1 USAGE instructions for the Independent JPEG Group's JPEG software 2 ================================================================= 3 4 This file describes usage of the JPEG conversion programs cjpeg and djpeg, 5 as well as the utility programs jpegtran, rdjpgcom and wrjpgcom. (See 6 the other documentation files if you wish to use the JPEG library within 7 your own programs.) 8 9 If you are on a Unix machine you may prefer to read the Unix-style manual 10 pages in files cjpeg.1, djpeg.1, jpegtran.1, rdjpgcom.1, wrjpgcom.1. 11 12 13 INTRODUCTION 14 15 These programs implement JPEG image compression and decompression. JPEG 16 (pronounced "jay-peg") is a standardized compression method for full-color 17 and gray-scale images. JPEG is designed to handle "real-world" scenes, 18 for example scanned photographs. Cartoons, line drawings, and other 19 non-realistic images are not JPEG's strong suit; on that sort of material 20 you may get poor image quality and/or little compression. 21 22 JPEG is lossy, meaning that the output image is not necessarily identical to 23 the input image. Hence you should not use JPEG if you have to have identical 24 output bits. However, on typical real-world images, very good compression 25 levels can be obtained with no visible change, and amazingly high compression 26 is possible if you can tolerate a low-quality image. You can trade off image 27 quality against file size by adjusting the compressor's "quality" setting. 28 29 30 GENERAL USAGE 31 32 We provide two programs, cjpeg to compress an image file into JPEG format, 33 and djpeg to decompress a JPEG file back into a conventional image format. 34 35 On Unix-like systems, you say: 36 cjpeg [switches] [imagefile] >jpegfile 37 or 38 djpeg [switches] [jpegfile] >imagefile 39 The programs read the specified input file, or standard input if none is 40 named. They always write to standard output (with trace/error messages to 41 standard error). These conventions are handy for piping images between 42 programs. 43 44 On most non-Unix systems, you say: 45 cjpeg [switches] imagefile jpegfile 46 or 47 djpeg [switches] jpegfile imagefile 48 i.e., both the input and output files are named on the command line. This 49 style is a little more foolproof, and it loses no functionality if you don't 50 have pipes. (You can get this style on Unix too, if you prefer, by defining 51 TWO_FILE_COMMANDLINE when you compile the programs; see install.doc.) 52 53 You can also say: 54 cjpeg [switches] -outfile jpegfile imagefile 55 or 56 djpeg [switches] -outfile imagefile jpegfile 57 This syntax works on all systems, so it is useful for scripts. 58 59 The currently supported image file formats are: PPM (PBMPLUS color format), 60 PGM (PBMPLUS gray-scale format), BMP, Targa, and RLE (Utah Raster Toolkit 61 format). (RLE is supported only if the URT library is available.) 62 cjpeg recognizes the input image format automatically, with the exception 63 of some Targa-format files. You have to tell djpeg which format to generate. 64 65 JPEG files are in the defacto standard JFIF file format. There are other, 66 less widely used JPEG-based file formats, but we don't support them. 67 68 All switch names may be abbreviated; for example, -grayscale may be written 69 -gray or -gr. Most of the "basic" switches can be abbreviated to as little as 70 one letter. Upper and lower case are equivalent (-BMP is the same as -bmp). 71 British spellings are also accepted (e.g., -greyscale), though for brevity 72 these are not mentioned below. 73 74 75 CJPEG DETAILS 76 77 The basic command line switches for cjpeg are: 78 79 -quality N Scale quantization tables to adjust image quality. 80 Quality is 0 (worst) to 100 (best); default is 75. 81 (See below for more info.) 82 83 -grayscale Create monochrome JPEG file from color input. 84 Be sure to use this switch when compressing a grayscale 85 BMP file, because cjpeg isn't bright enough to notice 86 whether a BMP file uses only shades of gray. By 87 saying -grayscale, you'll get a smaller JPEG file that 88 takes less time to process. 89 90 -optimize Perform optimization of entropy encoding parameters. 91 Without this, default encoding parameters are used. 92 -optimize usually makes the JPEG file a little smaller, 93 but cjpeg runs somewhat slower and needs much more 94 memory. Image quality and speed of decompression are 95 unaffected by -optimize. 96 97 -progressive Create progressive JPEG file (see below). 98 99 -targa Input file is Targa format. Targa files that contain 100 an "identification" field will not be automatically 101 recognized by cjpeg; for such files you must specify 102 -targa to make cjpeg treat the input as Targa format. 103 For most Targa files, you won't need this switch. 