Hi,

I've been having this issue recently as well. In my case, the images have
come both from darktable's "import from camera" feature, and via copying
them to a local directory before opening the folder in darktable. When I
rolled back from the darktable-unstable version to the stable version in
the Ubuntu repo, the corruption persisted, though I did not test a
re-import in the Ubuntu repo version.

The issue has resolved itself twice after deleting library.db, but crept
back in. The symptoms include the image info pane missing the usual EXIF
info (or showing zeros in some places), and therefore default values not
being applied to base curve,  etc. Portrait-oriented images are incorrectly
rotated.

At the moment, all is well. If the problem happens again, I will test the
cache reset technique and report back. Thanks!

-Mark

--

Message: 3
Date: Thu, 31 Oct 2013 08:50:22 -0400
From: Patrick Shanahan <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [Darktable-users] exif info now being recorded by
        darktable, Bug ??
To: [email protected]
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8

* ??????? ????????? <[email protected]> [10-31-13 02:13]:
> I have the same problem. I trying to delete library.db, but after new
> import I see first files with normal EXIF and other files -- without
> EXIF data.
> How I can reset cache?

html removed

lighttable -> selected images -> reset cache

It may just be happenstance, but after selecting from the first image
missing exif data thru the last image in the set, resetting cache, and
reimporting the set, all images appear to had correct exif data.

Currently using darktable-1.3_1236_gc800bca_git-2.1.TM.x86_64 built by
Togan Muftuoglu for openSUSE.

--
(paka)Patrick Shanahan       Plainfield, Indiana, USA          @ptilopteri
http://en.opensuse.org    openSUSE Community Member    facebook/ptilopteri
http://wahoo.no-ip.org        Photo Album: http://wahoo.no-ip.org/gallery2
Registered Linux User #207535                    @ http://linuxcounter.net



------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Android is increasing in popularity, but the open development platform that
developers love is also attractive to malware creators. Download this white
paper to learn more about secure code signing practices that can help keep
Android apps secure.
http://pubads.g.doubleclick.net/gampad/clk?id=65839951&iu=/4140/ostg.clktrk
_______________________________________________
Darktable-users mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/darktable-users

Reply via email to