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A fast Golang library for media type and file extension detection, based on magic numbers

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mimetype

A package for detecting MIME types and extensions based on magic numbers

Goroutine safe, extensible, no C bindings

Go Reference Go report card Code coverage License

Features

Install

go get github.com/gabriel-vasile/mimetype

Usage

mtype := mimetype.Detect([]byte)
// OR
mtype, err := mimetype.DetectReader(io.Reader)
// OR
mtype, err := mimetype.DetectFile("/path/to/file")
fmt.Println(mtype.String(), mtype.Extension())

See the runnable Go Playground examples.

Usage'

Only use libraries like mimetype as a last resort. Content type detection using magic numbers is slow, inaccurate, and non-standard. Most of the times protocols have methods for specifying such metadata; e.g., Content-Type header in HTTP and SMTP.

FAQ

Q: My file is in the list of supported MIME types but it is not correctly detected. What should I do?

A: Some file formats (often Microsoft Office documents) keep their signatures towards the end of the file. Try increasing the number of bytes used for detection with:

mimetype.SetLimit(1024*1024) // Set limit to 1MB.
// or
mimetype.SetLimit(0) // No limit, whole file content used.
mimetype.DetectFile("file.doc")

If increasing the limit does not help, please open an issue.

Structure

mimetype uses a hierarchical structure to keep the MIME type detection logic. This reduces the number of calls needed for detecting the file type. The reason behind this choice is that there are file formats used as containers for other file formats. For example, Microsoft Office files are just zip archives, containing specific metadata files. Once a file has been identified as a zip, there is no need to check if it is a text file, but it is worth checking if it is an Microsoft Office file.

To prevent loading entire files into memory, when detecting from a reader or from a file mimetype limits itself to reading only the header of the input.

structure

Performance

Thanks to the hierarchical structure, searching for common formats first, and limiting itself to file headers, mimetype matches the performance of stdlib http.DetectContentType while outperforming the alternative package.

                            mimetype  http.DetectContentType      filetype
BenchmarkMatchTar-24       250 ns/op         400 ns/op           3778 ns/op
BenchmarkMatchZip-24       524 ns/op         351 ns/op           4884 ns/op
BenchmarkMatchJpeg-24      103 ns/op         228 ns/op            839 ns/op
BenchmarkMatchGif-24       139 ns/op         202 ns/op            751 ns/op
BenchmarkMatchPng-24       165 ns/op         221 ns/op           1176 ns/op

Contributing

See CONTRIBUTING.md.

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A fast Golang library for media type and file extension detection, based on magic numbers

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