104 105 The -quality switch lets you trade off compressed file size against quality of 106 the reconstructed image: the higher the quality setting, the larger the JPEG 107 file, and the closer the output image will be to the original input. Normally 108 you want to use the lowest quality setting (smallest file) that decompresses 109 into something visually indistinguishable from the original image. For this 110 purpose the quality setting should be between 50 and 95; the default of 75 is 111 often about right. If you see defects at -quality 75, then go up 5 or 10 112 counts at a time until you are happy with the output image. (The optimal 113 setting will vary from one image to another.) 114 115 -quality 100 will generate a quantization table of all 1's, minimizing loss 116 in the quantization step (but there is still information loss in subsampling, 117 as well as roundoff error). This setting is mainly of interest for 118 experimental purposes. Quality values above about 95 are NOT recommended for 119 normal use; the compressed file size goes up dramatically for hardly any gain 120 in output image quality. 121 122 In the other direction, quality values below 50 will produce very small files 123 of low image quality. Settings around 5 to 10 might be useful in preparing an 124 index of a large image library, for example. Try -quality 2 (or so) for some 125 amusing Cubist effects. (Note: quality values below about 25 generate 2-byte 126 quantization tables, which are considered optional in the JPEG standard. 127 cjpeg emits a warning message when you give such a quality value, because some 128 other JPEG programs may be unable to decode the resulting file. Use -baseline 129 if you need to ensure compatibility at low quality values.) 130 131 The -progressive switch creates a "progressive JPEG" file. In this type of 132 JPEG file, the data is stored in multiple scans of increasing quality. If the 133 file is being transmitted over a slow communications link, the decoder can use 134 the first scan to display a low-quality image very quickly, and can then 135 improve the display with each subsequent scan. The final image is exactly 136 equivalent to a standard JPEG file of the same quality setting, and the total 137 file size is about the same --- often a little smaller. CAUTION: progressive 138 JPEG is not yet widely implemented, so many decoders will be unable to view a 139 progressive JPEG file at all. 140 141 Switches for advanced users: 142 143 -dct int Use integer DCT method (default). 144 -dct fast Use fast integer DCT (less accurate). 145 -dct float Use floating-point DCT method. 146 The float method is very slightly more accurate than 147 the int method, but is much slower unless your machine 148 has very fast floating-point hardware. Also note that 149 results of the floating-point method may vary slightly 150 across machines, while the integer methods should give 151 the same results everywhere. The fast integer method 152 is much less accurate than the other two. 153 154 -restart N Emit a JPEG restart marker every N MCU rows, or every 155 N MCU blocks if "B" is attached to the number. 156 -restart 0 (the default) means no restart markers. 157 158 -smooth N Smooth the input image to eliminate dithering noise. 159 N, ranging from 1 to 100, indicates the strength of 160 smoothing. 0 (the default) means no smoothing. 161 162 -maxmemory N Set limit for amount of memory to use in processing 163 large images. Value is in thousands of bytes, or 164 millions of bytes if "M" is attached to the number. 165 For example, -max 4m selects 4000000 bytes. If more 166 space is needed, temporary files will be used. 167 168 -verbose Enable debug printout. More -v's give more printout. 169 or -debug Also, version information is printed at startup. 170 171 The -restart option inserts extra markers that allow a JPEG decoder to 172 resynchronize after a transmission error. Without restart markers, any damage 173 to a compressed file will usually ruin the image from the point of the error 174 to the end of the image; with restart markers, the damage is usually confined 175 to the portion of the image up to the next restart marker. Of course, the 176 restart markers occupy extra space. We recommend -restart 1 for images that 177 will be transmitted across unreliable networks such as Usenet. 178 179 The -smooth option filters the input to eliminate fine-scale noise. This is 180 often useful when converting dithered images to JPEG: a moderate smoothing 181 factor of 10 to 50 gets rid of dithering patterns in the input file, resulting 182 in a smaller JPEG file and a better-looking image. Too large a smoothing 183 factor will visibly blur the image, however. 