/usr/share/perl5/Image/MetaData/JPEG.pm is in libimage-metadata-jpeg-perl 0.153-1.
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# A Perl package for showing/modifying JPEG (meta)data. #
# Copyright (C) 2004,2005,2006 Stefano Bettelli #
# See the COPYING and LICENSE files for license terms. #
###########################################################
#use 5.008;
package Image::MetaData::JPEG;
use Image::MetaData::JPEG::data::Tables qw(:JPEGgrammar);
use Image::MetaData::JPEG::Backtrace;
use Image::MetaData::JPEG::Segment;
no integer;
use strict;
use warnings;
our $VERSION = '0.153';
###########################################################
# These simple methods should be used instead of standard #
# "warn" and "die" in this package; they print a much #
# more elaborated error message (including a stack trace).#
# Warnings can be turned off altogether simply by setting #
# Image::MetaData::JPEG::show_warnings to false. #
###########################################################
sub warn { my ($this, $message) = @_;
warn Image::MetaData::JPEG::Backtrace::backtrace
($message, "Warning" . $this->info(), $this)
if $Image::MetaData::JPEG::show_warnings; }
sub die { my ($this, $message) = @_;
die Image::MetaData::JPEG::Backtrace::backtrace
($message, "Fatal error" . $this->info(), $this); }
sub info { my ($this) = @_;
my $filename = $this->{filename} || '<no file name>';
return " [file $filename]"; }
###########################################################
# Constructor for a JPEG file structure object, accepting #
# a "JPEG stream". It parses the file stream and stores #
# its sections internally. An optional parameter can ex- #
# clude parsing and even storing for some segments. The #
# stream can be specified in two ways: #
# - [a scalar] interpreted as a file name to be opened; #
# - [a scalar reference] interpreted as a pointer to an #
# in-memory buffer containing a JPEG stream; #
# ------------------------------------------------------- #
# There is now a second argument, $regex. This string is #
# matched against segment names, and only those segments #
# with a positive match are parsed. This allows for some #
# speed-up if you just need partial information. For #
# instance, if you just want to manipulate the comments, #
# you could use $regex equal to 'COM'. If $regex is unde- #
# fined, all segments are matched. #
# ------------------------------------------------------- #
# There is now a third optional argument, $options. If it #
# matches the string 'FASTREADONLY', only those segments #
# matching $regex are actually stored; also, everything #
# which is found after a Start Of Scan is completely #
# neglected. This allows for very large speed-ups, but, #
# obviously, you cannot rebuild the file afterwards, so #
# this is only for getting information fast (e.g., when #
# doing a directory scan). #
# ------------------------------------------------------- #
# If an unrecoverable error occurs during the execution #
# of the constructor, the undefined value is returned #
# instead of the object reference, and a meaningful error #
# message is set up (read it with Error()). #
###########################################################
sub new {
my ($pkg, $file_input, $regex, $options) = @_;
my $this = bless {
filename => undef, # private
handle => undef, # private
read_only => undef, # private
segments => [],
}, $pkg;
# remember to unset the ctor error message
$pkg->SetError(undef);
# set the read-only flag if $options matches FASTREADONLY
$this->{read_only} = $options =~ m/FASTREADONLY/ if $options;
# execute the following subroutines in an eval block so that
# errors can be treated without shutting down the caller.
my $status = eval { $this->open_input($file_input);
$this->parse_segments($regex) ; };
# close the file handle, if open
$this->close_input();
# If an error was found (and it triggered a die call)
# we must set the appropriate error variable here
$pkg->SetError($@) unless $status;
# return the object reference (undef if an error occurred)
return $this->Error() ? undef : $this;
}
###########################################################
# This block declares a private variable containing a #
# meaningful error message for problems during the class #
# constructor. The two following methods allow reading #
# and setting the value of this variable. #
###########################################################
{ my $ctor_error_message = undef;
sub Error { return $ctor_error_message || undef; }
sub SetError { $ctor_error_message = $_[1]; }
}
###########################################################
# This method writes the data area of each segment in the #
# current object to a disk file or a variable in memory. #
# A disk file is written if $filename is a scalar with a #
# valid file name; memory is instead used if $filename is #
# a scalar reference. If $filename is undef, it defaults #
# to the file originally used to create the current JPEG #
# structure object. This method returns "true" (1) if it #
# works, "false" (undef) otherwise. This call fails if #
# the "read_only" member is set. #
# ------------------------------------------------------- #
# Remember that if you make changes to any segment, you #
# should call update() for that particular segment before #
# calling this method, otherwise the changes remain confi-#
# ned to the internal structures of the segment (update() #
# dumps them into the data area). Note that "high level" #
# methods, like those in the JPEG_<segment name>.pl files,#
# are supposed to call update() on their own. #
###########################################################
sub save {
my ($this, $filename) = @_;
# fail immediately if "read_only" is set
return undef if $this->{read_only};
# if $filename is undefined, it defaults to the original name
$filename = $this->{filename} unless defined $filename;
