Contents
fileicon
is a macOS CLI for managing custom icons for files and folders, as
a programmatic alternative to interactively using Finder.
fileicon
allows assigning a custom icon to any file or folder,
using any image file whose format is recognized by the system.
Caveats:
-
Custom icons rely on extended attributes of the macOS filesystems, HFS+ and APFS. Therefore, custom icons are lost when copying files or folders to filesystems that don't support these attributes; for instance, custom icons cannot be stored in a Git repository.
-
v0.3.2+ supports custom icons for volumes (folders that act as volume mountpoints) in principle, but, as of macOS 13.1 (Ventura), this often fails in practice, for reasons unknown to me; see this Ask Different question, for instance.
When assigning an image file with fileicon set
, a set of icons in several
resolutions is created and stored in the resource fork of the target file itself
/ of a hidden Icon\r
file inside the target folder / as the content of a hidden .VolumeIcon.icns
file for folders that are volume mountpoints. Addtionally, a com.apple.FinderInfo
extended attribute with the custom-icon attribute (flag) is set on the target file or folder itself.
The icon with the highest resolution measures 512 x 512 pixels, and the input
image is scaled accordingly.
Note that input images that aren't square can result in distorted icons;
for best results, provide square images.
If you supply an input path to a symlink, it is invariably its target that is used for the operation; symlinks themselves cannot have icons associated with them.
See also: Icon Changer, a GUI utility that uses fileicon
behind the scenes.
# Assign custom icon derived from image file 'img.png' to file 'foo':
fileicon set foo img.png
# Remove previously assigned custom icon from folder 'foodir':
fileicon rm foodir
# Extract custom icon from file 'foo' to icon file 'foo.icns':
fileicon get foo
# Test if folder 'foodir' has custom icon:
fileicon test foodir
Supported platforms:
- macOS
Important:
- If you're running macOS 12 (Monterey) or higher, be sure to install at least version 0.3.1 of this utility, as it no longer relies on Python (which no longer ships with macOS).
- Unfortunately, a bug beyond
fileicon
's control causes theget
sub-command (for extracting an existing icon) to be excessively slow on macOS 12 (Monterey); this has been fixed in macOS 13 (Ventura).
With Homebrew installed, run the following:
brew install fileicon
Tip of the hat to @danielbayley for creating and submitting the formula.
With Node.js installed, install the package as follows:
[sudo] npm install fileicon -g
Note:
- Whether you need
sudo
depends on how you installed Node.js and whether you've changed permissions later; if you get anEACCES
error, try again withsudo
. - The
-g
ensures global installation and is needed to putfileicon
in your system's$PATH
.
- Download the CLI as
fileicon
. - Make it executable with
chmod +x fileicon
. - Move it or symlink it to a folder in your
$PATH
, such as/usr/local/bin
(requiressudo
).
Find concise usage information below; for complete documentation, read the manual online, or, once installed, run man fileicon
(fileicon --man
if installed manually).
$ fileicon --help
Manage custom icons for files and folders on macOS.
SET a custom icon for a file or folder:
fileicon set <fileOrFolder> [<imageFile>]
REMOVE a custom icon from a file or folder:
fileicon rm <fileOrFolder>
GET a file or folder's custom icon:
fileicon get [-f] <fileOrFolder> [<iconOutputFile>]
-f ... force replacement of existing output file
TEST if a file or folder has a custom icon:
fileicon test <fileOrFolder>
All forms: option -q silences status output.
Standard options: --help, --man, --version, --home
Copyright (c) 2015-2022 Michael Klement [email protected] (http://same2u.net), released under the MIT license.
This project gratefully depends on the following open-source components, according to the terms of their respective licenses.
npm dependencies below have optional suffixes denoting the type of dependency; the absence of a suffix denotes a required run-time dependency: (D)
denotes a development-time-only dependency, (O)
an optional dependency, and (P)
a peer dependency.
Versioning complies with semantic versioning (semver).
-
** v0.3.4 == v0.3.3** (2023-03-02):
-
v0.3.2 (2022-12-29):
- [enhancement] Support for volume icons, at least in principle; caveat: as of macOS 13.1, this often fails in practice; see https://apple.stackexchange.com/q/451965/28668 for an example.
-
v0.3.1 (2022-04-07):
- [compatibility] Removed dependency on Python in favor of AppleScript with its ObjC bridge, courtesy of @scriptingosx
-
v0.3.0 (2022-02-11):
- [compatibility] Added support for using an available
python3
on macOS 12.3+, where the system v2.x/usr/bin/python
will no longer be avaialble.
- [compatibility] Added support for using an available
-
v0.2.4 (2019-12-10):
- [installation] Thanks to @danielbayley, there is now an official Homebrew formula.
-
v0.2.3 (2019-11-01):
- [enhancement] Installation via Homebrew is now possible on macOS.
- [doc]
README.md
updated with Homebrew installation instructions. - [dev] Updated dev-time-only packages to fix security issues.
-
v0.2.2 (2018-03-05):
- [enhancement]
filecon set <file>
is now short forfilecon set <file> <file>
; that is, you can now more conveniently make an image file use itself as its icon.
- [enhancement]
-
v0.2.1 (2018-01-13):
- [doc] Read-me improvements re supported image formats.
- [enhancement] Improved wording of error message on attempting to use a pipe
such as via a process subsitution (
<(...)
) in lieu of an actual image file, which is not supported.
-
v0.2.0 (2017-10-14):
- [compatibility] macOS 10.13 (High Sierra) is now supported.
- [enhancement] Switched from using
sips -i
for icon creation to a Python-based Cocoa call toNSWorkSpace.setIcon(_:forFile:options:)
, courtesy of https://apple.stackexchange.com/a/161984/28668 As a result, icons in multiple resolutions are now generated, with a top resolution of 512 x 512 pixels (previously: 128 x 128) - [doc] More technical background added to
README.md
. - [usability] subcommands are now case-insensitive, and 'remove' is supported as an alias of 'rm'.
-
v0.1.8 (2016-04-21):
- [dev] Refactored exit-code reporting for the 'get' command (no change in functionality.)
- [dev]
TODO.md
added.
-
v0.1.7 (2016-04-21):
- [fix] Stored-npm-credentials detection code in the Makefile updated for newer npm versions.
- [fix] Folder write test is now properly skipped for 'get' and 'test' commands - thanks, @zmwangx.
- [fix] 'get' command now properly reports errors if icon extracton fails - thanks, @zmwangx.
- [dev] Insignificant trailing whitespace removed - thanks, @zmwangx.
- [dev] Added folder used by tests that was missing from the repo.
-
v0.1.6 (2015-09-16):
- [doc] Man-page improvements.
- [dev] Makefile improvements.
-
v0.1.5 (2015-09-15):
- [doc] Man-page improvements.
- [dev] Makefile improvements.
-
v0.1.4 (2015-09-14):
- [fix] Spurious error message no longer prints when invoking
fileicon --man
on a system where the man page isn't installed. - [doc] Read-me improvements.
- [fix] Spurious error message no longer prints when invoking
-
v0.1.3 (2015-09-02):
- [dev, doc] minor tweaks
-
v0.1.2 (2015-08-04):
- [doc] Read-me and manual enhancements.
-
v0.1.1 (2015-08-03):
- [doc] Read-me and manual enhancements.
- [dev] Permission-related tests added.
-
v0.1.0 (2015-08-03):
- Initial release.