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Image::ExifTool::MIE(3pm)      User Contributed Perl Documentation      Image::ExifTool::MIE(3pm)

NAME
       Image::ExifTool::MIE - Read/write MIE meta information

SYNOPSIS
       This module is used by Image::ExifTool

DESCRIPTION
       This module contains routines required by Image::ExifTool to read and write information in
       MIE files.

WHAT IS MIE?
       MIE stands for "Meta Information Encapsulation".  The MIE format is an extensible,
       dedicated meta information format which supports storage of binary as well as textual meta
       information.  MIE can be used to encapsulate meta information from many sources and bundle
       it together with any type of file.

   Features
       Below is very subjective score card comparing the features of a number of common file and
       meta information formats, and comparing them to MIE.  The following features are rated for
       each format with a score of 0 to 10:

         1) Extensible (can incorporate user-defined information).
         2) Meaningful tag ID's (hint to meaning of unknown information).
         3) Sequential read/write ability (streamable).
         4) Hierarchical information structure.
         5) Easy to implement reader/writer/editor.
         6) Order of information well defined.
         7) Large data lengths supported: >64kB (+5) and >4GB (+5).
         8) Localized text strings.
         9) Multiple documents in a single file.
        10) Compact format doesn't squander disk space or bandwidth.
        11) Compressed meta information supported.
        12) Relocatable data elements (ie. no fixed offsets).
        13) Binary meta information (+7) with variable byte order (+3).
        14) Mandatory tags not required (an unnecessary complication).
        15) Append information to end of file without editing.

                                 Feature number                   Total
            Format  1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9 10 11 12 13 14 15   Score
            ------ ---------------------------------------------  -----
            MIE    10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10    150
            PDF    10 10  0 10  0  0 10  0 10 10 10  0  7 10 10     97
            PNG    10 10 10  0  8  0  5 10  0 10 10 10  0 10  0     93
            XMP    10 10 10 10  2  0 10 10 10  0  0 10  0 10  0     92
            AIFF    0  5 10 10 10  0  5  0  0 10  0 10  7 10  0     77
            RIFF    0  5 10 10 10  0  5  0  0 10  0 10  7 10  0     77
            JPEG   10  0 10  0 10  0  0  0  0 10  0 10  7 10  0     67
            EPS    10 10 10  0  0  0 10  0 10  0  0  5  0 10  0     65
            CIFF    0  0  0 10 10  0  5  0  0 10  0 10 10 10  0     65
            TIFF    0  0  0 10  5 10  5  0 10 10  0  0 10  0  0     60
            EXIF    0  0  0 10  5 10  0  0  0 10  0  0 10  0  0     45
            IPTC    0  0 10  0  8  0  0  0  0 10  0 10  7  0  0     45

       By design, MIE ranks highest by a significant margin.  Other formats with reasonable
       scores are PDF, PNG and XMP, but each has significant weak points.  What may be surprising
       is that TIFF, EXIF and IPTC rank so low.

       As well as scoring high in all these features, the MIE format has the unique ability to
       encapsulate any other type of file, and provides a non-invasive method of adding meta
       information to a file.  The meta information is logically separated from the original file
       data, which is extremely important because meta information is routinely lost when files
       are edited.

       Also, the MIE format supports multiple files by simple concatenation, enabling all kinds
       of wonderful features such as linear databases, edit histories or non-intrusive file
       updates.  This ability can also be leveraged to allow MIE-format trailers to be added to
       some other file types.

MIE 1.1 FORMAT SPECIFICATION (2007-01-21)
   File Structure
       A MIE file consists of a series of MIE elements.  A MIE element may contain either data or
       a group of MIE elements, providing a hierarchical format for storing data.  Each MIE
       element is identified by a human-readable tag name, and may store data from zero to 2^64-1
       bytes in length.

   File Signature
       The first element in the MIE file must be an uncompressed MIE group element with a tag
       name of "0MIE".  This restriction allows the first 8 bytes of a MIE file to be used to
       identify a MIE format file.  The following table lists the two possible initial byte
       sequences for a MIE-format file (the first for big-endian, and the second for little-
       endian byte ordering):

           Byte Number:      0    1    2    3    4    5    6    7

           C Characters:     ~ \x10 \x04    ?    0    M    I    E
               or            ~ \x18 \x04    ?    0    M    I    E

           Hexadecimal:     7e   10   04    ?   30   4d   49   45
               or           7e   18   04    ?   30   4d   49   45

           Decimal:        126   16    4    ?   48   77   73   69
               or          126   24    4    ?   48   77   73   69

       Note that byte 1 may have one of the two possible values (0x10 or 0x18), and byte 3 may
       have any value (0x00 to 0xff).

