Jpegoptim
Jpegoptim provides Ruby interface to the jpegoptim
tool.
Some examples follow: (for details, see module documentation)
require "jpegoptim"
Jpegoptim.available? # will return true (or false)
Jpegoptim.optimize(["foo.jpg", "empty.jpg", "nonexist.jpg"], { :preserve => true, :strip => :all })
# will run 'jpegoptim --strip-all --preserve foo.jpg bar.jpg empty.jpg'
# and then will return for example:
# '#<struct Jpegoptim::Result succeed={"foo.jpg => -22.1}}, errors=[["empty.jpg", "ERROR"]]>
It can be also run asynchronously by non-blocking way (with eventmachine
)
simply by giving block with one argument to #optimize
. See documentation.
Call Result
Result contains members :success
and :errors
. Sucess member contains
hash of successfully optimized files with ratio as value. Zero or
positive percent ratio means the same as file has been skipped
. It's
negative number against the number reported by jpegoptim
so it means
new size against the old size.
Errors contains array with pairs where first member of the pair is
filename and second the message. First one can be null if message isn't
strictly associated with file. As unassociated messages are considered
all errors beginning by the jpegoptim:
string although these are
usually written to the error output so generaly unhandled and written
out to error output of the application instead.
Be warn, unassociated message is can't open
error too, so double
check, file exists if desired result is critical.
Unsupported Options
Destination directory option isn't supported, so you are purely responsible for optimizing files on the right place. Use Ruby methods for it.
Contributing
- Fork it.
- Create a branch (
git checkout -b 20101220-my-change
). - Commit your changes (
git commit -am "Added something"
). - Push to the branch (
git push origin 20101220-my-change
). - Create an Issue with a link to your branch.
- Enjoy a refreshing Diet Coke and wait.
Copyright
Copyright © 2011 Martin Kozák. See LICENSE.txt
for
further details.