////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// /// phpThumb() by James Heinrich // // available at http://phpthumb.sourceforge.net /// ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// /// // // This code is released under the GNU GPL: // // http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html // // // // +-----------------------------------------------+ // // | phpThumb() is free to use according to the | // // | terms of the GPL. Donations also gratefully | // // | GPL FAQ: http://gnu.org/licenses/gpl-faq.html | // // | | // // | Donations are gratefully accepted from happy | // // | users :) See http://phpthumb.sourceforge.net | // // | | // // | If you like phpThumb(), please consider | // // | writing a review at HotScripts.com: | // // | http://www.hotscripts.com/Detailed/25654.html | // // | | // // | If you do use this code somewhere, send me | // // | an email and tell me how/where you used it. | // // +-----------------------------------------------+ // // /// ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// Description: phpThumb() uses the GD library to create thumbnails from images (GIF, PNG or JPEG) on the fly. The output size is configurable (can be larger or smaller than the source), and the source may be the entire image or only a portion of the original image. True color and resampling is used if GD v2.0+ is available, otherwise low-color and simple resizing is used. Source image can be a physical file on the server or can be retrieved from a database. GIFs are supported on all versions of GD even if GD does not have native GIF support thanks to the GIFutil class by Fabien Ezber. AntiHotlinking feature prevents other people from using your server to resize their thumbnails, or link to your images from another server. The cache feature reduces server load. Usage: Call phpThumb() just like you would a normal image. Examples: See the "demo" link on http://phpthumb.sourceforge.net for more usage examples). Parameters that can be passed are listed below under "URL Parameters". NOTE: It's recommended you use the local image filename wherever possible (rather than http://) because performance is much better, less (or no) use of temp files, and the last-modified check for cached files doesn't work for remote files. To access files over a LAN with Windows share names you must use the network name (or IP) and not a mapped drive name, for example: //othercomputer/file.jpg - good //192.168.2.1/file.jpg - good z:/file.jpg - won't work This is a PHP limitation (see www.php.net/file-exists) Note: you may want to use "/" slashes instead of "\" if you have magic_quotes_gpc enabled to avoid stripslashes problems, although either slash should work if magic_quotes_gpc is disabled Alternate PATH_INFO-style Usage: phpThumb.php can also be called by passing parameters not after the usual "?" but like this: phpThumb.php/=;x; For example: phpThumb.php/100;pic.jpg phpThumb.php/100;images/pic.jpg phpThumb.php/100;/images/pic.jpg phpThumb.php/100x200;pic.jpg phpThumb.php/x200;pic.jpg phpThumb.php/f=jpeg;q=50;100x200;pic.jpg phpThumb.php/fltr[]=usm;100;pic.jpg must be the last item. Dimensions must be the second- last item. As many key/value pairs for parameters can be passed before those last two items, with each pair joined by equals ("=") and seperated by semicolon (";") Configuration: There are some configuration options you may (but are not required to) change. Most configuration options can be set when you call phpThumb() - see list below), but default configuration options (such as cache directory) are in phpThumb.config.php - this is the only file you should ever modify. The configuration file is distributed as phpThumb.config.php.default to prevent accidental overwriting of old configuration settings. Please migrate your old settings to the new file (if upgrading), delete your old config and rename the default to phpThumb.config.php The amount of memory required for phpThumb depends on several factors: the dimensions of the source image, the dimensions of the output image, whether unsharp masking is applied, whether watermarks are applied, etc. The auto-detection of memory limits works as a general "safe" value. You may be able to exceed the auto value by a small or large amount, depending on whether you apply watermarks and/or sharpening, and the output size of your thumbnails. I do not currently have a reliable formula for calculating such things, but I will attempt to craft one for future versions of phpThumb(). Until then, set "max_source_pixels" in phpThumb.config.php to a value that works well for you (or leave it alone if the defaults give you no problems). The configuration options you should maybe modify are: * cache_directory - thumbnailing is slow and processor- intensive. Enabling caching will dramatically speed up future thumbnail serving * max_source_pixels - This should be auto-detected, but if auto-detection fails and you get an invalid image from large source images, set this to about 20% of your available PHP memory