   Element Structure
           1 byte  SyncByte = 0x7e (decimal 126, character '~')
           1 byte  FormatCode (see below)
           1 byte  TagLength (T)
           1 byte  DataLength (gives D if DataLength < 253)
           T bytes TagName (T given by TagLength)
           2 bytes DataLength2 [exists only if DataLength == 255 (0xff)]
           4 bytes DataLength4 [exists only if DataLength == 254 (0xfe)]
           8 bytes DataLength8 [exists only if DataLength == 253 (0xfd)]
           D bytes DataBlock (D given by DataLength)

       The minimum element length is 4 bytes (for a group terminator).  The maximum DataBlock
       size is 2^64-1 bytes.  TagLength and DataLength are unsigned integers, and the byte
       ordering for multi-byte DataLength fields is specified by the containing MIE group
       element.  The SyncByte is byte aligned, so no padding is added to align on an N-byte
       boundary.

       FormatCode

       The format code is a bitmask that defines the format of the data:

           7654 3210
           ++++ ----  FormatType
           ---- +---  TypeModifier
           ---- -+--  Compressed
           ---- --++  FormatSize

       FormatType (bitmask 0xf0):
               0x00 - other (or unknown) data
               0x10 - MIE group
               0x20 - text string
               0x30 - list of null-separated text strings
               0x40 - integer
               0x50 - rational
               0x60 - fixed point
               0x70 - floating point
               0x80 - free space

       TypeModifier (bitmask 0x08):
           Modifies the meaning of certain FormatTypes (0x00-0x60):

               0x08 - other data sensitive to MIE group byte order
               0x18 - MIE group with little-endian byte ordering
               0x28 - UTF encoded text string
               0x38 - UTF encoded text string list
               0x48 - signed integer
               0x58 - signed rational (denominator is always unsigned)
               0x68 - signed fixed-point

       Compressed (bitmask 0x04):
           If this bit is set, the data block is compressed using Zlib deflate.  An entire MIE
           group may be compressed, with the exception of file-level groups.

       FormatSize (bitmask 0x03):
           Gives the byte size of each data element:

               0x00 - 8 bits  (1 byte)
               0x01 - 16 bits (2 bytes)
               0x02 - 32 bits (4 bytes)
               0x03 - 64 bits (8 bytes)

           The number of bytes in a single value for this format is given by 2**FormatSize (or 1
           << FormatSize).  The number of values is the data length divided by this number of
           bytes.  It is an error if the data length is not an even multiple of the format size
           in bytes.

       The following is a list of all currently defined MIE FormatCode values for uncompressed
       data (add 0x04 to each value for compressed data):

           0x00 - other data (insensitive to MIE group byte order) (1)
           0x01 - other 16-bit data (may be byte swapped)
           0x02 - other 32-bit data (may be byte swapped)
           0x03 - other 64-bit data (may be byte swapped)
           0x08 - other data (sensitive to MIE group byte order) (1)
           0x10 - MIE group with big-endian values (1)
           0x18 - MIE group with little-endian values (1)
           0x20 - ASCII (ISO 8859-1) string (2,3)
           0x28 - UTF-8 string (2,3,4)
           0x29 - UTF-16 string (2,3,4)
           0x2a - UTF-32 string (2,3,4)
           0x30 - ASCII (ISO 8859-1) string list (3,5)
           0x38 - UTF-8 string list (3,4,5)
           0x39 - UTF-16 string list (3,4,5)
           0x3a - UTF-32 string list (3,4,5)
           0x40 - unsigned 8-bit integer
           0x41 - unsigned 16-bit integer
           0x42 - unsigned 32-bit integer
           0x43 - unsigned 64-bit integer (6)
           0x48 - signed 8-bit integer
           0x49 - signed 16-bit integer
           0x4a - signed 32-bit integer
           0x4b - signed 64-bit integer (6)
           0x52 - unsigned 32-bit rational (16-bit numerator then denominator) (7)
           0x53 - unsigned 64-bit rational (32-bit numerator then denominator) (7)
           0x5a - signed 32-bit rational (denominator is unsigned) (7)
           0x5b - signed 64-bit rational (denominator is unsigned) (7)
           0x61 - unsigned 16-bit fixed-point (high 8 bits is integer part) (8)
           0x62 - unsigned 32-bit fixed-point (high 16 bits is integer part) (8)
           0x69 - signed 16-bit fixed-point (high 8 bits is signed integer) (8)
           0x6a - signed 32-bit fixed-point (high 16 bits is signed integer) (8)
           0x72 - 32-bit IEEE float (not recommended for portability reasons)
           0x73 - 64-bit IEEE double (not recommended for portability reasons) (6)
           0x80 - free space (value data does not contain useful information)

