXIF:GPSLatitude/EXIF:GPSLatitudeRef, EXIF:GPSLongitude/EXIF:GPSLongitudeRef, XMP:GPSLatitude, Composite:GPSLatitude, XMP:GPSLongitude, Composite:GPSLongitude | Composite tags are read-only |
Title | XMP:Title, XMP:DisplayName | |
Album | XMP-xmpDM:Album, XMP:Album | XMP:Album is user defined in configs/ExifTool_config for backwards compatability |
Camera Make | EXIF:Make, QuickTime:Make, EXIF:Model, QuickTime:Model |
For example, the media date can be retrieved, by order of preference, from
Date Original, Date Created. Optionally Date Modified and even filename date string can be used, depending of options used (see ordigi sort --help
).
Geolocation info
Ordigi use location Exif metadata Nominatim geocoder to retrive geolocation info from OpenStreetMap
Credits
The code is based on Elodie media organizer and take inspiration from SortPhotos and OSXPhotos for the Exiftool module.