limit. * imagemagick_path - If the source image is larger than max_source_pixels allows, but ImageMagick is available phpThumb() will use it to generate the thumbnail. Calling as an object (not using phpThumb.php): To use a database rather than physical files, or to render output to a file instead of the browser, you should skip phpThumb.php and instantiate your own phpThumb() object as follows: // create new phpThumb() object require_once('phpthumb.class.php'); $phpThumb = new phpThumb(); // set data $phpThumb->setSourceFilename($image_filename); // or $phpThumb->setSourceData($binary_image_data); // or $phpThumb->setSourceImageResource($gd_image_resource); // set parameters (see "URL Parameters" below) $phpThumb->w = 100; // set options (see phpThumb.config.php) // here you must preface each option with "config_" $phpThumb->config_output_format = 'jpeg'; // Set error handling (optional) $phpThumb->config_error_die_on_error = false; // generate & output thumbnail if ($phpThumb->GenerateThumbnail()) { $phpThumb->OutputThumbnail(); // or //if (!$phpThumb->RenderToFile($filename)) { //// do something with debug/error messages //echo 'Failed: '.implode("\n", $phpThumb->debugmessages); //} } else { // do something with debug/error messages echo 'Failed: '.implode("\n", $phpThumb->debugmessages); } If you want to change any of the configuration parameters (see phpThumb.config.php) you can change them like this: $phpThumb->config_ = for example: $phpThumb->config_output_format = 'jpeg'; Note: If you want to loop through and create multiple thumbnails from different image sources, you should create and dispose an instance of phpThumb() each time through the loop and not reuse the object. Note: phpThumb.php is where the caching code is located, if you instantiate your own phpThumb() object that code is bypassed and it's up to you to handle the reading and writing of cached files. Note: High-Security mode is recommended enabled if possible. Set $PHPTHUMB_CONFIG['high_security_enabled'] in phpThumb.config.php to enable it. Each call to phpThumb needs to be made through the function supplied at the bottom of phpThumb.config.php which create the hash: require_once('phpThumb.config.php'); echo ''; /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// URL Parameters: src = filename of source image new = create new image, not thumbnail of existing image. Requires "w" and "h" parameters set. [ex: &new=FF0000|75] - red background, 75% opacity Set to hex color string of background. Opacity is optional (defaults to 100% opaque). w = max width of output thumbnail in pixels h = max height of output thumbnail in pixels wp = max width for portrait images hp = max height for portrait images wl = max width for landscape images hl = max height for landscape images ws = max width for square images hs = max height for square images f = output image format ("jpeg", "png", or "gif") q = JPEG compression (1=worst, 95=best, 75=default) sx = left side of source rectangle (default = 0) (values 0 < sx < 1 represent percentage) sy = top side of source rectangle (default = 0) (values 0 < sy < 1 represent percentage) sw = width of source rectangle (default = fullwidth) (values 0 < sw < 1 represent percentage) sh = height of source rectangle (default = fullheight) (values 0 < sh < 1 represent percentage) zc = zoom-crop. Will auto-crop off the larger dimension so that the image will fill the smaller dimension (requires both "w" and "h"). Set "zc=1" to enable. (overrides both "iar" and "far") bg = background hex color (default = FFFFFF) bc = border hex color (default = 000000) fltr = filter system. Call as an array as follows: - "brit" (Brightness) [ex: &fltr[]=brit|] where is the amount +/- to adjust brightness (range -255 to 255) Availble in PHP5 with bundled GD only. - "cont" (Constrast) [ex: &fltr[]=cont|] where is the amount +/- to adjust contrast (range -255 to 255) Availble in PHP5 with bundled GD only. - "gam" (Gamma Correction) [ex: &fltr[]=gam|] where can be a number >0 to 10+ (default 1.0) Must be >0 (zero gives no effect). There is no max, although beyond 10 is pretty useless. Negative numbers actually do something, maybe not quite the desired effect, but interesting nonetheless. - "sat" (SATuration) [ex: &fltr[]=sat|] where is a number between zero (no change) and -100 (complete desaturation = grayscale), or it can be any positive number for increased saturation. - "ds" (DeSaturate) [ex: &fltr[]=ds|] is an alias for "sat" except values are inverted (positive values remove color, negative values boost saturation) - "gray" (Grayscale) [ex: &fltr[]=gray] remove all color from image, make it grayscale - "th" (Threshold) [ex: &fltr[]=th|] makes image greyscale, then sets all pixels brighter than (range 0-255) to white, and all pixels darker than to black - "rcd" (Reduce Color Depth) [ex: &fltr[]=rcd||] where is the number of colors (2-256) you want in the output image, and is "1" for dithering (deault) or "0" for no dithering - "clr" (Colorize) [ex: &fltr[]=clr||] where is a number between 