       Notes:

       1.  The byte ordering specified by the MIE group TypeModifier applies to the MIE group
           element as well as all elements within the group.  Data for all FormatCodes except
           0x08 (other data, sensitive to byte order) may be transferred between MIE groups with
           different byte order by byte swapping the uncompressed data according to the specified
           data format.  The following list illustrates the byte-swapping pattern, based on
           FormatSize, for all format types except rational (FormatType 0x50).

                 FormatSize              Change in Byte Sequence
               --------------      -----------------------------------
               0x00 (8 bits)       0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 --> 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 (no change)
               0x01 (16 bits)      0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 --> 1 0 3 2 5 4 7 6
               0x02 (32 bits)      0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 --> 3 2 1 0 7 6 5 4
               0x03 (64 bits)      0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 --> 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0

           Rational values consist of two integers, so they are swapped as the next lower
           FormatSize.  For example, a 32-bit rational (FormatSize 0x02, and FormatCode 0x52 or
           0x5a) is swapped as two 16-bit values (ie. as if it had FormatSize 0x01).

       2.  The TagName of a string element may have an 6-character suffix to indicate a specific
           locale. (eg. "Title-en_US", or "Keywords-de_DE").

       3.  Text strings are not normally null terminated, however they may be padded with one or
           more null characters to the end of the data block to allow strings to be edited within
           fixed-length data blocks.  Newlines in the text are indicated by a single LF (0x0a)
           character.

       4.  UTF strings must not begin with a byte order mark (BOM) since the byte order and byte
           size are specified by the MIE format.  If a BOM is found, it should be treated as a
           zero-width non-breaking space.

       5.  A list of text strings separated by null characters.  These lists must not be null
           padded or null terminated, since this would be interpreted as additional zero-length
           strings.  For ASCII and UTF-8 strings, the null character is a single zero (0x00)
           byte.  For UTF-16 or UTF-32 strings, the null character is 2 or 4 zero bytes
           respectively.

       6.  64-bit integers and doubles are subject to the specified byte ordering for both 32-bit
           words and bytes within these words.  For instance, the high order byte is always the
           first byte if big-endian, and the eighth byte if little-endian.  This means that some
           swapping is always necessary for these values on systems where the byte order differs
           from the word order (eg. some ARM systems), regardless of the endian-ness of the
           stored values.

       7.  Rational values are treated as two separate integers.  The numerator always comes
           first regardless of the byte ordering.  In a signed rational value, only the numerator
           is signed.  The denominator of all rational values is unsigned (eg. a signed 64-bit
           rational of 0x80000000/0x80000000 evaluates to -1, not +1).

       8.  32-bit fixed point values are converted to floating point by treating them as an
           integer and dividing by an appropriate value.  eg)

               16-bit fixed value = 16-bit integer value / 256.0
               32-bit fixed value = 32-bit integer value / 65536.0

       TagLength

       Gives the length of the TagName string.  Any value between 0 and 255 is valid, but the
       TagLength of 0 is valid only for the MIE group terminator.

       DataLength

       DataLength is an unsigned byte that gives the number of bytes in the data block.  A value
       between 0 and 252 gives the data length directly, and numbers from 253 to 255 are reserved
       for extended DataLength codes.  Codes of 255, 254 and 253 indicate that the element
       contains an additional 2, 4 or 8 byte unsigned integer representing the data length.