# Open an IO handler for output on a file named $filename
# or on an in-memory variable pointed to by $filename.
# Use an indirect handler, which is closed authomatically
# when it goes out of scope (so, no need to call close()).
# If open fails, it returns false and sets the special
# variable $! to reflect the system error.
open(my $out, '>', $filename) || return undef;
# Legacy systems might need an explicit binary open.
binmode($out);
# For each segment in the segment list, write the content of
# the data area (including the preamble when needed) to the
# IO handler. Save the results of each output for later testing.
my @results = map { $_->output_segment_data($out) } @{$this->{segments}};
# return undef if any print failed, true otherwise
return (scalar grep { ! $_ } @results) ? undef : 1;
}
###########################################################
# This method takes care to open a file handle pointing #
# to the JPEG object specified by $file_input. If the #
# "file name" is a scalar reference instead, it is saved #
# in the "handle" member (and it must be treated accor- #
# dingly in the following). Nothing is actually read now; #
# if opening fails, the routine dies with a message. #
###########################################################
sub open_input {
my ($this, $file_input) = @_;
# protect against undefined values
$this->die('Undefined input') unless defined $file_input;
# scalar references: save the reference in $this->{handle}
# and save a self-explicatory string as file name
if (ref $file_input eq 'SCALAR') {
$this->{handle} = $file_input;
$this->{filename} = '[in-memory JPEG stream]'; }
# real file: we need to open the file and complain if this is
# not possible (legacy systems might need an explicity binary
# open); then, the file name of the original file is saved.
else {
open($this->{handle}, '<', $file_input) ||
$this->die("Open error on $file_input: $!");
binmode($this->{handle});
$this->{filename} = $file_input; }
}
###########################################################
# This method is the counterpart of "open". Actually, it #
# does something only for real files (because we do not #
# want to close in-memory scalars ....). #
###########################################################
sub close_input {
my ($this) = @_;
# $this->{handle} should really be a reference to something
return unless ref $this->{handle};
# a ref to a scalar: we do not want to close in-memory scalars
return if ref $this->{handle} eq 'SCALAR';
# the default action corresponds to closing the filehandle
close $this->{handle};
}
###########################################################
# This method returns a portion of the input file (speci- #
# fied by $offset and $length). It is necessary to mask #
# how data reading is actually implemented. As usual, it #
# dies on errors (but this is trapped in the constructor).#
# This method returns a scalar reference; if $offset is #
# just "LENGTH", the input length is returned instead. #
# A length <= 0 is ignored (ref to empty string). #
###########################################################
sub get_data {
my ($this, $offset, $length) = @_;
# a shorter name for the file handle
my $handle = $this->{handle};
# understand if this is a file or a scalar reference
my $is_file = ref $handle eq 'GLOB';
# if the first argument is just the string 'LENGTH',
# return the input length instead
return ($is_file ? -s $handle : length $$handle) if $offset eq 'LENGTH';
# this is the buffer to be returned at the end
my $data = '';
# if length is <= zero return a reference to an empty string
return \ $data if $length <= 0;
# if we are dealing with a real file, we need to seek to the
# requested position, then read the appropriate amount of data
# (and throw an error if reading failed).
if ($is_file) {
seek($handle, $offset, 0) ||
$this->die("Error while seeking in $this->{filename}");
my $read = read $handle, $data, $length;
$this->die("Read error in $this->{filename}")