0 and 100 for the amount of colorization, and is the hex color to colorize to. - "sep" (Sepia) [ex: &fltr[]=sep||] where is a number between 0 and 100 for the amount of colorization (default=50), and is the hex color to colorize to (default=A28065). - "usm" (UnSharpMask) [ex: &fltr[]=usm|||] where is the amount (default = 80), is the radius (default = 0.5), is the threshold (default = 3). - "blur" (Blur) [ex: &fltr[]=blur|] where (0 < < 25) (default = 1) - "gblr" (Gaussian Blur) [ex: &fltr[]=gblr] Availble in PHP5 with bundled GD only. - "sblr" (Selective Blur) [ex: &fltr[]=gblr] Availble in PHP5 with bundled GD only. - "smth" (Smooth) [ex: &fltr[]=smth|] where is the weighting value for the matrix (range -10 to 10, default 6) Availble in PHP5 with bundled GD only. - "lvl" (Levels) [ex: &fltr[]=lvl||| where can be one of 'r', 'g', 'b', 'a' (for Red, Green, Blue, Alpha respectively), or '*' for all channels based on average grayscale value (default). and are the clip points for the levels and are set to clip 0.1% of each end by default. (range = 0-255) and are set to clip 0.1% of each end by default. Use -1 for min and/or max to invoke auto- detect mode. Using default parameters (&fltr[]=lvl) is similar to Auto Contrast in Adobe Photoshop. - "wb" (White Balance) [ex: &fltr[]=wb|] where is the target hex color to white balance on, this color is what "should be" white, or light gray. The filter attempts to maintain brightness so any gray color can theoretically be used. If is omitted the filter guesses based on brightest pixels in each of RGB - "hist" (Histogram) [ex: &fltr[]=hist|||||||] Where is the color band(s) to display, from back to front (one or more of "rgba*" for Red Green Blue Alpha and Grayscale respectively); is a semicolon-seperated list of hex colors to use for each graph band (defaults to FF0000, 00FF00, 0000FF, 999999, FFFFFF respectively); and are the width and height of the overlaid histogram in pixels, or if <= 1 then percentage of source image width/height; is the alignment (same as for "wmi" and "wmt"); is opacity from 0 (transparent) to 100 (opaque) (requires PHP v4.3.2, otherwise 100% opaque); is the edge (and inter-tile) margin in percent - "over" (OVERlay/underlay image) overlays an image on the thumbnail, or overlays the thumbnail on another image (to create a picture frame for example) [ex: &fltr[]=over||||] where is the image filename; is "0" (default) for overlay the image on top of the thumbnail or "1" for overlay the thumbnail on top of the image; is the margin - can be absolute pixels, or if < 1 is a percentage of the thumbnail size [must be < 0.5] (default is 0 for overlay and 10% for underlay); is opacity (0 = transparent, 100 = opaque) (requires PHP v4.3.2, otherwise 100% opaque); (thanks raynerapeØgmail*com, shabazz3Ømsu*edu) - "wmi" (WaterMarkImage) [ex: &fltr[]=wmi||||] where is the filename of the image to overlay; is the alignment (one of BR, BL, TR, TL, C, R, L, T, B, *) where B=bottom, T=top, L=left, R=right, C=centre, *=tile); is opacity from 0 (transparent) to 100 (opaque) (requires PHP v4.3.2, otherwise 100% opaque); is the edge (and inter-tile) margin in percent - "wmt" (WaterMarkText) [ex: &fltr[]=wmt||||||||] where: is the text to use as a watermark; is the font size (1-5 for built-in font, or point size for TrueType fonts); is the alignment (one of BR, BL, TR, TL, C, R, L, T, B, * where B=bottom, T=top, L=left, R=right, C=centre, *=tile); is the hex color of the text; is the filename of the TTF file (optional, if omitted a built-in font will be used); is opacity from 0 (transparent) to 100 (opaque) (requires PHP v4.3.2, otherwise 100% opaque); is the edge (and inter-tile) margin in percent; is the angle (thanks mailØmmjaeger*com) - "flip" [ex: &fltr[]=flip|x or &fltr[]=flip|y] flip image on X or Y axis - "ric" [ex: &fltr[]=ric||] rounds off the corners of the image (to transparent for PNG output), where is the horizontal radius of the curve and is the vertical radius - "elip" [ex: &fltr[]=elip] similar to rounded corners but more extreme - "mask" [ex: &fltr[]=mask|filename.png] greyscale values of mask are applied as the alpha channel to the main image. White is opaque, black is transparent. - "bvl" (BeVeL) [ex: &fltr[]=bvl|||] where is the bevel width, is the hex color for the top and left shading, is the hex color for the bottom and right shading - "bord" (BORDer) [ex: &fltr[]=bord|||| where is the width in pixels, and are horizontal and vertical radii for rounded corners, and is the hex color of the border - "fram" (FRAMe) draws a frame, similar to "bord" but more configurable [ex: &fltr[]=fram|||||] where is the width of the main border, is the width of each side of the bevel part, is the hex color of the main border, is the highlight bevel color, is the shadow bevel color - "drop" (DROP shadow) [ex: &fltr[]=drop||||] where is distance from image to shadow, is width of shadow fade (not yet implemented), is the hex color of the shadow, and is the angle of the shadow (default=225) file = if set then thumbnail will