           0-252      - length of data block
           255 (0xff) - use DataLength2
           254 (0xfe) - use DataLength4
           253 (0xfd) - use DataLength8

       A DataLength of zero is valid for any element except a compressed MIE group.  A zero
       DataLength for an uncompressed MIE group indicates that the group length is unknown.  For
       other elements, a zero length indicates there is no associated data.  A terminator element
       must have a DataLength of 0, 6 or 10, and may not use an extended DataLength.

       TagName

       The TagName string is 0 to 255 bytes long, and is composed of the ASCII characters A-Z,
       a-z, 0-9 and underline ('_').  Also, a dash ('-') is used to separate the language/country
       code in the TagName of a localized text string, and a units string (possibly containing
       other ASCII characters) may be appear in brackets at the end of the TagName.  The TagName
       string is NOT null terminated.  A MIE element with a tag string of zero length is reserved
       for the group terminator.

       MIE elements are sorted alphabetically by TagName within each group.  Multiple elements
       with the same TagName are allowed, even within the same group.

       TagNames should be meaningful.  Case is significant.  Words should be lowercase with an
       uppercase first character, and acronyms should be all upper case.  The underline ("_") is
       provided to allow separation of two acronyms or two numbers, but it shouldn't be used
       unless necessary.  No separation is necessary between an acronym and a word (eg.
       "ISOSetting").

       All TagNames should start with an uppercase letter.  An exception to this rule allows tags
       to begin with a digit (0-9) if they must come before other tags in the sort order, or a
       lowercase letter (a-z) if they must come after.  For instance, the '0Type' element begins
       with a digit so it comes before, and the 'data' element begins with a lowercase letter so
       that it comes after meta information tags in the main "0MIE" group.

       Tag names for localized text strings have an 6-character suffix with the following format:
       The first character is a dash ('-'), followed by a 2-character lower case ISO 639-1
       language code, then an underline ('_'), and ending with a 2-character upper case ISO
       3166-1 alpha 2 country code.  (eg.  "-en_US", "-en_GB", "-de_DE" or "-fr_FR".  Note that
       "GB", and not "UK" is the code for Great Britain, although "UK" should be recognized for
       compatibility reasons.)  The suffix is included when sorting the tags alphabetically, so
       the default locale (with no tag-name suffix) always comes first.  If the country is
       unknown or not applicable, a country code of "XX" should be used.

       Tags with numerical values may allow units of measurement to be specified.  The units
       string is stored in brackets at the end of the tag name, and is composed of zero or more
       ASCII characters in the range 0x21 to 0x7d, excluding the bracket characters 0x28 and
       0x29.  (eg. "Resolution(/cm)" or "SpecificHeat(J/kg.K)".)  See Image::ExifTool::MIEUnits
       for details. Unit strings are not localized, and may not be used in combination with
       localized text strings.

       Sets of tags which would require a common prefix should be added in a separate MIE group
       instead of adding the prefix to all tag names.  For example, instead of these TagName's:

           ExternalFlashType
           ExternalFlashSerialNumber
           ExternalFlashFired

       one would instead designate a separate "ExternalFlash" MIE group to contain the following
       elements:

           Type
           SerialNumber
           Fired

       DataLength2/4/8

       These extended DataLength fields exist only if DataLength is 255, 254 or 253, and are
       respectively 2, 4 or 8 byte unsigned integers giving the data block length.  One of these
       values must be used if the data block is larger than 252 bytes, but they may be used if
       desired for smaller blocks too (although this may add a few unnecessary bytes to the MIE
       element).

       DataBlock

       The data value for the MIE element.  The format of the data is given by the FormatCode.
       For MIE group elements, the data includes all contained elements and the group terminator.

   MIE groups
       All MIE data elements must be contained within a group.  A group begins with a MIE group
       element, and ends with a group terminator.  Groups may be nested in a hierarchy to
       arbitrary depth.

       A MIE group element is identified by a format code of 0x10 (big endian byte ordering) or
       0x18 (little endian).  The group terminator is distinguished by a zero TagLength (it is
       the only element allowed to have a zero TagLength), and has a FormatCode of 0x00.

