FastRawViewer Manual
FastRawViewer Manual
5
User Manual
FastRawViewer Strengths:
• Display of the actual RAW as well as the actual RAW histogram
• For the first time, a comfortable speed of RAW file viewing (together with histograms), provided
by FastRawViewer using the power of modern processors and video cards to process RAW
images:
o 6-15 frames per second on a modern desktop computer1 for files from modern photo
cameras (16-50 Mpix, testing was conducted on a mix of shots from recent cameras, SSD
recommended for peak performance).
o 30-50 frames per second for CinemaDNG 2.5k on the same equipment (we used Blackmagic
Pocket Cinema files for testing).
• Support of almost every single existing RAW format (that is, almost every known digital
camera)2, including native out-of-camera DNG files as well as the files converted to DNG.
• Instant display of RAW files directly from any memory card or other file storage - without
customary delays for importing, creating catalogues, libraries, and temporary databases.
• View JPEGs (including embedded JPEG thumbnails) – and also display the histograms.
• Support for TIFF and PNG formats – with histogram and EXIF data display.
1
Intel i7-7700K at stock clock rate, 32GB RAM, Nvidia GTX 1080, fast NVMe SSD drive, Windows 10
2
With only one significant exception: Foveon cameras are not supported.
• The convenience of working with the shots taken in the RAW + JPEG mode, with two files being
paired:
a) While listing through files, you have the option to ignore the second file in the pair.
b) JPEGs (including embedded thumbnails) are considered to be “additional images” and are
immediately accessible for viewing.
c) When you move a file from the RAW + JPEG pair to another folder, the other file follows.
d) And, of course, you can always switch this mode off, if you so choose, and treat the files as
separate.
• The possibility of doing a quick visual and technical analysis by:
a) Examining the real RAW histogram.
b) Assessing the exposure based on:
i. Spotlighting of over- and underexposed areas on the shot.
ii. Over- and underexposure statistics.
c) Outlining the in-focus and highly detailed areas on the shot.
d) Assessing per-channel exposure and acutance.
e) Assessing the noise level in the shadows.
• Time-saver: exposure and white balance adjustments can be made while browsing RAW files
and are saved in XMP files so that they can be automatically applied when you open that shot in
Adobe Lightroom or Adobe Camera Raw.
• Time-saver for series, including panoramas: propagation of white balance, exposure, and image
orientation adjustments from one shot to the entire series.
• Highly compatible system of assigning labels and ratings to images, including the user-defined
labels. Ratings and labels are written into XMP files and are read by Adobe software (and others
which acknowledge XMP sidecar files).
• Copying and moving the selected shots into folders chosen by the user.
• Moving the rejected shots into a special folder, which can be reviewed again later.
• Transferring the selected shots for further processing to a user-selected RAW converter directly
from FastRawViewer.
• Support for black and white RAW, including shots from cameras converted to b/w by removing
the color filter array.
• Warnings when FastRawViewer comes across a damaged RAW file.
• Monitor color profile support, without the loss of image rendering speed.
• Modifying settings to suite your workflow
a) You can set your own keyboard (or keyboard+mouse) shortcuts for every action.
b) The settings panel allows you to turn off the ones you don’t need, and change the others to
your preferences.
Table of Contents
How FastRawViewer Helps You ................................................................................................................ 2
Conventions used in this Manual ........................................................................................................... 11
System Requirements............................................................................................................................. 11
Windows ......................................................................................................................................... 11
Mac ................................................................................................................................................. 11
Software Installation .............................................................................................................................. 12
Windows Installation .......................................................................................................................... 12
Mac OS X ............................................................................................................................................. 15
First Launch and Program Activation ..................................................................................................... 17
Activating the Trial Version ................................................................................................................ 17
Activation of the License You’ve Purchased....................................................................................... 19
Manual Activation .............................................................................................................................. 20
First launch: automatic search for RAW-capable applications .......................................................... 22
1st Run: Windows Hardware Acceleration Method Selection ............................................................ 22
Using the Program: First Steps ............................................................................................................... 24
Launching FastRawViewer .................................................................................................................. 24
Main Screen ........................................................................................................................................ 24
View modes: “Grid” and single-file ................................................................................................ 24
Workspace ...................................................................................................................................... 28
Changing the Settings ......................................................................................................................... 31
Help with the Keyboard Shortcuts ..................................................................................................... 32
Supported file formats ........................................................................................................................... 33
Out-of-camera RAW files and DNG files ............................................................................................. 33
JPEG files ............................................................................................................................................. 33
PNG files ............................................................................................................................................. 33
TIFF files .............................................................................................................................................. 33
Determining the file type ................................................................................................................... 34
Maximum file sizes ............................................................................................................................. 34
Panels............................................................................................................................................ 139
Zoom ............................................................................................................................................. 140
Touchscreen ................................................................................................................................. 142
Grid/Filmstrip ............................................................................................................................... 143
Image Display.................................................................................................................................... 146
Exposure ....................................................................................................................................... 148
White Balance............................................................................................................................... 150
Sharpening/Other ......................................................................................................................... 152
Color Management ........................................................................................................................... 153
GPU Processing ................................................................................................................................. 154
External Editors................................................................................................................................. 157
Performance ..................................................................................................................................... 159
Thumbnail cache........................................................................................................................... 161
Other ................................................................................................................................................. 163
Additional Settings............................................................................................................................ 165
Using Additional Settings Scripts: Windows ................................................................................. 165
Using Additional Settings Scripts: Mac OS X ................................................................................ 167
Additional settings table ............................................................................................................... 168
Support of non-standard cameras ................................................................................................... 177
Backing up the Settings .................................................................................................................... 178
Informational Panel Settings ................................................................................................................ 180
Folders Panel .................................................................................................................................... 180
Favorite Folders Panel ...................................................................................................................... 181
Filmstrip/Thumbnails Panel .............................................................................................................. 182
Grid View Panel ................................................................................................................................ 183
EXIF Panel ......................................................................................................................................... 184
XMP Metadata Panel ........................................................................................................................ 185
Exposure Statistics Panel .................................................................................................................. 185
Sort & Filter Panel............................................................................................................................. 186
System Requirements
Windows
• Recommended system: Windows 8.1 – 10, 64-bit.
• 64 bit versions: Windows 7-10.
• 32-bit versions Windows: Windows 7 – 10
• Windows Vista and XP are supported in a separate “Legacy” version of FastRawViewer
• Processor with SSE3 support or later (meaning released 2005+):
o Intel: Pentium 4 Prescott or later; Celeron D or later, any Core processor, Intel Atom.
o AMD: Athlon 64 or later.
o The complete list of supported processors is available on
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SSE3
• Video card with DirectX 9.0 support or later, or with OpenGL 2.1 or later.
FastRawViewer will work with practically any video card with 3D acceleration support,
released 2006+ (users of older cards may experience some problems).
Mac
• Intel-based Mac.
• Processor with 64-bit support (that’s every Intel Mac, excluding models from 2005-2006, that
use Intel Core Solo and Intel Core Duo processors).
• Mac OS X 10.6 or later.
• We recommend a video card with OpenGL 2.1 support (that’s every native Mac video card,
that works with OS X 10.6). An OpenGL emulator will be used if such a video card is not
present in the system; some of the advanced features of FastRawViewer will take significant
time to render.
Software Installation
Windows Installation
The program installation starts by running the executable file of the distribution package
(FastRawViewer-1.2.0.xxx--Setup.exe).
If you downloaded FastRawViewer from our site on the first program launch, current versions of
Windows will display the following security warning:
After the “Run” button is pressed, the UAC (Windows User Access Control) system will display a
warning once again:
Both dialogs allow you to verify that the setup program is signed with unique LibRaw LLC electronic
signature.
To proceed with the installation, you must agree to the dialog above, and the usual Setup Wizard will
be launched:
4. A list of possible additional actions is shown: add FastRawViewer to desktop right-click menu,
add icon to the desktop, add icon to the Quick Launch menu:
Afterwards, the installation takes place. Upon completion, the following screen appears:
Mac OS X
Double click on FastRawViewer-1.x.x.dmg to mount the FastRawViewer disk image you've
downloaded. The content of the disk image will appear like this:
Drag FastRawViewer icon onto the Applications icon. The program will be copied to Applications
folder and ready to run.
Other items contained in the disk image are:
• FastRawViewer Manual (FastRawViewer-manual.pdf).
• Brief description (README.txt) and Changelog (Changelog.txt).
• End-User License Agreement (EULA.txt), Copyright Information (Copyrights.txt).
• Licenses and Copyrights for libraries and components used in FastRawViewer
(Licenses folder).
Scripts folder contains additional scripts used to set parameters that are not needed in a
general case and therefore are not placed in the Settings menu. These scripts will be copied
upon installation together with the application and are accessible through FastRawViewer
menu.
If you are using Mac OS X/macOS, you may receive a prompt saying that FastRawViewer can't be
launched, as it was not downloaded from the Apple App Store, you can change the settings in System
– Security to allow launching applications downloaded from App Store and identified developers:
Immediately after that, with the main program screen being opened, FastRawViewer will try to
connect to Internet to activate the trial version:
If you are connected to the Internet and FastRawViewer is not blocked by a firewall, the activation of
the trial version happens automatically and nearly instantly, after which the 30-day trial period starts.
No private data is transferred during the activation process; the only data that is passed through the
Internet is FastRawViewer version number and unique non-reversible 64-bit hash code identifying
your computer; this code can’t be decoded to extract any private or personal data.
After the successful automatic activation the trial period begins; the trial time left is indicated in
Help-About window and on the splash screen that pops up when FastRawViewer is started.
In case the automatic activation was impossible for some reason (no Internet access, or
FastRawViewer was blocked by firewall), then either in 30 seconds, or while opening a file for
viewing you will be presented with the screen for manual activation:
Here you can allow FastRawViewer a one-time Internet access and press Activate Trial button to
start 30-day free trial period.
If after pressing Activate Trial button FastRawViewer still can’t access activation server an additional
button for Manual Activation will appear:
Pressing this Manual Activation button will take you to manual activation dialogue (for more details,
please see below, in “Manual Activation” section).
After the license key is entered, please click Activate license button. The license will be activated and
you will be able to continue using the program.
The Help-Purchase/Activate menu item will now be renamed to Help-Registration data, and the
respective dialog will show your registration data:
To complete the activation (of both the trial and the fully licensed version) the program needs a one-
time access to the Internet. If you cannot grant the appropriate Internet access permissions, you can
activate the program manually.
Manual Activation
If the program fails to connect with the activation server (one-minute timeout happens), you will see
a pop up alert, with a Manual Activation button on the bottom right of the notification window.
After clicking the Manual Activation button, a Manual Trial Activation window will pop up:
Depending on your Internet access, you can use one of the 3 ways to obtain the activation code:
By using browser (if your browser has an internet connection) – use this if your browser can connect
to the Internet.
Simply click this link: http://activate.fastrawviewer.com/activate.cgi and you will see a browser
window pop up with your unique activation key:
For each listed application, you can choose to use it (Use this app) or not (Skip).
Additional applications (those that are not currently known to FastRawViewer, or some older
versions of the known applications) can be enabled through Preferences – External Editors. Changing
hotkeys (Shortcuts) is described below in Setting the Keyboard Shortcuts.
• Computers with old Intel graphics adapters on a separate chip (chipsets like G45, 845G, 965G,
etc.): DirectX 9 will be selected.
• Computers with two or more graphics adapters, or two or more monitors: OpenGL will be
selected.
• All other cases: DirectX 9 will be selected.
The above-listed rules are sorted through “from top to bottom” and the first fitting one is used.
The choice of graphics engine is made once and stored in the Windows Registry, so that the process
of the selection of the graphics engine is not repeated during subsequent launches of
FastRawViewer.
The automatic selection of graphics hardware acceleration can be, however, changed by the user,
either through the FastRawViewer Preferences (see the “GPU Processing” section in the “Program
settings” chapter), or by launching the Registry scripts (see the “Setting the graphics acceleration
manually” section in the “Troubleshooting” chapter).
In rare cases of problems, usually caused by a buggy old video driver, the automatically chosen
graphics engine might not work with your hardware/drivers. In this case one of the following will
take place:
• If in DirectX11 mode: the program will switch to DirectX9 mode (so that DirectX9 mode will
be active when the user re-launches FastRawViewer) and exits.
• If in DirectX9 mode: the program will switch to OpenGL mode (so that OpenGL mode will be
active when the user re-launches FastRawViewer) and exits.
• If in OpenGL mode: the program will suggest switching to DirectX9 mode and re-launching
the program.
This is described in more detail in the “Troubleshooting” section.
Main Screen
View modes: “Grid” and single-file
If FastRawViewer is launched without indicating a filename, if will start in Grid mode, displaying the
content of a selected folder:
If FastRawViewer is launched over a specific file (for example, by dropping a RAW file onto the
program’s icon, or by double-clicking a file which is associated with FastRawViewer), or by selecting
one of the files from the “Grid” by:
• A double-click on the file.
• Menu – View – Switch to single image (G key by default).
• Navigation by using the “arrow keys” in the main window or the bottom “Filmstrip” bar and
pressing Enter.
The program will switch to a Single-File View mode (Single File view):
o Panels – controls the visibility and layout of information panes; on the above screenshot,
those panes are located to the right of the image.
o XMP Metadata – allows to choose XMP Ratings / XMP Labels.
o Help – the name says it.
• Located in the central part of the window:
o If in single file mode, the RAW image is displayed;
o If in “Grid” mode, the preview thumbnails of the current folder are displayed.
• To the left, the following panels are displayed:
o Folder tree and the Favorite folders panel (those folders which were selected for quick
access).
o EXIF data.
• The following panes are located to the right:
o Histogram (RAW for RAW files, RGB – for RGB files).
o Over/Underexposure statistics.
o XMP Rating and XMP Label.
o Sort & Filter: Panel for sorting and filtering the files in a current folder
• The Filmstrip/Thumbnails panel is placed below the window, showing the file previews for the
current folder.
• Additional information and operational elements are placed in the bottom (status) bar.
Default elements:
o File open icon.
o Buttons for navigating through the current folder: previous file, number of file in the file
list and the length of the list, next file.
o Buttons for switching between RAW-JPEG-external JPEG.
o Buttons for turning on Screen Sharpening, Focus Peaking, Shadow Boost and Highlight
Inspection.
o Exposure Correction control button.
o Overexposed and Underexposed area display buttons.
o Preset White Balance choices drop-down menu.
o Contrast Control section: the up/down arrows and the current setting indication.
o Buttons for quick control: Fullscreen, hide/show Filmstrip panel/all panels, display and
edit settings call-up.
• Aside from the aforementioned, if the window is wide enough, the following buttons will be
displayed:
o File name
o Brief EXIF data for the shot (Exposure settings, ISO setting, applied exposure
compensation, use of flash, lens's focal length).
o Manual White Balance customization button.
o Contrast Curve selection menu.
o Image Orientation indicator and Rotation buttons.
The elements shown in the bottom status bar can be customized according to your needs. For this,
press the “Customize FastRawViewer” button on the lower right corner of the screen, choose
“Customize bottom bar” and select the necessary display mode for each possible element. For more
detail, see below in the “Customizing the status bar” section.
Workspace
The informational panels (Histogram, EXIF, Folders etc.) can be dragged from the main window of the
program to the side (for instance, to a second monitor) and be made “floating”. Panels can be turned
on/off through the Panel menu (or the F2-F8 hotkeys), the statistics and XMP-data panels are fixed in
size, but the sizes of the other panels can be changed.
The header of every panel has a settings button (gear icon, ); when pressed, it brings forth a menu,
allowing one to customize the panel.
Any floating panel can be made semi-transparent and placed in the workspace, above the image.
Setting Preferences – Interface – Panels – Disable transparency for panels outside of main window
makes a floating panel completely non-transparent when it is placed outside the main program
window.
The other panel settings are individualized, and are described in the “Informational Panel settings”
section.
Informational panels can be closed (‘x’ on the upper right corner of the panel or corresponding item in
Menu – Panels), and re-opened through Menu – Panels. The same menu has the option Move all
panels to dock, which will restore the standard layout of the program workspace.
Menu–Panels–Hide all panels (or, press Tab) – hides all informational panels:
With this, the top menu bar is hidden as well (this can be turned off through Preferences – Interface
– Panels – Hide menu bar when hiding information panels). You may, also, hide bottom information
bar (status bar) by setting Preferences – Interface – Panels – Hide bottom window bar when hiding
information panels.
Pressing Tab key the second time returns everything to the way it was.
You can disable the hiding of informational panels that are outside the program window. This is
useful when, for instance, you have moved them to a second monitor: Preferences – Interface –
Panels – Do not hide panels outside of main window.