be rendered to this filename, not output and not cached. (Deprecated. Disabled by default since v1.6.0. You should instantiate your own object instead) goto = URL to redirect to after rendering image to file * Must begin with "http://" * Requires file parameter set (Deprecated. Disabled by default since v1.6.0. You should instantiate your own object instead) err = custom error image filename instead of showing error messages (for use on production sites) md5s = MD5 hash of the source image -- if this parameter is passed with the hash of the source image then the source image is not checked for existance or modification and the cached file is used (if available). If 'md5s' is passed an empty string then phpThumb.php dies and outputs the correct MD5 hash value. This parameter is the single-file equivalent of 'cache_source_filemtime_ignore_*' configuration paramters xto = EXIF Thumbnail Only - set to only extract EXIF thumbnail and not do any additional processing ra = Rotate by Angle: angle of rotation in degrees positive = counterclockwise, negative = clockwise ar = Auto Rotate: set to "x" to use EXIF orientation stored by camera. Can also be set to "l" or "L" for landscape, or "p" or "P" for portrait. "l" and "P" rotate the image clockwise, "L" and "p" rotate the image counter-clockwise. aoe = Output Allow Enlarging - override the setting for $CONFIG['output_allow_enlarging'] (1=on, 0=off) ("far" and "iar" both override this and allow output larger than input) iar = Ignore Aspect Ratio - disable proportional resizing and stretch image to fit "h" & "w" (which must both be set). (1=on, 0=off) (overrides "far") far = Force Aspect Ratio - image will be created at size specified by "w" and "h" (which must both be set). Alignment: L=left,R=right,T=top,B=bottom,C=center BL,BR,TL,TR use the appropriate direction if the image is landscape or portrait. maxb = MAXimum Byte size - output quality is auto-set to fit thumbnail into "maxb" bytes (compression quality is adjusted for JPEG, bit depth is adjusted for PNG and GIF) down = filename to save image to. If this is set the browser will prompt to save to this filename rather than display the image Additional Object-only configuration variables: rawImageData = binary data of source image, for example if the source data is from a database. Set this value instead of setting "src". General Notes: * Always use the local image filename wherever possible rather than a full http:// URL because performance is much better, less (or no) use of temp files, and the last-modified check for cached files doesn't work for remote files. * Thumbnails will be scaled proportionately to fit in a box of at most (width * height) pixels (unless "iar" is set) * Thumbnail caching for URL or database sources requires an absolute directory name for $config_cache_directory Physical file cached thumbnails will be recreated if the source file changes, but remote/database files cannot (modification time isn't readily available) * If you need a GUI interface to phpThumb(), or for a user to specify crop settings, or something like that please see the list of known programs in /demo/readme.demos.txt * Cropping images can be specified with either exact pixel values for sx/sy/sw/sh parameters, or if those are set to a value >0 and <1 then these are interpreted as a percentage of the source image width/height. For example, to crop 25% off all sides, you would specify parameters: phpThumb.php?src=pic.jpg&sx=.25&sy=.25&sw=.5&sh=.5 * phpThumb() may have tempfile access issues on servers where Safe Mode is enabled, specificly when accessing a file over HTTP, or when a non-bundled version of GD is in use. Specifying "config_temp_directory" may help * Properly resolving /~user/ style filenames requires apache_lookup_uri(), which is missing or broken in Apache2, or if PHP is not installed as an Apache module. phpThumb() does try and work around this if it is unavailble, but you may have to specify a full filename for "src" if you encounter problems. * phpThumb() should work with PHP v4.0.6+, but seems to have a few quirks before v4.1.0 EXIF thumbnail extraction requires PHP v4.2.0+ Image rotation requires PHP v4.3.0+. There have been reports of problems with PHP older than v4.3.3 Some image filters require PHP v5.0.0+ * phpThumb() works with GD v1.x, but works better with GD v2.0+ because of the true-color image support and ImageCopyResampled(). Also, there appears to be a bug in ImageCopyResized() which is used with GD v1.x where the bottom and/or right line of pixels is set to the background color (due to a rounding error?) NOTE: Please use the bundled version of GD if at all possible (with PHP v4.3.0+) because the non-bundled version has bugs which may cause PHP to crash: * http://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=21518 * http://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=24174 phpThumb() has a workaround for the above bug but there may be other bugs, and the workaround is slow. Most (if not all) filters require GD v2.x to function at all.