       The MIE group element is permitted to have a zero DataLength only if the data is
       uncompressed.  This special value indicates that the group length is unknown (otherwise
       the minimum value for DataLength is 4, corresponding the the minimum group size which
       includes a terminator of at least 4 bytes). If DataLength is zero, all elements in the
       group must be parsed until the group terminator is found.  If non-zero, DataLength
       includes the length of all elements contained within the group, including the group
       terminator.  Use of a non-zero DataLength is encouraged because it allows readers quickly
       skip over entire MIE groups.  For compressed groups DataLength must be non-zero, and is
       the length of the compressed group data (which includes the compressed group terminator).

       Group Terminator

       The group terminator has a FormatCode and TagLength of zero.  The terminator DataLength
       must be 0, 6 or 10 bytes, and extended DataLength codes may not be used.  With a zero
       DataLength, the byte sequence for a terminator is "7e 00 00 00" (hex).  With a DataLength
       of 6 or 10 bytes, the terminator data block contains information about the length and byte
       ordering of the preceding group.  This additional information is recommended for file-
       level groups, and is used in multi-document MIE files and MIE trailers to allow the file
       to be scanned backwards from the end.  (This may also allow some documents to be recovered
       if part of the file is corrupted.)  The structure of this optional terminator data block
       is as follows:

           4 or 8 bytes  GroupLength (unsigned integer)
           1 byte        ByteOrder (0x10 or 0x18, same as MIE group)
           1 byte        GroupLengthSize (0x04 or 0x08)

       The ByteOrder and GroupLengthSize values give the byte ordering and size of the
       GroupLength integer.  The GroupLength value is the total length of the entire MIE group
       ending with this terminator, including the opening MIE group element and the terminator
       itself.

       File-level MIE groups

       File-level MIE groups may NOT be compressed.

       All elements in a MIE file are contained within a special group with a TagName of "0MIE".
       The purpose of the "OMIE" group is to provide a unique signature at the start of the file,
       and to encapsulate information allowing files to be easily combined.  The "0MIE" group
       must be terminated like any other group, but it is recommended that the terminator of a
       file-level group include the optional data block (defined above) to provide information
       about the group length and byte order.

       It is valid to have more than one "0MIE" group at the file level, allowing multiple
       documents in a single MIE file.  Furthermore, the MIE structure enables multi-document
       files to be generated by simply concatenating two or more MIE files.

   Scanning Backwards through a MIE File
       The steps below give an algorithm to quickly locate the last document in a MIE file:

       1.  Read the last 10 bytes of the file.  (Note that a valid MIE file may be as short as 12
           bytes long, but a file this length contains only an an empty MIE group.)

       2.  If the last byte of the file is zero, then it is not possible to scan backward through
           the file, so the file must be scanned from the beginning.  Otherwise, proceed to the
           next step.

       3.  If the last byte is 4 or 8, the terminator contains information about the byte
           ordering and length of the group.  Otherwise, stop here because this isn't a valid MIE
           file.

       4.  The next-to-last byte must be either 0x10 indicating big-endian byte ordering or 0x18
           for little-endian ordering, otherwise this isn't a valid MIE file.

       5.  The value of the preceding 4 or 8 bytes gives the length of the complete file-level
           MIE group (GroupLength).  This length includes both the leading MIE group element and
           the terminator element itself.  The value is an unsigned integer with a byte length
           given in step 3), and a byte order from step 4).  From the current file position (at
           the end of the data read in step 1), seek backward by this number of bytes to find the
           start of the MIE group element for this document.

       This algorithm may be repeated again beginning at this point in the file to locate the
       next-to-last document, etc.

       The table below lists all 5 valid patterns for the last 14 bytes of a file-level MIE
       group, with all numbers in hex.  The comments indicate the length and byte ordering of
       GroupLength (xx) if available:

         ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? 7e 00 00 00  - (no GroupLength)
         ?? ?? ?? ?? 7e 00 00 06 xx xx xx xx 10 04  - 4 bytes, big endian
         ?? ?? ?? ?? 7e 00 00 06 xx xx xx xx 18 04  - 4 bytes, little endian
         7e 00 00 0a xx xx xx xx xx xx xx xx 10 08  - 8 bytes, big endian
         7e 00 00 0a xx xx xx xx xx xx xx xx 18 08  - 8 bytes, little endian

