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Accessing WMF metadata with C#

By , 21 Jun 2006
 

Introduction

So, you want to write a C# application that can use specific Windows Media Format (WMF) metadata fields? Perhaps you want to list the title and ratings of all of the movie files you have. Fortunately, Microsoft has an SDK for Windows Media Format. However, the WMF SDK is not managed code. But, it very nicely provides a managed wrapper for metadata access. In fact, the SDK contains a complete sample program for editing WMF metadata. So, why not simply use that? Because, in my case, it was overkill for my client's needs. All I needed in this case was the ability to query a WMF file (in particular, a WMV file) to obtain author and copyright information. So, I wrote my own class, which was streamlined to work strictly with string metadata. (It can easily be modified to accommodate other data types, or to access the metadata by index instead of by name.)

Since I had need of something this simple, I thought others might, as well. In addition, this example can serve as a simple introduction to the use of WMF metadata in an application.

Background

First of all, what kind of metadata are we talking about? The WMF metadata fields are one of four data types:

  • QWORD (Quadruple word)
  • DWORD (Double word)
  • BOOL
  • STRING

For instance, here is a list of metadata attributes available in one of my test WMV files:

 Index    Name                   Stream Language Type  
 -----    ------                 ------ -------- ----  
   0      Duration                    0    0    QWORD  
   1      Bitrate                     0    0    DWORD  
   2      Seekable                    0    0     BOOL  
   3      Stridable                   0    0     BOOL  
   4      Broadcast                   0    0     BOOL  
   5      Is_Protected                0    0     BOOL  
   6      Is_Trusted                  0    0     BOOL  
   7      Signature_Name              0    0   STRING  
   8      HasAudio                    0    0     BOOL  
   9      HasImage                    0    0     BOOL  
  10      HasScript                   0    0     BOOL  
  11      HasVideo                    0    0     BOOL  
  12      CurrentBitrate              0    0    DWORD  
  13      OptimalBitrate              0    0    DWORD  
  14      HasAttachedImages           0    0     BOOL  
  15      Can_Skip_Backward           0    0     BOOL  
  16      Can_Skip_Forward            0    0     BOOL  
  17      FileSize                    0    0    QWORD  
  18      HasArbitraryDataStream      0    0     BOOL  
  19      HasFileTransferStream       0    0     BOOL  
  20      WM/ContainerFormat          0    0    DWORD  
  21      Title                       0    0   STRING  
  22      Author                      0    0   STRING  
  23      Copyright                   0    0   STRING  
  24      Description                 0    0   STRING  
  25      Rating                      0    0   STRING  
  26      BannerImageURL              0    0   STRING  
  27      CopyrightURL                0    0   STRING  
  28      WMFSDKVersion               0    0   STRING  
  29      WMFSDKNeeded                0    0   STRING  
  30      IsVBR                       0    0     BOOL  
  31      WM/AlbumTitle               0    0   STRING  
  32      WM/Track                    0    0   STRING  
  33      WM/PromotionURL             0    0   STRING  
  34      WM/AlbumCoverURL            0    0   STRING  
  35      WM/Genre                    0    0   STRING  
  36      WM/Year                     0    0   STRING  
  37      WM/GenreID                  0    0   STRING  
  38      WM/Composer                 0    0   STRING  
  39      WM/Lyrics                   0    0   STRING  
  40      WM/ToolName                 0    0   STRING  
  41      WM/ToolVersion              0    0   STRING  
  42      WM/AlbumArtist              0    0   STRING  
  43      WM/AuthorURL                0    0   STRING  
  44      WM/AudioFileURL             0    0   STRING  
  45      WM/Language                 0    0   STRING  
  46      WM/ParentalRating           0    0   STRING  
  47      WM/BeatsPerMinute           0    0   STRING  
  48      WM/InitialKey               0    0   STRING  
  49      WM/Mood                     0    0   STRING  
  50      WM/DVDID                    0    0   STRING  
  51      WM/UniqueFileIdentifier     0    0   STRING  
  52      WM/ModifiedBy               0    0   STRING  
  53      WM/RadioStationName         0    0   STRING  
  54      WM/RadioStationOwner        0    0   STRING  
  55      WM/PlaylistDelay            0    0   STRING  
  56      WM/Codec                    0    0   STRING  
  57      WM/DRM                      0    0   STRING  
  58      WM/ISRC                     0    0   STRING  
  59      WM/Provider                 0    0   STRING  
  60      WM/ProviderRating           0    0   STRING  
  61      WM/ProviderStyle            0    0   STRING  
  62      WM/ContentDistributor       0    0   STRING  
  63      WM/SubscriptionContentID    0    0   STRING  
  64      WM/ASFPacketCount           0    0    QWORD  
  65      WM/ASFSecurityObjectsSize   0    0    QWORD

As you can see, there can be a lot of attributes available! However, it's important to note that not all files contain the same attribute list. Be sure that the file you're interrogating has the field you are asking for. If it doesn't, the query will return an error: Exception from HRESULT: 0xC00D07F0 or Exception from HRESULT: 0xC00D001D.