if ! defined $read || $read < $length; }
# otherwise, we are dealing with a scalar reference, and
# everything is much simpler (this can't fail, right?)
else { $data = substr $$handle, $offset, $length; }
# return a reference to read data
return \ $data;
}
###########################################################
# This method searches for segments in the input JPEG. #
# When a segment is found, the corresponding data area is #
# read and used to create a segment object (the ctor of #
# this object takes care to decode the relevant data). #
# The object is then inserted into the "segments" hash, #
# with a code-related key. Raw (compressed) image data #
# are stored in "fake" segments, just for simplicity. #
# ------------------------------------------------------- #
# There is now an argument, set equal to the second argu- #
# ment of the constructor. If it is defined, only match- #
# ing segments are parsed. Also, if read_only is set, #
# only "interesting" segments are saved and everything #
# after the Start Of Scan is neglected. #
#=========================================================#
# Structure of a generic segment: #
# 2 bytes segment marker (the first byte is always 0xff) #
# 2 bytes segment_length (it doesn't include the marker) #
# .... data (segment_length - 2 bytes) #
#=========================================================#
# The segment length (2 bytes) has a "Motorola" (big end- #
# ian) endianness (byte alignement), that is it starts #
# with the most significant digit. Note that the segment #
# length marker counts its own length (i.e., after it #
# there are only segment_length-2 bytes). #
#=========================================================#
# Some segments do not have data after them (not even the #
# length field, they are pure markers): SOI, EOI and the #
# RST? restart segments. Scans (started by a SOS segment) #
# are followed by compressed data, with possibly inter- #
# leaved RST segments: raw data must be searched with a #
# dedicated routine because they are not envelopped. #
#=========================================================#
# Ref: "Digital compression and coding of continuous-tone #
# still images: requirements and guidelines", #
# CCITT, 09/1992, sec. B.1.1.4, pag. 33. #
###########################################################
sub parse_segments {
my ($this, $regex) = @_;
# prepare another hash to reverse the JPEG markers lookup
my %JPEG_MARKER_BY_CODE = reverse %JPEG_MARKER;
# an offset in the input object, and a variable with its size
my $offset = 0;
my $isize = $this->get_data('LENGTH');
# don't claim empty files are valid JPEG pictures
$this->die('Empty file') unless $isize;
# loop on input data and find all of its segment
while ($offset < $isize) {
# search for the next JPEG marker, giving the segment type
(my $marker, $offset) = $this->get_next_marker($offset);
# Die on unknown markers
$this->die(sprintf 'Unknown marker found: 0x%02x (offset $offset)',
$marker) unless exists $JPEG_MARKER_BY_CODE{$marker};
# save the current offset (beginning of data)
my $start = $offset;
# calculate the name of the marker
my $name = $JPEG_MARKER_BY_CODE{$marker};
# determine the parse flag
my $flag = ($regex && $name !~ /$regex/) ? 'NOPARSE' : undef;
# SOI, EOI and ReSTart are dataless segments
my $length = 0; goto DECODE_LENGTH_END if $name =~ /^RST|EOI|SOI/;
DECODE_LENGTH_START:
# we need at least two bytes here
$this->die('Segment size not found') unless $isize > $offset + 2;
# decode the length of this application block (2 bytes).
# This is always in big endian ("Motorola") style, that
# is the first byte is the most significant one.
$length = unpack 'n', ${$this->get_data($offset, 2)};
# the segment length includes the two aforementioned
# bytes, so the length must be at least two
$this->die('JPEG segment too small') if $length < 2;
DECODE_LENGTH_END:
# we need at least $length bytes here
$this->die('Segment data not found') unless $isize >= $offset+$length;
# pass the data to a segment object and store it, unless
# the "read_only" member is set and $flag is "NOPARSE".
# (don't pass $flag to dataless segments, it is just silly).
push @{$this->{segments}}, new Image::MetaData::JPEG::Segment
($name, $this->get_data($start + 2, $length - 2),
$length ? $flag : undef) unless $this->{read_only} && $flag;
# update offset
$offset += $length;
# When you find a SOS marker or a RST marker there is a special
# treatement; if "read_only" is set, we neglect the rest of the
# input. Otherwise, we need a special routine
if ($name =~ /SOS|^RST/) {
$offset = $isize, next if $this->{read_only};
$offset = $this->parse_ecs($offset); }
DECODE_PAST_EOI_GARBAGE:
