Texture file
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Revision as of 13:25, 17 January 2018
Trainz Texture files are ASCII text format specification files describing a single texture. Texture files have a ".texture.txt" name extension, however when a texture file is specified within a config.txt file or similar, the ".txt" must be omitted (as you are specifying a resource name, not a file path), leaving only the ".texture" extension.
Texture files (*.texture.txt) should be distinguished from image files (*.tga, etc.) and materials. A material may utilize zero or more texture files, and a texture file may utilize one or more image files. While we often refer to the image data as "a texture", this usage isn't strictly correct as any given texture also has a number of metadata attributes which are not present in the source image. Additionally, a texture may be compressed (at installation time) which may actually lose some of the data originally present in the source image.
When importing a trainzmesh file from an FBX file, any image files referenced in the FBX which do not already have corresponding texture files will have generic texture files created automatically. These files may be suitable for basic purposes, but may need to be customized for more advanced functionality. Once the file has been created (and optionally customised) the importer will not recreate/overwrite it on subsequent runs.
This page describes content format v4.6.
Contents |
File format
The user-editable *.texture.txt files are ASCII text formatted key-value pairs with the following options. Please note that this format is not the same (despite some similarities) as other text-based formats used by Trainz. Please be aware of the filename character restrictions when naming texture and image files.
- Syntax
Each key is specified on a new line. There is no white space anywhere in the line. A empty value is sometimes valid. The syntax is:
<key>=<value>
- Example
Primary=WayCoolTexture.tga Alpha=WayCoolTexture.tga Tile=st AlphaHint=masked
(Example only, not recommended settings)
Keys and Values
Primary=diffusemap.bmp
This tag specifies the filename of the image file representing the color (R, G, B) channels of the texture. Any alpha channel in the image file is ignored. The resultant texture will have a pure white (100%) alpha channel.
Primary=diffusemap.jpg Alpha=diffusemap.bmp
This tag combination specifies the filenames of the image file representing the color (R, G, B) channels of the texture and the image file representing the alpha (A) channel of the texture. The alpha channel image should be grayscale. Neither file should contain an alpha channel. The two image files must be of identical size.
Primary=diffusemap.tga Alpha=diffusemap.tga
This tag combination specifies the filename of a single image file representing the color and alpha (R, G, B, A) channels of the texture. In this case both tags must reference the same filename. The image file must contain an alpha channel.
Compression=dxt3
This tag hints the usage of a particular texture compression scheme. If you don't have a specific effect in mind, don't include this tag. Valid options are currently 'none', 'dxt1', 'dxt3', 'dxt5'. Refer DXT Compression.
The current selection logic for texture compression is as follows, however it should be noted that this may change between Trainz versions. The first matching rule is used.
- Special texture formats (such as HDR) which don't support compression are stored uncompressed.
- "Compression=none" forces no compression. This gives the best visual result for a given input image, but typically yields worse visual results per output texture filesize. It is often better to activate compression and double the image dimensions, rather than disabling compression.
- Images with an "opaque" alpha hint use DXT1 compression.
- "Compression=dxt3" will use DXT3 compression.
- DXT5 compression is used.
NormalMapHint=normalmap
The 'NormalMapHint' tag allows the texture to be specified as a normal map. By default, Trainz will assume that your texture is a diffuse map and will apply some processing options which are not appropriate for normal maps. You must specify this option for normal maps. Valid options are 'none' and 'normalmap'.
ModifyMap=flipgreen
The 'ModifyMap' option allows a texture's green color channel to be flipped. Some programs such as Autodesk 3ds Max create normal maps with the Y axis facing the opposite way to what is expected by the Trainz shaders. This option can be used to make the bump effect look correct in Trainz. Valid options are 'none' and 'flipgreen'.
AlphaHint=opaque
The 'AlphaHint' tag allows you to force a particular alpha mode on the texture. Valid options are 'opaque' (meaning that the alpha channel is overwritten with pure white), 'semitransparent' (meaning that the alpha channel is a grayscale blend) and 'masked' (meaning that the alpha channel is clamped to a pure black&white bitmap based on a 50% threshold.) If omitted, Trainz will supply an appropriate value for this tag based on the actual contents of the Alpha channel.
Tile=st
Tiling refers to the ability for texture coordinates outside the range of (0.0 .. 1.0) to be treated as valid coordinates on an infinitely tiled texture. With tiling active, coordinates which pass the right/bottom side of the texture effectively wrap back onto the left/top side, and so on. Valid options include 's' (tile horizontally), 't' (tile vertically), 'st' (tile both horizontally and vertically), and 'none' (do not tile the image).