Using the code

Since the managed wrapper is Microsoft's code, and part of the WMF SDK, I'm not including it as a download with this article. But you can download the SDK from MSDN. Once you install it, find the "Managed" directory, (for the default installation, it will be: C:\WMSDK\WMFSDK95\samples\managed\). Under that directory, you'll find the wrapper project. The simplest way to use it is to import that project into your Visual Studio solution, then add a reference to that project in your main application project. Now, import my MetaDataReader class file into your main project, and use the GetFieldByName method to retrieve the value of your desired metadata field.

Here's the MetaDataReader class:

using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Text;
using WMFSDKWrapper;
//managed wrapper to WMF SDK -
//        provides access to metadata

namespace MyNamespace
{

    /// This class contains the functionality
    /// for handling interaction with the media file
    /// metadata, via the WMF SDK managed wrapper class.
    public class MetaDataReader
    {

        /// Default constructor
        public MetaDataReader()
        {
        }

        /// Method to obtain a metadata attribute by passing in its name. 
        /// Assumes the metadata type is STRING.
        /// Uses the SDK function GetAttributeByName.
        ///
        /// param name="filename" - the filename
        ///            (including path) of media file to interrogate
        /// param name="attrName" - the name of the field we're looking for
        /// returns - the value of the named attribute,
        ///           empty string if not found, or error message
        public string GetFieldByName(string fileName, string attrName)
        {
            try
            {
                //object used to access WMF file 
                IWMMetadataEditor MetadataEditor;
                //object to use access metadata 
                IWMHeaderInfo3 HeaderInfo3;
                //media stream to interrogate
                ushort streamNum = 0;
                //data type of attribute
                WMT_ATTR_DATATYPE wAttribType;
                //value of attribute (as returned by method call)
                byte[] pbAttribValue = null;
                //length of attribute (byte array)
                ushort wAttribValueLen = 0;

                WMFSDKFunctions.WMCreateEditor(out MetadataEditor);

                MetadataEditor.Open(fileName);

                HeaderInfo3 = (IWMHeaderInfo3)MetadataEditor;

                //make call to get attribute length
                HeaderInfo3.GetAttributeByName(ref streamNum, attrName, 
                  out wAttribType, pbAttribValue, ref wAttribValueLen);
                //set byte array length
                pbAttribValue = new byte[wAttribValueLen];
                //make call again, which will get value 
                //into correct-length byte array
                HeaderInfo3.GetAttributeByName(ref streamNum, 
                                               attrName, out wAttribType, 
                                               pbAttribValue, 
                                               ref wAttribValueLen);

                MetadataEditor.Close();

                return ConvertAttrToString(pbAttribValue, 
                                           wAttribValueLen);
            }
            catch (Exception e)
            {
                return "ERROR: " + e.Message;
            }
        }//end method

        /// Method to convert byte array value into string. 
        /// (From the Microsoft WMF SDK sample.)
        ///
        /// param name="pbValue" - byte array value of attribute
        /// param name="dwValueLen" - Length of byte array
        private string ConvertAttrToString(byte[] pbValue, ushort dwValueLen)
        {
            string Value = "";

            if (0 == dwValueLen)
            {
                Value = "";
            }
            else
            {
                if ((0xFE == Convert.ToInt16(pbValue[0])) &&
                     (0xFF == Convert.ToInt16(pbValue[1])))
                {
                    Value = "UTF-16LE BOM+";

                    if (4 <= dwValueLen)
                    {
                        for (int i = 0; i < pbValue.Length - 2; i += 2)
                        {
                            Value += 
                              Convert.ToString(BitConverter.ToChar(pbValue, i));
                        }
                    }
                }
                else if ((0xFF == Convert.ToInt16(pbValue[0])) &&
                          (0xFE == Convert.ToInt16(pbValue[1])))
                {
                    Value = "UTF-16BE BOM+";
                    if (4 <= dwValueLen)
                    {
                        for (int i = 0; i < pbValue.Length - 2; i += 2)
                        {
                            Value += 
                              Convert.ToString(BitConverter.ToChar(pbValue, i));
                        }
                    }
                }
                else
                {
                    Value = "";
                    if (2 <= dwValueLen)
                    {
                        for (int i = 0; i < pbValue.Length - 2; i += 2)
                        {
                            Value += 
                              Convert.ToString(BitConverter.ToChar(pbValue, i));
                        }
                    }
                }
            }//end else not a 0-length string

            return Value;
            