Menu – View – Fullscreen (or the F key, or Fullscreen button on the bottom bar) switches the full
screen mode on/off. Choosing this item again or second press of the F key escapes from full screen
mode (for Mac OS X 10.6 we have no true full screen mode, instead the main program window will be
maximized).
• Mac: Menu–FastRawViewer–
Preferences or Cmd-comma (,)
• Windows: Menu – File – Customize –
Prererences or Ctrl-P
All keyboard shortcuts can be changed and tuned to your taste. The instructions on how to do this
are in the “Adjusting the Keyboard Shortcuts” section below. If the keyboard shortcuts are changed,
the help window will show their current state.
The standard list of keyboard macros is given in the «Standard FastRawViewer Keyboard Shortcuts»
(at the end of the document).
JPEG files
FastRawViewer supports the following types of JPEG files: 8-bit, both RGB and monochrome.
PNG files
FastRawViewer supports 8/16 bit PNG files, both RGB and monochrome. Transparency and
background color are not fully supported.
For PNG files, EXIF display is guaranteed only in Single File View Mode.
TIFF files
The following formats are supported:
• TIFF and BigTIFF (EXIF display is supported only for standard TIFF files)
• RGB and Grayscale: 8/16 bit integer, 16/24/32 bit floating point
• LAB: 8/16 bit integer.
• CMYK: by default, any support for this format is turned off. One can turn it on, but only a
grayscale conversion will be displayed (See the section on “Additional Settings”).
The default file extensions for TIFF files are: .TIF and .TIFF. If one needs to process TIFF files with a
different extension (for example, .fff for Imacon/Hasselblad scanners), this can be enabled through
the the AdditionalTIFFExts script (See the section on “Additional Settings”).
RAW+JPEG Mode
With default settings, FastRawViewer combines RAW and JPEG files with the same name.
For this operation, the extension of the JPEG file must be .JPG or .jpg.
In cases where one folder has several RAW files with the same name (but different extensions), the
JPEG will be combined with the RAW file, the extension of which is alphabetically earliest.
One can switch off RAW+JPG combining by turning off the setting Preferences – File Types – Handle
RAW+JPEG together.
In Grid mode, the main section of the window contains the Thumbnail previews of all of the
supported files from the current folder.
The following icons are placed at the title bar of this panel (left to right):
• Current folder
• Total number of files in the folder, number of files that passed through the filter, and number
of selected files.
• Settings that control the file preview display (see below).
You can customize the file preview using the “gear” icon in the upper-right corner of the “Grid” mode
window:
The following data can be found below, above, and overlaid over the image preview:
• EXIF data: date of the shot, or exposure parameters, or the camera name.
• XMP label (color) and XMP rating
• Filename
The displayed data and the positions of the said data are controlled through the “gear icon”,
separately for the Grid and Filmstrip modes.
A detailed description of the settings can be found in the “Customizing Display Modes” section
below.
When working with very dark (nighttime) shots, the setting Preferences - Interface – Grid/Filmstrip -
Apply automatic brightening to thumbnails can be useful, as it turns on the automatic brightening of
previews.
These same actions (except for switching to single file mode) are accessible through the context
menu, which is activated with a right-click:
The names of the folders which were used for copy operations are stored in the menu items below
Menu – File – Copy ... to – [Select folder]. The most recent copy destination is at the top of this list,
below are the folders which were used earlier. The list can contain up to five folders.
All of the folders in this list can be accessed through the keyboard (C, Shift-C, etc.), which allows one
to conveniently copy to those destinations without accessing the menu.
Moving files works much the same way: after a file is moved to a destination via the (Menu – File –
Move ... to – [Select folder] or pressing M) the path to this destination folder will be stored as an
element of the menu under [Select folder], and can be used in the future without subsequently
choosing the destination, using the following dialog:
The lists for copy and move destinations are kept separately.
Copy and move operations work not only over the RAW file, but also copy/move the following to the
same destination:
• External JPG-file (in RAW+JPEG mode).
• XMP- sidecar file (if it exists).
• .rpps sidecar file (if .rpps sidecar file recording is turned on).
• Other files according to the setting Preferences – Copy/Move/Reject - Additional file extensions
to copy/move with file. This setting is described in more detail in the section Program Settings –
File Handling - Copy/Move/Reject.
When doing sensitive work and/or using unreliable media, the Preferences – File Handling –
Copy/Move/Reject - Verify file contents after copy setting may come in handy, as it turns on data
verification after copying.
Please put checkmarks next to the names of the lists you want to reset.
The history of used subfolders is the same for copying and for moving.
The OK button will only be accessible after checking Yes, I’m sure checkbox.
The additional Delete read-only files too checkmark allows one to delete files with the Read-Only
attribute; if this checkmark is not set then those files will be ignored and will remain in _Rejected.
Show in Explorer button (Mac: Reveal in Finder) allows one to look at the content of _Rejected
folder using the file manager.
If Preferences - Copy/Move/Reject - Show detailed _Rejected folder stats before clearing the folder
setting is checked, then a more detailed statistics for the files to be deleted is displayed (number of
RAW files, number of RAW+JPEG pairs, etc.):
Attention: in Mac OS X, the read-only attribute from FAT/FAT32/exFAT file systems (used in
memory cards) is translated as locked (blocked). When checking ‘Delete read-only files too,’ such
blocked files will also be deleted.
Note: Menu – File – Clear _Rejected is not available if global rejected folder is used.
To switch this warning off, unset the setting: XMP - Warn if overwrite XMP for file with same name.
If the default settings are in use:
• When the file is displayed in “Grid View” mode, the sidecar XMP files (those having the same
name as the current by with a .XMP extension) and XMP blocks embedded in RAW/JPEG files
(if such exist) are read.
• Only manual changes are recorded into XMP files (for instance, image orientation or exposure
are changed from automatic to something else).
This behavior can be changed with the following settings:
• Preferences – XMP – Use XMP for RAW Files – turning off these settings leads to a complete
disregard of XMP files: they are not read, written, and not moved together with RAW files.
• Preferences – XMP – Read Only XMP – blocks any recording of XMP files. Data (ratings,
labels, white balance, exposure correction) will be read and used for display, but any changes
to it will not be saved.
• Preferences – XMP – Force XMP file creation – turns on the creation of XMP files, even if
nothing was changed manually. The parameters that were (automatically) set up when
opening the file will be set as the parameters in the XMP file.
Exposure compensation and white balance are written to newly created XMP files according to the
setting of Adobe Process Version in Preferences – XMP – Exposure, Contrast, WB – Adobe process
version for newly created XMP files.
To set color labeling scheme to be compatible with CaptureOne, set Preferences – XMP – Ratings &
Labels – Write photoshop:Urgency tag with color labels (for PhaseOne C1). This setting turns on the
recording of the XMP-tag photoshop:Urgency, which is used by CaptureOne to recognize and set
color labels.
When working with JPEG files, XMP data can be recorded not just as separate sidecar files, but also in
the form of data blocks embedded into the JPEG files themselves (this setting has been added
because certain programs, for example, Adobe Bridge, ignore XMP sidecars for JPEG files.
As with any operation that modifies image files, recording XMP could theoretically damage the file
itself (if, for example, a bad card reader is being used), so when turning on the above-described
setting, the user is given an additional warning. When using this option, if the JPEG file previously had
an XMP sidecar file, said sidecar will be deleted after recording an XMP block inside the JPEG.
When using RAW+JPEG mode, one can turn on the setting RAW+JPEG mode: embed XMP block into
JPEG. If it’s turned on, then aside from writing XMPs for RAW (as an XMP sidecar), the same XMP
block will be written into the associated JPEG file (if there was a different XMP block in the JPEG file,
it will be replaced, not combined).
XMP files and XMP blocks are not supported for TIFF and PNG files.
What happens when you use several applications simultaneously to modify XMP files
FastRawViewer, when it’s running, stores XMP data in memory cache. If the XMP data was modified
by some external application, the changes will not be automatically recognized in FastRawViewer.
To make such changes visible in FastRawViewer, you need to explicitly trigger the re-reading of XMP
data:
• Menu – File – Reload – Reload current file (by default assigned to Ctrl-F4 hotkey) – will re-
read the current file, opened in Single File view mode, if it exists;
• Menu – File – Reload – Reload current folder (by default Ctrl-Shift-F4) – will re-read the
contents of the current folder, including the XMP and EXIF data, and will also reload the
current file, if it exists.
FastRawViewer records any changes to XMP data immediately, without any delay. For other
applications to recognize those changes you may need to perform some extra actions.
In particular, when using Adobe Lightroom with FastRawViewer, one needs to take the following
into account:
1. Adobe Lightroom ignores XMP files while importing from a flash card (whether it is through
card reader or by directly connecting a camera to a computer).
Should you need to import changes made in FastRawViewer to Adobe Lightroom, please copy
the files to a hard drive first (you can do this using FastRawViewer and selecting only the
images you need to copy; corresponding sidecar files, if present, will be copied automatically).
Nevertheless, we suggest copying the files to a hard drive before setting ratings, labels,
and/or changing any RAW processing parameters, to avoid any corruption of the data on the
card caused by sudden losses of power, disconnections, or hardware malfunctions. Again, you
do not need to copy everything from the card: you can use FastRawViewer to select the
images that you want to copy.
2. Adobe Lightroom ignores XMP sidecar files for JPEG files. In the case of JPEG files, for Adobe
Lightroom to acknowledge changes made to XMP data it needs to be embedded into the
JPEGs. To do so, please use Write XMP blocks to JPEG files mode, as described above.
3. If RAW files are already imported into an Adobe Lightroom catalog, you need to ensure some
additional settings to XMP sidecar export and to explicitly trigger the synchronization while
importing XMP files:
a. To import changes to XMP files, made in other programs, including FastRawViewer:
• Select a file or a group of files for which you want to refresh XMP data in a
Lightroom catalog.
• Use Menu – Metadata – Read metadata from files, or the context menu which
appears on the right-click, selecting Metadata – Read metadata from files.
b. To automatically record the XMP data changes you’ve made in Adobe Lightroom to
sidecar XMP files, please use the Adobe Lightroom setting Catalog Settings –
Metadata – Automatically write changes into XMP
c. If the above setting in Adobe Lightroom is off, or the XMP file has been changed by an
external application, Lightroom will not record XMP files automatically. To trigger
synchronization manually, please use Menu – Metadata – Save Metadata to files or
the respective choice from the context menu.
• Exposure compensation.
• White Balance.
This option is controlled through Preferences – Other – Write RPPS files checkbox. Another
checkbox, Preferences – Other – Force RPPS files creation, forces the creation of .rpps files
immediately after a RAW file is opened in FastRawViewer, with automatic exposure compensation
and current white balance recorded as initial settings.
To import such .rpps files for further use, while in RawPhotoProcessor navigate to Menu - Settings -
Import Multiple settings and select both RAW and .rpps files in the folder that you wish to process.
The settings in .rpps files will be imported into RawPhotoProcessor History and the corresponding
RAW files will be opened using the parameters you've set in .rpps files.
FastRawViewer behavior while creating or updating .rpps files:
1. If .rpps file exists, and exposure compensation and/or white balance are changed in
FastRawViewer, the values for white balance and/or exposure are replaced in .rpps file
with the new ones. Also, if Force RPPS files creation is checked, those values in .rpps file
are replaced upon opening the raw file.
2. If .rpps file does not exist, and Preferences - Other – RPPS files – RPPS Template field
points to some readable file, this template will be used to create specific .rpps file for the
current raw file; once again, current FastRawViewer settings will be used for exposure
compensation and / or white balance fields.
2. Adobe Lightroom style, color marks (Red, Yellow, Green, Blue, Purple).
3. Adobe Lightroom ‘Review Status’ style (To Delete, Color Correction Needed, Good to Use,
Retouching Needed, To Print).
4. Custom user labels.
You can select the appropriate label style through Preferences – XMP – Ratings & Labels – XMP
Label Style section. For the Custom style, you can also edit the names for the labels.
Setting and changing the label for the image is performed through Menu– XMP Metadata, or by
pressing the colored squares in the XMP Metadata panel, or using hotkeys (Alt-6-Alt-9). To delete the
label, press the [X] button in the row for setting the label, or use Menu – XMP Metadata – Clear
Label.
When turning on the Read Only XMP mode, labels and ratings are read from XMP files, but the
program prevents any changes to them.
In Preferences – XMP - Ratings & Labels one can turn on the Visual Feedback on rating/label change
setting. If this is done, visual feedback will be given in the form of a contrasting notification when
changing a rating/label, occurring for about 1 second.
After editing the name and description they are shown in:
1. The floating tooltip in the Filmstrip/Thumbnails panel.
2. The XMP Metadata panel:
File Sorting
The sorting of files can be set in the menu that appears when pressing
the sorting icon (second from the left in the panel header).
File Filtering
Filtering is controlled by the rest of the Sort & Filter panel. The panel displays the types of
parameters (XMP Rating, XMP Label, EXIF
Timestamp) and value options. You can check the
checkbox to the left of the sorting and filtering
parameter, and only files that pass the filtering
conditions will be displayed.
In the Exif Timestamp group, you can select the
necessary ranges of dates. You can edit those ranges
if necessary, changing the standard
Today/Yesterday/This Week/… tailoring them to your
current needs. The number of ranges is fixed. The
first value for the range is always “from;” the second
is always “to.”
If there are any selected files in the folder (see the
next section), you can check the checkbox to the left
of the word Selected in the Files/Metadata group, and only the selected files will be displayed. In
this case, if you unselect some file, it will be excluded from the display, which means that in order to
have it displayed again, you need to uncheck Selected and select the file again, after which you can
check Selected once more.
The filtering inside one group is of OR-type. The filtering among groups is AND-type. That is, if, for
example, you select XMP Label Yellow and XMP Label Green, files that have either of those two labels
will be displayed. If, however, you checked XMP Rating: 3, XMP Label: Green, and EXIF Timestamp:
This week, only the files which conform to all three conditions simultaneously will be displayed.
The numbers in the respective lines indicate how many files there are with a given parameter value.
If the numbers are in the form nn/mm, mm indicates how many files with the given parameter value
are present, while nn indicates how many of those passed through the filters. If only one number is
indicated, then all of the files passed through the filters. If the numbers are displayed in italics, the
reading of the metadata is still in progress.
With standard settings, the metadata (EXIF, XMP) is read only when this data is needed – for Icon
display, or when filtering is on. This accelerates the browsing. This can be changed in the preferences
by switching off File Handling - Sorting and Filtering - Lazy metadata read
Filtering by filename
Filtering by filename is switched on and off through
Menu - File - File filtering in folder - Filter files by name
(Alt-F) or the “page with magnifying glass” button,
located in the Sort & Filter panel’s title bar.
When this filtering is on, an edit line appears that allows
one to enter:
• a substring of any symbols that are contained
in the filenames of the images that you want to
be displayed
• a mask for the filename (this condition is recognized by the presence of the * symbol in the
edit)
• A regular expression in PCRE syntax; this is recognized by the / symbol in the first position of
the edit line; this symbol will be ignored when evaluating a regular expression.
After pressing Enter (or the folder-with-magnifying-glass icon located to the right of the edit line),
the files in the current folder will be filtered, i.e., only the names of the files that meet the condition
in the edit line will be displayed. Any other present filtering conditions such as label/rating/date/etc.,
are also applied.
Name filtering precedes metadata filtering. This filter isn’t cancelled/restored/saved/recalled by the
Disable/Enable/Remember/Recall actions (see above) and isn’t switched off when moving to a
different folder.
o Save Selection to file – saves the list of marked files to a text file on the disk.
o Load/Append selection from file – loads the list of marked files from the previous
bullet and marks the corresponding files for the load operation or adds to the list of
the currently-marked files for the append operation.
This color can be changed through Preferences – Interface – Selected files background.
If some files with the same name (but different extensions, such as CR2 / DNG pair) are highlighted,
then the operations to change the orientation or to change / set ratings or labels will be disabled: it is
impossible to apply such operations over a pair of files with the same name and different extensions,
because for such a pair only one XMP file can exist:
To allow XMP operations, disable the setting "XMP settings - Disable batch XMP operations if files
with same name are selected". If it is turned off, the XMP files will be created for all selected files,
but because of the naming conflict only the last recorded file will contain actual data.
Context menus
When clicking on any of the selected files, a context menu that displays possible actions over the
group appears.
Program menus/hotkeys
Starting with version 1.4.6, FastRawViewer uses the same hotkeys/menu items for operations with
several files as for single files.
This mode can be turned off by turning on the setting: Preferences – Interface – Grid/Filmstrip –
Single file keys work for multiple files too, in which case FastRawViewer will work in a mode that is
compatible with older versions, when operations over separate files and over groups of selected files
is performed via separate hotkeys/menu items.