# Try to intercept underground data stored after the EOI segment;
# I have found images which store multiple reduced versions of
# itself after the EOI segment, as well as undocumented binary
# and ascii data. Save them in a pseudo-segment, so that they
# can be restored (take "read_only" into account).
if ($name eq 'EOI' && $offset < $isize) {
my $len = $isize - $offset;
push @{$this->{segments}}, new Image::MetaData::JPEG::Segment
('Post-EOI', $this->get_data($offset, $len), 'NOPARSE')
unless $this->{read_only};
$offset += $len;
}
}
}
###########################################################
# This method searches for the next JPEG marker in the #
# stream being parsed. A marker is always assigned a two #
# byte code: an 0xff byte followed by a byte which is not #
# 0x00 nor 0xff. Any marker may optionally be preceeded #
# by any number of fill bytes (padding of the previous #
# segment, I suppose), set to 0xff. Most markers start #
# marker segments containing a related group of parame- #
# ters; some markers stand alone. The return value is a #
# list containing the numeric value of the second marker #
# byte and an offset pointing just after it. #
# ------------------------------------------------------- #
# An old version of "Arles Image Web Page Creator" had a #
# bug which caused the application to generate JPEG's #
# with illegal comment segments, reportedly due to a bug #
# in the Intel JPEG library the developers used at that #
# time (these segments had to 0x00 bytes appended). It is #
# true that a JPEG file with garbage between segments is #
# to be considered invalid, but some libraries like IJG's #
# try to forgive, so we try to forgive too, if the amount #
# of garbage is not too large ... #
#=========================================================#
# Ref: "Digital compression and coding of continuous-tone #
# still images: requirements and guidelines", #
# CCITT, 09/1992, sec. B.1.1.2, pag. 31. #
#=========================================================#
sub get_next_marker {
my ($this, $offset) = @_;
my $punctuation = chr $JPEG_PUNCTUATION; my $garbage = 0;
# this is the upper limit to $offset
my $length = $this->get_data('LENGTH');
# $offset should point at the beginning of a new segment,
# so the next byte should be 0xff. However, sometimes garbage
# slips in ... Forgive this bug if garbage is not too much
$offset < $length && ${$this->get_data($offset, 1)} eq $punctuation
? last : (++$garbage, ++$offset) for (0..10);
$this->die('Next marker not found') unless $length - $offset > 1;
# it is assumed that we are now at the beginning of
# a new segment, so the next byte must be 0xff.
my $marker_byte = ${$this->get_data($offset++, 1)};
$this->die(sprintf 'Unknown punctuation (0x%02x) at offset 0x%x',
ord($marker_byte), $offset) if $marker_byte ne $punctuation;
# report about garbage, unless we died
$this->warn("Skipping $garbage garbage bytes") if $garbage;
# next byte can be either the marker type or a padding
# byte equal to 0xff (skip it if it's a padding byte)
$marker_byte = ${$this->get_data($offset++, 1)}
while $marker_byte eq $punctuation;
# return the marker we have found (no check on its validity),
# as well as the offset to the next byte in the JPEG stream
return (ord($marker_byte), $offset);
}
###########################################################
# This method reads in a compressed (entropy coded) data #
# segment (ECS) and saves it as a "pseudo" segment. The #
# argument is the current offset in the in-memory JPEG #
# stream, the result is the updated offset. These pseudo #
# segments can be found after a Start-Of-Scan segment, #
# and, if restart is enabled, they can be interleaved #
# with restart segments (RST). Indeed, an ECS is not a #
# real segment, because it does not start with a marker #
# and its length is not known a priori. However, it is #
# easy to detect its end since a regular marker cannot #
# appear inside it. In practice, data in an ECS are coded #
# in such a way that a 0xff byte can only be followed by #
# 0x00 (invalid marker) or 0xff (padding). #
#=========================================================#
# WARNING: when restart is enabled, usually the file con- #
# tains a lot of ECS and RST. In order not to be too slow #
# we keep the restart marker embedded in row data here. #
#=========================================================#
# Ref: "Digital compression and coding of continuous-tone #
# still images: requirements and guidelines", #
# CCITT, 09/1992, sec. B.1.1.5, pag. 33. #
###########################################################
sub parse_ecs {
my ($this, $offset) = @_;
# A title for a raw data block ('ECS' must be there)
my $ecs_name = 'ECS (Raw data)';
# transform the JPEG punctuation value into a string
my $punctuation = chr $JPEG_PUNCTUATION;
