DPF Manager: Digital Preservation Formats Manager (Image files)
DPF Manager is an open source modular TIFF conformance checker that is extremely easy to use, to integrate with existing and new projects, and to deploy in a multitude of different scenarios. It is designed to help archivists and digital content producers ensure that TIFF files are fit for long term preservation, and is able to automatically suggest improvements and correct preservation issues. The team developing it has decades of experience working with image formats and digital preservation, and has leveraged the support of 60+ memory institutions to draft a new ISO standard proposal (TIFF/A) specifically designed for long term preservation of still-images. An open source community will be created and grown through the project lifetime to ensure its continuous development and success. Additional commercial services will be offered to make DPF Manager self-sustainable and increase its adoption.
The DPF Manager is dual-licensed:
You can download an installer for the latest DPF Manager GUI release from our download site.
If you want to try the latest development version you can obtain it from our development download site.
You can run the DPF Manager in two modes, GUI and CLI. To start the software in GUI mode just double-click the GUI executable. A manual for the GUI can be found in our download site.
For using the CLI in non-windows operating systems use the terminal and enter the following command which will explain the available parameters.
dpf_manager -h
For Windows operating systems use the CLI executable named dpf-manager-console.exe instead.
If you want to build the code from source you'll require:
You can use Git to download the source code.
git clone https://github.com/EasyinnovaSL/DPFManager.git
or download the latest release from [GitHub] (https://github.com/EasyinnovaSL/DPFManager/releases).
Move to the downloaded project directory and call Maven install:
cd DPFManager
mvn clean install
The executable and the installer will be generated under the directory target/jfx.
We recommend to compile the DPF Manager using the OracleJDK, since compiling the project with it, is straightforward.
However, if you want to use OpenJDK instead of OracleJDK, you will need to build with the open version of OpenJDK that includes JavaFX completely from source.