Media sorting tool to organize photos and videos from your camera in folders by year, month and day.
The software will collect all files from the input directory and copy them to the output directory without changing the files content. It will only rename the files and place them in the proper directory for year, month and day.
All files which are not images or videos or those which do not have creation date information will be placed in a directory called unknown
without file name change. By doing this you can be sure that the input directory can be safely deleted after the successful process completion because all files from the input directory have a copy in the output directory.
Requires snapd
sudo snap install phockup
Note: snap applications can access files only in your home and /media
directories for security reasons. If your media files are not located in these directories you should use the installation method below.
If your files are in /media
you should run the following command to allow access:
sudo snap connect phockup:removable-media
If you are using distro which doesn't support snapd or you don't want to download the snap you can use the following commands to download the source and set it up
sudo apt-get install python3 libimage-exiftool-perl -y
curl -L https://github.com/ivandokov/phockup/archive/latest.tar.gz -o phockup.tar.gz
tar -zxf phockup.tar.gz
sudo mv phockup-* /opt/phockup
sudo ln -s /opt/phockup/phockup.py /usr/local/bin/phockup
Requires Homebrew
brew tap ivandokov/homebrew-contrib
brew install phockup
- Download and install latest stable Python 3
- Download Phockup's latest release and extract the archive
- Download exiftool from the official website and extract the archive
- Rename
exiftool(-k).exe
toexiftool.exe
- Move
exiftool.exe
to phockup folder - Open Command Prompt and
cd
to phockup folder - Use the command below (use
phockup.py
instead ofphockup
)
docker run -v ~/Pictures:/mnt ivandokov/phockup:latest phockup /mnt/Input /mnt/Output [PHOCKUP ARGUMENTS]
The -v ~/Pictures:/mnt
part of the command mounts your ~/Pictures
directory to /mnt
inside the container. You can pass any absolute path to be mounted to the container and later on be used as paths for the phockup
command. The example above provides your ~/Pictures/Input
as INPUTDIR
and ~/Pictures/Output
as OUTPUDIR
. You can pass additional arguments afterwards.
Organize photos from one directory into another
phockup INPUTDIR OUTPUTDIR
INPUTDIR
is the directory where your photos are located.
OUTPUTDIR
is the directory where your sorted photos will be stored. It could be a new not existing directory.
Example:
phockup ~/Pictures/camera ~/Pictures/sorted
If you want to change the output directories date format you can do it by passing the format as -d | --date
argument.
You can choose different year format (e.g. 17 instead of 2017) or decide
to skip the day directories and have all photos sorted in year/month.
Supported formats:
YYYY - 2016, 2017 ...
YY - 16, 17 ...
MM - 07, 08, 09 ...
M - July, August, September ...
m - Jul, Aug, Sept ...
DD - 27, 28, 29 ... (day of month)
DDD - 123, 158, 365 ... (day of year)
Example:
YYYY/MM/DD -> 2011/07/17
YYYY/M/DD -> 2011/July/17
YYYY/m/DD -> 2011/Jul/17
YY/m-DD -> 11/Jul-17
If any of the photos does not have date information you can use the -r | --regex
option to specify date format for date extraction from filenames:
--regex="(?P<day>\d{2})\.(?P<month>\d{2})\.(?P<year>\d{4})[_-]?(?P<hour>\d{2})\.(?P<minute>\d{2})\.(?P<second>\d{2})"
As a last resort, specify the -t
option to use the file modification timestamp. This may not be accurate in all cases but can provide some kind of date if you'd rather it not go into the unknown
folder.
Instead of copying the process will move all files from the INPUTDIR to the OUTPUTDIR by using the flag -m | --move
. This is useful when working with a big collection of files and the remaining free space is not enough to make a copy of the INPUTDIR.
Instead of copying the process will create hard link all files from the INPUTDIR into new structure in OUTPUTDIR by using the flag -l | --link
. This is useful when working with good structure of photos in INPUTDIR (like folders per device).
Organize the files in selected format or using the default year/month/day format but keep original filenames by using the flag -o | --original-names
.
If date extracted from photos is incorrect, you can use the -f | --date-field
option to set the correct exif field to get date information from. Use this command to list which fields are available for a file:
exiftool -time:all -mimetype -j file.jpg
The output may look like this, but with more fields:
[{
"DateTimeOriginal": "2017:10:06 01:01:01",
"CreateDate": "2017:01:01 01:01:01",
]}
If the correct date is in DateTimeOriginal
, you can include the option --date-field=DateTimeOriginal
to get date information from it.
To set multiple fields to be tried in order until a valid date is found, just join them with spaces in a quoted string like "CreateDate FileModifyDate"
.
To run the tests, first install the dev dependencies using
pip3 install -r requirements-dev.txt
Then run the tests using
pytest