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'\" e
.\"
.\" This file is part of RGBDS.
.\"
.\" Copyright (c) 2013-2021, stag019 and RGBDS contributors.
.\"
.\" SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT
.\"
.Dd March 28, 2021
.Dt RGBGFX 1
.Os
.Sh NAME
.Nm rgbgfx
.Nd Game Boy graphics converter
.Sh SYNOPSIS
.Nm
.Op Fl CfmuVZ
.Op Fl v Op Fl v No ...
.Op Fl a Ar attrmap | Fl A
.Op Fl b Ar base_ids
.Op Fl c Ar color_spec
.Op Fl d Ar depth
.Op Fl L Ar slice
.Op Fl N Ar nb_tiles
.Op Fl n Ar nb_pals
.Op Fl o Ar out_file
.Op Fl p Ar pal_file | Fl P
.Op Fl s Ar nb_colors
.Op Fl t Ar tilemap | Fl T
.Op Fl U Ar unit_size
.Op Fl x Ar quantity
.Ar file
.Sh DESCRIPTION
The
.Nm
program converts PNG images into data suitable for display on the Game Boy and Game Boy Color.
.Pp
The main function of
.Nm
is to divide the input PNG into 8\[tmu]8 pixel
.Em squares ,
convert each of those squares into 1bpp or 2bpp tile data, and save all of the tile data in a file.
It also has options to generate a tile map, attribute map, and/or palette set as well; more on that and how the conversion process can be tweaked below.
.Sh ARGUMENTS
Note that options can be abbreviated as long as the abbreviation is unambiguous:
.Fl Fl verb
is
.Fl Fl verbose ,
but
.Fl Fl ver
is invalid because it could also be
.Fl Fl version .
.Pp
.Nm
accepts decimal, binary, and hexadecimal numbers in option arguments.
Decimal numbers are written as usual; binary numbers must be prefixed with either
.Ql %
or
.Ql 0b ,
and hexadecimal numbers must be prefixed with either
.Ql $
(which will likely need escaping or quoting to avoid being interpreted by the shell), or
.Ql 0x .
Leading zeros (after the base prefix, if any) are accepted, and letters are not case-sensitive.
All of these are equivalent:
.Ql 42 ,
.Ql 042 ,
.Ql 0b00101010 ,
.Ql 0B101010 ,
.Ql 0x2A ,
.Ql 0X2A ,
.Ql 0x2a .
.Pp
TODO: add "palette map" output.
.Pp
The following options are accepted:
.Bl -tag -width Ds
.It Fl a Ar attrmap , Fl Fl attr-map Ar attrmap
Generate an attribute map, which is a file containing tile
.Dq attributes .
For each square of the input image, its corresponding attribute map byte contains the mirroring bits (if
.Fl m
was specified), the bank bit
.Pq see Fl N ,
and the palette index.
See
.Lk https://gbdev.io/pandocs/Tile_Maps#bg-map-attributes-cgb-mode-only Pan Docs
for the individual bytes' format.
The output is written just like the tile map (see
.Fl t ) ,
follows the same order
.Pq Fl Z ,
and has the same size.
.It Fl A , Fl Fl output-attr-map
Same as
.Fl a Ar path ,
where
.Ar path
is the input image's path with the extension set to
.Pa .attrmap .
.It Fl b Ar base_ids , Fl Fl base-tiles Ar base_ids
Set the base IDs for tile map output.
.Ar base_ids
should be one or two numbers between 0 and 255, separated by a comma; they are for bank 0 and bank 1 respectively.
Both default to 0.
.It Fl C , Fl Fl color-curve
When generating palettes, use a color curve mimicking the Game Boy Color's screen.
The resulting colors may look closer to the input image's
.Sy on hardware and accurate emulators .
.It Fl c Ar color_spec , Fl Fl colors Ar color_spec
Use the specified color palettes instead of having
.Nm
automatically determine some.
.Ar color_spec
can be one of the following:
.Bl -tag -width Ds
.It Sy inline palette spec
If
.Ar color_spec
begins with a hash character
.Ql # ,
it is treated as an inline palette specification.
It should contain a comma-separated list of hexadecimal colors, each beginning with a hash.
Colors in are accepted in the following formats:
.Ql #rgb ,
.Ql #rrggbb ,
and
.Ql #rrggbbaa .
