Configure Dynamic Media General Settings
Configuring Dynamic Media General Settings is available only if:
- You have an existing Dynamic Media Configuration (in Cloud Services) in Adobe Experience Manager as a Cloud Service. See Create a Dynamic Media Configuration in Cloud Services.
- You are an Experience Manager system administrator with administrator privileges.
Dynamic Media General Settings is intended for use by experienced web site developers and programmers. Adobe Dynamic Media recommends that users who change these publish settings be familiar with Dynamic Media on Adobe Experience Manager and basic imaging technology.
On account creation, Adobe Dynamic Media automatically provides the assigned servers for your company. These servers are used to construct URL strings for your web site and applications. These URL calls are specific to your account.
The Dynamic Media Publish Setup page establishes default settings that determine how assets are delivered from Adobe Dynamic Media servers to web sites or applications. If no setting is specified, the Adobe Dynamic Media server delivers an asset according to a default setting that was configured on the Dynamic Media Publish Setup page.
See also Optional - Setup and configuration of Dynamic Media settings for more optional configuration tasks.
To configure Dynamic Media General Settings:
-
In Experience Manager Author mode, select the Experience Manager logo to access the global navigation console.
-
In the left rail, select the Tools icon, then go to Assets > Dynamic Media General Settings.
-
In the Server page, set your Published Server Name and Origin Server Name, and then use the five tabs to configure default upload options for Image Editing, and for Postscript, Photoshop, PDF, and Illustrator files.
- Server
- Upload to Application
- Image Editing tab
- PostScript tab
- Photoshop tab
- PDF tab
- Illustrator tab
Dynamic Media General Settings page, with the Image Editing tab selected. -
When you are finished, near the upper-right corner of the page, select Save.
Server server-general-setting
On account creation, Adobe Dynamic Media automatically provides the assigned servers for your company. These servers are used to construct URL strings for your web site and applications. These URL calls are specific to your account.
The name must use
https://
in the path.This server is the live CDN (Content Deliver Network) server used in all system-generated URL calls that are specific to your account. Do not change this server name unless you are instructed to do so by Adobe Technical Support.
This server is used for quality assurance testing only. Do not change this server name unless instructed to do so by Adobe Technical Support.
Upload to Application upload-to-application
-
Overwrite Images
Adobe Dynamic Media does not allow two files to have the same name. Each item’s Adobe Dynamic Media ID (the image name minus the filename extension) must be unique. Because of this rule, Upload to Application has an overwrite. The exact effect of this option depends on the specified Overwrite Images option you have chosen. These options specify how replacement images are uploaded: whether they replace the original images, or become duplicate images. Duplicate images are renamed with a
-1
. For example,chair.tif
is renamedchair-1.tif
. These options affect images uploaded to a different folder than the original or images with a different filename extension from the original, such as JPG, TIF, or PNG.note note NOTE To maintain consistency with Experience Manager, select the Overwrite Images option Overwrite in current folder, same base name/extension. table 0-row-2 1-row-2 2-row-2 3-row-2 4-row-2 Overwrite Images option Description Overwrite in current folder, same base name/extension Default for new Dynamic Media accounts only.
This option is the strictest rule for replacement. It requires that you upload the replacement image to the same folder as the original, and that the replacement image has the same filename extension as the original. If these requirements are not met, a duplicate is created.
To maintain consistency with Experience Manager, select this option.Overwrite in current folder, same base name regardless of extension Requires that you upload the replacement image to the same folder as the original, however the filename extension can be different from the original. For example, chair.tif replaces chair.jpg. Overwrite in any folder, same base asset name/extension Requires that the replacement image has the same filename extension as the original image (for example, chair.jpg must replace chair.jpg, not chair.tif). However, you can upload the replacement image to a different folder than the original. The updated image resides in the new folder; the file can no longer be found in its original location. Overwrite in any folder, same base asset name regardless of extension This option is the most inclusive replacement rule. You can upload a replacement image to a different folder than the original, upload a file with a different filename extension, and replace the original file. If the original file is in a different folder, the replacement image resides in the new folder to which it was uploaded. -
Preserve Crop
Controls the preservation of any existing manual crop definition.
See also
preserveCrop
in UploadPostJob and ReprocessAssetsJob, both in the Dynamic Media Viewers Reference Guide.
Default Upload Options default-upload-options
Image Editing tab image-editing-tab
This filter lets you fine-tune a sharpening filter effect on the final downsampled image. It helps you control the intensity of the effect, the radius of the effect (as measured in pixels), and a threshold of contrast that is ignored.
The Unsharp Mask effect uses the same options as Photoshop’s Unsharp Mask filter. Contrary to what the name suggests, Unsharp Mask is a sharpening filter.
Controls the amount of contrast that is applied to edge pixels.
Think of it as the intensity of the effect. The main difference between the amount values of Unsharp Mask in Adobe Dynamic Media and the amount values in Adobe Photoshop, is that Photoshop has an amount range of 1% to 500%. Whereas in Adobe Dynamic Media, the value range is
0.0
to 5.0
. A value of 5.0 in Adobe Dynamic Media is the rough equivalent of 500% in Photoshop; a value of 0.9 is the equivalent of 90%, and so on.Controls the radius of the effect.