184 185 Switches for wizards: 186 187 -baseline Force baseline-compatible quantization tables to be 188 generated. This clamps quantization values to 8 bits 189 even at low quality settings. (This switch is poorly 190 named, since it does not ensure that the output is 191 actually baseline JPEG. For example, you can use 192 -baseline and -progressive together.) 193 194 -qtables file Use the quantization tables given in the specified 195 text file. 196 197 -qslots N[,...] Select which quantization table to use for each color 198 component. 199 200 -sample HxV[,...] Set JPEG sampling factors for each color component. 201 202 -scans file Use the scan script given in the specified text file. 203 204 The "wizard" switches are intended for experimentation with JPEG. If you 205 don't know what you are doing, DON'T USE THEM. These switches are documented 206 further in the file wizard.doc. 207 208 209 DJPEG DETAILS 210 211 The basic command line switches for djpeg are: 212 213 -colors N Reduce image to at most N colors. This reduces the 214 or -quantize N number of colors used in the output image, so that it 215 can be displayed on a colormapped display or stored in 216 a colormapped file format. For example, if you have 217 an 8-bit display, you'd need to reduce to 256 or fewer 218 colors. (-colors is the recommended name, -quantize 219 is provided only for backwards compatibility.) 220 221 -fast Select recommended processing options for fast, low 222 quality output. (The default options are chosen for 223 highest quality output.) Currently, this is equivalent 224 to "-dct fast -nosmooth -onepass -dither ordered". 225 226 -grayscale Force gray-scale output even if JPEG file is color. 227 Useful for viewing on monochrome displays; also, 228 djpeg runs noticeably faster in this mode. 229 230 -scale M/N Scale the output image by a factor M/N. Currently 231 the scale factor must be 1/1, 1/2, 1/4, or 1/8. 232 Scaling is handy if the image is larger than your 233 screen; also, djpeg runs much faster when scaling 234 down the output. 235 236 -bmp Select BMP output format (Windows flavor). 8-bit 237 colormapped format is emitted if -colors or -grayscale 238 is specified, or if the JPEG file is gray-scale; 239 otherwise, 24-bit full-color format is emitted. 240 241 -gif Select GIF output format. Since GIF does not support 242 more than 256 colors, -colors 256 is assumed (unless 243 you specify a smaller number of colors). If you 244 specify -fast, the default number of colors is 216. 245 246 -os2 Select BMP output format (OS/2 1.x flavor). 8-bit 247 colormapped format is emitted if -colors or -grayscale 248 is specified, or if the JPEG file is gray-scale; 249 otherwise, 24-bit full-color format is emitted. 250 251 -pnm Select PBMPLUS (PPM/PGM) output format (this is the 252 default format). PGM is emitted if the JPEG file is 253 gray-scale or if -grayscale is specified; otherwise 254 PPM is emitted. 255 256 -rle Select RLE output format. (Requires URT library.) 257 258 -targa Select Targa output format. Gray-scale format is 259 emitted if the JPEG file is gray-scale or if 260 -grayscale is specified; otherwise, colormapped format 261 is emitted if -colors is specified; otherwise, 24-bit 262 full-color format is emitted. 263 264 Switches for advanced users: 265 266 -dct int Use integer DCT method (default). 267 -dct fast Use fast integer DCT (less accurate). 268 -dct float Use floating-point DCT method. 269 The float method is very slightly more accurate than 270 the int method, but is much slower unless your machine 271 has very fast floating-point hardware. Also note that 272 results of the floating-point method may vary slightly 273 across machines, while the integer methods should give 274 the same results everywhere. The fast integer method 275 is much less accurate than the other two. 276 277 -dither fs Use Floyd-Steinberg dithering in color quantization. 278 -dither ordered Use ordered dithering in color quantization. 279 -dither none Do not use dithering in color quantization. 280 By default, Floyd-Steinberg dithering is applied when 281 quantizing colors; this is slow but usually produces 282 the best results. Ordered dither is a compromise 283 between speed and quality; no dithering is fast but 284 usually looks awful. Note that these switches have 285 no effect unless color quantization is being done. 286 Ordered dither is only available in -onepass mode. 287 288 -map FILE Quantize to the colors used in the specified image 289 file. This is useful for producing multiple files 290 with identical color maps, or for forcing a predefined 291 set of colors to be used. The FILE must be a GIF 292 or PPM file. This option overrides -colors and 293 -onepass. 294 295 -nosmooth Use a faster, lower-quality upsampling routine. 296 297 -onepass Use one-pass instead of two-pass color quantization. 