Palettes must be separated by a semicolon (they may require quoting to avoid special handling by the shell), and spaces are allowed around semicolons and commas; trailing commas and semicolons are allowed.
See
.Sx EXAMPLES
for an example of an inline palette specification.
.It Sy embedded palette spec
If
.Ar color_spec
is the case-insensitive word
.Cm embedded ,
then the first four colors of the input PNG's embedded palette are used.
It is an error if the PNG is not indexed, or if colors other than these 4 are used.
.Pq This is different from the default behavior of indexed PNGs, as then unused entries in the embedded palette are ignored, whereas they are not with Fl c Cm embedded .
.It Sy external palette spec
Otherwise,
.Ar color_spec
is assumed to be an external palette specification.
The expected format is
.Ql format:path ,
where
.Ar path
is a path to a file, which will be processed according to the
.Ar format .
See
.Sx PALETTE SPECIFICATION FORMATS
for a list of formats and their descriptions.
.El
.It Fl d Ar depth , Fl Fl depth Ar depth
Set the bit depth of the output tile data, in bits per pixel (bpp), either 1 or 2 (the default).
This changes how tile data is output, and the maximum number of colors per palette (2 and 4 respectively).
.It Fl f , Fl Fl fix
Make the input image an
.Em indexed
PNG.
.Sy TODO: before or after processing ?
Due to some changes in
.Nm Ap s behavior, this option does not really Dq fix
the input PNG anymore, and so it may be removed in a future RGBDS release.
To manipulate a PNG's format, using an external editor like GIMP or command-line tools like ImageMagick's
.Xr convert 1
program is recommended instead.
.It Fl L Ar slice , Fl Fl slice Ar slice
Only process a given rectangle of the image.
.Sy TODO: arg format .
This is useful for example if the input image is a sheet of some sort, and you want to convert each item individually.
.It Fl m , Fl Fl mirror-tiles
Deduplicate tiles that are mirrors of each other.
Tiles are checked for horizontal, vertical, and horizontal-vertical mirroring.
Useful with a tile map and attribute map together to keep track of the duplicated tiles and the dimension(s) mirrored.
Implies
.Fl u .
.It Fl N Ar nb_tiles , Fl Fl nb-tiles Ar nb_tiles
Set a maximum number of tiles that can be placed in each VRAM bank.
.Ar nb_tiles
should be one or two numbers between 0 and 256, separated by a comma; if the latter is omitted, it defaults to 0.
Setting either number to 0 prevents any tiles from being output in that bank.
.Pp
If more tiles are generated than can fit in the two banks combined,
.Nm
will abort.
If
.Fl N
is not specified, no limit will be set on the amount of tiles placed in bank 0, and tiles will not be placed in bank 1.
.It Fl n Ar nb_pals , Fl Fl nb-palettes Ar nb_pals
Abort if more than
.Ar nb_pals
palettes are generated.
Note that attribute map output only has 3 bits for the palette ID, so a limit higher than 8 may yield incomplete data.
.It Fl o Ar out_file , Fl Fl output Ar out_file
Output the tile data in native 2bpp format or in 1bpp
.Pq depending on Fl d
to this file.
.It Fl p Ar pal_file , Fl Fl palette Ar pal_file
Output the image's palette set to this file.
Palettes are emitted in order, TODO.
If the palette contains too few colors, the remaining entries are TODO.
.It Fl P , Fl Fl output-palette
Same as
.Fl p Ar path ,
where
.Ar path
is the input image's path with the extension set to
.Pa .pal .
.It Fl s Ar nb_colors , Fl Fl palette-size Ar nb_colors
Specify how many colors each palette contains, including the transparent one if any.
.Ar nb_colors
cannot be more than
.Ql 1 << Ar depth
.Pq see Fl d .
.It Fl t Ar tilemap , Fl Fl tilemap Ar tilemap
Generate a file of tile indices.
For each square of the input image, its corresponding tile map byte contains the index of the associated tile in the tile data file.
The IDs wrap around from 255 back to 0, and do not include the bank bit; use
.Fl a
for that.
Useful in combination with
.Fl u
and/or
.Fl m
to keep track of duplicate tiles.
.It Fl T , Fl Fl output-tilemap
Same as
.Fl t Ar path ,
where
.Ar path
is the input image's path with the extension set to
.Pa .tilemap .