   Trailer Signature
       The MIE format may be used for trailer information appended to other types of files.  When
       this is done, a signature must appear at the end of the main MIE group to uniquely
       identify the MIE format trailer.  To achieve this, a "zmie" trailer signature is written
       as the last element in the main "0MIE" group.  This element has a FormatCode of 0, a
       TagLength of 4, a DataLength of 0, and a TagName of "zmie".  With this signature, the hex
       byte sequence "7e 00 04 00 7a 6d 69 65" appears immediately before the final group
       terminator, and the last 22 bytes of the trailer correspond to one of the following 4
       patterns (where the trailer length is given by "xx", as above):

         ?? ?? ?? ?? 7e 00 04 00 7a 6d 69 65 7e 00 00 06 xx xx xx xx 10 04
         ?? ?? ?? ?? 7e 00 04 00 7a 6d 69 65 7e 00 00 06 xx xx xx xx 18 04
         7e 00 04 00 7a 6d 69 65 7e 00 00 0a xx xx xx xx xx xx xx xx 10 08
         7e 00 04 00 7a 6d 69 65 7e 00 00 0a xx xx xx xx xx xx xx xx 18 08

       Note that the zero-DataLength terminator may not be used here because the trailer length
       must be known for seeking backwards from the end of the file.

       Multiple trailers may be appended to the same file using this technique.

   MIE Data Values
       MIE data values for a given tag are usually not restricted to a specific FormatCode.  Any
       value may be represented in any appropriate format, including numbers represented in
       string (ASCII or UTF) form.

       It is preferred that closely related values with the same format are written to a single
       tag instead of using multiple tags.  This improves localization of like values and
       decreases MIE element overhead.  For instance, instead of separate ImageWidth and
       ImageHeight tags, a single ImageSize tag is defined.

       Tags which may take on a discrete set of values should have meaningful values if possible.
       This improves the extensibility of the format and allows a more reasonable interpretation
       of unrecognized values.

       Numerical Representation

       Integer and floating point numbers may be represented in binary or string form.  In string
       form, integers are a series of digits with an optional leading sign (eg. "[+|-]DDDDDD"),
       and multiple values are separated by a single space character (eg. "23 128 -32").
       Floating point numbers are similar but may also contain a decimal point and/or a signed
       exponent with a leading 'e' character (eg. "[+|-]DD[.DDDDDD][e(+|-)EEE]").  The string
       "inf" is used to represent infinity.  One advantage of numerical strings is that they can
       have an arbitrarily high precision because the possible number of significant digits is
       virtually unlimited.

       Note that numerical values may have associated units of measurement which are specified in
       the "TagName" string.

       Date/Time Format

       All MIE dates are strings in the form "YYYY:mm:dd HH:MM:SS.ss+HH:MM".  The fractional
       seconds (".ss") are optional, and if included may contain any number of significant digits
       (unlike all other fields which are a fixed number of digits and must be padded with
       leading zeros if necessary).  The timezone ("+HH:MM" or "-HH:MM") is recommended but not
       required.  If not given, the local system timezone is assumed.

   MIME Type
       The basic MIME type for a MIE file is "application/x-mie", however the specific MIME type
       depends on the type of subfile, and is obtained by adding "x-mie-" to the MIME type of the
       subfile.  For example, with a subfile of type "image/jpeg", the MIE file MIME type is
       "image/x-mie-jpeg".  But note that the "x-" is not duplicated if the subfile MIME type
       already starts with "x-".  So a subfile with MIME type "image/x-raw" is contained within a
       MIE file of type "image/x-mie-raw", not "image/x-mie-x-raw".  In the case of multiple
       documents in a MIE file, the MIME type is taken from the first document.  Regardless of
       the subfile type, all MIE-format files should have a filename extension of ".MIE".

   Levels of Support
       Basic MIE reader/writer applications may choose not to provide support for some advanced
       features of the MIE format.  Features which may not be supported by all software are:

       Compression
           Software not supporting compression must ignore compressed elements and groups, but
           should be able to process the remaining information.

       Large data lengths
           Some software may limit the maximum size of a MIE group or element.  Historically, a
           limit of 2GB may be imposed by some systems.  However, 8-byte data lengths should be
           supported by all applications provided the value doesn't exceed the system limit.
           (eg. For systems with a 2GB limit, 8-byte data lengths should be supported if the
           upper 17 bits are all zero.)  If a data length above the system limit is encountered,
           it may be necessary for the application to stop processing if it can not seek to the
           next element in the file.