298 The one-pass method is faster and needs less memory, 299 but it produces a lower-quality image. -onepass is 300 ignored unless you also say -colors N. Also, 301 the one-pass method is always used for gray-scale 302 output (the two-pass method is no improvement then). 303 304 -maxmemory N Set limit for amount of memory to use in processing 305 large images. Value is in thousands of bytes, or 306 millions of bytes if "M" is attached to the number. 307 For example, -max 4m selects 4000000 bytes. If more 308 space is needed, temporary files will be used. 309 310 -verbose Enable debug printout. More -v's give more printout. 311 or -debug Also, version information is printed at startup. 312 313 314 HINTS FOR CJPEG 315 316 Color GIF files are not the ideal input for JPEG; JPEG is really intended for 317 compressing full-color (24-bit) images. In particular, don't try to convert 318 cartoons, line drawings, and other images that have only a few distinct 319 colors. GIF works great on these, JPEG does not. If you want to convert a 320 GIF to JPEG, you should experiment with cjpeg's -quality and -smooth options 321 to get a satisfactory conversion. -smooth 10 or so is often helpful. 322 323 Avoid running an image through a series of JPEG compression/decompression 324 cycles. Image quality loss will accumulate; after ten or so cycles the image 325 may be noticeably worse than it was after one cycle. It's best to use a 326 lossless format while manipulating an image, then convert to JPEG format when 327 you are ready to file the image away. 328 329 The -optimize option to cjpeg is worth using when you are making a "final" 330 version for posting or archiving. It's also a win when you are using low 331 quality settings to make very small JPEG files; the percentage improvement 332 is often a lot more than it is on larger files. (At present, -optimize 333 mode is always selected when generating progressive JPEG files.) 334 335 GIF input files are no longer supported, to avoid the Unisys LZW patent. 336 Use a Unisys-licensed program if you need to read a GIF file. (Conversion 337 of GIF files to JPEG is usually a bad idea anyway.) 338 339 340 HINTS FOR DJPEG 341 342 To get a quick preview of an image, use the -grayscale and/or -scale switches. 343 "-grayscale -scale 1/8" is the fastest case. 344 345 Several options are available that trade off image quality to gain speed. 346 "-fast" turns on the recommended settings. 347 348 "-dct fast" and/or "-nosmooth" gain speed at a small sacrifice in quality. 349 When producing a color-quantized image, "-onepass -dither ordered" is fast but 350 much lower quality than the default behavior. "-dither none" may give 351 acceptable results in two-pass mode, but is seldom tolerable in one-pass mode. 352 353 If you are fortunate enough to have very fast floating point hardware, 354 "-dct float" may be even faster than "-dct fast". But on most machines 355 "-dct float" is slower than "-dct int"; in this case it is not worth using, 356 because its theoretical accuracy advantage is too small to be significant 357 in practice. 358 359 Two-pass color quantization requires a good deal of memory; on MS-DOS machines 360 it may run out of memory even with -maxmemory 0. In that case you can still 361 decompress, with some loss of image quality, by specifying -onepass for 362 one-pass quantization. 363 364 To avoid the Unisys LZW patent, djpeg produces uncompressed GIF files. These 365 are larger than they should be, but are readable by standard GIF decoders. 366 367 368 HINTS FOR BOTH PROGRAMS 369 370 If more space is needed than will fit in the available main memory (as 371 determined by -maxmemory), temporary files will be used. (MS-DOS versions 372 will try to get extended or expanded memory first.) The temporary files are 373 often rather large: in typical cases they occupy three bytes per pixel, for 374 example 3*800*600 = 1.44Mb for an 800x600 image. If you don't have enough 375 free disk space, leave out -progressive and -optimize (for cjpeg) or specify 376 -onepass (for djpeg). 377 378 On MS-DOS, the temporary files are created in the directory named by the TMP 379 or TEMP environment variable, or in the current directory if neither of those 380 exist. Amiga implementations put the temp files in the directory named by 381 JPEGTMP:, so be sure to assign JPEGTMP: to a disk partition with adequate free 382 space. 383 384 The default memory usage limit (-maxmemory) is set when the software is 385 compiled. If you get an "insufficient memory" error, try specifying a smaller 386 -maxmemory value, even -maxmemory 0 to use the absolute minimum space. You 387 may want to recompile with a smaller default value if this happens often. 