Are there any good Ubuntu/Debian/Linux-based tools for identifying corrupted jpeg images in a collection of tens of thousands? I know that there are a few in there, but I can't bring myself to view them all manually, even at the thumbnail level.
1 Answer
It might not be perfect, but you could use feh -p
and examine the error messages generated.
To list all the unloadable images in /opt/images and below
feh -ur /opt/images
-u
,--unloadable
Don't display images. Just print out their names if imlib2 can NOT successfully load them. Returns false if at least one image was loadable.
-r
,--recursive
Recursively expand any directories in the commandline arguments to the content of those directories, all the way down to the bottom level.
-
From
info feh
...feh --unloadables -r /opt/images
Weed out (list) all the unloadable images in /opt/images and below.– Peter.OApr 2, 2011 at 11:22 -
3Actually, it's
feh --unloadable -r /opt/images
orfeh -ur /opt/images
. Apr 2, 2011 at 22:50 -
Missed a description, or a link: man.finalrewind.org/1/feh "feh is an X11 image viewer aimed mostly at console users".– amotzgDec 26, 2016 at 7:55