# create a string containing the character which can follow a
# punctuations mark without causing the ECS to be considered
# terminated. This string must contain at least the null byte and
# the punctuation mark itself. But, for efficiency reasons, we are
# going to include also the restart markers here.
my $skipstring = $punctuation . chr 0x00;
$skipstring .= chr $_ for ($JPEG_MARKER{RST0} .. $JPEG_MARKER{RST7});
# read in everything till the end of the input
my $length = $this->get_data('LENGTH');
my $buffer = $this->get_data($offset, $length - $offset);
# find the next 0xff byte not followed by a character of $skipstring
# from $offset on. It is better to use pos() instead of taking a
# substring of $$buffer, because this copy takes a lot of space. In
# order to honour the position set by pos(), it is necessary to use
# "g" in scalar context. My benchmarks say this is almost as fast as C.
pos($$buffer) = 0; scalar $$buffer =~ /$punctuation[^$skipstring]/g;
# trim the $buffer at the byte before the punctuation mark; the
# position of the last match can be accessed through pos(); if no
# match is found, complain but do not fail (similar behaviour to that
# of the 'xv' program); the file is however corrupt and unusable.
pos($$buffer) ? substr($$buffer, pos($$buffer) - 2) = ''
: $this->warn('Premature end of JPEG stream');
# push a pseudo segment among the regular ones (do not parse it)
push @{$this->{segments}}, new Image::MetaData::JPEG::Segment
($ecs_name, $buffer, 'NOPARSE');
# return the updated offset
return $offset + length $$buffer;
}
###########################################################
# This method creates a list containing the references #
# (or their indexes in the segment references list, if #
# the second argument is 'INDEXES') of those segments #
# whose name matches a given regular expression. #
# The output can be invalid after adding/removing any #
# segment. If $regex is undefined or evaluates to the #
# empty string, this method returns all indexes. #
###########################################################
sub get_segments {
my ($this, $regex, $do_indexes) = @_;
# fix the regular expression to '.' if undefined or set to the
# empty string. I do this because I want to avoid the stupid
# behaviour of m//; from `man perlop`: if the pattern evaluates
# to the empty string, the last successfully matched regular
# expression is used instead; if no match has previously succeeded,
# this will (silently) act instead as a genuine empty pattern
$regex = '.' unless defined $regex && length $regex > 0;
# get the list of segment references in this file
my $segments = $this->{segments};
# return the list of matched segments
return (defined $do_indexes && $do_indexes eq 'INDEXES') ?
grep { $$segments[$_]->{name} =~ /$regex/ } 0..$#$segments :
grep { $_->{name} =~ /$regex/ } @$segments;
}
###########################################################
# This method erases from the internal segment list all #
# segments matching the $regex regular expression. If #
# $regex is undefined or evaluates to the empty string, #
# this method throws an exception, because I don't want #
# the user to erase the whole file just because he/she #
# did not understand what he was doing. The apocalyptic #
# behaviour can be forced by setting $regex = '.'. One #
# must remember that it is not wise to drop non-metadata #
# segments, because this in general invalidates the file. #
# As a special case, if $regex == 'METADATA', all APP* #
# and COM segments are erased. #
###########################################################
sub drop_segments {
my ($this, $regex) = @_;
# refuse to work with empty or undefined regular expressions
$this->die('regular expression not specified')
unless defined $regex && length $regex > 0;
# if $regex is 'METADATA', convert it
$regex = '^(APP\d{1,2}|COM)$' if $regex eq 'METADATA';
