A daemon to automatically handle image optimization


License
Other
Install
pip install imagy==0.0.2

Documentation

Imagy - make your website's images load up to 50% faster

Imagy is a file daemon, that watches your website's media root (where your images are stored) and automatically optimizes image files that are created or modified within.

Imagy uses lossless compression, so your users never have to load unnecessary bytes. Your images look the same, but load faster.

Getting Started

Imagy relies on a few select binaries to perform image optimization. On Ubuntu (tested on 11.10) you can install everything with:

sudo apt-get install pngnq pngcrush imagemagick gifsicle libjpeg-progs

pip install imagy

That's it.

Running it for the first time

A lot of work has gone into making it set-and-forget. If you're running it for the first time, this command should be all you need:

imagy /awesome/images/

Imagy will run through the directory /awesome/images/ and all its subdirectories and optimize all image files it finds. After that it will watch these directories for images that get created or modified.

The algorithms used are stable (don't further modify files after multiple invocations), however to make trying Imagy out as easy as possible, the default is to keep original files around for later reversal. For example the file /file.jpg would be copied to /file-original.jpg before optimization. If the optimized fileis not smaller than the original, no copy gets stored and the original file remains unchanged.

Further Usage

If after some time you wish to stop using Imagy, run imagy --revert which will move all original images back to their initial location.

If you have (rightfully) come to the conclusion that you don't really need to keep originals around, set KEEP_ORIGINALS in config.py to False. If you want to delete all already stored originals run imagy --deloriginals.

Credits

In the background Imagy uses the awesome library smush.py which exposes a general interface to handle the various file types.

Notes

I use Imagy in production at sc2wow.com. I was able to save 150kB off my frontpage load, saving anywhere from 5% to 50% per image, though your results may differ.

More information on how to install pip

Dependencies

  • imagemagick
  • gifsicle
  • jpegtran (on ubuntu in libjpeg-progs)
  • pngcrush