Since in Advanced selection mode the current file may be not a part of the selection, we introduced a
special setting to make the behavior determined:
Preferences - Grid/Filmstrip - If the current file is not in the group of selected files, single-file
shortcuts will work with, with the options:
• Current file - the buttons to act on files work on the current file
• Selected group - works with the selected group
Both - the current file is implicitly added to the selected group. When turning on Single file keys
works for multiple...:
• Default actions, specifically:
o Menu – File – Copy, Move, Pass to (program), Move to Rejected
o Menu – Adjust – Rotate/Flip
o Menu – XMP Metadata
can work with one file or with several, depending on the context:
• In Single-file View Mode, the actions always work with the current file, not the group.
• In Grid View Mode, if there are selected files, the
actions will work with the group:
o If the current file is not present (e.g. folder just
opened) or is in the group of selected files
o If the current file isn't in the group of selected
files, but the setting If the current file... is set to
Selected group or Both.
• Group mode is indicated in the menu:
o File: Move, Copy, "Move to Rejected", Run -
instead of the filename, you will see "Move
(Copy, Pass to) NN files to"
o Adjust: the header "Rotate NN selected files"
appears above the Rotate group; and "Adjust filename" above the edit single file (In
Single file View Mode) group.
o XMP Metadata: the first line of the menu becomes the "Rate/Label nn selected files"
header
• Group mode is indicated in the XMP Metadata panel and in the application's bottom bar
(please see the picture below: single mode - the left part, group mode - the right part):
o The panel header changes to XMP Batch change: NN files
o The asterisks change to snowflakes
• If the selected group has identical ratings/labels, then the corresponding snowflakes/borders
will be highlighted (picture below, on the left), if they’re non-identical (or unknown, see the
next point), then they won’t be (on the right).
• If for part of the files, the metadata hasn't been read yet, then if there are fewer than 30 such
files, they will be read. If there are more, then the "common rating/common label" will be
unknown.
The Title/Description fields are displayed the same as for ratings/labels:
• If they are the same for all selected files, then a field that matches the contents of all of the
files will be displayed in the XMP/Metadata panel.
• If they are different (or unknown because the metadata hasn’t been read), multiple values is
displayed there instead.
If, when working with a group of files, with the setting XMP -> Disable batch XMP operations if files
with same name are selected turned on (default value), then if in the group of selected files there
are files with identical names (for example file.CR2 and file.DNG), then XMP operations (rotation,
rating, label, title, description) will be restricted (in fact, disabled).
XMP operation restriction mode (due to a naming conflict) is indicated:
• In the Adjust and XMP menu, with the header 'XMP change disabled: filename conflict'
• In the header of the XMP Metadata panel (XMP Change disabled), and textually in place of the
Title/Description fields.
When turning on Single file keys works for multiple files too mode, the (old) buttons for group
actions disappear from:
• The keyboard shortcuts editor (Ctrl-K)
• Current keyboard macros help (F1)
The check for one button is assigned to several actions happens at the start of the application.
The editing dialogue differs from Title/Description editing for a single file
• Each of the two fields has an additional checkbox (when first used, it's not checked -
afterwards, it's saved for the duration of one session)
• If the checkbox isn't checked, then the corresponding field can't be edited and it won't be
changed for file groups.
If a group of selected files has the same Title/Description, then they will be displayed in the editing
dialog. If different, then it will say in the dialog (as a gray text in the editing panels) that the values
are different.
To switch decoding of RAW data on, press the “statistics” ( ) button in the in the upper bar of the
Histogram panel.
When you click this icon, it brightens up and the decoding of the RAW data is turned on, thus
enabling the display of the Histogram, Statistics, and EXIF data:
RAW data decoding takes some time; during the decoding the active file (for which the RAW data is
read and decoded) is highlighted with a red frame:
Folder Navigation
Folders can be navigated via the Folders panel, the standard location of which is to the left of the
main program window:
• Start Folder tree at current folder (Ctrl-T) – the folder tree will be limited to the current folder
and its sub-folders.
• Start Folder tree at one level up (Ctrl-Shift-T) – the folder tree is limited with the folder one
level up and its subfolders (includes the current folder).
• Move folder filter one level up (Shift-T) – the filtering point is moved to one level up on the
folder tree.
• Reset folder filtering (Alt-T) – resets the filters.
Upon choosing Start folder tree at folder name, that folder will serve as the root of the folder tree,
with its subfolders also being displayed:
Also, an informational panel appears at the top of the tree with two icons and a Folder filter: ON
message. The buttons/icons work in the following manner:
• (x) – turns off the filtering, and displays the entire folder tree again (same way as Reset folder
filtering in menu)
• [↑] –moves the "root" of the filtering one level up (same way as Move folder filter one level
up in menu).
Furthermore, the folder filtering will cease when opening a file or a folder outside of the current tree
branch (for example, when opening something through File-Open or by Drag-and-Dropping
something into the program window).
Apart from Menu – File – Folder tree filter (and corresponding hot-keys), the filtering of the folder
tree can be switched on with the mouse:
• Ctrl+Left Click in Folders panel (or in the Favorite Folders, please see below) makes the folder
clicked on the top-level folder in the folder tree (same as Ctrl-T)
• Ctrl+Shift+Left Click – limits the folder tree “by one level above” (same as Ctrl-Shift-T)
Folder filtering can also be set through Folders panel context menu (mouse right-click):
With default settings, folder filtering is not re-applied when re-launching the program. This can be
changed by turning off File Handling – Startup –
Reset folder tree filtering on start.
If a folder is currently in use by some other folder, renaming or deleting it may not be possible; in this
case, an appropriate message will be displayed.
“Removable Media insertion detected, FastRawViewer will open the newest folder found on it under
the DCIM folder”.
The action resulting from detecting removable media can be changed in Preferences – File Handling
– Removable Media to one of the following variants:
• Do nothing (Do nothing);
• Open predetermined folder (by default, \DCIM);
• Opens the most recent (by date of modification) folder in the predetermined folder.
You can also turn off the above-shown warning in the same Preferences section.
After a successful un-mount, the media will be freed up without additional messages. If there are any
problems, then the following error message will be displayed:
This message means that the removable media is in use by some other program as well, and
FastRawViewer cannot safely un-mount it.
The “behavior” of the elements in this panel is analogous to that of the Folders panels:
• One click: The Thumbnails panel will be populated with the previews of the files in the chosen
folder.
• Double-click: opens the first file in the folder.
• Ctrl-Click/Ctrl-Shift-Click – opens the selected folder, while the folder tree in the Folder panel
will be limited by the selected folder/one folder above selected.
2. The context menu in the Folders panel allows you to do the same with a chosen folder (Add
*folder name* to favorite folders):
“Close” File/Folder
FastRawViewer background process scans files and receives system signals upon folder updates. This
prevents safe ejecting of removable media, including flash memory cards and cameras connected to
the computer via a cable.
Menu – File – Close File (or Ctrl-U) «closes» the currently opened file:
• All background processes are stopped as fast as possible.
• The monitoring of the current folder is cancelled.
• The current file display is cancelled.
• The current / working folder is changed to %HOME%/Pictures, or, if that one is not present,
to %HOME%.
• Upon the completion of the Close File command the removable media can be safely un-
mounted and ejected, as usual.
Un-mounting a portable media through the context menu in the Folder panel automatically preforms
the Close File action.
When choosing a file from this panel (using the mouse, arrow keys on the keyboard, Menu – File –
Next/Prev File and Last/First file) the selected file is displayed in the main window, and the controls
of exposure, white balance, and contrast will act over this active RAW file (see below the “Working
with a single image” section).
You can use the same file operations in the filmstrip as those described previously for the Grid View
mode:
• Copy, move, move to _Rejected;
• Editing metadata (ratings, labels, title and description);
• Orientation;
• Passing the file to external programs;
• Selecting a group of files and group file operations (copying, moving, labels, ratings, passing
to external programs) is also possible.
Mac OS X: it is recommended that files/folders (if there are a lot of them) be dropped on the opened
window, rather than the icon; this way it works a lot faster.
FastRawViewer for Windows 7 – 10 supports the Touchscreen interface. This support is disabled by
default; one can enable it via Preferences – Interface – Touchscreen – Enable Touchscreen features.
1. Toolbars for the main action: file navigation, interface mode switching, zoom, setting XMP
ratings and labels, RAW data inspection, setting exposure compensation, contrast, and white
balance.
2. Support for basic gestures on the touchscreen.
When this interface is switched on, the following settings become accessible:
• Enable toolbars, Toolbars size – switches Toolbars on, and allows one to adjust the size of the
Toolbars. Toolbars can be switched on for desktops as well, however in this case you may
want to change the size down from the default Large. Each Toolbar can be switched on and
off via Menu – Panels – Toolbars
• Image Display - Dim image while switching to next
Turns down the brightness of the current image while the program is preparing the display of
the new image (decoding it and loading it into the video card). This gives visual feedback if
• Single finger filmstrip scroll/grid scroll – the scroll is performed with a single figure gesture.
• Double tap to switch grid/single mode – switches between Grid Mode and displaying a Single
File with a double-tap.
• Gesture support in Single File View:
o Single finger pan to switch – allows one to switch images with one finger gesture from
left to right). If the zoom is larger than Fit to Screen, instead of switching images the
current image is scrolled.
o Pinch to zoom/unzoom – change the zoom level of the image with a pinch.
o Double tap to unzoom (if zoomed): if the image zoom level is larger than Fit to Screen,
a double-tap will bring it to Fit to Screen.
If Double tab to switch grid/single mode is turned on, another double tap will return
to Grid Mode.
This menu is always for current (single) file even if current file is within selected group.
• Non RAW-files Decode priorities – if set to “None” for a certain type of JPEG (Embedded –
those that are contained in RAW files, External – those paired with RAW files, commonly a
result of setting a camera to shoot RAW+JPEG), decoding and display of JPEGs of such types
are disabled. Other options (On prefetch, On demand, On file open) – set the event that
triggers the decoding of JPEG files. Those options are explained below, in Performance
Settings chapter – JPEG/TIFF/PNG Handling section.
• Default image to Display (same as Previous/RAW/internal JPEG/external JPEG) – controls
what representation will be used for display when opening the next file.
Furthermore, the fast combined “Zoom + Panning” modes are available as well:
• Left mouse button + Shift – turns on temporary zoom and Drag mode.
• Right mouse button + Shift – turns on temporary zoom and panning mode.
The zoom factor for these modes is set in the Preferences – Interface – Zoom section:
• “Zoom and Drag” Zoom to
• “Zoom and Pan” Zoom to
• “Toggle Zoom” Zoom to
• If you want to limit the range of the zoom available through the keyboard, please use the
following setting: Interface – Zoom – Zoom In/Zoom Out range.
To fine-tune the amount and mode of sharpening, you can use Preferences – Image Display –
Sharpening. We will cover this in more detail in the “Program Settings” section below.
This is also the place where you can switch off the sharpening for JPEG representation, turning on the
Sharpen RAW files only setting.
For the image above: on the left part, the shadow boost mode is on, on the right, it is off. When the
mode is on the indicating S in the EDS group on the bottom bar turns bright white.
You can turn the boost on/off through Menu - View – Boost Shadows (or by pressing Shift-S on the
keyboard).
Setting the amount of boost: Preferences – Image Display – Boost Shadows Amount controls the
additional gamma adjustment; the range is 0.2 to 2.0.
Inspection of Highlights
Highlight Inspection mode (Menu – View – Highlights inspection or Shift-H) does the “opposite” of
the Shadow Boost mode:
• The brightness of the shadows and midtones is decreased, and as a result the image looks
darker.
• The contrast in the highlights is increased.
• Additionally, you can “cancel” the white balance, by setting it to “UniWB” in the Highlights
inspection settings.
As a result, you can evaluate the details in the highlights (left – Highlight inspection mode on, right –
default view mode; as we can see, the highlights contain plenty of details):
2
Adobe programs clip the shadows below the setting for “blacks,” in FastRawViewer we use a curve with a very gentle
slope.
Histogram
The RAW-data histogram is created based on the unmodified (disregarding any exposure
adjustments metadata) RAW data from the file:
Horizontal Scale:
• EV0 – the level that corresponds to the middle gray. If exposure adjustment has not been
applied, it’s set to 3 photographic stops below the saturation level of a camera.
• -5 – the level that corresponding to the level of the underexposure indication (see below)
• +3 (when exposure adjustment is turned on it can be +2 or +1) – extreme highlights.
• The leftmost mark of the scale is the level that corresponds to the value of “1” in the RAW
data.
The histogram step on the horizontal axis is 0.1EV, so there will always be a “comb” in the shadows,
as there are less possible levels than 10 levels per stop.
When applying exposure adjustment (see below) the histogram itself does not change – instead the
horizontal axis shifts. During a positive exposure adjustment, the EV0 level shifts in the direction of
the shadows (because the shadow sections shifts to brighter ones – closer to middle gray),
correspondingly the other vertical marks move as well (and if needed, the numbers for the marks
change as well). During a negative exposure adjustment, the axis shift is in the opposite direction.
With this, the underexposure level indicator stays in place because the quality of the shadows
doesn’t change with the change of exposure compensation.
Exposure Statistics
For RAW data, the exposure statistics are calculated for each channel. These statistics are displayed
in the Exposure stats panel, which by default is located in the right side of the program window.
If no positive exposure compensation was applied (that includes automatic exposure correction,
please see below “Hidden Adobe exposure compensation”), the table consists of three columns: name
of the Raw “color” channel, percentage of underexposed pixels, and percentage of overexposed
pixels:
1. Underexposure (UnExp) is 2.45% in the Red channel, 0.29% in the Green channel, and 1.78%
in the blue channel – those pixels are in the underexposure zone, that is 8EV (with standard
settings) below the saturation point for the camera.
2. Overexposure (OvExp): no overexposure.
8EV is a standard value for the photographically usable dynamic range. You can change it to match
your particular camera through Preferences – Image Display – Exposure – Underexposure detection
limit.
The underexposure indication limit (meaning the dynamic range of the camera) can be set even more
flexibly, depending on the ISO settings. For this, one needs to turn on the Preferences – Image
Display – Exposure - ISO-based underexposure limit setting and set three parameters for the
camera: underexposure level (dynamic range) for ISO 200, ISO 1600, and “for high ISO.”
Calculating the Underexposure Limit (dynamic range) will happen in the following manner
• For ISO values of 1600 and lower, down to ISO 6, the linear change is such that the line
passes through the value for ISO 200. In other words, the line passes through two user-
defined points: ISO 1600 and ISO 200.
• For ISO settings 1601 and above, the dynamic range decreases by one stop for each stop of
ISO setting increase, but the limit is always greater or equal to the value that is entered for
high ISO.
If positive exposure compensation was applied to the image the table may contain an additional
column OE+Corr, indicating the number of pixels, which will be above the maximum value after the
exposure compensation is applied.
After the positive exposure compensation was applied as in the shot above, 10% of “green” pixels are
above the maximum, most probably because the value of the exposure compensation is a little bit
overboard.
For a fast review of a significant number of files, it may be convenient to keep the OE+Corr column
always on. This way, you won’t be distracted by the changes in the size of the panel. This can be done
by going into the Exposure Stats panel’s settings (gear icon) and checking Always display OE+Corr
column.
In the same settings menu, you can also enable the count of the number of over- and underexposed
pixels by checking Show pixel counts:
If some pixels of a channel hit the overexposure limit the values for such pixels are clipped.
FastRawViewer is using the following color scheme to spotlight the areas of overexposure:
• Magenta – areas where the green channel is clipped.
• Cyan – areas where only the red channel is clipped.
• Yellow – areas where only the blue channel is clipped.
• Blue – areas where both green and red channels are clipped.
• Green – areas where both blue and red channels are clipped.
• Red – areas where both blue and green channels are clipped.
• Black – areas where all 3 channels are clipped.
For this image, we see the blown-out green channel on almost the entire sky over the sand dune;
while on the central portion of the sky the blue and green are both blown out. More likely than not,
recovering the sky’s tone normally via Highlight recover won’t be possible.
With standard settings, the positive exposure adjustment has the effect on the overexposure area
display: the areas shown are the ones that would be overexposed, if we had taken the shot with this
exposure compensation on the camera. This behavior can be changed by turning off the setting
Preferences – Image Display – Exposure – Exposure adjustments affects OverExposure display, in
this case only those areas that are overexposed (clipped) in the RAW file itself will be shown as the
overexposed areas (obviously, the exposure adjustment in FastRawViewer has no effect on the
content of RAW files).
Viewing the underexposure zone can be turned on and off through Menu–View–Underexposure
Display (or by pressing the U key on the keyboard):
Like in the previous, the underexposed pixels are spotlighted with saturated colors:
• Blue – where the blue channel is underexposed.
• Red – where the red channel is underexposed.
• Green – where the green channel is underexposed.
• Magenta – where both red and blue channels are underexposed.
• Cyan – where both green and blue channels are underexposed.
