A command line tool to rename media files based on titles from IMDb. imdb-rename downloads the official IMDb data set and creates a local index to use for fast fuzzy searching.
Dual-licensed under MIT or the UNLICENSE.
Archives of precompiled binaries for imdb-rename are available for Windows, macOS and Linux.
Otherwise, users are expected to compile imdb-rename from source:
$ git clone https://github.com/BurntSushi/imdb-rename
$ cd imdb-rename
$ cargo build --release
$ ./target/release/imdb-rename --help
Alternatively, if you have Cargo installed, then you can install imdb-rename directly from crates.io:
$ cargo install imdb-rename
imdb-rename's minimum supported Rust version is 1.28.0.
An aur package is available: imdb-rename.
Ever since Season 1 of The Simpsons came out on DVD, I've been collecting them and ripping them on to my hard drive. My process is somewhat manual, but I wind up with a directory that looks like this:
S18E01.mkv S18E05.mkv S18E09.mkv S18E13.mkv S18E17.mkv S18E21.mkv
S18E02.mkv S18E06.mkv S18E10.mkv S18E14.mkv S18E18.mkv S18E22.mkv
S18E03.mkv S18E07.mkv S18E11.mkv S18E15.mkv S18E19.mkv
S18E04.mkv S18E08.mkv S18E12.mkv S18E16.mkv S18E20.mkv
It would be much nicer if these files had their proper episode titles. imdb-rename can rename these files automatically using episode titles from IMDb:
$ imdb-rename -q 'the simpsons {show}' *.mkv
This command ran a query with the -q
flag to identify the TV show, provided
the files to rename, and... presto!
S18E01 - The Mook, the Chef, the Wife and Her Homer.mkv
S18E02 - Jazzy & The Pussycats.mkv
S18E03 - Please Homer, Don't Hammer 'Em.mkv
S18E04 - Treehouse of Horror XVII.mkv
S18E05 - G.I. (Annoyed Grunt).mkv
S18E06 - Moe'N'a Lisa.mkv
S18E07 - Ice Cream of Margie: With the Light Blue Hair.mkv
S18E08 - The Haw-Hawed Couple.mkv
S18E09 - Kill Gil, Vol. 1 & 2.mkv
S18E10 - The Wife Aquatic.mkv
S18E11 - Revenge Is a Dish Best Served Three Times.mkv
S18E12 - Little Big Girl.mkv
S18E13 - Springfield Up.mkv
S18E14 - Yokel Chords.mkv
S18E15 - Rome-old and Juli-eh.mkv
S18E16 - Homerazzi.mkv
S18E17 - Marge Gamer.mkv
S18E18 - The Boys of Bummer.mkv
S18E19 - Crook and Ladder.mkv
S18E20 - Stop or My Dog Will Shoot.mkv
S18E21 - 24 Minutes.mkv
S18E22 - You Kent Always Say What You Want.mkv
imdb-rename isn't limited to just renaming TV episodes based on season/episode numbers. It can also perform a fuzzy match based on the contents of the file name. For example, given this file:
Thor.Ragnarok.2017.1080p.WEB-DL.DD5.1.H264-FGT.mkv
We can "clean it up" and rename it to a nice title like so:
$ imdb-rename Thor.Ragnarok.2017.1080p.WEB-DL.DD5.1.H264-FGT.mkv
which gives us:
Thor: Ragnarok (2017).mkv
We can also use imdb-rename to search IMDb, which is the default behavior
when a -q/--query
is provided without any file names:
$ imdb-rename -q 'homey loves flanders'
# score id kind title year tv
1 1.000 tt0773646 tvEpisode Homer Loves Flanders 1994 S05E16 The Simpsons
2 0.646 tt2101691 tvEpisode Tiny Loves Flowers N/A S02E08 Dinosaur Train
3 0.568 tt3203408 tvEpisode Courtney Loves Love 2014 S01E05 Courtney Loves Dallas
4 0.561 tt1722576 short In Flanders Fields 2010
5 0.561 tt2253780 tvSeries In Vlaamse Velden 2014
6 0.555 tt4528474 video My Lovely Homeland 2011
7 0.551 tt0220646 tvMovie Moll Flanders 1975
[... results truncated ...]
Notice that our query had a typo in it. imdb-rename does its best to find the most relevant results. It is also fast. Even though the above query searches through all 6 million names in IMDb, it runs in under 100ms. This is thanks to using an inverted index memory mapped from disk.
imdb-rename works by downloading approved datasets from IMDb, and creating an inverted index based on ngrams extracted from the names in IMDb's data. The inverted index provides a quick way to search and rank results using techniques from information retrieval such as Okapi-BM25.
My motivation for building this tool is somewhat idiosyncratic, but three-fold:
- I find it very convenient to have a tool to rename media files automatically. imdb-rename is my third iteration on this tool. The first was an unpublished hodge podge of Python scripts and a MySQL database. The second was a Go program with a PostgreSQL database. The Go program served me well, but IMDb retired their old data format, which required me to build a new tool to adapt.
- I've been working on a low-level information retrieval library off-and-on for a couple years, and initially built this tool on top of that library as a form of dogfooding. It didn't work out as well as I'd hoped, so I scrapped the generic library and built out a specific solution tailored to IMDb. I'm no longer dogfooding directly, but I've established a useful baseline.
- I want more people to learn about information retrieval, and I believe this tool can serve to teach others. In particular, imdb-rename is a complete end-to-end information retrieval system that is fast, solves a real problem, is only a few thousand lines of code and comes with a built-in evaluation that is easy to run.
This tool is perhaps a bit over engineered, but I had fun with it. Believe it or not, parts of imdb-rename are intentionally simple at the cost of both query speed and size on disk!
It is possible to run an evaluation to compare the various parameters available for searching. The evaluation system is available as a separate tool called imdb-eval, which is included in this repository. To use it, we must first build it:
$ git clone https://github.com/BurntSushi/imdb-rename
$ cd imdb-rename
$ cargo build --release --all
$ ./target/release/imdb-eval --help
Running an evaluation is simple. We can run an evaluation on all combinations
of scorer and similarity function, along with ngram sizes of 3 and 4 like so:
(This will use truth data that is built into the imdb-eval
binary.)
$ ./target/release/imdb-eval --ngram-size 3 --ngram-size 4 | tee eval.csv
This will output the results of running a search on every item in the truth
data. The results include the rank of the expected answer. The results can be
summarized into a single score called the
Mean Reciprocal Rank
(which is itself a specific instance of MAP, or mean average precision)
with the --summarize
flag like so:
$ ./target/release/imdb-eval --summarize eval.csv
If you have xsv installed, then the results can be easily sorted and formatted:
$ ./target/release/imdb-eval --summarize eval.csv | xsv sort -R -s mrr | xsv table
If you want to tweak the truth data, then you might consider starting with the bundled truth data (assuming you're at the root of the imdb-rename repository):
$ $EDITOR data/eval/truth.toml
$ ./target/release/imdb-eval --ngram-size 3 --ngram-size 4 --truth data/eval/truth.toml
imdb-rename is tool for renaming media files, and to the extent that searching IMDb facilitates renaming files, it is also a search tool. There is no intent to develop this further to explore all IMDb data, such as cast/crew information.
Folks interested in building a different type of IMDb tool may be interested
in the imdb-index
crate, which provides
programmatic access to the index created by imdb-rename.
The data used by imdb-rename is retrieved from
IMDb datasets.
In particular, imdb-rename will never scrape imdb.com, and only uses the data
provided by IMDb in the tsv
files.
Additionally, imdb-rename must only be used for non-commercial and personal uses.