Consider an application handling uploading of potentially very large PNG files.
All uploaded files must be stored to disk for later retrieval. However, the PNG files can be up to 30 MB in size, but disk storage limitations gives a maximum per file size of 1 MB.
The problem is to take an input PNG of file size up to 30 MB and produce an output PNG of file size below 1 MB.
This operation will obviously be lossy - and reduction in image quality, colors, etc is not a problem. However, one thing that must not be changed is the image dimension. Hence, an input file of dimension 800x600 must produce an output file of dimension 800x600.
The above requirements outlined above are strict and cannot be changed.
Using ImageMagick (or some other open source tool) how would you go about reducing the file size of input PNG-files of size ~30 MB to a maximum of 1 MB per file, without changing image dimensions?
If you want to resize an image without losing quality, you need to make sure that the "Resample" checkbox is unchecked. This checkbox tells Paint to change the number of pixels in the image. When you uncheck this box, Paint will not change the number of pixels, and the quality of the image will not be reduced.
The primary way to reduce the file size of an image is by increasing the amount of compression. In most image editing applications this is done by the selections you make in the “Save As” or “Export As” dialog box when saving a PNG, JPG, or GIF.
PNG is not a lossy image format, so you would likely need to convert the image into another format-- most likely JPEG. JPEG has a settable "quality" factor-- you could simply keep reducing the quality factor until you got an image that was small enough. All of this can be done without changing the image resolution.
Obviously, depending on the image, the loss of visual quality may be substantial. JPEG does best for "true life" images, such as pictures from cameras. It does not do as well for logos, screen shots, or other images with "sharp" transitions from light to dark. (PNG, on the other hand, has the opposite behavior-- it's best for logos, etc.)
However, at 800x600, it likely will be very easy to get a JPEG down under 1MB. (I would be very surprised to see a 30MB file at those smallish dimensions.) In fact, even uncompressed, the image would only be around 1.4MB:
800 pixels * 600 pixels * 3 Bytes / color = 1,440,000 Bytes = 1.4MB
Therefore, you only need a 1.4:1 compression ratio to get the image down to 1MB. Depending on the type of image, the PNG compression may very well provide that level of compression. If not, JPEG almost certainly could-- JPEG compression ratios on the order of 10:1 are not uncommon. Again, the quality / size of the output will depend on the type of image.
Finally, while I have not used ImageMagick in a little while, I'm almost certain there are options to re-compress an image using a specific quality factor. Read through the docs, and start experimenting!
EDIT: Looks like it should, indeed, be pretty easy with ImageMagick. From the docs:
$magick> convert input.png -quality 75 output.jpg
Just keep playing with the quality value until you get a suitable output.
Your example is troublesome because a 30MB image at 800x600 resolution is storing 500 bits per pixel. Clearly wildly unrealistic. Please give us real numbers.
Meanwhile, the "cheap and cheerful" approach I would try would be as follows: scale the image down by a factor of 6, then scale it back up by a factor of 6, then run it through PNG compression. If you get lucky, you'll reduce image size by a factor of 36. If you get unlucky the savings will be more like 6.
pngtopng big.png | pnmscale -reduce 6 | pnmscale 6 | pnmtopng > big.png
If that's not enough you can toss a ppmquant
in the middle (on the small image) to reduce the number of colors. (The examples are netpbm/pbmplus, which I have always found easier to understand than ImageMagick.)
To know whether such a solution is reasonable, we have to know the true numbers of your problem.
Also, if you are really going to throw away the information permanently, you are almost certainly better off using JPEG compression, which is designed to lose information reasonably gracefully. Is there some reason JPEG is not appropriate for your application?
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