• Yellow – where both green and red channels are underexposed.
• White – where all three channels are underexposed.
Exposure adjustments do not affect the display of underexposure areas (or underexposure statistics).
For this shot, part of the foreground is underexposed; also, one can see areas with the red channel
underexposed (red), and, also areas where both red and blue channels are underexposed (magenta).
Unlike for overexposure, which is determined fairly unambiguously in digital cameras (by the
“blowout” of one or more channels, the channel histogram pressed to the right edge and having a
characteristic spike), the limit of the unacceptable underexposure area cannot be exactly
determined, because it depends on
• Planned print size.
• Planned shadow boost in the current shot.
In FastRawViewer, the limit that controls the underexposure warning is set by the user themselves in
the preferences (Preferences – Image Display – Exposure – Underexposure detection limit). The
default value (8EV) is fairly conservative, and works pretty well for low ISO settings, 100-800 ISO. In
the case of using high ISO, or strict demands to the image quality, this parameter may to be set lower
(to 6-7EV, and sometimes even lower), according to the technical requirements for the resulting
image.
Exposure correction
The following settings for the automatic exposure correction are user-adjustable:
• Mode:
a. Fixed shift by the given number of stops (EV), the value is controlled through Preferences
– Image Display – Exposure – Auto Exposure – Fixed Exposure shift.
b. Automatic calculation of the exposure compensation to shift the histogram ‘to the right’,
controlled through Preferences – Image Display – Exposure – Auto Exposure – ETTR-style
autoexposure (shift histogram to the right).
• Fine-tuning of the automatic exposure compensation:
a. Saturate up to NN% pixels – controls the percent of the pixels that will reach the
saturation as the result of the automatic exposure correction.
b. Exposure shift limits:
i. Unlimited – no limit, goes all the way to the setting for Saturate up to NN% pixels
ii. Hard limit – no more than the number of stops set in this field.
iii. Virtual ISO – the limit depends on the ISO setting that was used to take the shot:
• If the shot was taken at ISO in-camera setting higher that this limit, the
maximum exposure correction is 0.
• For the shots taken at lower than this limit ISO setting in camera, the
maximum value for the exposure correction is equal to the difference
(in stops, EV) between the ISO setting in the camera and the limit set (for
example, if the limit is set to ISO 6400, and the shot was taken at ISO 1600,
the maximum amount of exposure correction is 2EV).
To switch off the exposure correction, making it 0 (or, if Apply Adobe hidden exposure correction is
ON, making it equal to that value of hidden correction), press the ‘A’ key on the keyboard. Second
press of ‘A’ will restore the previous correction.
Recording of the exposure correction to XMP files: Interaction with Adobe Programs
Exposure adjustment is recorded in XMP-file in the FastRawViewer format (if reading/recording XMP
is on).
Moreover, exposure adjustment in a format that is compatible with Adobe (Bridge, Camera Raw,
Lightroom) is recorded in XMP as well. This recording can be turned off through Preferences – XMP –
Exposure, Contrast, WB – Adobe Compatible Exposure and White Balance.
White Balance
FastRawViewer offers several methods of setting white balance
• Choose one of the standard presets (As Shot/Auto/Daylight/Tungsten) and presets fetched
from RAW file (most modern cameras save several standard presets in RAW metadata).
• Set it by clicking on the known neutral gray area of the image.
• Set it by choosing the color temperature/tint value.
The available white balance indication modes are chosen through Preferences – Image
Display – White Balance – White balance display mode
a. Color Temperature/Tint – a mode commonly used in RAW converters.
b. Mired/Tint – instead of correlated color temperatures, the value indicated is in Mired.
c. WB Coefficients – the per-channel coefficients (factors) of white balance are shown.
d. Channel EV Correction – the per-channel correction factors in EV (stops) of white
balance are shown.
The calculation of color temperature/tint is not possible for all the cameras. It is also not possible for
extreme white balance coefficients. Here are the limitations:
1. FastRawViewer must have the color data for the camera (for the vast majority of modern
cameras, it does).
2. The camera has to be RGB and tricolor. CMYG, RGBE, and other non-RGB cameras are not
supported.
3. A range of color temperatures from 1667 to 25000K is supported. If you set the manual
balance (see below) from a deep blue or a dark red area, then calculating the temperature
may be impossible.
For those cases where the calculation of color temperature is impossible, the indication of CCT/Tint
or Mired/Tint values is changed to “---/--“.
Choosing a preset can be done via the drop-down list menu in the lower bar of the program window:
If the RAW file contains a list of standard white balances in its EXIF data, this list will be shown in the
drop-down menu (between Auto and UniWB). If there is no list of white balances in the file, then the
generic table for the camera model that took the shot will be used instead.
If two neighboring files are taken with one camera, and a mode to preserve white balance when
moving between files is active (Preferences – Image Display – White Balance – White balance for
next file (same camera), see detailed description below), but the two above-listed files contain
different balance preset lists (for example, one file is in the camera’s original RAW format, while the
other is converted to DNG), then:
• If possible, the setting (preset) with the same name is preserved.
• If no such preset exists, then the “White balance for the next file (another camera)” is used,
meaning that the program assumes that if the lists of white balances are very different
between two files, then the camera must have been changed.
The changes made in this dialogue are applied to the image on the screen on the screen with a slight
delay (up to 200ms). If the changes you’ve made satisfy you, hit OK. If not, continue adjusting, or hit
Cancel to disregard any changes.
Undo editing
Menu – Adjust – Reset image rendering to defaults (Ctrl-Shift-R, Ctrl-Command-R) applies default
image editing settings that are enabled in Preferences – Image Display – Reset rendering to default
parameters. Initial defaults are:
• White balance is set to «As Shot»
• Exposure correction is set to «No correction»
When this filter is on the letter E in the USM EDSH group on the bottom bar takes the same color
that is used for the outline (green by default).
The Fine Detail Filter outlines small, acute, but not necessarily contrasting details:
When this filter is on the letter D in the USM EDSH group on the bottom bar takes the same color
that is used for the outline (red by default).
The colors that are used outlines for both filters, as well as the opacity of the filter overlay are
controlled through the settings in the Preferences – GPU Processing – Focus Peaking mode section.
For GPU-based demosaicking the overlays indicating the areas of sharpness and sharp details have
lower brightness, as this demosaicking creates less artifacts and the algorithm has less data to cling
to.
Overlay Grid
One can overlay a grid over an image, available grids are:
• Standard grids: Golden rule, 3x3, 4x4, 5x5
• Two custom grids (regular grid up to 25x25)
To switch the grid on, use Menu – View – Grid Overlay – and select the one or more grids. If several
grids are selected, they can be cycled through Menu – View – Grid Overlay – Next Overlay Grid (the
default hotkey is Alt + G).
The selected grid is displayed as dashed lines, with black and white dashes interleaved, over the
image.
Performance Settings
Depending on the characteristics of your computer, the most important ones being
• Amount of RAM.
• Number of processors and cores per processors.
• Type and performance of the video card.
You may need to tune the performance settings of FastRawViewer to be more comfortable.
FastRawViewer is optimized for work with files on modern high-speed storage devices: SSD drives,
disk arrays (RAIDs), fast flash cards (UHS-I and similar in fast USB3 readers).
When using slower media, additional optimization of FastRawViewer may be necessary, because the
default settings will not be optimal.
Hard Disk Drives (HDD) and Hybrid drives (HDD with SSD cache)
Hard disk drives, cannot read the data from multiple locations at once: the delays are caused by the
time spent on the positioning of magnetic heads.
Accordingly, when using HDDs for optimal performance of FastRawViewer it is necessary to decrease
the number of parallel reads:
1. Preferences - Performance - Memory usage and performance - Number of simultaneous
RAW decode threads
recommended values for HDD: 2-3
2. Preferences - Performance - Thumbnail cache - Thumbnail decoder thread count.
Set 1-3 for HDD (the higher, the more priority will be given to the preview generation over the
other functionality of FastRawViewer).
TIFF/PNG/JPEG Handling
The event that triggers the decoding of JPEG files is defined in Preferences - File formats – Non-RAW
files decode priority, separately for each type of RGB files:
Because On prefetch is implemented only for 64-bit versions, 32-bit version doesn’t have a tunable
setting for Lone files
The “On prefetch” mode uses a lot of memory, for example: 20 Mpix JPEG takes up 3-4 MB before
unpacking, and 80 MB unpacked (as RGBA); that means a 20-file cache of such JPEGs will take up 1.6
GB instead of 60 to 80 MB.
Process RAW data on GPU: controls processing of the RAW data on the GPU
o None – all processing is performed on the central processor (CPU), video card is
loaded with fully prepared RGB images.
o Bayer RAW only – only Bayer RAW data will be processed on the GPU (and a higher
quality demosaicking will be used, see De-Bayering (demosaicking): CPU and GPU
modes)
o All RAW files – all RAW data will be processed on the GPU.
When RAW data is processed on a GPU:
1. Adjustment to white balance, lightness/exposure, contrast have nearly instant effect
2. Better demosaicking
3. However, the first time the file is displayed (on file open) it can be slower, as more data is
loaded into the GPU.
Note: Consequently, the optimal set of parameters depends on the hardware and software
(drivers); but it also depends on your preferred workflow: if you are using inspection tools
heavily and/or adjusting rendering parameters often enough, especially if going through
iterations, processing on GPU will save you time even if the video adapter is a slow one and
the delay associated displaying the file for the first time is longer.
Image Resampling method – sets the method to be used for calculating zoom-in (going
above 100% view):
• No resampling – for large zoom factors, the image will look as if it is constituted of small
square tiles.
• Bilinear resampling – fast, mid-quality method.
• Bicubic resampling – high-quality method, a relatively fast vast video card is recommended.
Preferences – GPU Processing – Downsampling options – sets the method for zoom-out
calculations:
• None – no additional processing is involved.
• Generate low resolution previews – most compatible method, but relatively slow.
• Suppress downsampling artifacts – we recommend turning this on when you are viewing a
noisy image (high ISO, underexposure, deep shadows bumped, etc.)
Not all of the above-listed modes are available on all video cards. If you have an older video-card,
bicubic resampling and artifact suppression may not be available at all.
Default settings are optimized for low performance (older) video cards, but if you happen to have
one of modern cards (including those based on Intel HD4xxx and higher), we recommend changing
the settings in the following way:
1. Turn on Preferences – GPU Processing – Image resampling method – Bicubic.
2. Set Preferences – GPU Processing – Image downsampling to None or to Suppress
downsampling artifacts.
In this case, the amount of the data transferred into the video card is minimized, and the image
display is faster.
Troubleshooting
Windows: Changing the Active Graphics Engine
In some cases (to the best of our knowledge, this will only happen due to an old graphics driver),
FastRawViewer cannot use the automatically selected graphics engine.
When this happens, one of the following warnings is displayed:
OpenGL mode, unsupported version of OpenGL
FastRawViewer informs the user that the version of OpenGL made available by the OS is not recent
enough for the program to operate, and offers to manually switch to the graphics acceleration
through DirectX 9 (see below, the section “Manually Changing Graphics Modes”)
FastRawViewer informs the user that the version of OpenGL available in the system does not support
the features necessary for the program to operate, and offers to manually switch to the graphics
acceleration through DirectX 9 (see below, the section “Manually Changing Graphics Modes”).
DirectX9 context is not initialized properly
FastRawViewer informs the user that the version of DirectX available in the system does not support
the features necessary for the program to operate; and switches to OpenGL, which will be used upon
the next program launch.
FastRawViewer informs the user that the version of DirectX 11 available in the system does not
support the features necessary for the program to operate; and switches to DirectX9, which will be
used upon the next program launch.
The Registry scripts shown above must be used in the case that FastRawViewer informs the user that
the available version of OpenGL is inadequate and suggests switching to DirectX.
Scripts that switch video modes will disable Process RAW data on GPU mode, should you wish to
continue using it, please switch it back manually via Preferences – GPU Processing
This window indicates that the graphics driver cannot process those sub-routines that
FastRawViewer needs to execute on the video card.
Possible solutions:
1. Switch to the other version of the graphics engine (if you're using OpenGL – change to DirectX
and vice versa). A description of the engine switch is given in the previous section.
2. Update the driver of your video card to the newest version.
If neither of the above-listed helped you, copy the error message using the ‘Save to file’ or ‘Copy to
clipboard’ buttons and send it to our tech support at
http://www.fastrawviewer.com/contact/Technical-support or support@fastrawviewer.com
If neither of the above-listed helped you, turn on the debug log (see below «Debug Information»),
restart the program, open a RAW file, and send the debug log to tech support at
http://www.fastrawviewer.com/contact/Technical-support or support@fastrawviewer.com
Other problems
If your problem is not listed above, then, to make troubleshooting faster, please turn on your Debug
Log, (see below) and when contacting support please attach a copy of the debug information.
When turning to tech support, please remember to attach the debug log.
Program Settings
File Handling
This group of settings controls the file processing rules
Copy/Move/Reject
• Use global rejected folder – sets the folder for Rejected files as a global folder, or as a subfolder
in the current folder (checkbox is unchecked).
• Subfolder for rejected files – the name of the subfolder to store the rejected files.
• Warn when file(s) are moved to rejected – customizes the warning settings for when files are
moved to the _Rejected subfolder:
o No – never warn me.
o Always – always warn me.
o Multiple files – warn only moving several files to the _Rejected subfolder.
• Confirm file move – customizes the warning about moving a file(s) to the same destination as for
the previous operation, with same options as for the setting directly above this.
• Show progress bar on copy/move/reject – controls the display of the progress bar for these
operations (the progress bar also allows to stop the operation, if necessary).
• Drop file(s) to folders tree – allows one to select one of the following drop modes:
o Copy w/o prompt – the file is copied; no user confirmation is requested.
o Select copy or move – at each drop action, the user will be prompted to select what to do
with the file (copy, move, cancel the action).
o Move files – the files will be moved, while the request for confirmation is controlled by
the Confirm file move checkbox in the same Copy/Move/Reject pane).
• Enable move to _Selected subolder – turns on support for the _Selected subfolder, you can set a
custom name for it in the neighboring field.
• Verify file contents after copy – turns on the verification of files after copying or moving a file to
another file system.
• Show detailed _Rejected folder stats before clearing the folder – enables extended statistics for
files to be deleted: (NN RAW files, MM RAW+JPEG…)
• Remember drop targets in last used copy/move lists – turns on the recording of the names of
folders that are used in drag and drop to the list of folders in copy file to/move file to.
• Change/Cleanup recent folders/file lists and favorites on folder tree edits – when renaming
folders, whether to rename/remove elements in the Recent files/Recent folders/Favorite folders
lists, etc.
• Allow move/reject for locked files (Mac only) – allows for the moving/copying of locked files.
• Copy/Move folder selector starts at – controls the dialog to select a destination folder when
preforming copy/move operations, with the following options:
o Last used – the folder that was used last for Copy or Move operation (for Copy and Move,
separate “last used” lists are kept).
o One level up from last used – a folder one level above (“parent”) the previous option.
o Current folder – current folder
o One level up from current folder – a folder one level above (“parent”) the previous
option.
o Specified folder – the specified folder (an additional text line input will pop up to enter
the folder path with folder selection button).
• Additional file extensions to copy/move with file. Allows one to list the additional file
extensions of the files to be copied/moved along with the main (raw) file of the given extension.
Syntax: RAWext+AUXext, several such pairs can be listed, separated by spaces. If AUXExt starts
with a dot, then the extension will be added to the end of the FILENAME.RAWext
(FILENAME.RAWext.AUXExt); if it starts with a letter, then RAWext will be replaced by AUXext,
forming FILENAME.AUXExt. An asterisk (*) can be indicated in place of RAWext, in this case, this
will be applied to all files.
Default: ORF+ORI *+.dop means: copy FILENAME.ORI along with FILENAME.ORF, and copy
FILENAME.EXT.dop along with FILENAME.EXT (.dop is a DXO Photolab file containing metadata)
Attention: the rules that govern copying JPG, XMP, .rpps are defined separately via the Handle
RAW+JPEG together, Use XMP for RAW files, Write RPPS files settings, accordingly.
• Undo settings – Customizing the Undo mode:
o Clear undo history on folder change – clears the undo history when the undo is changed.
o Undo history length – sets the number of undo levels.
Removable Media
This group of settings sets the specifics of work with removable media and network volumes.
File formats
• PNG file support, TIFF files support – turns on support for the respective formats.
• Handle RAW+JPEG together – turns on the pairing of RAW and JPEG of the same name:
displaying them as different representations of the same image, and treating them as a single
unit for move operations, so that both are relocated to a different folder when a move operation
is invoked.
o Do not show internal JPEG if external JPEG is present – removes the embedded JPEG
from the list of available representations if there is an external JPEG (which, usually, has
better resolution).
o Analyze external JPEG Orientation tag and image dimensions to match RAW
– FastRawViewer will rotate the external JPEG if necessary, to match the orientation of
the RAW image.
