Technology Tales

Adventures & experiences in contemporary technology

Installing Perl modules using CPAN on Linux Mint 19.2

28th September 2019

My online travel photo gallery is a self-coded set of PHP scripts that read data from tables in a MySQL database. These tables are built from input XML files using a Perl script that itself creates and executes an SQL script. The Perl script also does some image processing using GraphicsMagick commands to resize images and to add copyright information and image framing. Because this processed one image at a time sequentially, it was taking several minutes to complete and only partly used the capacity of the PC that I used.

This led me to look at adding parallel processing and that is what brought me to looking at the Parallel::ForkManager Perl module. An alternative approach might have been to add new images in such a way as not to need the full run involving hundreds of image files, but that will take more work and I fancied having a look at parallelising things anyway.

If it was not there already, the first act would have been to install build-essential to get access to the cpan command. The following command accomplishes this:

sudo apt-get install build-essential

Once that is there, the cpan command needs to be run and some questions answered to get things going. The first question to answer is whether you want setup to be as automated as possible and the default answer of yes worked for me. The next question to answer regards the approach that cpan takes when installing modules and I chose sudo here (local::lib is the default value and manual is another option). After this, cpan drops into its own command shell. Here, I issued two more commands to continue the basic setup by updating CPAN.pm to the latest version and adding Bundle::CPAN to optimise the module further:

make install
install Bundle::CPAN

Continuing the last of these may need extra intervention to confirmation the suggested default of exit at one point in its operation and that takes a little time to complete. It is after this that Parallel::ForkManager can be installed using the following command:

install Parallel::ForkManager

That completed quickly and the cpan shell was exited using its exit command. Then, the new module was available in scripting after that. The actual use of this module is something that hope to describe in another post so I am ending this one here and the same process is just as applicable to setting up cpan and adding any other Perl CPAN module.

A collection of legal BitTorrent sites

19th October 2014

It was an article in a magazine that revealed these legal BitTorrent download sites to me, so I thought that I’d keep them on file for future reference while also sharing them with others who might need them. As far as I am aware, they are all legal in that no copyrighted material is on there. If that changes, I am happy to know and make amendments as needed.

My own interest in torrents arises from their being a convenient way to download installation disk images for Linux distributions, and at least one of the entries is devoted to just that. However, the distribution also lends itself to movies along with music and books, so that is reflected below too. With regard to downloading actual multimedia content, there is so much illegal downloading that a list like this is needed and has blackened the reputation of BitTorrent too because it only ever was conceived as a means for distributing large files in a peer-to-peer manner without the use of a single server. Of course, any use can be found for a technology, and it never has to be legal or morally acceptable either.

Archive.org

Bt.etree.org

FrostClick

Linux Tracker

Public Domain Torrents

Command Line Processing of EXIF Image Metadata

8th July 2013

There is a bill making its way through the U.K. parliament at the moment that could reduce the power of copyright when it comes to images placed on the web. The current situation is that anyone who creates an image automatically holds the copyright for it. However, the new legislation will remove that if it becomes law as it stands. As it happens, the Royal Photographic Society is doing what it can to avoid any changes to what we have now. There may be the barrier of due diligence but how many of us take steps to mark our own intellectual property? For one, I have been less that attentive to this and now wonder if there is anything more that I should be doing. Others may copyleft their images but I don’t want to find myself unable to share my own photos because another party is claiming rights over them. There’s watermarking them but I also want to add something to the image metadata too.

That got me wondering about adding metadata to any images that I post online that assert my status as the copyright holder. It may not be perfect but any action is better than doing nothing at all. Given that I don’t post photos where EXIF metadata is stripped as part of the uploading process, it should be there to see for anyone who bothers to check and there may not be many who do.

Because I also wanted to batch process images, I looked for a command line tool to do the needful and found ExifTool. Being a Perl library, it is cross-platform so you can use it on Linux, Windows and even OS X. To install it on a Debian or Ubuntu based Linux distro, just use the following command:

sudo apt-get install libimage-exiftool-perl

The form of the command that I found useful for adding the actual copyright information is below:

exiftool -p “-copyright=(c) John …” -ext jpg -overwrite_original

The -p switch preserves the timestamp of the image file while the -overwrite_original one ensures that you don’t end up with unwanted backup files. The copyright message goes within the quotes along with the -copyright option. With a little shell scripting, you can traverse a directory structure and change the metadata for any image files contained in different sub-folders. If you wish to do more than this, there’s always the user documentation to be consulted.

  • All the views that you find expressed on here in postings and articles are mine alone and not those of any organisation with which I have any association, through work or otherwise. As regards editorial policy, whatever appears here is entirely of my own choice and not that of any other person or organisation.

  • Please note that everything you find here is copyrighted material. The content may be available to read without charge and without advertising but it is not to be reproduced without attribution. As it happens, a number of the images are sourced from stock libraries like iStockPhoto so they certainly are not for abstraction.

  • With regards to any comments left on the site, I expect them to be civil in tone of voice and reserve the right to reject any that are either inappropriate or irrelevant. Comment review is subject to automated processing as well as manual inspection but whatever is said is the sole responsibility of the individual contributor.