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| dcraw(1) | General Commands Manual | dcraw(1) | 
NAME¶
dcraw - command-line decoder for raw digital photos
SYNOPSIS¶
dcraw [OPTION]... [FILE]...
DESCRIPTION¶
dcraw decodes raw photos, displays metadata, and extracts thumbnails.
GENERAL OPTIONS¶
- -v
 - Print verbose messages, not just warnings and errors.
 - -c
 - Write decoded images or thumbnails to standard output.
 - -e
 - Extract the camera-generated thumbnail, not the raw image. You'll get either a JPEG or a PPM file, depending on the camera.
 - -z
 - Change the access and modification times of an AVI, JPEG, TIFF or raw file to when the photo was taken, assuming that the camera clock was set to Universal Time.
 - -i
 - Identify files but don't decode them. Exit status is 0 if dcraw can decode the last file, 1 if it can't. -i -v shows metadata.
 - dcraw cannot decode JPEG files!!
 
REPAIR OPTIONS¶
- -I
 - Read the raw pixels from standard input in CPU byte order with no header. Use dcraw -E -4 to get the raw pixel values.
 - -P deadpixels.txt
 - Read the dead pixel list from this file instead of ".badpixels". See FILES for a description of the format.
 - -K darkframe.pgm
 - Subtract a dark frame from the raw data. To generate a dark frame, shoot a raw photo with no light and do dcraw -D -4 -j -t 0.
 - -k darkness
 - When shadows appear foggy, you need to raise the darkness level. To measure this, apply pamsumm -mean to the dark frame generated above.
 - -S saturation
 - When highlights appear pink, you need to lower the saturation level. To measure this, take a picture of something shiny and do dcraw -D -4 -j -c photo.raw | pamsumm -max
 - The default darkness and saturation are usually correct.
 - -n noise_threshold
 - Use wavelets to erase noise while preserving real detail. The best threshold should be somewhere between 100 and 1000.
 - -C red_mag blue_mag
 - Enlarge the raw red and blue layers by the given factors, typically 0.999 to 1.001, to correct chromatic aberration.
 - -H 0
 - Clip all highlights to solid white (default).
 - -H 1
 - Leave highlights unclipped in various shades of pink.
 - -H 2
 - Blend clipped and unclipped values together for a gradual fade to white.
 - -H 3+
 - Reconstruct highlights. Low numbers favor whites; high numbers favor colors. Try -H 5 as a compromise. If that's not good enough, do -H 9, cut out the non-white highlights, and paste them into an image generated with -H 3.
 
COLOR OPTIONS¶
By default, dcraw uses a fixed white balance based on a color chart illuminated with a standard D65 lamp.
- -w
 - Use the white balance specified by the camera. If this is not found, print a warning and use another method.
 - -a
 - Calculate the white balance by averaging the entire image.
 - -A left top width height
 - Calculate the white balance by averaging a rectangular area. First do dcraw -j -t 0 and select an area of neutral grey color.
 - -r mul0 mul1 mul2 mul3
 - Specify your own raw white balance. These multipliers can be cut and pasted from the output of dcraw -v.
 - +M or -M
 - Use (or don't use) any color matrix from the camera metadata. The default is +M if -w is set or the photo is in DNG format, -M otherwise. Besides DNG, this option only affects Olympus, Leaf, and Phase One cameras.
 - -o [0-6]
 - Select the output colorspace when the -p option is not used:
    
0 Raw color (unique to each camera)
1 sRGB D65 (default)
2 Adobe RGB (1998) D65
3 Wide Gamut RGB D65
4 Kodak ProPhoto RGB D65
5 XYZ
6 ACES - -p camera.icm [ -o output.icm ]
 - Use ICC profiles to define the camera's raw colorspace and the desired output colorspace (sRGB by default).
 - -p embed
 - Use the ICC profile embedded in the raw photo.
 
INTERPOLATION OPTIONS¶
- -d
 - Show the raw data as a grayscale image with no interpolation. Good for photographing black-and-white documents.
 - -D
 - Same as -d, but with the original unscaled pixel values.
 - -E
 - Same as -D, but masked pixels are not cropped.
 - -h
 - Output a half-size color image. Twice as fast as -q 0.
 - -q 0
 - Use high-speed, low-quality bilinear interpolation.
 - -q 1
 - Use Variable Number of Gradients (VNG) interpolation.
 - -q 2
 - Use Patterned Pixel Grouping (PPG) interpolation.
 - -q 3
 - Use Adaptive Homogeneity-Directed (AHD) interpolation.
 - -f
 - Interpolate RGB as four colors. Use this if the output shows false 2x2 meshes with VNG or mazes with AHD.
 - -m number_of_passes
 - After interpolation, clean up color artifacts by repeatedly applying a 3x3 median filter to the R-G and B-G channels.
 
OUTPUT OPTIONS¶
By default, dcraw writes PGM/PPM/PAM with 8-bit samples, a BT.709 gamma curve, a histogram-based white level, and no metadata.
- -W
 - Use a fixed white level, ignoring the image histogram.
 - -b brightness
 - Divide the white level by this number, 1.0 by default.
 - -g power toe_slope
 - Set the gamma curve, by default BT.709 (-g 2.222 4.5). If you prefer sRGB gamma, use -g 2.4 12.92. For a simple power curve, set the toe slope to zero.
 - -6
 - Write sixteen bits per sample instead of eight.
 - -4
 - Linear 16-bit, same as -6 -W -g 1 1.
 - -T
 - Write TIFF with metadata instead of PGM/PPM/PAM.
 - -t [0-7,90,180,270]
 - Flip the output image. By default, dcraw applies the flip specified by the camera. -t 0 disables all flipping.
 - -j
 - For Fuji Super CCD cameras, show the image tilted 45 degrees. For cameras with non-square pixels, do not stretch the image to its correct aspect ratio. In any case, this option guarantees that each output pixel corresponds to one raw pixel.
 - -s [0..N-1] or -s all
 - If a file contains N raw images, choose one or "all" to decode. For example, Fuji Super CCD SR cameras generate a second image underexposed four stops to show detail in the highlights.
 
FILES¶
- ./.badpixels, ../.badpixels, ../../.badpixels, ...
 - List of your camera's dead pixels, so that dcraw can interpolate
      around them. Each line specifies the column, row, and UNIX time of death
      for one pixel. For example:
    
    
962 91 1028350000 # died between August 1 and 4, 2002 1285 1067 0 # don't know when this pixel diedThese coordinates are before any stretching or rotation, so use dcraw -j -t 0 to locate dead pixels.
 
SEE ALSO¶
pgm(5), ppm(5), pam(5), pamsumm(1), pnmgamma(1), pnmtotiff(1), pnmtopng(1), gphoto2(1), cjpeg(1), djpeg(1)
AUTHOR¶
Written by David Coffin, dcoffin a cybercom o net
| March 3, 2015 |