The value range is
0
to 250
. The effect is run on all pixels in an image and radiates out from all pixels in all directions. The radius is measured in pixels. For example, to get a similar sharpening effect for a 2000 x 2000 pixel image and 500 x 500 pixel image, you would set a radius of two pixels on the 2000 x 2000 pixel image. Then set a radius value of one pixel on the 500 x 500 pixel image. A larger value is used for an image that has more pixels.Threshold is a range of contrast that is ignored when the Unsharp Mask filter is applied. This effect is important so that no “noise” is introduced to an image when this filter is used. The value range is
0
- 255
, which is the number of brightness steps in a grayscale image. 0
=black, 128
=50% gray and 255
=white.A threshold value of
12
ignores slight variations is skin tone brightness to avoid adding noise, but still add edge contrast to contrasty areas such as where eyelashes meet skin.If you have a photo of someone’s face, the Unsharp Mask affects the contrasty parts of the image. For example, where eyelashes and skin meet to create an obvious area of contrast, and the smooth skin itself. Even the smoothest skin exhibits subtle changes in brightness values. If you do not use a threshold value, the filter accentuates these subtle changes in skin pixels. In turn, a noisy and undesirable effect is created while contrast on the eyelashes is increased, enhancing sharpness.
To avoid this issue, a threshold value is introduced that tells the filter to ignore pixels that do not change contrast dramatically, like smooth skin.
In the zipper graphic shown earlier, notice the texture next to the zippers. Image noise is exhibited because the threshold values were too low to suppress the noise.
Deselect to unsharp-mask each color component separately.
See also Sharpen images in Adobe Dynamic Media and on Image Server.
PostScript tab postscript-tab
You can rasterize Adobe PostScript® files, maintain transparent backgrounds, choose a resolution, and choose a color space.
You can use Adobe PostScript® (EPS) files in Adobe Dynamic Media. Adobe Dynamic Media offers commands for configuring these files as you upload them.
When you upload PostScript (EPS) image files, you can format them in various ways. You can rasterize the files, maintain the transparent background, choose a resolution, and choose a color space.
• Force as RGB - Converts to the RGB color space.
• Force as CMYK - Converts to the CMYK color space.
• Force as Grayscale - Converts to the Grayscale color space.
Photoshop tab photoshop-tab
You can create templates from Adobe® Photoshop® files, maintain layers, specify how layers are named, extract text, and specify how images are anchored into templates.
• Layer name - Names the images after their layer names in the PSD file. For example, a layer named Price Tag in the original PSD file becomes an image named Price Tag. However, if the layer names in the PSD file are default Photoshop layer names (Background, Layer 1, Layer 2, and so on), the images are named after their layer numbers in the PSD file.
• Photoshop and layer number - Names the images after their layer numbers in the PSD file, ignoring original layer names. Images are named with the Photoshop filename and an appended layer number. For example, the second layer of a file called
Spring Ad.psd
is named Spring Ad_2
even if it had a non-default name in Photoshop.• Photoshop and layer name - Names the images after the PSD file followed by the layer name or layer number. The layer number is used if the layer names in the PSD file are default Photoshop layer names. For example, a layer named
Price Tag
in a PSD file named SpringAd
is named Spring Ad_Price Tag
. A layer with the default name Layer 2 is called Spring Ad_2
.PDF tab pdf-tab
The maximum number of pages for a PDF to be considered for extraction is 5000 for new uploads. This limit will change to 100 pages (for all PDFs) on December 31, 2022. See also Dynamic Media limitations.
You can choose to rasterize the files, extract search words and links, set the resolution, and choose a color space.
• Thumbnail - Rips each page in the PDF file and converts it to a thumbnail image.
• Rasterize - Rips the pages in the PDF file and converts vector graphics to bitmap images. To create an eCatalog, choose this option.
• Search words - Extracts search words from the PDF file so that the file can be searched by keyword in an eCatalog Viewer.
• Links - Extracts links from the PDF files and coverts them to Image Maps that are used in an eCatalog Viewer.
• Search words and links - Extracts both search words and links for use in an eCatalog viewer.
• Force as RGB - Converts to the RGB color space.
• Force as CMYK - Converts to the CMYK color space.
• Force as Grayscale - Converts to the Grayscale color space.
Illustrator tab illustrator-tab
You can rasterize Adobe Illustrator® files, maintain transparent backgrounds, choose a resolution, and choose a color space.
You can use Adobe® Illustrator® (AI) files in Adobe Dynamic Media. Adobe Dynamic Media offers commands for configuring these files as you upload them.
When you upload Illustrator (AI) image files, you can format them in various ways. You can rasterize the files, maintain the transparent background, choose a resolution, and choose a color space. Options for formatting PostScript and Illustrator files are available on the Upload screen under PostScript Options and Illustrator Options in the Upload Job Options box.
• Force as RGB - Converts to the RGB color space.
• Force as CMYK - Converts to the CMYK color space.
• Force as Grayscale - Converts to the Grayscale color space.