        }//end method

    }//end class
}

Here's a code snippet of a sample call:

MetaDataReader objMetaData = new MetaDataReader();
string Author = objMetaData.GetAttrByName("C:\Videos\MyVideo.wmv", "Author");

That's it! I hope this simple example will provide the basics you need for writing some cool apps that access the WMF metadata.

History

  • 06.20.06 - Initial version.

License

This article has no explicit license attached to it but may contain usage terms in the article text or the download files themselves. If in doubt please contact the author via the discussion board below.

A list of licenses authors might use can be found here

About the Author

Kris Rudin
Web Developer
United States United States
Member
Kris Rudin is a senior developer with Ascentium corporation, with 10 years of experience including both web and Windows client software development.

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Comments and Discussions

 
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GeneralSlow Performancemembergoondoo279 Apr '07 - 12:17 
First off, thanks for a great article! I've written a simple display window that reads *.wma file attributes and displays them to a window. It works fine, but the performance is pretty slow when the number of files gets close to 1000. The bottle neck seems to be in the GetFieldByName() routine. Have you done anything with increasing the performance of this otherwise great code?
 
Thanks,
John

GeneralRe: Slow PerformancememberKris Rudin10 Apr '07 - 14:08 
John,
 
Glad you found the article useful. Unfortunately, I haven't done any more work with the code (I got moved to another project). The GetFieldByName() method uses calls to the SDK methods, which could be the cause of the slow-down. I'd be interested in hearing from you if you do find a way to increase the performance. Then I can update the sample, and give you the credit for the improvement. Smile | :)
 
Kris
GeneralTotal wrong title [modified]memberMike Novy28 Feb '07 - 1:01 
You named your project completely wrong: WMF (vector based gfx: windows meta FILE) and WMV (VIDEO) are completly different things.
 

-- modified at 7:16 Wednesday 28th February, 2007
GeneralRe: Total wrong titlememberKris Rudin28 Feb '07 - 4:36 
Gee, I guess I called it WMF because that's what Microsoft called it. It's the "WMF wrapper" class by them, in their code and on their website.
GeneralRe: Total wrong titlememberRyan Beesley15 Sep '07 - 14:12 
Microsoft has the sometimes annoying habit of recycling product names, code names, and acronyms. WMF in this case stands for Windows Media Format and while it does in fact cover WMV (Video), this article and the associated SDK also equally applies to WMA (Audio).
Questionhow to add attribute with size>64kmemberHemant kulkarni7 Nov '06 - 3:35 
Hi,
 
I am adding some metadata into wmv file. My data is a string data of size>64k. SO I have to use IWMHeaderInfo3 got it.
 
But I am getting the error "The parameter is incorrect."
 
Please help me ! ! !
 

 
Following is my code (in c#)
 

 
///
 
///
 
///

 
public static void AddMetaData()
 
{
 
try
 
{
 
// Create a WMEncoder object.
 
WMEncoder Encoder = new WMEncoder();
 

 
IWMMetadataEditor metadataEditor = null;
 
try
 
{
 
//create encoder object
 
Qlikkit.WMFSDKWrapper.Functions.WMCreateEditor(out metadataEditor);
 
}
 
catch(Exception ex)
 
{
 
string str = ex.Message;
 
}
 

 
// open wmv file
 
try
 
{
 
String videoFileName = Model.CApplicationData.userVideoDataPath + @"\" + Utils.Constants.VIDEO_NO_AUDIO_NAME;
 
metadataEditor.Open(videoFileName);
 
}
 
catch(System.Runtime.InteropServices.COMException ex)
 
{
 
string mystr = ex.Message;
 
string mystr2 = ex.StackTrace;
 
}
 

 
// get the IWMHeaderInfo3 interface
 
IWMHeaderInfo3 headerInfo = metadataEditor as IWMHeaderInfo3;
 