388 389 On machines that have "environment" variables, you can define the environment 390 variable JPEGMEM to set the default memory limit. The value is specified as 391 described for the -maxmemory switch. JPEGMEM overrides the default value 392 specified when the program was compiled, and itself is overridden by an 393 explicit -maxmemory switch. 394 395 On MS-DOS machines, -maxmemory is the amount of main (conventional) memory to 396 use. (Extended or expanded memory is also used if available.) Most 397 DOS-specific versions of this software do their own memory space estimation 398 and do not need you to specify -maxmemory. 399 400 401 JPEGTRAN 402 403 jpegtran performs various useful transformations of JPEG files. 404 It can translate the coded representation from one variant of JPEG to another, 405 for example from baseline JPEG to progressive JPEG or vice versa. It can also 406 perform some rearrangements of the image data, for example turning an image 407 from landscape to portrait format by rotation. 408 409 jpegtran works by rearranging the compressed data (DCT coefficients), without 410 ever fully decoding the image. Therefore, its transformations are lossless: 411 there is no image degradation at all, which would not be true if you used 412 djpeg followed by cjpeg to accomplish the same conversion. But by the same 413 token, jpegtran cannot perform lossy operations such as changing the image 414 quality. 415 416 jpegtran uses a command line syntax similar to cjpeg or djpeg. 417 On Unix-like systems, you say: 418 jpegtran [switches] [inputfile] >outputfile 419 On most non-Unix systems, you say: 420 jpegtran [switches] inputfile outputfile 421 where both the input and output files are JPEG files. 422 423 To specify the coded JPEG representation used in the output file, 424 jpegtran accepts a subset of the switches recognized by cjpeg: 425 -optimize Perform optimization of entropy encoding parameters. 426 -progressive Create progressive JPEG file. 427 -restart N Emit a JPEG restart marker every N MCU rows, or every 428 N MCU blocks if "B" is attached to the number. 429 -scans file Use the scan script given in the specified text file. 430 See the previous discussion of cjpeg for more details about these switches. 431 If you specify none of these switches, you get a plain baseline-JPEG output 432 file. The quality setting and so forth are determined by the input file. 433 434 The image can be losslessly transformed by giving one of these switches: 435 -flip horizontal Mirror image horizontally (left-right). 436 -flip vertical Mirror image vertically (top-bottom). 437 -rotate 90 Rotate image 90 degrees clockwise. 438 -rotate 180 Rotate image 180 degrees. 439 -rotate 270 Rotate image 270 degrees clockwise (or 90 ccw). 440 -transpose Transpose image (across UL-to-LR axis). 441 -transverse Transverse transpose (across UR-to-LL axis). 442 443 The transpose transformation has no restrictions regarding image dimensions. 444 The other transformations operate rather oddly if the image dimensions are not 445 a multiple of the iMCU size (usually 8 or 16 pixels), because they can only 446 transform complete blocks of DCT coefficient data in the desired way. 447 448 jpegtran's default behavior when transforming an odd-size image is designed 449 to preserve exact reversibility and mathematical consistency of the 450 transformation set. As stated, transpose is able to flip the entire image 451 area. Horizontal mirroring leaves any partial iMCU column at the right edge 452 untouched, but is able to flip all rows of the image. Similarly, vertical 453 mirroring leaves any partial iMCU row at the bottom edge untouched, but is 454 able to flip all columns. The other transforms can be built up as sequences 455 of transpose and flip operations; for consistency, their actions on edge 456 pixels are defined to be the same as the end result of the corresponding 457 transpose-and-flip sequence. 458 459 For practical use, you may prefer to discard any untransformable edge pixels 460 rather than having a strange-looking strip along the right and/or bottom edges 461 of a transformed image. To do this, add the -trim switch: 462 -trim Drop non-transformable edge blocks. 463 Obviously, a transformation with -trim is not reversible, so strictly speaking 464 jpegtran with this switch is not lossless. Also, the expected mathematical 465 equivalences between the transformations no longer hold. For example, 466 "-rot 270 -trim" trims only the bottom edge, but "-rot 90 -trim" followed by 467 "-rot 180 -trim" trims both edges. 468 469 Another not-strictly-lossless transformation switch is: 470 -grayscale Force grayscale output. 