.It Fl U Ar unit_size , Fl Fl unit-size Ar unit_size
Set the deduplication
.Dq unit
size to
.Ar unit_size ,
which should be two comma-separated tile counts (width then height).
Defaults to
.Ql 1,1 ,
i.e. one tile.
.Fl U Cm 1,2
is particularly useful for the
.Dq 8\[tmu]16
OAM mode.
.Pp
.Sy TODO: describe how this affects the dedup process, and how the image is visited .
.It Fl u , Fl Fl unique-tiles
Deduplicate identical tiles, and omit the duplicates from the tile data file.
Useful with a tile map
.Pq see Fl t
to keep track of the duplicated tiles.
.Pp
Note that if this option is enabled, no guarantee is made on the order in which tiles are output; while it
.Em should
be consistent across identical runs of a given
.Nm
release, the same is not true for different releases.
.It Fl V , Fl Fl version
Print the version of the program and exit.
.It Fl v , Fl Fl verbose
Be verbose.
The verbosity level is increased by one each time the flag is specified, with each level including the previous:
.Bl -enum -width 2n -compact
.It
.Nm
prints out its configuration before doing anything.
.It
A generic message is printed before doing most actions.
.It
Some of the actions' intermediate results are printed.
.It
Some internal debug printing is enabled.
.El
The verbosity level does not go past 6.
.Pp
Note that verbose output is only intended to be consumed by humans, and may change without notice between RGBDS releases; relying on those for scripts is not advised.
.It Fl x Ar quantity , Fl Fl trim-end Ar quantity
Do not output the last
.Ar quantity
tiles to the tile data file; no other output is affected.
This is useful for trimming
.Dq filler
/ blank squares at the end of an image.
If fewer than
.Ar quantity
tiles would have been emitted, the file will be empty.
.Pp
Note that this is done
.Em after
deduplication if
.Fl u
was enabled, so you probably don't want to use this option in combination with
.Fl u .
Note also that the tiles that don't get output will not count towards
.Fl N Ap s
limit.
.It Fl Z , Fl Fl columns
Read squares from the PNG in column-major order (column by column), instead of the default row-major order (line by line).
This primarily affects tile map and attribute map output, although it may also change generated tile data and palettes.
.El
.Ss At-files
In a given project, many images are to be converted with different flags.
The traditional way of solving this problem has been to specify the different flags for each image in the Makefile / build script; this can be inconvenient, as it centralizes all those flags away from the images they concern.
.Pp
To avoid these drawbacks,
.Nm
supports
.Dq at-files :
any command-line argument that begins with an at sign
.Pq Ql @
is interpreted as one.
The rest of the argument (without the @, that is) is interpreted as the path to a file, whose contents are interpreted as if given on the command line.
At-files can be stored right next to the corresponding image, for example.
.Pp
Since the contents of at-files are interpreted by
.Nm ,
.Sy no shell processing is performed ;
for example, shell variables are not expanded
.Ql ( $PWD ,
.Ql %WINDIR% ,
etc.).
In at-files, lines that are empty or contain only whitespace are ignored; lines that begin with a hash sign
.Pq Ql # ,
optionally preceded by whitespace, are considered comments and also ignored.
Each line can contain any number of arguments, which are separated by whitespace.
.Pq \&No quoting feature to prevent this is provided.
.Pp
Note that this special meaning given to arguments has less precedence than option arguments, and that the standard
.Ql --
to stop option processing also disables at-file processing.
For example, the following command line processes
.Ql @tilesets/town.png ,
outputs tile data to
.Ql @tilesets/town.2bpp ,
and reads command-line options from
.Ql tilesets/town.flags
then
.Ql tilesets.flags :
.Pp
.Dl $ rgbgfx -o @tilesets/town.2bpp @tilesets/town.flags @tilesets.flags -- @tilesets/town.png
.Pp
At-files can also specify the input image directly, and call for more at-files, both using the regular syntax.
Note that while
.Ql --
can be used in an at-file (with identical semantics), it is only effective inside of it\(emnormal option processing continues in the parent scope.
.Sh PALETTE SPECIFICATION FORMATS
TODO.
.Sh PALETTE GENERATION
.Nm
must generate palettes from the colors in the input image, unless
.Fl c
was used; in that case, the provided palettes will be used.