MipAlgorithm=tend-towards-opaque
The default mipmap generation algorithm tends to make semi-transparent dithers (such as chain-link fences or tree leaves) appear more transparent in the distance. This occurs because the multiple texels of alpha in the high-detail source image (100%, 0%, 100%, 0%) are blended to a single pixel in the lower mips (50%.) The net result is that the average opacity level remains the same, but that the maximum value is reduced. Coupled with the fact that overlapping layers of semi-opaque textures do not necessarily increase the output opacity (a rendering limitation relating to performance) the net result is that something which might be quite opaque close-up may become ghostly in the distance. An alternate "tend-towards-opaque" algorithm may be selected for mipmap generation, which defeats this issue by biasing opacity toward the maximum. This increases average opacity for distant objects, and has the side effect of making soft edges become hard and potentially "blocky". It should only be used where the default algorithm gives decidedly sub-optimal results.
The value of this key is only relevant where Content Manager is responsible for producing mipmap images. It is not relevant on any mipmap images provided in the source images.
nonpoweroftwo=1
By default, all textures must have both their width and height as a power of two (eg. 8, 16, 32, 64, 128, 256, 512, 1024, 2048), though they need not be square. Setting the value '1' for the 'nonpoweroftwo' key allows this restriction to be relaxed. This is currently considered experimental and may have unexpected performance, quality, or functionality outcomes. It is not recommended that end-users utilize this format at the current time.
Non-power-of-two (NPOT) textures may not support mipmapping and thus may be noticeably affected by the moire effect in addition to having higher overall GPU bandwidth requirements.
Texture Formats
The following texture formats are supported internally by Trainz on desktop platforms.
- R8 G8 B8 A8
- DXT1
- DXT3
- DXT5
- R32F G32F B32F A32F
The selection of internal format depends on the source image format and the value of the 'Compression' key.
Texture Size
Textures must be no more than 4096 pixels in either dimension, although it is strongly recommended that textures are kept below this maximum to avoid performance problems. Small objects should typically use approximately 512x512. Large, highly detailed objects such as train vehicles or ground textures will typically use 2048x2048. Uniform-color textures (ie. textures in which all texels have the same color) should be 8x8. Textures must be a power-of-two size in each dimension (unless the 'nonpoweroftwo' key is activated), but need not be square. Some materials may give unexpected results for non-square textures; consult the material-specific documentation for details.
Source Image Formats
The following image formats are acceptable as source data for the texture file. Note that these formats are not used at runtime, and that format-specific benefits such as compression will apply to the DLS download size of the content but not to the runtime memory footprint or GPU bandwidth usage.
- Targa (.tga) files. Targa is a lossless image format with optional compression and optional alpha channel. This is a sensible choice where compatibility with older versions of Trainz is desired.
- JPEG (.jpg) files. JPEG is a lossy image compression format with no alpha channel support. This format should generally be avoided since it will typically lead to the image being compressed in a lossy format (JPG), decompressed, recompressed again into another lossy format (DXT1), losing detail at each stage. Worse, if JPEG files are used during the creation of the image, each edit-save-test cycle may result in a loss of image quality.
- Windows Bitmap (.bmp) files. BMP is a lossless image format with no compression and optional alpha channel. This format should generally be avoided since it does not offer compression and has no redeeming benefits.
- HDR (.hdr) files. HDR is a lossless image format with 32 bits of precision per channel. The R32F G32F B32F A32F internal texture format is used, and texture compression is not supported. This is a very expensive format (in terms of memory and performance) and should only be used where absolutely essential. Textures created in this format should be kept as small as possible (eg. 256-512 pixels wide and high).
- PNG (.png) files. PNG is a lossless compressed image format with alpha channel support. This is the best choice where compatibility with older versions of Trainz is not required.
- DDS (.dds) files. This has very limited support intended for specific internal purposes; it is not recommended that end-users utilize this format at the current time.
All images which comprise a given texture must have identical dimensions (width, height).
Source images should use the SRGB color space except where material-specific documentation indicates otherwise.
Notes on Image Editors
- The Targa Exporter plugin shipped with some older versions of Adobe Photoshop is broken and silently corrupts or discards alpha channels; a free update is available which resolves this issue.
- Some image editors do not support alpha channels on BMP files.
*.txt File Extension
Texture files have a ".texture.txt" name extension, however when a texture file is specified within a config.txt file or similar, the ".txt" must be omitted, leaving the ".texture" extension. For example, a texture file named grass.texture.txt is specified in a KIND Groundtexture config file using the syntax texture "grass.texture".
Use of Image Files in Place of Texture Files
Trainz previously supported using any supported image file type in place of a Texture file. TANE does not support this technique; a texture.txt file must be used.