471 This option discards the chrominance channels if the input image is YCbCr 472 (ie, a standard color JPEG), resulting in a grayscale JPEG file. The 473 luminance channel is preserved exactly, so this is a better method of reducing 474 to grayscale than decompression, conversion, and recompression. This switch 475 is particularly handy for fixing a monochrome picture that was mistakenly 476 encoded as a color JPEG. (In such a case, the space savings from getting rid 477 of the near-empty chroma channels won't be large; but the decoding time for 478 a grayscale JPEG is substantially less than that for a color JPEG.) 479 480 jpegtran also recognizes these switches that control what to do with "extra" 481 markers, such as comment blocks: 482 -copy none Copy no extra markers from source file. This setting 483 suppresses all comments and other excess baggage 484 present in the source file. 485 -copy comments Copy only comment markers. This setting copies 486 comments from the source file, but discards 487 any other inessential data. 488 -copy all Copy all extra markers. This setting preserves 489 miscellaneous markers found in the source file, such 490 as JFIF thumbnails and Photoshop settings. In some 491 files these extra markers can be sizable. 492 The default behavior is -copy comments. (Note: in IJG releases v6 and v6a, 493 jpegtran always did the equivalent of -copy none.) 494 495 Additional switches recognized by jpegtran are: 496 -outfile filename 497 -maxmemory N 498 -verbose 499 -debug 500 These work the same as in cjpeg or djpeg. 501 502 503 THE COMMENT UTILITIES 504 505 The JPEG standard allows "comment" (COM) blocks to occur within a JPEG file. 506 Although the standard doesn't actually define what COM blocks are for, they 507 are widely used to hold user-supplied text strings. This lets you add 508 annotations, titles, index terms, etc to your JPEG files, and later retrieve 509 them as text. COM blocks do not interfere with the image stored in the JPEG 510 file. The maximum size of a COM block is 64K, but you can have as many of 511 them as you like in one JPEG file. 512 513 We provide two utility programs to display COM block contents and add COM 514 blocks to a JPEG file. 515 516 rdjpgcom searches a JPEG file and prints the contents of any COM blocks on 517 standard output. The command line syntax is 518 rdjpgcom [-verbose] [inputfilename] 519 The switch "-verbose" (or just "-v") causes rdjpgcom to also display the JPEG 520 image dimensions. If you omit the input file name from the command line, 521 the JPEG file is read from standard input. (This may not work on some 522 operating systems, if binary data can't be read from stdin.) 523 524 wrjpgcom adds a COM block, containing text you provide, to a JPEG file. 525 Ordinarily, the COM block is added after any existing COM blocks, but you 526 can delete the old COM blocks if you wish. wrjpgcom produces a new JPEG 527 file; it does not modify the input file. DO NOT try to overwrite the input 528 file by directing wrjpgcom's output back into it; on most systems this will 529 just destroy your file. 530 531 The command line syntax for wrjpgcom is similar to cjpeg's. On Unix-like 532 systems, it is 533 wrjpgcom [switches] [inputfilename] 534 The output file is written to standard output. The input file comes from 535 the named file, or from standard input if no input file is named. 536 537 On most non-Unix systems, the syntax is 538 wrjpgcom [switches] inputfilename outputfilename 539 where both input and output file names must be given explicitly. 540 541 wrjpgcom understands three switches: 542 -replace Delete any existing COM blocks from the file. 543 -comment "Comment text" Supply new COM text on command line. 544 -cfile name Read text for new COM block from named file. 545 (Switch names can be abbreviated.) If you have only one line of comment text 546 to add, you can provide it on the command line with -comment. The comment 547 text must be surrounded with quotes so that it is treated as a single 548 argument. Longer comments can be read from a text file. 549 550 If you give neither -comment nor -cfile, then wrjpgcom will read the comment 551 text from standard input. (In this case an input image file name MUST be 552 supplied, so that the source JPEG file comes from somewhere else.) You can 553 enter multiple lines, up to 64KB worth. Type an end-of-file indicator 554 (usually control-D or control-Z) to terminate the comment text entry. 555 556 wrjpgcom will not add a COM block if the provided comment string is empty. 557 Therefore -replace -comment "" can be used to delete all COM blocks from a 558 file. 559 560 These utility programs do not depend on the IJG JPEG library. In 561 particular, the source code for rdjpgcom is intended as an illustration of 562 the minimum amount of code required to parse a JPEG file header correctly. 563