# rewrite the segment list keeping only segments not matching
# $regex (see get_segments for further considerations).
@{$this->{segments}} =
grep { $_->{name} !~ /$regex/ } @{$this->{segments}};
}
###########################################################
# This method inserts the segments referenced by $segref #
# into the current list of segments at position $pos. If #
# $segref is undefined, the method fails silently. If #
# $pos is undefined, the position is chosen automatically #
# (using find_new_app_segment_position); if $pos is out #
# of bound, an exception is thrown; this happens also if #
# $pos points to the first segment, and it is SOI. #
# $segref may be a reference to a single segment or a #
# reference to a list of segment references; everything #
# else throws an exception. If overwrite is defined, it #
# must be the number of segs to overwrite during splice. #
###########################################################
sub insert_segments {
my ($this, $segref, $pos, $overwrite) = @_;
# do nothing if $segref is undefined or is not a reference
return unless ref $segref;
# segref may be a reference to a segment or a reference
# to a list; we must turn it into a reference to a list
$segref = [ $segref ] unless ref $segref eq 'ARRAY';
# check that all elements in the list are segment references
ref $_ eq 'Image::MetaData::JPEG::Segment' ||
$this->die('$segref is not a reference') for @$segref;
# calculate a convenient position if the user neglects to;
# remember to pass the new segment name as an argument
$pos = $this->find_new_app_segment_position
(exists $$segref[0] ? $$segref[0]->{name} : undef) unless defined $pos;
my $max_pos = -1 + $this->get_segments();
# fail if $pos is negative or out-of-bound;
$this->die("out-of-bound position $pos [0, $max_pos]")
if $pos < 0 || $pos > $max_pos;
# fail if $pos points to the first segment and it is SOI
$this->die('inserting on start-of-image is forbidden')
if $pos == 0 && $this->{segments}->[0]->{name} eq 'SOI';
# do the actual insertion (one or multiple segments);
# if overwrite is defined, it must be the number of
# segments to overwrite during the splice.
$overwrite = 0 unless defined $overwrite;
splice @{$this->{segments}}, $pos, $overwrite, @$segref;
}
###########################################################
# This method finds a position for a new application or #
# comment segment to be placed in the file. The algorithm #
# is the following: the position is chosen immediately #
# before the first (or after the last) element of some #
# list, provided that the list is not empty, otherwise #
# the next list is taken into account: #
# -) [for COM segments only] try after 'COM' segments; #
# otherwise try after all APP segments; #
# -) [for APPx segments only] try after the last element #
# of the list of APPy's (with y = x..0, in sequence); #
# otherwise try before the first element of the list #
# of APPy's (with y = x+1..15, in sequence); #
# -) try before the first DHP segment #
# -) try before the first SOF segment #
# If all these approaches fail, this method returns the #
# position immediately after the SOI segment (i.e., 1). #
# ------------------------------------------------------- #
# The argument must be the name of the segment to be #
# inserted (it defaults to 'COM', producing a warning). #
###########################################################
sub find_new_app_segment_position {
my ($this, $name) = @_;
# if name is not specified, issue a warning and set 'COM'
$this->warn('Segment name not specified: using COM'), $name = 'COM'
unless $name;
# setting $name to something else than 'COM' or 'APPx' is an error
$this->die("Unknown segment name ($name)")
unless $name =~ /^(COM|APP([0-9]|1[0-5]))$/;
# just in order to avoid a warning for half-read files
# with an incomplete set of segments, let us make sure
# that no position is past the segment array end
my $last_segment = -1 + $this->get_segments();
my $safe = sub { ($last_segment < $_[0]) ? $last_segment : $_[0] };
# this private function returns a list containing the
# indexes of the segments whose name matches the argument
my $list = sub { $this->get_segments('^'.$_[0].'$', 'INDEXES') };
# if there are already some 'COM' segments, let us put the new COM
# segment immediately after them; otherwise try after all APP segments
if ($name =~ /^COM/) {
return &$safe(1+$_) for reverse &$list('COM');
return &$safe(1+$_) for reverse &$list('APP.*'); }
# if $name is APPx, try after the last element of the list of APPy's
# (with y = x .. 0, in sequence); if all these fail, try before the
# first element of the list of APPy's (with y = x+1..15, in sequence)
if ($name =~ /^APP(.*)$/) {
for (reverse 0..$1) {return &$safe(1+$_) for reverse &$list("APP$_");};
for (1+$1..15) { return &$safe($_) for &$list("APP$_"); }; }
# if all specific tests failed, try with the
# first DHP segment or the first SOF segment
return &$safe($_) for &$list('DHP');
return &$safe($_) for &$list('SOF');
# if even this fails, try after start-of-image (just in order
# to avoid a warning for half-read files with not even two
# segments (they cannot be saved), return 0 if necessary)
return &$safe(1);
}
###########################################################
# Load other parts for this package. In order to avoid #
# that this file becomes too large, only general interest #
# methods are written here. #
###########################################################
require 'Image/MetaData/JPEG/access/various.pl';
require 'Image/MetaData/JPEG/access/comments.pl';
require 'Image/MetaData/JPEG/access/app1_exif.pl';
require 'Image/MetaData/JPEG/access/app13.pl';
# successful package load
1;
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