• Non-RAW files decode priorities – sets the decoding mode for each RGB file type (Lone
JPEGs/TIFFs/PNGs, not paired with RAW; embedded JPEGs, contained in RAW files; external
JPEGs, paired with RAW, as in RAW+JPEG:
o None – do not decode at all (only for Embedded/External JPEGs)
o On demand – the decoding will happen during switching from RAW to JPEG (only for
Embedded/External JPEGs also)
o On file open – the decoding will happen during the file load
o On prefetch – the decoding happens in advance, decoded data is cached.
• Default image to display – which representation to display when switching to the next file:
o Same as previous – the same as for the current file.
o RAW, internal JPEG, external JPEG – explicit designation of the representation.
XMP
This group of settings controls the processing of XMP files
• Use XMP for RAW files – turns on/off the use of XMP files.
• Read Only XMP – turns on the mode, where XMP files are read, but not changed.
• Warn about XMP writing errors – informs the user of any errors that occurred during the XMP
file recording process.
• Warn if overwrite XMP for file with same name – If it is "on", FastRawViewer will ask user for
confirmation before overwriting an XMP sidecar file containing settings for a file with the same
name but different extension.
• Disable batch XMP operations if files with same name are selected – If it is "on" (default) and
the selected files contain filenames that differ in extension only, the batch editing of XMP (setting
or changing orientation, labels, ratings) will be grayed out / disabled in Menus and in context
menu.
• Force XMP file creation – turns on the unconditional creation of XMP files, even if no
adjustments were changed manually while viewing the RAW file (those adjustments are
orientation, white balance, exposure adjustment, labels and ratings). Useful for automatic
propagation of adjustments to the next file.
• Write XMP blocks to JPEG files instead of creating sidecars – when working with JPEG files,
record XMP blocks directly to the JPEG files, instead of creating sidecar files.
o Fallback to XMP sidecar if XMP block write to JPEG fails – if XMP block could not be
recorded into JPEG file (e.g. because of read-only file), FastRawViewer will create XMP
sidecar file for this JPEG file.
o Restore original JPEG file date after writing XMP block – if this setting is turned on, then
after writing an XMP block, the original file modification data will be restored.
o RAW+JPEG mode: embed XMP block into JPEG – in RAW+JPEG mode, writes not only
XMP sidecars, but also XMP blocks into JPEG files.
• Use XMP Reject Rating – turns on the possibility of setting the rating to -1. This rating is
supported in Adobe Bridge. The setting is turned on automatically when selecting XMP Label
Style: Adobe Bridge.
• XMP Label Style – sets the label format in XMP files:
▪ Adobe Bridge: Select, Second, Approved, Review, To Do.
▪ Color labels/Adobe Lightroom: Red, Yellow, Green, Blue, Purple.
▪ Review status/Adobe Lightroom: To Delete, Color Correction Needed, Good to
Use, Retouching Needed, To Print.
▪ Custom – user labels (any text you choose).
• Use custom string for not set labels – allows one to set text for a un-set mark (if the text isn’t set,
then when setting a mark in “un-set” the xmp:Label tag is deleted from the XMP file).
This is intended for use with the PhaseOne C1 program, which doesn’t reread deleted tags from
modified files, but does reread xmp:Label=None
• Write photoshop:Urgency tag with color labels (for PhaseOne C1) – Turns on the recording of
the XMP-tag photoshop:Urgency, which is used by CaptureOne to recognize and set color labels.
The setting is activated only if the mode XMP labels is set in 'Color Labels' (this is the default). In
other modes, the XMP Labels photoshop:Urgency tag is not modified: if it was in the XMP file, it
stays unchanged.
• Visual feedback on rating label change – give easily-seen visual feedback when ratings/labels are
changed (as in Adobe Lightroom).
Exposure, Contrast, WB
This section defines processing settings transfer to Adobe software
• Adobe compatible Exposure and White Balance – turns on reading and recording into XMP files
exposure compensation and white balance in Adobe format:
o Adobe process version for newly created XMP files. Default: Version 3 (2012), can be set
to Version 1 (2003)…. Version 5 (2019).
Features:
▪ If the tag crs:ProcessVersion is set already in XMP file, the version doesn't change
and the exposure is written according to the version.
▪ If the crs:ProcessVersion tag isn't present in XMP file, then it's added in
accordance to the setting (this way, XMP-files created in older versions of
FastRawViewer and then not changed by ACR/LR will be "upgraded");
▪ For Version 3 – Version 5 process, Exposure2012 (equal to expo correction in
FastRawViewer plus Adobe Shift) and the tags Contrast2012, Whites2012,
Blacks2012 (set to 0, if these tags are not present in the file) are recorded.
▪ For the Version 1/2 (2003/2010) processes the tags crs:Exposure, crs:Brightness,
and crs:Contrast are recorded (if the file already had the values for those tags, they
are preserved, otherwise they are set to 0).
o Write adobe-compatible Contrast/Blacks into XMP files – enables the recording of the
contrast settings in the Adobe-compatible format.
Interface
The group of settings for user interface adjustments.
• Bottom bar font size – controls bottom bar font size (Small – Extra Large on Windows and
Normal – Extra Large on OS X).
• Background Gray level allows you set the brightness of the main program window background.
• Selected/active files contrast – allows one to change the contrast (against the FastRawViewer
background) of selected or active files when showing them in Grid mode or in the Filmstrip panel.
• Selected files background – allows one to set the background color for selected files.
• Active (current) file border – to set the color for the frame around the current file.
• Activate program on file drop – controls program behavior for file Drag-n-Drop operations and if
started in ‘Single instance’ mode:
o None – the program remains on the background (if it is already there)
o Fullscreen – the program brings itself to the foreground if it is in Fullscreen mode
o Always – the program brings itself to the foreground for both Fullscreen and “windowed”
modes.
• Ignore successive wheel events for NN msec – this setting is designed to tame the stream of
events generated by mouse wheel, Apple Magic Mouse, or trackpad.
• Set the main menubar colors to match the main window – (Windows only) colors of main menu
bar will match main window color scheme (Note: color of program top bar is controlled by
Windows and could be edited only via Windows Colors Control Panel/PC Settings page).
• Restore last View settings on program start – when closing the program the following image
display parameters are saved (independent of the status of the settings):
Display mode (RGB, per-channel, BW Conversion)
Focus Peaking mode
Boost Shadows mode
Exposure correction on/off
If 'Restore last View settings' is turned on, then during the next start-up of the program, the
above-listed parameters will be in effect.
• Use built-in drive/folder icons in Folders panel – show icons built-in into FastRawViewer in the
Folders panel (in several cases, using the system’s icon can lead to problems).
• Use system Open file/Open folder dialogs – switches between standard and smaller dialogs
when opening files/folders.
o Use built-in file/folder icons in Open File/Open Folder dialogs – when using non-system
dialogs for opening files/folders – use built-in icons.
• Force open Folders panel if started without filename – if this setting is on, starting the program
without a file to be opened, or with an invalid / non-existent filename will result in the display of
Folders panel, even if this panel was switched off previously.
• Disable splash screen – switches off the display of logo at FastRawViewer start.
• Edit bottom bar items – launches the dialog that allows one edit the composition of the
program’s bottom bar.
Panels
• Panel’s font size: sets the font size in the informational panels.
• Panels color scheme – sets the brightness of the panel background.
• Hide Menu bar when hiding information panels – for the hide informational panels mode (Tab),
controls if the menu bar should be hidden too.
• Hide bottom window bar when hiding information panels – hide main program window status
bar in ‘hide information panels’ (Tab key) mode.
• Disable transparency for panels outside of main window – allows disabling transparency for
informational panels that are placed completely outside the main program window.
• Dim Histogram/Stats/Exif panels while changing files – enables dimming of those panels for the
time needed to switch to the next file. Dimming takes additional 6 to 15 milliseconds, if maximum
performance is needed, you can turn this off.
• Restore Panels -> Hide all state on program start – allows the program to recall the “all panels
are hidden” state when it’s opened.
Attention: the setting Interface -> Force open Folders panel if started without filename activates
AFTER Restore Panels -> Hide All. If you want to always start without panels, you will need to
either explicitly close them all, or turn off Force open folders.
• Hide floating panels – controls floating (not “docked”) informational panels behavior on Menu-
Panels-Hide All panels action:
o Hide all – hide all panels
o Those inside main window – hide only panels, that float within main program window
o Do not hide – do not hide floating panels
Zoom
• Image zoom on next file – sets the zoom factor to be used when displaying the next file:
o Keep zoom ratio – will keep the zoom factor.
o Keep image width – will keep the visible width of the image
o Fit to window – the Fit to screen mode will be turned on.
o Fit to width – the image takes up the entire width of the window.
• Zoom and Drag Zoom to – sets zoom factor to use in the Zoom and Drag mode (Shift – left mouse
click).
• Zoom and Pan Zoom to – sets zoom factor to use in the Zoom and Pan mode (Shift – right mouse
click).
• Toggle Zoom Zoom to – sets the magnification/zoom level used for the Toggle Zoom (Z) mode.
• Zoom step (for shortcut) – controls the zoom step for keyboard (and mouse) shortcuts:
o Large – fixed zoom step value of about 50%, to be used for keyboard control.
o Medium – zoom step is set to 20%.
o Small – zoom step is set to 5%.
The last two settings are designed to be used while zooming with the Mouse Wheel or
trackpad.
• Zoom In/Zoom Out range sets the range for zoom values for Zoom In/Out actions for any zoom
mode, be it through menu, keyboard shortcuts, or mouse wheel.
Fit to Window – sets the minimum zoom level such that the image fits in the window.
• Zoom+Pan within visible area – if this setting is on, then the panning will take place inside the
area visible before the start of the panning. If it is off, then the panning will be over the entire
image.
• Allow Fit-to-screen to zoom above 1:1 – this allows one to zoom (small) images to more than
100% in the Fit To Screen/Fit to Width modes.
• Zoom anchor at mouse cursor – zooming will happen taking the position of the mouse cursor
into account; the point underneath it will retain its position respective of the window during
zooming.
• Use Logical pixels for zoom calculation (Mac OS X only):
o If turned on (default, "legacy" behavior), then the pixel in the screen is considered to be
the "logical pixel" (in the case of Retina, it's a block of 2x2 "physical" pixels) and the
calculation of the zoom size is done in these units.
o If turned off, the zoom value is calculated in "physical pixels", so for Retina screens the
displayed zoom value will now be doubled, and at 100% zoom the image will be half the
size compared to "legacy" behavior.
Touchscreen
The settings in this group control working with the touchscreen
Touchscreen support is off by default, to turn it on one ought to use the setting Enable Touchscreen
features. After it’s turned on, the following settings become available:
• Enable Toolbars – turns on toolbars (their visibility can be controlled through Menu – Panels –
Toolbars).
• Toolbars size – controls the size of the toolbar icons.
• Dim image while switching to next – gives visual feedback about the status of the image moving
to another image:
o Do not dim – works as previous; no brightness decreases while switching between images
o While switching to next file – decreases the brightness by 40% while in the process of
switching to another image. This is the default.
o Next file or RAW/JPEG switch – the same as previous, plus a 25% decrease in brightness
when switching between RAW and JPEG.
Other checkboxes control touch features:
• Single finger filmstrip scroll/grid scroll – the scroll is performed with a single figure gesture.
• Double tap to switch grid/single mode – switches between Grid Mode and displaying a Single
File with a double-tap.
• Gesture support in Single File View:
o Single finger pan to switch – allows one to switch images with one finger gesture from left
to right). If the zoom is larger than Fit to Screen, instead of switching images the current
image is scrolled.
o Pinch to zoom/unzoom – change the zoom level of the image with a pinch.
o Double tap to unzoom (if zoomed): if the image zoom level is larger than Fit to Screen, a
double-tap will bring it to Fit to Screen.
If Double tab to switch grid/single mode is turned on, another double tap will return to
Grid Mode.
Grid/Filmstrip
The settings in this group control the display of the image in Grid mode and the Filmstrip panel.
• Enable Grid mode – Turns on/off support for Grid Mode. You must restart the program for the
change to take effect.
• Start in Grid mode – when launched without passing a filename, FastRawViewer will start in Grid
mode.
• Remember Grid/Single file state on exit – turns on restoration of the previous mode for the next
time FastRawViewer is launched.
• Browse folders in Grid mode – when moving from the current folder to another one,
FastRawViewer will switch to Grid Mode.
• Hide panels floating within main window in Grid mode – if the setting is on, all floating panels in
the Grid Mode that are currently positioned inside the program’s main window will be hidden;
they will reappear when switching to Single File View Mode.
• Hide Filmstrip in Grid mode – customizes the visibility of the Filmstrip panel in Grid Mode (the
Filmstrip panel can be brought back to display through Menu – Panels – Filmstrip):
o No – do not hide the Filmstrip panel
o If Docked at bottom – if the Filmstrip panel is at the bottom of the program window, it
will be hidden upon switching to Grid Mode. The setting has no effect for a Filmstrip that
is anywhere else.
o If Docked anywhere – the Filmstrip panel will be hidden if it is located in one of the main
dock areas of the main window (at the top, at the bottom, and on the left). If the Filmstrip
panel is dragged out of the main window, it will stay visible after switching to Grid Mode.
• RAW processing in Grid mode – customizes the RAW decoding when Grid Mode is enabled and
RAW decoding is switched on through the Show Histogram/Stats/EXIF icon:
o Partial – only partial decoding is preformed, enough for displaying the exposure statistics
and histogram. In this mode, browsing files happens faster.
o Full – full decoding is preformed, and switching to Single File view mode is nearly
instantaneous.
• Grid View Font size, Filmstrip panel font size – to set the size of the fonts for the Grid View and
Filmstrip panels:
o Auto – the font size is set automatically, based on the setting for the Panel Font size and
the preview size.
o Extra small…Extra Large – the font size is set to the same as that of the Panels (using the
same setting).
• Advanced Selection mode – enables the “advanced” mode of selecting files, for details see
Operations with Multiple Files
• Single file keys work for multiple files too – turns on the mode in which work with groups of
selected files is down with the same menu items/hotkeys that are used with single files (see the
section “Alternate mode: using same shortcuts/menus for single file and for the group” above)
o If the selected file is not in the group of selected files single file shortcuts will work with
– describes the program’s behavior with regards to operations over several files, if the
current file isn’t in the group of selected files:
• Ignore folder paths on selection load – selection lists are simple list of files with full path, one file
per line. With default settings, full path is checked against current visible files list, so selection
lists are bound to specific folder. With Ignore folder paths… option on, only filename part is
checked against current visible files list, so selection lists become folder-independent.
• Center Filmstrip items – turns on Filmstrip automatic centering mode:
o No centering – never center.
o Edge items only – if the edge-most item is selected, it’ll be moved to the center.
• Always center – the active item will always be in the center.
Image Display
The settings in this group control the processing and the display of the images (Exposure, White
Balance and Screen sharpening are tuned in separate preferences pages).
• Contrast curve – sets the tone curve to be used when displaying the image:
o Gamma 1.8, Gamma 2.2, sRGB, L* - sets one of the standard tone curves, typically used in
image editing.
o Variable contrast – corresponds to the variable tone/contrast curve, see Adjusting image
contrast section for details.
• Boost shadows amount – controls the additional gamma adjustment while in Boost Shadows
mode, the range is 0.2 to 2.0.
• Highlights inspection – this group of settings controls the Highlight Inspection mode:
o Gamma decrease – the amount by which the Gamma for the image will be reduced.
o Decrease Exposure by – additional image darkening.
o Apply UniWB white balance – White Balance will be substituted with UniWB, thus
avoiding any possible clipping caused by White Balance.
• Reset rendering to default parameters – sets the modes or values of white balance, exposure
correction (actually, lightening), and contrast that will be used for Menu – Adjust – Reset image
rendering to defaults
o White balance: As shot or one of 4 standard presets (daylight, auto, tungsten, camera
auto)
o Exposure correction: No correction or ETTR (ETTR settings are selected on the Exposure
tab.
o Contrast: values from -5 to U+5.
• Use embedded color data for – controls the use of color data embedded into RAW files and
allows using that data instead of data that comes with FastRawViewer.
• Use Monochrome mode for Bayer images – turns on the black-and-white mode for color
cameras. This mode is intended for modified cameras, where the color filter array is removed.
Available modes:
o None – Off
Exposure
• Apply Adobe hidden exposure correction – switches ON the automatic exposure correction
similar to the one used by Adobe RAW converters, such as Camera Raw and Lightroom. With this
correction ON, same values in exposure correction will result in overall image brightness being
similar between Adobe converters and FastRawViewer.
