I'm trying to load a PNG image using SDL but the program doesn't work and this error appears in the console
libpng warning: iCCP: known incorrect sRGB profile
Why does this warning appear? What should I do to solve this problem?
Some applications treat warnings as errors; if you are using such an application, you do have to remove the chunk. You can do that with any variety of PNG editors, like ImageMagick.
With Windows CMD prompt, you will need to cd (change directory) into the folder with the images you want to focus on before you can use the commands listed below.
Libpng-1.6 is more stringent about checking ICC profiles than previous versions; you can ignore the warning. To get rid of it, remove the iCCP chunk from the PNG image.
convert in.png out.png
To remove the invalid iCCP chunk from all of the PNG files in a folder (directory), you can use mogrify from ImageMagick:
mogrify *.png
This requires that your ImageMagick was built with libpng16. You can easily check it by running:
convert -list format | grep PNG
If you'd like to find out which files need to be fixed instead of blindly processing all of them, you can run
pngcrush -n -q *.png
where the -n means don't rewrite the files and -q means suppress most of the output except for warnings. Sorry, there's no option yet in pngcrush to suppress everything but the warnings.
Note: You must have pngcrush installed.
Binary Releases of ImageMagick are here
For Android Projects (Android Studio) navigate into res folder.
For example:
C:\{your_project_folder}\app\src\main\res\drawable-hdpi\mogrify *.png
Use pngcrush to remove the incorrect sRGB profile from the png file:
pngcrush -ow -rem allb -reduce file.png
-ow will overwrite the input file
-rem allb will remove all ancillary chunks except tRNS and gAMA
-reduce does lossless color-type or bit-depth reduction
In the console output you should see Removed the sRGB chunk, and possibly more messages about chunk removals. You will end up with a smaller, optimized PNG file. As the command will overwrite the original file, make sure to create a backup or use version control.
Solution
The incorrect profile could be fixed by:
Opening the image with the incorrect profile using QPixmap::load
Saving the image back to the disk (already with the correct profile) using QPixmap::save
Note: This solution uses the Qt Library.
Example
Here is a minimal example I have written in C++ in order to demonstrate how to implement the proposed solution:
QPixmap pixmap;
pixmap.load("badProfileImage.png");
QFile file("goodProfileImage.png");
file.open(QIODevice::WriteOnly);
pixmap.save(&file, "PNG");
The complete source code of a GUI application based on this example is available on GitHub.
UPDATE FROM 05.12.2019: The answer was and is still valid, however there was a bug in the GUI application I have shared on GitHub, causing the output image to be empty. I have just fixed it and apologise for the inconvenience!
You can also just fix this in photoshop...
Open your .png file.
File -> Save As and in the dialog that opens up uncheck "ICC Profile: sRGB IEC61966-2.1"
Uncheck "As a Copy".
Courageously save over your original .png.
Move on with your life knowing that you've removed just that little bit of evil from the world.
To add to Glenn's great answer, here's what I did to find which files were faulty:
find . -name "*.png" -type f -print0 | xargs \
-0 pngcrush_1_8_8_w64.exe -n -q > pngError.txt 2>&1
I used the find and xargs because pngcrush could not handle lots of arguments (which were returned by **/*.png). The -print0 and -0 is required to handle file names containing spaces.
Then search in the output for these lines: iCCP: Not recognizing known sRGB profile that has been edited.
./Installer/Images/installer_background.png:
Total length of data found in critical chunks = 11286
pngcrush: iCCP: Not recognizing known sRGB profile that has been edited
And for each of those, run mogrify on it to fix them.
mogrify ./Installer/Images/installer_background.png
Doing this prevents having a commit changing every single png file in the repository when only a few have actually been modified. Plus it has the advantage to show exactly which files were faulty.
I tested this on Windows with a Cygwin console and a zsh shell. Thanks again to Glenn who put most of the above, I'm just adding an answer as it's usually easier to find than comments :)
After trying a couple of the suggestions on this page I ended up using the pngcrush solution. You can use the bash script below to recursively detect and fix bad png profiles. Just pass it the full path to the directory you want to search for png files.
fixpng "/path/to/png/folder"
The script:
#!/bin/bash
FILES=$(find "$1" -type f -iname '*.png')
FIXED=0
for f in $FILES; do
WARN=$(pngcrush -n -warn "$f" 2>&1)
if [[ "$WARN" == *"PCS illuminant is not D50"* ]] || [[ "$WARN" == *"known incorrect sRGB profile"* ]]; then
pngcrush -s -ow -rem allb -reduce "$f"
FIXED=$((FIXED + 1))
fi
done
echo "$FIXED errors fixed"
There is an easier way to fix this issue with Mac OS and Homebrew:
Install homebrew if it is not installed yet
$brew install libpng
$pngfix --strip=color --out=file2.png file.png
or to do it with every file in the current directory:
mkdir tmp; for f in ./*.png; do pngfix --strip=color --out=tmp/"$f" "$f"; done
It will create a fixed copy for each png file in the current directory and put it in the the tmp subdirectory. After that, if everything is OK, you just need to override the original files.