.Sy If the order of colors in the palettes is important to you ,
for example because you want to use palette swaps, please use
.Fl c
to specify the palette explicitly.
.Pp
First, if the image contains
.Em any
transparent pixel, color #0 of
.Em all
palettes will be allocated to it.
This is done
.Sy even if palettes were explicitly specified using Fl c ;
then the specification only covers color #1 onwards.
.Pq If you do not want this, ask your image editor to remove the alpha channel.
.Pp
After generating palettes,
.Nm
sorts colors within those palettes using the following rules:
.EQ
delim $$
.EN
.Bl -bullet -offset indent
.It
If the PNG file internally contains a palette (often dubbed an
.Dq indexed
PNG), then colors in each output palette will be sorted according to their order in the PNG's palette.
Any unused entries will be ignored, and only the first entry is considered if there are any duplicates.
.Po If you want a given color to appear more than once, or an unused color to appear at all, you should specify the palettes explicitly instead using Fl c ;
.Fl c Cm embedded
may be appropriate.
.Pc
.It
Otherwise, if the PNG only contains shades of gray, they will be categorized into as many
.Dq bins
as there are colors per palette, and the palette is set to these bins.
The darkest gray will end up in bin #0, and so on; note that this is the opposite of the RGB method below.
If two distinct grays end up in the same bin, the RGB method is used instead.
.Pp
Be careful that
.Nm
is picky about what it considers
.Dq grays :
the red, green, and blue components of each color must
.Em all
be
.Em exactly
the same.
.It
If none of the above apply, colors are sorted from lightest to darkest.
The definition of luminance that
.Nm
uses is
.Do
$2126 times red + 7152 times green + 722 times blue$
.Dc .
.El
.EQ
delim off
.EN
.Pp
Note that the
.Dq indexed
behavior depends on an internal detail of how the PNG is saved, specifically its
.Ql PLTE
chunk.
Since few image editors (such as GIMP) expose that detail, this behavior is only kept for compatibility and should be considered deprecated.
.Sh OUTPUT FILES
.Ss Tile data
TODO.
.Ss Palette data
Palette data is output like a dump of GBC palette memory: the output is a binary file.
Each color is written as GBC-native little-endian RGB555 (that is, the first byte contains the red and the lower 3 bits of green).
There is no padding between colors, nor between palettes; however, empty colors in the palettes are TODO.
.Ss Tilemap data
TODO.
.Ss Attrmap data
TODO.
.Sh NOTES
Some flags have had their functionality removed.
.Fl D
is now ignored,
.Fl F
now behaves like
.Fl f ,
and
.Fl h
is an alias for the new (and less confusingly named)
.Fl Z .
These will be removed and/or repurposed in future versions of
.Nm ,
so relying on them is not recommended.
The same applies to the corresponding long options.
.Pp
If you are curious, you may find out that palette generation is an NP-complete problem, so
.Nm
does not attempt to find the optimal solution, but instead to find a good one in a reasonable amount of time.
It is possible to compute the optimal solution externally (using a solver, for example), and then provide it to
.Nm
via
.Fl c .
.Sh EXAMPLES
The following will only validate the PNG (check its size, that all tiles have a suitable amount of colors, etc.), but output nothing:
.Pp
.Dl $ rgbgfx src/res/maps/overworld/tileset.png
.Pp
The following will convert the image using the two given palettes (and only those), and store the generated 2bpp tile data in
.Ql tileset.2bpp ,
and the attribute map in
.Ql tileset.attrmap .
.Pp
.Dl $ rgbgfx -c '#ffffff,#8d05de, #dc7905,#000000 ; #fff,#8d05de, #7e0000 \&, #000' -A -o tileset.2bpp tileset.png
.Pp
TODO: more examples.
.Sh BUGS
Please report bugs on
.Lk https://github.com/gbdev/rgbds/issues GitHub .
.Sh SEE ALSO
.Xr rgbds 7 ,
.Xr rgbasm 1 ,
.Xr rgblink 1 ,
.Xr rgbfix 1 ,
.Xr gbz80 7
.Sh HISTORY
.Nm
was originally created by
.An stag019
to be included in RGBDS.
It was later rewritten by
.An ISSOtm ,
and is now maintained by a number of contributors at
.Lk https://github.com/gbdev/rgbds .