• Set hidden exposure correction to – allows setting a user-defined value for the hidden automatic
exposure correction. Often this is not necessary, as FastRawViewer already comes with the
corrections for all cameras supported in Adobe converters.
• Exposure correction on file open:
o No correction – no additional exposure correction (apart from the Adobe-style one, if it is
ON) is applied when a file is opened, unless the correction is found in the accompanying
XMP sidecar file.
o Autoexposure – automatic exposure correction is applied, according to the settings listed
below.
o Keep from prev. file – the new file will be opened with the same exposure correction that
was set for the previous file (it does not matter here how that exposure correction was set,
manually or automatically).
• Auto Exposure – controls the automatic exposure correction (the one that is applied when
‘automatic correction’ action is performed).
o Fixed Exposure Shift – the exposure is shifted by the fixed value.
o ETTR-style autoexposure (shift histogram to the right) – positive exposure correction that
forces the saturation of the given percentage of pixels (those saturated pixels are having
value of 255 on the 8-bit scale); the percentage is controlled through Saturate up to %NN
of pixels setting.
The amount of the positive exposure correction shift is limited by the ‘Limit to’ setting:
▪ Unlimited – no limit
▪ Hard limit – the limit is set to the given amount.
▪ Virtual ISO – limits the automatic exposure correction, taking into account the ISO
setting in the camera. For example, if the current shot is taken at ISO 400 setting in
the camera, while auto limit is set to ISO 6400 (the default value), the positive
exposure correction is limited to (6400/400 =) 16 times, or, in photographic units,
to 4EV.
• Manual exposure step size (small step/big step) – sets the step sizes for manual exposure
adjustment change.
• The Over/Underexposure display section controls the over- and underexposure indications
o Exposure adjustments affect OverExposure display – when turning on this setting the
change in exposure adjustment (both automatic and manual) will affect the display of
overexposed areas.
o Under/Overexposure layer opacity – controls the perceived contrast of the highlighting
for over- and underexposed areas.
o Use camera linearity limit to detect clipping – displays overexposure for RAW for the
RAW values that are larger than the camera’s linearity limit as recorded in RAW file
metadata (not all the cameras record it; if the limit is unknown, then the maximum
possible value will be used).
o Underexposure detection limit NN EV below sensor saturation – sets the “usable
dynamic range” of the camera with one value, the same for all ISO settings. Everything
below this limit will be displayed as underexposed.
o ISO-based underexposure limit – the working range will be set by a kinked curve of the
following type:
▪ For ISO 6-1600 – straight line going through the points @ISO 200 and @ISO 1600
▪ For ISO above 1600 – the dynamic range decreases by one photographic stop for
each stop of ISO increase, but no less than the value set for @high ISO.
White Balance
This group contains all the white balance processing controls:
• White Balance Sampler size – for “click-on-gray” (Alt-Click) method, sets the size of the area used
to evaluate the white balance
• White Balance for next file (same camera) – sets the white balance mode when opening a file
coming from the same camera model as the current file. Choices here are:
o Same as previous – keep the current white balance choice.
o Camera Auto/As Shot – if the camera records the metered white balance (which may
differ from that which is used during the shoot), then that balance is used. Otherwise, it
will be As Shot.
o All others – the respective white balance mode will be in effect.
• White Balance for next file (another camera) – sets the white balance mode when opening
a file coming from a different camera model.
• White Balance display mode:
o Color Temperature/Tint – a mode commonly used in many RAW converters, including
those by Adobe
Sharpening/Other
Color Management
This group of settings controls the appearance of the color on-screen in respect to color
management:
• Color space for thumbnails: sets the mode for color space for previews (thumbnails).
Lab TIFF files will be converted to the same color space when building previews. Previews for
these files will be stored in the preview database (if it is in use) in RGB format. Because of this,
when you change the color space for thumbnails, we recommend purging the preview database if
it contains previews for Lab TIFF files.
GPU Processing
This group controls the video card modes and how the sharp areas of the image will be displayed.
• Graphics Engine (Windows only): sets the method of using the graphics hardware acceleration:
DirectX 9, DirectX 11 (Windows7 and newer), OpenGL, OpenGL emulator. The last option can only
be set through an external script, as it results in extremely low performance, and can be selected
only for the purposes of testing.
• Image resampling method:
o No resampling – for large zoom factors, the image will look as if it is constituted of small
square tiles. The fastest method.
External Editors
This window displays the paths to external programs. FastRawViewer can launch those, passing to
them the name of the currently displayed file.
• Supports batch processing: if this checkbox is marked for the program, then this program will
be included in both Menu and in the context menu for groups of files.
• Use […] buttons to lookup executable file on your system.
• Supports batch processing – this program supports the import of several files into it at the
same time. Said programs will be displayed in the menu Run Program for file groups.
• Set custom name – allows one to set an arbitrary name for a program (said name will be used
in the menu in place of the application file name of the external program)
• Add slot button adds additional slot for external program (up to 10).
• Rescan for known apps button starts a search for RAW-aware applications known to
FastRawViewer. After the search is finished, a dialogue similar to the following is displayed:
If, during the scan, some newer versions of applications are found, they will be displayed in
Replacement Applications column, together with an option to renew (Upgrade) the settings
for External Editors tab.
• Check external programs presence on startup enables check each program existence on
FastRawViewer start.
If during the startup it was determined that some application is absent, you will be presented
with a dialogue similar to the following:
If a “replacement” application was found, this replacement will be displayed in the Replacement
Application column; thus allowing to renew the settings without resorting to manual editing.
Performance
o PNG/TIFF thumbnail generation limit – for files above the set limit, previews will not be
created or displayed.
• Other performance settings section
o Generate high-quality previews – sets the preview quality. High-quality previews (the
checkmark is set) are built noticeably slower.
o Use high speed preview for Fujifilm X-Trans – this preference turns on faster (but lower
quality) processing for files created by Fujifilm X-Trans sensors.
This mode is recommended if you are not satisfied with the display rate of these files in
standard mode.
Automatically turns on during the first start-up, and when resetting to default the preferences
if the system has one of the following processors:
▪ Intel Core2Duo and older.
▪ Intel i3-i7 1st generation with fewer than 4 cores.
o Use all subframes for Pentax 4-shot files – enables merging all sub-frames into one when
working with Pentax frames shot in Pixel Shift mode.
o Flush decoded RAW/JPEG cache on folder refresh – if this setting is turned on, then when
using Menu – File – Reload – Reload current folder, the decoded file cache will be reset.
o Check for folder updates each – sets the refresh rate for the list of files in the current
folder (if the folder changes, for instance other files are copied into it, then it won’t be
reread very often).
Thumbnail cache
Other
This section contains other settings that cannot be grouped with any other preceding group:
• Write RPPS files – saves an .rpps file (for RawPhotoProcessor) if manual changes of
WB/exposure are applied to the image
o Force RPPS files creation – saves an .rpps file with automatic settings for
WB/Exposure when a RAW file is opened.
o Never write Green2 white balance for RGB files – switches off the recording of the
separate white balance coefficient for the second green channel.
o RPPS Template – the name of the file that will be used as a template while creating
specific .rpps files (used if .rpps file does not yet exist for the raw file).
• Check for updates – this parameter schedules the checks for updates - at each program
launch or once in every 1-3-7-15-30 days.
• Debug log messages – turns on the debug mode, the debug messages are available through
Menu – Help – Debug log.
• Save Debug log to file – Debug log recording to text file:
Windows: UserProfileFolder/AppData/Local/LibRaw LLC/FastRawViewer/FRV_DebugLog.txt
Mac: ~/Library/Application\ Support/libraw-llc/FastRawViewer/FRV_DebugLog.txt
If the setting is set to some on state, Show Debug log in Explorer/Reveal in Finder appears as
last item of Help menu.
Possible values for the setting:
o No – do not record log into file. If you’ll change to No from some Yes… settings,
existing log file will be removed.
o Yes, remove on quit – log file is recorded, but removed on program successful close
(but will be kept if program crashes)
o Yes, keep forever – log file recorded and not deleted, so it may grow indefinitely.
• Run single program instance – (Windows only) turns on the “one instance” mode of the
program. At an attempt of starting the second instance, the file is displayed in the already
existing program window.
• Use reduced Folders panel functions: switches off some potentially incompatible with your
applications / OS functions of the Folders panel, in particular:
o Monitoring of Removable media change (CD/DVD, USB devices).
o Monitoring changes in the folder tree structure.
o Editing the folder tree.
• Check global folders presence on startup –
checks for the presence of (and, if
necessary, for write permission) the
following global folders, if they're
configured (in the File Handling and Copy-
Move-Reject Preference sections):
o Start without filename - Specified
folder
o Open folder dialog starts at -
Specified folder
o Use global rejected folder -
Subfolder for rejected files
o Copy/Move folder selector starts at -
Specified folder.
• Faster program close – (Windows only)
turns on the fast program completion
mode.
• Manage File Associations – (Windows-only,
not supported in Legacy Windows version):
activates the system dialogue to edit file
association with FastRawViewer (sample
window screenshot is on the right).
Additional Settings
A few of FastRawViewer’s settings are accessible only by running scripts that are installed alongside
the program. These “hidden” settings are needed extremely rarely, and should be applied, as a rule,
only once.
These settings are only read at program start, so if you apply scripts with FastRawViewer running,
immediately close the program and restart it. If the program is not closed immediately, and you
move to editing and saving the settings, the changes made by the script may be lost and require
repeating the procedure.
Select the necessary script and launch it (double click or press Enter).
Registry Editor will run, which will first display a Windows UAC message:
Press Yes to agree to the warning, after which Register Editor will warn you again:
Once again confirm by pressing Yes, and Registry Editor will inform you of your success:
5. Switch to the Terminal window and press Enter. The script will be executed without any
output to the Terminal window; if there’s some sort of message, it means that there was an
error.
Advanced Troubleshooting
Windows: choosing the program graphics acceleration method
GraphicsToOpenGL
GraphicsToDirectX11
Use16BitFloatingPoint Use / don’t use 16-bit floating point data while processing RAW
No16BitFloatingPoint data on GPU
UseOEUEOnGPU Use / don’t use GPU to create over- and under-exposure maps
NoOEUEOnGPU
UseBottomBarFontPixels Windows-only: sets font size on the bottom line in pixels, not in
NoBottomBarFontPixels points. This is intended for cases when two displays with very
different resolutions are being used.
Advanced Tune
Using Adobe DNG SDK
UseDNGSDKAllFiles Use DNG SDK for
UseDNGSDKSelectedFiles • All DNG files
• Linear DNG/Floating point DNG (default)
NoDNGSDK • Do not use
DngUseColorMatrix Type of embedded color data used to display DNG files: ColorMatrix
DngUseForwardMatrix or ForwardMatrix
NoFilmstripCenterOn
FolderUpdate
WheelScrollDefault Sets the default mouse wheel scroll step for all scrolling lists
(folders, thumbnails in Filmstrip and Grid View, EXIF table).
If one wants to increase/decrease the contrast – copy the script,
and edit it (change the default value to wheel step needed) and run
it.
NoFileArrivalDelay FastRawViewer
• waits for the file size on the disk to stop changing (to
determine that the size stopped changing the folder is re-
read with the frequency set in Preferences - Performance -
Re-read folder in...)
• additionally, delays the display of this new file for the
amount of time set in FileArrivalDelay (default setting - 2
seconds)
• displays this file in Filmstrip/Grid panels
Scripts that control the delay:
• FileArrivalDefaultDelay - sets the default delay (2000
milliseconds); if you want a different value for the default
delay please edit the script
• NoFileArrivalDelay - sets the delay to zero, thus disabling
any extra delay and file size change analysis.
This script assigns a standard value (0) to the
ShiftClickSelectionModeDef
ShiftClickSelectionMode parameter, which modifies the program’s
ault
behavior while selecting a range of files using Shift-Click. To change
parameter value you need to edit the script before apply.
This parameter is a bit field of 3 bits:
• Bit 0:
o 0 - the second limit for the Shift-Click's range will
be 'last Ctrl-Clicked', irrespective of whether the
action was "selection" or "de-selection"
o 1 - the second limit for the range will be 'last Ctrl-
Clicked' only if the action was "selection"
• Bit 1:
o 0 - If 'last Ctrl-Clicked' isn't there, the second limit
for the range will be the first file in the current
folder
o 2 - The second limit for the range will be the
current file if it wasn't Shift-Clicked (if it was, then
it will again be the first file in the current folder)
• Bit 2:
o 0 - Shift-Click always creates a new range selection,
overriding the previous one.
o 4 - Shift-Click always expands the selection, never
de-selecting previous selections.
File Processing
TryJPEGasRAW Attempts to decode files with a JPEG extension the same as for
RAW files.
NoJPEGasRAW
This setting is useful for cameras with modified Firmware (the
DiagRAW hack and old versions of the CHDK hack) because these
cameras save RAW files with JPG extensions.
UseGPSStatus Check GPS Status field (default) or ignore it and display GPS
coordinates regardless of status.
IgnoreGPSStatus
EnableDetectDNGfromTiff Turns on the detection of DNG files converted form RGB Tiff. When
such files are detected
DisableDetectDNGfromTiff
• An sRGB tone curve is set
• UniWB White Balance is set
• Color data is taken from the DNG file
UseDNGDefaultCrop Apply (or not) DNG DefaultCrop* tags
NoDNGDefaultCrop Default is off.
UseAVX2 Turns on/off the use of AVX2 instructions where for those
NoAVX2 computers where this instruction set is supported. By default, this is
turned on.
UseBottomBarFontPixels Turns on bottom bar font size setting via pixels (DPI-independend),
not points (DPI depended). Use if you have multiple monitors with
NoBottomBarFontPixels
very different resolution and OS is unable to deliver resolution data
to FastRawViewer application.
EnableLargeJumps When this is turned on, the Menu adds the items Menu -> File ->
Jump +2 files (+3 files, -2 files, -3 files) and default hotkeys: Ctrl-Alt-
DisableLargeJumps
RightArrow (move +2), Ctrl-Shift-Alt-RightArrow (+3) and similar
for left arrow to move -2/-3.
The size of the jump can be controlled through the
Registry/Defaults Large2JumpStep and Large3JumpStep settings.
The EnableLargeJumps script sets these settings to 2 and 3,
respectively.
If you need other values (for example, your standard bracketing
step is 3 and 5 shots), you will need to copy the script somewhere
where it can be edited, change the values, and launch it (or change
the values manually through Registry Editor/defaults).
The changed values take place after FastRawViewer has been
relaunched.
If the step for "large steps" is set to 0, then the corresponding
menu points/hotkeys are deactivated.
ForceWindowSizeRestore Enables (second) forced main window size restore after main
NoForceWindowSizeRestore program window made visible.
In both cases:
Camera01 (or Camera02 … Camera64) – the “number line” in the table, up to 64 records of this type
are supported.
The line “24096096,4008,3006, 0, 0, 0, 0,0,148,0,0,Dalsa, FTF4052C 4:3,0” defines the format of the
camera’s data and consists of 14 fields separated by commas (a note for engineers: the format of this
line is completely analogous to the line in the “sensor dump” table’s description in dcraw.c with the
one difference being that the CFA filter’s format is set in base 10):
1. The exact size of the file in bytes (in this example – 24096096). This is the only criterion by
which FastRawViewer recognizes a data “format”, files of a different size will be ignored.
2. The width of the sensor in pixels. Put the entire width, including the “black frame” in this
field.
3. The height of the sensor in pixels, including the black frame.
4. The width of the black frame at the left edge of the sensor (in pixels)
5. The width (height) of the black frame at the top.
6. The width of the black frame at the right edge.
7. The width (height) of the black frame at the bottom.
8. Additional parameters for the file decoding subprogram (see below).
9. The Bayer filter CFA format, with the byte field taking one of the following values:
• 22 – BGGR
• 97 – GRBG
• 73 – GBRG
• 148 – RGGB
• 180 - GMYC
10. The amount of unused bit data (for example, if 14-bit data is recorded in a 16-bit format)
11. Additional metadata, bit mask.
a. Bit 0 – find a .JPG file with the same name and read the EXIF data from it.
b. Bit 1 – filter (average neighbors) for pixels with values of zero
c. Bits 2-4 – the orientation of the image (0=do not rotate, 3=180, 5=90CCW, 6=90CW)
12. Camera manufacturer
13. Camera model
14. The offset of the beginning of the sensor data from the beginning of the file (the value range
is 0-65534, the special value 65535 means that “the rows are going in the opposite
direction”).
8, 10, 12, and 16-bit data formats are supported, the number of bits is calculated as (the size of the
file minus the offset from the beginning of the data)/number of pixels.