Another tip is to use the Keynote and Preview applications to create the icons. I draw them using Keynote, in the size of about 120x120 pixels, over a slide with a white background (the option to make polygons editable is great!). Before exporting to Preview, I draw a rectangle around the icon (without any fill or shadow, just the outline, with the size of about 135x135) and copy everything to the clipboard. After that, you just need to open it with the Preview tool using "New from Clipboard", select a 128x128 pixels area around the icon, copy, use "New from Clipboard" again, and export it to PNG. You won't need to run the pngfix tool.
Thanks to the fantastic answer from Glenn, I used ImageMagik's "mogrify *.png" functionality. However, I had images buried in sub-folders, so I used this simple Python script to apply this to all images in all sub-folders and thought it might help others:
import os
import subprocess
def system_call(args, cwd="."):
print("Running '{}' in '{}'".format(str(args), cwd))
subprocess.call(args, cwd=cwd)
pass
def fix_image_files(root=os.curdir):
for path, dirs, files in os.walk(os.path.abspath(root)):
# sys.stdout.write('.')
for dir in dirs:
system_call("mogrify *.png", "{}".format(os.path.join(path, dir)))
fix_image_files(os.curdir)
some background info on this:
Some changes in libpng version 1.6+ cause it to issue a warning or
even not work correctly with the original HP/MS sRGB profile, leading
to the following stderr: libpng warning: iCCP: known incorrect sRGB
profile The old profile uses a D50 whitepoint, where D65 is standard.
This profile is not uncommon, being used by Adobe Photoshop, although
it was not embedded into images by default.
(source: https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Libpng_errors)
Error detection in some chunks has improved; in particular the iCCP
chunk reader now does pretty complete validation of the basic format.
Some bad profiles that were previously accepted are now rejected, in
particular the very old broken Microsoft/HP sRGB profile. The PNG spec
requirement that only grayscale profiles may appear in images with
color type 0 or 4 and that even if the image only contains gray
pixels, only RGB profiles may appear in images with color type 2, 3,
or 6, is now enforced. The sRGB chunk is allowed to appear in images
with any color type.
(source: https://forum.qt.io/topic/58638/solved-libpng-warning-iccp-known-incorrect-srgb-profile-drive-me-nuts/16)
Using IrfanView image viewer in Windows, I simply resaved the PNG image and that corrected the problem.
Some of the proposed answers use pngcrush with the -rem allb option, which the documentation says is like "surgery with a chainsaw." The option removes many chunks. To prevent the "iCCP: known incorrect sRGB profile" warning it is sufficient to remove the iCCP chunk, as follows:
pngcrush -ow -rem iCCP filename.png
Extending the friederbluemle solution, download the pngcrush and then use the code like this if you are running it on multiple png files
path =r"C:\\project\\project\\images" # path to all .png images
import os
png_files =[]
for dirpath, subdirs, files in os.walk(path):
for x in files:
if x.endswith(".png"):
png_files.append(os.path.join(dirpath, x))
file =r'C:\\Users\\user\\Downloads\\pngcrush_1_8_9_w64.exe' #pngcrush file
for name in png_files:
cmd = r'{} -ow -rem allb -reduce {}'.format(file,name)
os.system(cmd)
here all the png file related to projects are in 1 folder.
I ran those two commands in the root of the project and its fixed.
Basically redirect the output of the "find" command to a text file to use as your list of files to process. Then you can read that text file into "mogrify" using the "#" flag:
find *.png -mtime -1 > list.txt
mogrify -resize 50% #list.txt
That would use "find" to get all the *.png images newer than 1 day and print them to a file named "list.txt". Then "mogrify" reads that list, processes the images, and overwrites the originals with the resized versions. There may be minor differences in the behavior of "find" from one system to another, so you'll have to check the man page for the exact usage.
When I training yolo, the warninglibpng warning: iCCP: known incorrect sRGB profile occurs each epoch. Then I use bash to find the png, then use python3 and opencv(cv2) to rewrite the png files. So, the warning just occurs when rewriting. Steps as follow:
step 1. Create a python file:
# rewrite.py
import cv2, sys, os
fpath = sys.argv[1]
if os.path.exists(fpath):
cv2.imwrite(fpath, cv2.imread(fpath))
step 2. In bash, run:
# cd your image dir
# then find and rewrite png file
find . -iname "*.png" | xargs python3 rewrite.py
for PHP developers having this issue with imagecreatefrompng function
you can try suppressing the warning using #
$img = #imagecreatefrompng($file);
Here is a ridiculously brute force answer:
I modified the gradlew script. Here is my new exec command at the end of the file in the
exec "$JAVACMD" "${JVM_OPTS[#]}" -classpath "$CLASSPATH" org.gradle.wrapper.GradleWrapperMain "$#" **| grep -v "libpng warning:"**
i have problem with magick tool on php
use this tool on my laptop and my server (bluehost)
the weird part is the function work on laptop but it doesn't work on the server
here command on my laptop
$gp= "C:\Program Files (x86)\ImageMagick-6.8.0-Q16\convert.exe ";
$ch=" -density 300 upload\\temp_img\\*.png";
$ch.=" upload\\pdf_created\\".$id_pro."_".$id.".pdf";
$gp=escapeshellarg($gp);
echo exec($gp.$ch);
and the command on the server
$gp= "convert upload/temp_img/*.png upload/pdf_create/".$id_pro."_".$id.".pdf";
echo shell_exec($gp);
in addition to this problem
convert -resize
doesn't work on the server
but i used other function to resize
Imagemagick is a raster image processor only. PDF is not a raster image, therefore it has to be converted to it before further processing. Imagemagick uses ghostscript to handle this.