EXAMPLES
       This section gives examples for working with MIE information using ExifTool.

   Encapsulating Information with Data in a MIE File
       The following command encapsulates any file recognized by ExifTool inside a MIE file, and
       initializes MIE tags from information within the file:

           exiftool -o new.mie -tagsfromfile FILE '-mie:all<all' \
               '-subfilename<filename' '-subfiletype<filetype' \
               '-subfilemimetype<mimetype' '-subfiledata<=FILE'

       where "FILE" is the name of the file.

       For unrecognized files, this command may be used:

           exiftool -o new.mie -subfilename=FILE -subfiletype=TYPE \
               -subfilemimetype=MIME '-subfiledata<=FILE'

       where "TYPE" and "MIME" represent the source file type and MIME type respectively.

   Adding a MIE Trailer to a File
       The MIE format may also be used to store information in a trailer appended to another type
       of file.  Beware that trailers may not be compatible with all file formats, but JPEG and
       TIFF are two formats where additional trailer information doesn't create any problems for
       normal parsing of the file.  Also note that this technique has the disadvantage that
       trailer information is commonly lost if the file is subsequently edited by other software.

       Creating a MIE trailer with ExifTool is a two-step process since ExifTool can't currently
       be used to add a MIE trailer directly.  The example below illustrates the steps for adding
       a MIE trailer with a small preview image ("small.jpg") to a destination JPEG image
       ("dst.jpg").

       Step 1) Create a MIE file with a TrailerSignature containing the desired information:

           exiftool -o new.mie -trailersignature=1 -tagsfromfile small.jpg \
               '-previewimagetype<filetype' '-previewimagesize<imagesize' \
               '-previewimagename<filename' '-previewimage<=small.jpg'

       Step 2) Append the MIE information to another file.  In Unix, this can be done with the
       'cat' command:

           cat new.mie >> dst.jpg

       Once added, ExifTool may be used to edit or delete a MIE trailer in a JPEG or TIFF image.

   Multiple MIE Documents in a Single File
       The MIE specification allows multiple MIE documents (or trailers) to exist in a single
       file.  A file like this may be created by simply concatenating MIE documents.  ExifTool
       may be used to access information in a specific document by adding a copy number to the
       MIE group name.  For example:

           # write the Author tag in the second MIE document
           exiftool -mie2:author=phil test.mie

           # delete the first MIE document from a file
           exiftool -mie1:all= test.mie

   Units of Measurement
       Some MIE tags allow values to be specified in different units of measurement.  In the MIE
       file format these units are combined with the tag name, but when using ExifTool they are
       specified in brackets after the value:

           exiftool -mie:gpsaltitude='7500(ft)' test.mie

       If no units are provided, the default units are written.

   Localized Text
       Localized text values are accessed by adding a language/country code to the tag name.  For
       example:

           exiftool -comment-en_us='this is a comment' test.mie

REVISIONS
         2010-04-05 - Fixed "Format Size" Note 7 to give the correct number of bits
                      in the example rational value
         2007-01-21 - Specified LF character (0x0a) for text newline sequence
         2007-01-19 - Specified ISO 8859-1 character set for extended ASCII codes
         2007-01-01 - Improved wording of Step 5 for scanning backwards in MIE file
         2006-12-30 - Added EXAMPLES section and note about UTF BOM
         2006-12-20 - MIE 1.1:  Changed meaning of TypeModifier bit (0x08) for
                      unknown data (FormatType 0x00), and documented byte swapping
         2006-12-14 - MIE 1.0:  Added Data Values and Numerical Representations
                      sections, and added ability to specify units in tag names
         2006-11-09 - Added Levels of Support section
         2006-11-03 - Added Trailer Signature
         2005-11-18 - Original specification created

AUTHOR
       Copyright 2003-2020, Phil Harvey (philharvey66 at gmail.com)

       This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same
       terms as Perl itself.  The MIE format itself is also copyright Phil Harvey, and is covered
       by the same free-use license.

REFERENCES
       <https://exiftool.org/MIE1.1-20070121.pdf>

SEE ALSO
       "MIE Tags" in Image::ExifTool::TagNames, Image::ExifTool::MIEUnits, Image::ExifTool(3pm)

perl v5.30.0                                2021-06-09                  Image::ExifTool::MIE(3pm)

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