Depending on the bit-ness of the data, the 8th field (“additional parameters for the file decoding
subprogram”) can accept the following values for 10-bit data:
• 1: “4 pixels in 5 bytes” packing is used
• 0: “6 pixels in 8 bytes” packing is used
For the cameras that are supported through this method, the data needed for proper color
transforms is (obviously) missing in FastRawViewer. As a result:
- the color displayed will be "raw", that is the saturation is low and hues are inaccurate;
- only Auto WB is available in drop-down;
- no calculation of CCT and Tint
1. Quit FastRawViewer
2. Double-click the file with the backup copy of the settings you want to restore – this will
import them into the Windows Registry.
Folders Panel
• Refresh folder tree – re-reads the folder tree. This action is intended to sync the displayed file
structure with the current one on the disk; useful if the monitoring of the creation of new
files/folders (default setting for network collections and memory cards) is turned off.
• Show system/special files: turns on the display of files/folders which are usually hidden:
o Mac: bundles (applications and disk images); folders, the names of which start with a
dot; standard Unix folders like /usr, /bin etc.
o Windows: C:\Windows folder.
o All systems: Lightroom folders.
• Show Drive/Folder icons – allows drive and folder icon display.
• Monitor removable media changes – allows automatic discovery and monitoring of
removable media.
• Show unmoumted volumes (Windows only) – allows drive letter display when the media is
offline.
• Shorten long folder names: for folders with names longer than 8 characters, the displayed
name for the folder will be automatically shortened to fit in the window.
This is done by removing the middle of the folder name from the display. Any folder names
shorter than 9 symbols aren’t affected.
• Show horizontal scrollbar: if enabled (default), Folders panel contents could be scrolled using
mouse/trackpad. If disabled, then horizontal scroll of panel contents is completely disabled.
• Use natural folder sort order: consider digits in file/folder names to be ordinal numbers and
sorts those numbers in numeric value order.
• Reverse sort order: folders are displayed in reverse order (ZZ.AA). Windows: this doesn’t
affect disk letters, which remain in their natural order A:…Z:
• Enable add/rename/remove folders – allows one to edit the folder tree.
• Enable file drops to folder tree – allows one to drag files into the folder tree.
• Folder tree autoexpand on drop target selection – enables the auto-expanding of subfolders
when a file being dragged is dragged to it
• Add current folder to favorites – adds the current folder to the list of favorites
• Clear favorites list – clears the list of favorite folders.
Filmstrip/Thumbnails Panel
• Show filenames – sets a mode for file name display in the Filmstrip: don’t show, show under
the icon, or show over the icon.
• Show Rating/Label – sets a mode for XMP Rating/Label display in the Filmstrip: don’t show,
show under the icon, or show over the icon.
• Show EXIF Data – EXIF data display mode:
o What to display: exposure (abridged), exposure (full), Timestamp, camera name,
image size in pixels.
o Where to show: Do not show, above thumbnail, overlay atop the thumbnail.
• Show Read-only status (Windows)/Show Locked/Read-only status (Mac) – read-only/locked
files will be shows with a “padlock” symbol to the left of the checkbox mark.
• Thumbnail size: setting the size of the Thumbnail preview:
o 11 sizes, starting with 75 and up to 600 pixels on the longer side.
o More space for vertical images – allows on to set the icon aspect ratio 1:1 instead of
2:3
o Display Thumbnails – allows one to turn off preview display, allowing only file names,
and, if desired, XMP ratings/labels.
This mode is efficient when using a Filmstrip in vertical orientation:
o To adjust the font size in this mode, first set the thumbnail size and only after that
switch the previews off.
• Tooltips – what to display in the floating hints: Title, Description.
• Refresh thumbnails/ratings: action for re-reading the file icons in the current folder.
In the upper-right corner of the Grid View window there is a “gear” button that drops down the
settings menu:
These settings are very much like those for the Thumbnail panel, with the following exceptions:
• The list of sizes is different: from 125 to 800 pixels on the longest side.
• There is no setting to switch off the display of Thumbnails.
EXIF Panel
In this dialog:
• The up/down arrows allow one to move the groups of the displayed information.
• In each group, one can choose the elements that are necessary during display.
• Do not show empty values – forbids the output of empty lines (for which the displayed RAW
has no data).
• Show row labels – turns the left column of the EXIF-table (field names) on/off.
• Move to next file after – sets the automatic progression to the next file after setting a rating
or mark:
o Do not move – doesn’t move.
o Rating is set – moves when a rating is set.
o Label is set – moves when a mark is set.
o Rating or label – moves when setting either parameter.
• Show Title/Description – Shows the title and description in the XMP panel.
• Always display OE+Corr column: turns on the display of the third column of statistics
(OE+Corr), even if it has the same values as the OveExp column.
• Display statistics in color: turns on the output of table rows in the color corresponding to the
color of the pixels.
The use of these items is described above in the “Sort & Filter”
section.
Panel
Settings:
Each line on the table corresponds to one element of the program’s status bar, and can be set to one
of three positions:
• Visibility always: always shows the element. If the program window size is too small, then the
elements will overlap.
• If fits: The element is shown only if the size of the window is such that the elements do not
get in each other’s way.
• Hide: The element is not shown.
The following elements can be customized:
➢ File Navigation:
o Open File Button: Open file icon
o File navigation buttons: Prev File/Next file button and current file number indication
(this button opens up the set file by number dialog).
The left pane contains the list of groups of actions. The right pane displays the names of the actions
in the highlighted group and current shortcuts for those actions.
Looking to the right of every action name:
• [+] – adds a new keyboard shortcut for the action
• [keyboard combination] – currently assigned shortcut
• [x] (to the right of every keyboard combination) – deletes this combination.
When pressing the buttons to add or edit the combination the following dialogue appears:
Hit the combination of keys (and mouse buttons), which you want to assign to the action, and it will
be memorized. To close the window without modifying the current status (that is, to cancel the
assignment), press the Shift key three times.
It is possible that the selected combination is already in use somewhere, and then the program will
prompt with the following:
For some actions, only a specific mouse button can be assigned (this applies to the actions, which are
done with the mouse: setting the white balance for the “click-on-gray” method, etc.). In this case, the
dialogue to assign the combination changes a bit:
To transfer shortcut settings to another computer, use Export button on source and Load on
destination.
File Handling
Ctrl+Shift+Left ⇧⌘←
Open first file in folder
Ctrl+Shift+Num+Left ⇧⌘+Num←
Ctrl+Left ⌘←
Backspace ⌫
Open previous file Ctrl+Num+Left ⌘+Num←
Left ←Num
Num+Left ←
Ctrl+Right ⌘→
Space Space
Open next file (in current folder) Ctrl+Num+Right ⌘+Num→
Right →
Num+Right Num→
Ctrl+Shift+Right ⇧⌘→
Open last file in folder
Ctrl+Shift+Num+Right ⇧⌘+Num→
File Copy/Move
Ctrl++
⌘+
Zoom In Ctrl+=
⌘=
Shift+Wheel Up
Ctrl+-
Zoom Out ⌘-
Shift+Wheel Down
Toggle Zoom Z Z
Ctrl+7 ⌘7
Rotate 900 Counterclockwise
Ctrl+Home ⌘↖
Ctrl+9 ⌘9
Rotate 900 Clockwise
Ctrl+PgUp ⌘⇞
Image Display
Image rotation
Image Adjustments
Alt++ ⌥+
Increase Exposure
Alt+= ⌥=
Alt+Shift++ ⌥⇧+
Increase Exposure, big step
Alt+ Shift+= ⌥⇧=
Information Panels
Show/Hide Histogram F2 F2
Show/Hide EXIF F3 F3
panel
XMP Rating
No Rating Alt+0 ⌥0
XMP Labels
Red Alt+6 ⌥6
Yellow Alt+7 ⌥7
Green Alt+8 ⌥8
Blue Alt+9 ⌥9
External editors
General Functions
• ARRIRAW format
• ASUS ZenPhone4
• AVT
o F-080C
o F-145C
o F-201C
o F-510C
o F-810C
• Adobe Digital Negative (DNG)
• AgfaPhoto DC-833m
• Alcatel 5035D
• Apple
o iPad Pro
o iPhone SE
o iPhone 6s
o iPhone 6 plus
o iPhone 7
o iPhone 7 plus
o iPhone 8
o iPhone 8 plus
o iPhone X
o QuickTake 100
o QuickTake 150
o QuickTake 200
• Baumer TXG14
• BlackMagic
o Cinema Camera
o Micro Cinema Camera
o Pocket Cinema Camera
o Production Camera 4k
o URSA
o URSA Mini 4k
o URSA Mini 4.6k
o URSA Mini Pro 4.6k
• CLAUSS pix500
• Canon
o PowerShot 600
o PowerShot A5
o PowerShot A5 Zoom
o PowerShot A50
o PowerShot A410 (CHDK hack)
o PowerShot A460 (CHDK hack)
o PowerShot A470 (CHDK hack)
o PowerShot A480 (CHDK hack)
o EOS 60Da
o EOS 70D
o EOS 77D
o EOS 80D
o EOS 200D
o EOS 300D / Digital Rebel / Kiss Digital
o EOS 350D / Digital Rebel XT / Kiss Digital N
o EOS 400D / Digital Rebel XTi / Kiss Digital X
o EOS 450D / Digital Rebel XSi / Kiss Digital X2
o EOS 500D / Digital Rebel T1i / Kiss Digital X3
o EOS 550D / Digital Rebel T2i / Kiss Digital X4
o EOS 600D / Digital Rebel T3i / Kiss Digital X5
o EOS 650D / Digital Rebel T4i / Kiss Digital X6i
o EOS 700D / Digital Rebel T5i
o EOS 750D / Digital Rebel T6i
o EOS 760D / Digital Rebel T6S
o EOS 800D
o EOS 100D / Digital Rebel SL1
o EOS 1000D / Digital Rebel XS / Kiss Digital F
o EOS 1100D / Digital Rebel T3 / Kiss Digital X50
o EOS 1200D / Kiss X70 / EOS REBEL T5 / EOS Hi
o EOS 1300D
o EOS 2000D / 1500D / Rebel T7 / Kiss X90
o EOS 4000D / 3000D /Rebel T100
o EOS C500
o EOS D2000C
o EOS M
o EOS M2
o EOS M3
o EOS M5
o EOS M6
o EOS M10
o EOS M100
o EOS-1D
o EOS-1DS
o EOS-1D C
o EOS-1D X
o EOS-1D Mark II
o EOS-1D Mark II N
o EOS-1D Mark III
o EOS-1D Mark IV
o EOS-1Ds Mark II
o EOS-1Ds Mark III
o EOS-1D X Mark II
• Casio
o QV-2000UX
o QV-3000EX
o QV-3500EX
o QV-4000
o QV-5700
o QV-R41
o QV-R51
o QV-R61
o EX-F1
o EX-FC300S
o EX-FC400S
o EX-FH20
o EX-FH25
o EX-FH100
o EX-P600
o EX-S20
o EX-S100
o EX-Z4
o EX-Z50
o EX-Z500
o EX-Z55
o EX-Z60
o EX-Z75
o EX-Z750
o EX-Z8
o EX-Z850
o EX-Z1050
o EX-ZR100
o EX-Z1080
o EX-ZR700
o EX-ZR710
o EX-ZR750
o EX-ZR800
o EX-ZR850
o EX-ZR1000
o EX-ZR1100
o EX-ZR1200
o EX-ZR1300
o EX-ZR1500
o EX-ZR3000
o EX-ZR4000/5000
o EX-ZR4100/5100
o EX-100
o EX-100F
o EX-10
o Exlim Pro 505
o Exlim Pro 600
o HS20EXR
o HS22EXR
o HS30EXR
o HS33EXR
o HS35EXR
o HS50EXR
o F505EXR
o F550EXR
o F600EXR
o F605EXR
o F770EXR
o F775EXR
o F800EXR
o F900EXR
o GFX 50S
o GFX 50R
o X-Pro1
o X-Pro2
o X-S1
o XQ1
o XQ2
o X100
o X100f
o X100S
o X100T
o X10
o X20
o X30
o X70
o X-A1
o X-A2
o X-A3
o X-A5
o X-A10
o X-A20
o X-E1
o X-E2
o X-E2S
o X-E3
o X-M1
o XF1
o XF10
o X-H1
o X-T1
o X-T1 Graphite Silver
o X-T2
o X-T3
o X-T10
o X-T20
o X-T30
o X-T100
o IS-1
• GITUP
o GIT2
o GIT2P
o G3 DUO (16:9 mode only)
• Gione E7
• Google
o Pixel
o Pixel XL
• HTC
o UltraPixel
o MyTouch 4G
o One (A9)
o One (M9)
o 10
• Hasselblad
o H2D-22
o H2D-39
o H3DII-22
o H3DII-31
o H3DII-39
o H3DII-50
o H3D-22
o H3D-31
o H3D-39
o H4D-60
o H4D-50
o H4D-40
o H4D-31
o H5D-60
o H5D-50
o H5D-50c
o H5D-40
o H6D-100c
o A6D-100c
o CFV
o CFV-50
o CFH
o CF-22
o CF-31
o CF-39
o V96C
o Lusso
o Lunar
o True Zoom
o Stellar
o Stellar II
o HV
o X1D
• Huawei
o P8 Lite (PRA-LX1)
o P9 (EVA-L09/AL00)
o P10 (VTR-L09)
o P10+ (VKY-L09)
o P10 Lite (WAS-LX1A)
o P20 (EML-L09)
o P20 Pro (CLT-L29)
o Honor6a
o Honor7a pro
o Honor8 (FRD-L09)
o Honor9
o Honor10
o Honor View 10 (BKL-L09)
o Mate10 (BLA-L29)
• ISG 2020x1520
• Ikonoskop
o A-Cam dII Panchromatic
o A-Cam dII
• Imacon
o Ixpress 96, 96C
o Ixpress 384, 384C (single shot only)
o Ixpress 132C
o Ixpress 528C (single shot only)
• JaiPulnix
o BB-500CL
o BB-500GE
• Kinefinity
o KineMINI
o KineRAW Mini
o KineRAW S35
• Kodak
o DC20
o DC25
o DC40
o DC50
o DC120
o DCS200
o DCS315C
o DCS330C
o DCS420
o DCS460
o DCS460A
o DCS460D
o DCS520C
o DCS560C
o DCS620C
o DCS620X
o DCS660C
o DCS660M
o DCS720X
o DCS760C
o DCS760M
o EOSDCS1
o EOSDCS3B
o NC2000F
o ProBack
o PB645C
o PB645H
o PB645M
o DCS Pro 14n
o DCS Pro 14nx
o DCS Pro SLR/c
o DCS Pro SLR/n
o C330
o C603
o P850
o P880
o PIXPRO AZ901
o S-1
o Z980
o Z981
o Z990
o Z1015
o KAI-0340
• Konica
o KD-400Z
o KD-510Z
• LG
o G3
o G4
o G6
o V20 (F800K)
o VS995
• Leaf
o AFi 5
o AFi 6
o AFi 7
o AFi-II 6
o AFi-II 7
o AFi-II 10
o AFi-II 10R
o Aptus-II 5
o Aptus-II 6
o Aptus-II 7
o Aptus-II 8
o Aptus-II 10
o Aptus-II 12
o Aptus-II 12R
o Aptus 17
o Aptus 22
o Aptus 54S
o Aptus 65
o Aptus 65S
o Aptus 75
o Aptus 75S
o Cantare
o Cantare XY
o CatchLight
o CMost
o Credo 40
o Credo 50
o Credo 60
o Credo 80 (low compression mode only)
o DCB-II
o Valeo 6
o Valeo 11
o Valeo 17
o Valeo 17wi
o Valeo 22
o Valeo 22wi
o Volare
• Leica
o C (Typ 112)
o CL
o Digilux 2
o Digilux 3
o Digital-Modul-R
o D-LUX2
o D-LUX3
o D-LUX4
o D-LUX5
o D-LUX6
o D-LUX7
o D-Lux (Typ 109)
o M8
o M8.2
o M9
o M10
o M10-D
o M10-P
o M (Typ 240)
o M (Typ 262)
o Monochrom (Typ 240)
o Monochrom (Typ 246)
o M-D (Typ 262)
o M-E
o M-P
o R8
o Q (Typ 116)
o Q2
o S
o S2
o S (Typ 007)
o SL (Typ 601)
o T (Typ 701)
o TL
o TL2
o X1
o X (Typ 113)
o X2
o X-E (Typ 102)
o X-U (Typ 113)
o V-LUX1
o V-LUX2
o V-LUX3
o V-LUX4
o V-Lux (Typ 114)
o X VARIO (Typ 107)
• Lenovo a820
• Logitech Fotoman Pixtura
• Mamiya ZD
• Matrix 4608x3288
• Meizy MX4
• Micron 2010
• Minolta
o RD175
o DiMAGE 5
o DiMAGE 7
o DiMAGE 7i
o DiMAGE 7Hi
o DiMAGE A1
o DiMAGE A2
o DiMAGE A200
o DiMAGE G400
o DiMAGE G500
o DiMAGE G530
o DiMAGE G600
o DiMAGE Z2
o Alpha/Dynax/Maxxum 5D