 
// this code is just for testing
 
// get attribute count
 
ushort Outindex2= 0;
 
headerInfo.GetAttributeCount(0,out Outindex2);
 
// end of testing code
 

 
int metadataSize =100;
 
char [] mm = new byte[metadataSize];
 

 
for(int jj=0; jj<metadataSize; jj++)
 
{
 
mm[jj]= 'H';
 
}
 

 
System.IntPtr myptr = new IntPtr();
 
myptr = Marshal.AllocHGlobal(metadataSize);
 

 
// copy then data to pinter
 
Marshal.Copy(mm,0,myptr,metadataSize);
 

 
ushort Outindex3= 0;
 

 
Qlikkit.WMFSDKWrapper.WMT_ATTR_DATATYPE attrDataType2 = new Qlikkit.WMFSDKWrapper.WMT_ATTR_DATATYPE();
 
attrDataType2 = Qlikkit.WMFSDKWrapper.WMT_ATTR_DATATYPE.WMT_TYPE_STRING;
 

 
try
 
{
 
// add attribute
 
headerInfo.AddAttribute(
 
(ushort)0,
 
"Mydataww",
 
out Outindex3,
 
attrDataType2,
 
(ushort)0,
 
//myDataptr,
 
myptr,
 
(uint)metadataSize
 
);
 
}
 
catch(Exception ex2)
 
{
 
// TODO: Handle exceptions.
 
string str = ex2.Message;
 
}
 

 
// close the metadata editor
 
metadataEditor.Close();
 

 
//[in] WORD containing the stream number of the stream to which the attribute applies. Setting this value to zero indicates an attribute that applies to the entire file.
 
//Pointer to a wide-character null-terminated string containing the name of the attribute. Attribute names are limited to 1024 wide characters
 
//Pointer to a WORD. On successful completion of the method, this value is set to the index assigned to the new attribute
 
//Type of data used for the new attribute. For more information about the types of data supported, see WMT_ATTR_DATATYPE
 
//WORD containing the language index of the language to be associated with the new attribute. This is the index of the language in the language list for the file. Setting this value to zero indicates that the default language will be used. A default language is created and set according to the regional settings on the computer running your application
 
//myDataptr,//Pointer to an array of bytes containing the attribute value.
 
//DWORD containing the length of the attribute value, in bytes
 

 
}
 
catch (Exception ex)
 
{
 
// TODO: Handle exceptions.
 
string str = ex.Message;
 
}
 
}
 

 
Thanks in advance and regard,
 
Hemant.
 


AnswerRe: how to add attribute with size>64kmemberKris Rudin7 Nov '06 - 6:24 
Hemant,
 
I'm very sorry, but I'm leaving town today and will be unable to help you until I return to my computer on 27 November.
 
I will look into this when I return, if you haven't solved it by then.
 
Again, I'm sorry I can't help you right now,
 
Kris
QuestionOdd charactersmemberMr Saoi26 Oct '06 - 5:49 
Hi, I'm trying to read the duration attribute of the file and it's returning what looks like unicode characters " 嫊�"
 
Any ideas? The file is valid, it has a valid duration attribute as far as I can see through explorer and WMP, other attributes (such as "Author") are reading ok.
 

WMVMetaDataReader wmv = new WMVMetaDataReader();
wmv.GetFieldByName(this.FileAbsolutePath, "Duration");

 
Many thanks,
 
Sam
AnswerRe: Odd charactersmemberKris Rudin26 Oct '06 - 5:56 
If you are working file files encoded in Asia, there seems to be a problem with the way the ConvertAttrToString method is handling the data from the file. This is a method written by the Microsoft folks who created the WMF wrapper class. Maybe they didn't account for something different in Asian-based files. The only suggestion I have is to see my reply in the first post (Weird characters), and try to catch exactly where the odd characters are coming from, and then attempt to handle them on an individual basis.
 
Sounds like the MS folks need to update their WMF wrapper! Wink | ;-)
 
Kris
GeneralRe: Odd charactersmember_C#_beginner15 Aug '07 - 11:39 
I have the same problem. And I do NOT use asian characters in my wmv files. I think there's something wrong with your code. I hope someone can fix this.
 
It's really stupid. I just learned C# because on the web there are almost only sites concerning c# and not c++. (If I was searching for something I instantly got an solution for C# but after an hour of search I still got nothing valuable for my C++ project) And in c++ I know how to do this (get duration of wmv files). But why has Microsoft not yet released a new SDK for C#?

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