So if you can convert images like jpg's with the mentioned command, but not pdf's, it's very likely that ghostscript is missing.
There is problem with the path on the server, On server there is no "C:\Program Files (x86)" path.
Give the relative path like this
$path= realpath(__DIR__.'/../'));
I have an SVG file which contains rotated, semi-transparent, clipped (clip-path) elements (e.g polygons, images). This file is perfectly working in Inkscape but for further image processing I would like to use it in CorelDraw, too. But opening in CorelDraw the result is a mess (X6 actually, but earlier versions do almost the same).
Is there a method to convert SVG to native CDR or any other vector format that is CorelDraw compatible???
The SVG is on an Ubuntu LAMP server and imagemagick, inkscape, libcairo2-dev, librsvg2-bin are installed.
To convert vectors you could use Unicovertor, which is a command-line converter supporting many formats. https://sk1project.net/uc2/
Command in terminal to convert files is
uniconvertor image.svg image.cdr
In php you could then do
system('uniconvertor image.svg image.cdr');
Please note I used this one however it can be sometimes tricky to install on ubuntu, make sure you always have the most updated version (apt-get update).
Multiple distributions are available https://sk1project.net/uc2/download/
You can use inkscape and save SVG image as PDF and import PDF in Corel Draw.
Just a little trick.
It is not the indicated way, nor the correct way. But it works. !!
Rename the file.
myFile.svg to myFile.cdr
I tried the sample codes for imagemagick and it was able to save out document previews to the folder on the server.
I tried sample code for fpdf and it was able to render the PDF file fine when it is sent but fails when I ask it to save for directory.
Researching online it says the resolution to the fpdf issue is to set file permission to 777 (any source access permitted, as I understand). My default folder permission is 755.
I want to ask if anyone knows why I can save with imagemagick but not with fpdf.
The reason, I suspect, is because imagemagick calls requires exec() which is effectively command line access. As I understand it however, fpdf is just a PHP wrapper for PDF libraries already present on the server so should have the same availability to exec().
Haven't had a chance to go through the code of fpdf yet but as I am a noob to PHP I don't think that is going to be particularly enlightening.
Please help!
EDIT:
As requested
FPDF
$pdf->Output('testdocument.pdf', 'F');
http://www.fpdf.org/en/doc/output.htm
Imagmagick
exec('convert "docprev.pdf[0]" -colorspace RGB -geometry 200 "document2.png"');
So those are the output commands of FPDF and Imagemagick respectively.
I want to create thumbnails out of PDF files to be able to display a short preview of the PDF file on a website.
I tried it by using ImageMagick. Unfortunately the results aren't very pleasing.
The resulting images are very fuzzy.
Example Thumbnail (fuzzy):
Original PDF: (see Comment)
Command: convert -thumbnail x800 k.pdf[0] test.png
Is my convert command misconfigured or do you know any better way achieving my goal?
Your original pdf is smaller than the thumbnail you're creating. Imagemagick scales the image to match the requested dimensions. Use the following parameters:
convert -scale '800x800+0+0>' -colorspace rgb -strip in.pdf[0] out.png
The trailing > in the scale parameter tells Imagemagick to not scale the image to larger than the original.
Edit: Imagemagick uses Ghostscript to render PDF files. You can use Ghostscript directly if you need to set some parameters, like resolution to get a better image. Default resolution is 72 DPI which means that an A4 paper has size of 595 x 841 pixels. With 150 DPI you'll get twice the number of pixels. E.g.
gs -q -dBATCH -dNOPAUSE -sDEVICE=pngalpha -dMAxBitmap=500000000 -dAlignToPixles=0 -dGridFitTT=0 -r150x150 -sOutputFile=out.png in.pdf
The above command is almost identical to the one Imagemagick uses. Note the -r parameter which sets 150 DPI resolution. You can use ImageMagick to scale the resulting image to smaller size.
Using a higher resolution will reduce fuzziness when you resize the image.
You can just use Google Docs.
https://docs.google.com/viewer?a=bi&pagenumber=1&url=http://.../sample.pdf