o Alpha/Dynax/Maxxum 7D
• Motorola
o PIXL
o Moto G (5S)
• Nikon
o D1
o D1H
o D1X
o D2H
o D2Hs
o D2X
o D2Xs
o D3
o D3s
o D3X
o D4
o D4s
o D40
o D40X
o D5
o D50
o D60
o D70
o D70s
o D80
o D90
o D100
o D200
o D300
o D300s
o D500
o D600
o D610
o D700
o D750
o D800
o D800E
o D810
o D810A
o D850
o D3000
o D3100
o D3200
o D3300
o D3400
o D3500
o D5000
o D5100
o D5200
o D5300
o D5500
o D5600
o D7000
o D7100
o D7200
o D7500
o Df
o Z6
o Z7
o 1 AW1
o 1 J1
o 1 J2
o 1 J3
o 1 J4
o 1 J5
o 1 S1
o 1 S2
o 1 V1
o 1 V2
o 1 V3
o E700 ("DIAG RAW" hack)
o E800 ("DIAG RAW" hack)
o E880 ("DIAG RAW" hack)
o E900 ("DIAG RAW" hack)
o E950 ("DIAG RAW" hack)
o E990 ("DIAG RAW" hack)
o E995 ("DIAG RAW" hack)
o E2100 ("DIAG RAW" hack)
o E-10
o E-20
o E-30
o E-300
o E-330
o E-400
o E-410
o E-420
o E-450
o E-500
o E-510
o E-520
o E-600
o E-620
o E-P1
o E-P2
o E-P3
o E-P5
o E-PL1
o E-PL1s
o E-PL2
o E-PL3
o E-PL5
o E-PL6
o E-PL7
o E-PL8
o E-PL9
o E-PM1
o E-PM2
o E-M1
o E-M1 Mark II
o E-M1X
o E-M10
o E-M10 Mark II
o E-M10 Mark III
o E-M5
o E-M5 Mark II
o Pen F
o SP310
o SP320
o SP350
o SP500UZ
o SP510UZ
o SP550UZ
o SP560UZ
o SP565UZ
o SP570UZ
o STYLUS1
o STYLUS1s
o SH-2
o SH-3
o TG-4
o TG-5
o XZ-1
o XZ-2
o XZ-10
• OmniVision
o 4688
o OV5647
o OV5648
o OV8850
o 13860
• OnePlus
o One
o A3303
o A5000
• PARROT
o Anafi
o Bebop 2
o Bebop Drone
• Panasonic
o DMC-CM1
o DMC-FZ8
o DMC-FZ18
o DMC-FZ28
o DMC-FZ30
o DMC-FZ35/FZ38
o DMC-FZ40
o DMC-FZ45
o DMC-FZ50
o DMC-FZ7
o DMC-FZ70
o DMC-FZ72
o DC-FZ80/82
o DMC-FZ100
o DMC-FZ150
o DMC-FZ200
o DMC-FZ300/330
o DMC-FZ1000
o DMC-FZ2000/2500/FZH1
o DMC-FX150
o DMC-G1
o DMC-G10
o DMC-G2
o DMC-G3
o DMC-G5
o DMC-G6
o DMC-G7/G70
o DMC-G8/80/81/85
o DC-G9
o DMC-GF1
o DMC-GF2
o DMC-GF3
o DMC-GF5
o DMC-GF6
o DMC-GF7
o DC-GF10/GF90
o DMC-GH1
o DMC-GH2
o DMC-GH3
o DMC-GH4
o AG-GH4
o DC-GH5
o DC-GH5S
o DMC-GM1
o DMC-GM1s
o DMC-GM5
o DMC-GX1
o DMC-GX7
o DMC-GX8
o DC-GX9
o DMC-GX80/85/GX7mkII
o DC-GX800/850/GF9
o DMC-L1
o DMC-L10
o DMC-LC1
o DMC-LF1
o DMC-LX1
o DMC-LX2
o DMC-LX3
o DMC-LX5
o DMC-LX7
o DMC-LX9/10/15
o DMC-LX100
o DC-LX100M2
o DMC-TZ60/61/SZ40
o DMC-TZ70/71/ZS50
o DMC-TZ80/81/85/ZS60
• PhaseOne
o IQ140
o IQ150
o IQ160
o IQ180
o IQ180 IR
o IQ250
o IQ260
o IQ260 Achromatic
o IQ280
o IQ3 50MP
o IQ3 60MP
o IQ3 80MP
o IQ3 100MP
o IQ3 100MP Trichromatic
o LightPhase
o Achromatic+
o H 10
o H 20
o H 25
o P 20
o P 20+
o P 21
o P 25
o P 25+
o P 30
o P 30+
o P 40+
o P 45
o P 45+
o P 65
o P 65+
• Photron BC2-HD
• Pixelink A782
• Polaroid x530 (embedded previews only)
• PtGrey GRAS-50S5C
• RaspberryPi
o Camera
o Camera V2
• Ricoh
o GR
o GR Digital
o GR Digital II
o GR Digital III
o GR Digital IV
o GR II
o GX100
o GX200
o GXR MOUNT A12
o GXR MOUNT A16 24-85mm F3.5-5.5
o GXR, S10 24-72mm F2.5-4.4 VC
o GXR, GR A12 50mm F2.5 MACRO
o GXR, GR LENS A12 28mm F2.5
o GXR, GXR P10
• Rollei d530flex
• RoverShot 3320af
• SMaL
o Ultra-Pocket 3
o Ultra-Pocket 4
o Ultra-Pocket 5
• STV680 VGA
• SVS SVS625CL
• Samsung
o EX1
o EX2F
o GX-1L
o GX-1S
o GX10
o GX20
o Galaxy Nexus
o Galaxy NX (EK-GN120)
o Galaxy S3
o Galaxy S6 (SM-G920F)
o Galaxy S7
o Galaxy S7 Edge
o Galaxy S8 (SM-G950U)
o Galaxy S9+ (SM-G965U/965F)
o NX1
o NX5
o NX10
o NX11
o NX100
o NX1000
o NX1100
o NX20
o NX200
o NX210
o NX2000
o NX30
o NX300
o NX300M
o NX3000
o NX500
o NX mini
o Pro815
o WB550
o WB2000
o S85 (hacked)
o S850 (hacked)
• Sarnoff 4096x5440
• Seitz
o 6x17
o Roundshot D3
o Roundshot D2X
o Roundshot D2Xs
• Sigma (embedded previews only)
o SD9
o SD10
o SD14
o SD15
o SD1
o SD1 Merill
o DP1
o DP1 Merill
o DP1S
o DP1X
o DP2
o DP2 Merill
o DP2S
o DP2X
o DP3 Merill
o dp0 Quattro
o dp1 Quattro
o dp2 Quattro
o dp3 Quattro
o sd Quattro
o sd Quattro H
• Sinar
o eMotion 22
o eMotion 54
o eSpirit 65
o eMotion 75
o eVolution 75
o 3072x2048
o 4080x4080
o 4080x5440
o STI format
o Sinarback 54
• Sony
o A7
o A7 II
o A7 III
o A7R
o A7R II
o A7R III
o A7S
o A7S II
o A9
o ILCA-68 (A68)
o ILCA-77M2 (A77-II)
o ILCA-99M2 (A99-II)
o ILCE-3000
o ILCE-5000
o ILCE-5100
o ILCE-6000
o ILCE-6300
o ILCE-6400
o ILCE-6500
o ILCE-QX1
o DSC-F828
o DSC-HX95
o DSC-HX99
o DSC-R1
o DSC-RX0
o DSC-RX1
o DSC-RX1R
o DSC-RX1R II
o DSC-RX10
o DSC-RX10II
o DSC-RX10III
o DSC-RX10IV
o DSC-RX100
o DSC-RX100II
o DSC-RX100III
o DSC-RX100IV
o DSC-RX100V
o DSC-RX100VA
o DSC-RX100VI
o DSC-V3
o DSLR-A100
o DSLR-A200
o DSLR-A230
o DSLR-A290
o DSLR-A300
o DSLR-A330
o DSLR-A350
o DSLR-A380
o DSLR-A390
o DSLR-A450
o DSLR-A500
o DSLR-A550
o DSLR-A560
o DSLR-A580
o DSLR-A700
o DSLR-A850
o DSLR-A900
o NEX-3
o NEX-3N
o NEX-5
o NEX-5N
o NEX-5R
o NEX-5T
o NEX-6
o NEX-7
o NEX-C3
o NEX-F3
o NEX-VG20
o NEX-VG30
o NEX-VG900
o SLT-A33
o SLT-A35
o SLT-A37
o SLT-A55V
o SLT-A57
o SLT-A58
o SLT-A65V
o SLT-A77V
o SLT-A99V
o XCD-SX910CR
o IMX135-mipi 13mp
o IMX135-QCOM
o IMX072-mipi
o IMX214
o IMX219
o IMX230
o IMX298-mipi 16mp
o IMX219-mipi 8mp
o Xperia L
• Xiaomi
o MI3
LibRaw
LibRaw: raw images processing library
Copyright (C) 2008-2014 LibRaw LLC (http://www.libraw.org, info@libraw.org)
Qt 5.4
Copyright (C) 2014 Digia Plc and/or its subsidiary(-ies).
Contact: http://www.qt-project.org/legal
Qt library is used under the terms of GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE 2.1, see file LICENSE.LGPL
in the FastRawViewer program directory.
Qt uses a number of freeware libraries; their list and copyrights are contained in file QT-Third-Party-
Licenses.rtf LGPL in the FastRawViewer program directory.
RawSpeed library
RawSpeed - RAW file decoder.
Copyright (C) 2009 Klaus Post
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU
Lesser General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the
License, or (at your option) any later version.
This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without
even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU Lesser General Public License for more details.
LibJPEG-turbo
Copyright 2009 Pierre Ossman <ossman@cendio.se> for Cendio AB
Copyright 2010 D. R. Commander
Based on x86 SIMD extension for IJG JPEG library - version 1.02
Copyright (C) 1999-2006, MIYASAKA Masaru.
This software is provided 'as-is', without any express or implied warranty. In no event will the authors
be held liable for any damages arising from the use of this software. Permission is granted to anyone
to use this software for any purpose, including commercial applications, and to alter it and
redistribute it freely, subject to the following restrictions:
1. The origin of this software must not be misrepresented; you must not claim that you wrote the
original software. If you use this software in a product, an acknowledgment in the product
documentation would be appreciated but is not required.
2. Altered source versions must be plainly marked as such, and must not be misrepresented as being
the original software.
3. This notice may not be removed or altered from any source distribution.
LibJPEG
The Independent JPEG Group's JPEG software
This distribution contains a release of the Independent JPEG Group's free JPEG software. You are
welcome to redistribute this software and to use it for any purpose, subject to the conditions under
LEGAL ISSUES, below.
This software is the work of Tom Lane, Guido Vollbeding, Philip Gladstone, Bill Allombert, Jim
Boucher, Lee Crocker, Bob Friesenhahn, Ben Jackson, Julian Minguillon, Luis Ortiz, George Phillips,
Davide Rossi, Ge' Weijers, and other members of the Independent JPEG Group.
IJG is not affiliated with the official ISO JPEG standards committee.
LibXML2
Copyright (C) 1998-2003 Daniel Veillard. All Rights Reserved.
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and
associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including
without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to
the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial
portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A
PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THEDANIEL VEILLARD BE
LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHERIN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT,
TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE
USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
Except as contained in this notice, the name of Daniel Veillard shall not be used in advertising or
otherwise to promote the sale, use or other dealings in this Software without prior written
authorization from him.
LibTiff
Copyright (c) 1988-1997 Sam Leffler
Copyright (c) 1991-1997 Silicon Graphics, Inc.
Permission to use, copy, modify, distribute, and sell this software and
its documentation for any purpose is hereby granted without fee, provided
that (i) the above copyright notices and this permission notice appear in
all copies of the software and related documentation, and (ii) the names of
Sam Leffler and Silicon Graphics may not be used in any advertising or
publicity relating to the software without the specific, prior written
permission of Sam Leffler and Silicon Graphics.
LibPNG
PNG Reference Library License version 2
---------------------------------------
* Copyright (c) 1995-2018 The PNG Reference Library Authors.
* Copyright (c) 2018 Cosmin Truta.
* Copyright (c) 2000-2002, 2004, 2006-2018 Glenn Randers-Pehrson.
1. LICENSE GRANT
Software License. Subject to the restrictions below and other terms of this Agreement, Adobe hereby
grants you a non-exclusive, worldwide, royalty free license to use, reproduce, prepare derivative
works from, publicly display, publicly perform, distribute and sublicense the Software for any
purpose.
Document License. Subject to the terms of this Agreement, Adobe hereby grants you a non-exclusive,
worldwide, royalty free license to make a limited number of copies of the Documentation for your
development purposes and to publicly display, publicly perform and distribute such copies. You may
not modify the Documentation.
2. RESTRICTIONS AND OWNERSHIP
You will not remove any copyright or other notice included in the Software or Documentation and
you will include such notices in any copies of the Software that you distribute in human-readable
format.
You will not copy, use, display, modify or distribute the Software or Documentation in any manner
not permitted by this Agreement. No title to the intellectual property in the Software or
Documentation is transferred to you under the terms of this Agreement. You do not acquire any
rights to the Software or the Documentation except as expressly set forth in this Agreement. All
rights not granted are reserved by Adobe.
3. DISCLAIMER OF WARRANTY
ADOBE PROVIDES THE SOFTWARE AND DOCUMENTATION ONLY ON AN "AS IS" BASIS WITHOUT
WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING WITHOUT
LIMITATION ANY WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF TITLE, NON-INFRINGEMENT, MERCHANTABILITY
OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. ADOBE MAKES NO WARRANTY THAT THE SOFTWARE OR
DOCUMENTATION WILL BE ERROR-FREE. To the extent permissible, any warranties that are not and
cannot be excluded by the foregoing are limited to ninety (90) days.
4. LIMITATION OF LIABILITY
ADOBE AND ITS SUPPLIERS SHALL NOT BE LIABLE FOR LOSS OR DAMAGE ARISING OUT OF THIS
AGREEMENT OR FROM THE USE OF THE SOFTWARE OR DOCUMENTATION. IN NO EVENT WILL
ADOBE BE LIABLE TO YOU OR ANY THIRD PARTY FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL,
INCIDENTAL, OR SPECIAL DAMAGES INCLUDING LOST PROFITS, LOST SAVINGS, COSTS, FEES, OR
EXPENSES OF ANY KIND ARISING OUT OF ANY PROVISION OF THIS AGREEMENT OR THE USE OR THE
INABILITY TO USE THE SOFTWARE OR DOCUMENTATION, HOWEVER CAUSED AND UNDER ANY
THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE
OR OTHERWISE), EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES. ADOBE'S AGGREGATE
LIABILITY AND THAT OF ITS SUPPLIERS UNDER OR IN CONNECTION WITH THIS AGREEMENT SHALL BE
LIMITED TO THE AMOUNT PAID BY YOU FOR THE SOFTWARE AND DOCUMENTATION.
5. INDEMNIFICATION
If you choose to distribute the Software in a commercial product, you do so with the understanding
that you agree to defend, indemnify and hold harmless Adobe against any losses, damages and costs
arising from the claims, lawsuits or other legal actions arising out of such distribution.
6. TRADEMARK USAGE
Adobe and the DNG logo are the trademarks or registered trademarks of Adobe Systems
Incorporated in the United States and other countries. Such trademarks may not be used to endorse
or promote any product unless expressly permitted under separate agreement with Adobe. For
information on how to license the DNG logo please go to www.adobe.com.
7. TERM
Your rights under this Agreement shall terminate if you fail to comply with any of the material terms
or conditions of this Agreement. If all your rights under this Agreement terminate, you will
immediately cease use and distribution of the Software and Documentation.
8. GOVERNING LAW AND JURISDICTION. This Agreement is governed by the statutes and laws of the
State of California, without regard to the conflicts of law principles thereof. The federal and state
courts located in Santa Clara County, California, USA, will have non-exclusive jurisdiction over any
dispute arising out of this Agreement.
9. GENERAL
This Agreement supersedes any prior agreement, oral or written, between Adobe and you with
respect to the licensing to you of the Software and Documentation. No variation of the terms of this
Agreement will be enforceable against Adobe unless Adobe gives its express consent in writing
signed by an authorized signatory of Adobe. If any part of this Agreement is found void and
unenforceable, it will not affect the validity of the balance of the Agreement, which shall remain valid
and enforceable according to its terms.
For licensing information on the DNG File Format Specification, which is not included in the DNG SDK,
please visit: http://www.adobe.com/products/dng/license.html.