ILBM explained

"ILBM" IFF Interleaved Bitmap
Extension:.iff, .lbm
Owner:Electronic Arts
Genre:Image file formats
Standard:EA IFF 85: Standard for Interchange Format[1] [2] [3]
Open:Public domain source code
Containedby:Interchange File Format

Interleaved Bitmap (ILBM) is an image file format conforming to the Interchange File Format (IFF) standard. The format originated on the Amiga platform, and on IBM-compatible systems, files in this format or the related PBM (Planar Bitmap) format are typically encountered in games from late 1980s and early 1990s that were either Amiga ports or had their graphical assets designed on Amiga machines.

A characteristic feature of the format is that it stores bitmaps in the form of interleaved bit planes, which gives the format its name; this reflects the way the Amiga graphics hardware natively reads graphics data from memory. Packbits, a simple form of compression is supported to make ILBM files more compact.[4]

On the Amiga, these files are not associated with a particular file extension, though as they started being used on PC systems where extensions are systematically used, they employed a .lbm or occasionally a .pbm extension.

File format

ILBM is an implementation of the IFF file format consisting of a number of consecutive chunks, whose order can, to some extent, be varied. Each chunk has a different function and has the same basic format. This means that a program does not have to read or decode every chunk in a file, only the ones it wants to deal with or the ones it can understand.[4]

ILBM files usually contain enough information to allow them to be displayed by an image editing program, including image dimensions, palette and pixel data. Some files were designed to act as palettes for paint programs (pixel data left blank) or to be merged into another image. This makes them much more flexible, but also much more complex than other formats such as BMP.

For ILBMs the BMHD (Bit Map HeaDer) chunk and any other 'vital' chunks must appear before the BODY chunk. Any chunks appearing after BODY are considered 'extra' and many programs will leave them unread and unchanged.[4]

Type Name Description
FOURCC chunkID "FORM"
lenChunk Length of chunk data, in bytes. Does not include the pad byte. Will be the same as the file size minus eight bytes (this field and chunkID are not included in the count)
FOURCC formatID "ILBM" or "PBM "
BYTE[lenChunk - 12] content Actual data of the chunk, made up of the other sub-chunks below
BYTE pad Optional padding byte, only present if lenChunk is not a multiple of 2.

BMHD: Bitmap Header

The BMHD chunk specifies how the image is to be displayed and is usually the first chunk inside the FORM. It not only defines the image's height/width, but where it is drawn on the screen, how to display it in various screen resolutions and if the image is compressed. The content of this chunk is as follows:[4]

Type Name Description
width Image width, in pixels
height Image height, in pixels
xOrigin Where on screen, in pixels, the image's top-left corner is. Value is usually 0,0 unless image is part of a larger image or not fullscreen.
yOrigin
numPlanes Number of planes in bitmap; 1 for monochrome, 4 for 16 color, 8 for 256 color, or 0 if there is only a colormap, and no image data. (i.e., this file is just a colormap.)
mask 1 = masked, 2 = transparent color, 3 = lasso (for MacPaint). Mask data is not considered a bit plane.
compression If 0 then uncompressed. If 1 then image data is RLE compressed. If 2 "Vertical RLE" from Deluxe Paint for Atari ST. Other values are theoretically possible, representing other compression methods.
pad1 Ignore when reading, set to 0 when writing for future compatibility
transClr Transparent colour, useful only when mask >= 2
xAspect Pixel aspect, a ratio width:height; used for displaying the image on a variety of different screen resolutions for 320x200 5:6 or 10:11
yAspect
pageWidth The size of the screen the image is to be displayed on, in pixels, usually 320×200
pageHeight

BODY: Image data

The BODY chunk is usually the last chunk in a file,[4] and the largest.

In ILBM files the BODY chunk stores the actual image data as interleaved bitplanes (and optional mask) by row. The bitplanes appear first from 1 to n, followed by the mask plane. If the image is uncompressed then each line will be made up of (width + 15) / 16 16-bit values (i.e. one bit per pixel, rounded up to the nearest multiple of 16-bits.) If it is compressed then each line is compressed individually and is always a multiple of 16-bits long when compressed.[4]

In PBM files, the BODY chunk is simpler as uncompressed it is just a continuous stream of bytes containing image data.

Compression

If an image is compressed, each row of data (but not each bitplane) is compressed individually, including the mask data if present. The compression is a variety of RLE Compression using flags. It can be decoded as follows:[4]

For the compression routine, it's best to encode a 2 byte repeat run as a replicate run except when preceded and followed by a literal run, in which case it is best to merge the three into one literal run. Always encode >3 byte repeats as replicate runs.[4]

CAMG: Amiga mode

A CAMG chunk is specifically for the Commodore Amiga computer. It stores a LONG "viewport mode". This lets you specify Amiga display modes like "dual playfield" and "hold and modify". It is, not surprisingly, rare outside of Amiga games.

If you need to convert or display files that might contain meaningful CAMG chunks, see the 'Notes on working with ILBM files' below.

CMAP: Palette

The CMAP chunk contains the image's palette and consists of 3-byte RGB values for each colour used. Each byte is between 0 and 255 inclusive. The chunk is 3 × numColours bytes long. The number of colours in the palette will be 2 ^ numBitplanes. This chunk is optional and a default palette will be used if it is not present. It is possible to have fewer entries than expected (e.g. 7 colours for a 4-plane '16 colour' bitmap for example.) Remember that if this has an odd number of colours, as per the IFF specification the chunk will be padded by one byte to make it an even number of bytes long, but the pad byte is not included in the chunk's length field.[4]

CRNG: Colour range

The colour range chunk is 'nonstandard'. It is used by Electronic Arts' Deluxe Paint program to identify a contiguous range of colour registers or a "shade range" and colour cycling. There can be zero or more CRNG chunks in an ILBM file, but all should appear before the BODY chunk. Deluxe Paint normally writes 4 CRNG chunks in an ILBM when the user asks it to "Save Picture".[4]

Type Name Description
padding 0x0000
rate Colour cycle rate. The units are such that a rate of 60 steps per second is represented as 214 = 16384. Lower rates can be obtained by linear scaling: for 30 steps/second, rate = 8192.
flags Flags which control the cycling of colours through the palette. If bit0 is 1, the colours should cycle, otherwise this colour register range is inactive and should have no effect. If bit1 is 0, the colours cycle upwards, i.e. each colour moves into the next index position in the colour map and the uppermost colour in the range moves down to the lowest position. If bit1 is 1, the colours cycle in the opposite direction. Only those colours between the low and high entries in the colour map should cycle.
low The index of the first entry in the colour map that is part of this range.
high The index of the last entry in the colour map that is part of this range.

CCRT: Colour cycling

Commodore's Graphicraft program uses CCRT for Colour Cycling Range and Timing. This chunk contains a CycleInfo structure. Like CRNG it is a nonstandard chunk.[4]

Type Name Description
direction Cycle direction: 0=no cycling, 1=forwards, -1=backwards
low lowest color register selected
high highest color register selected
delaySec Seconds between changing colors
delayuS Microseconds between changing colors (added to delaySec to get total delay time)
padding 0x0000

The data is similar to a CRNG chunk. A program would probably only use one of these two methods of expressing colour cycle data. You could write out both if you want to communicate this information to both DeluxePaint and Graphicraft.[4]

DEST: Bitplane combining

The optional property DEST is a way to control how to scatter zero or more source bitplanes into a deeper destination image. Some readers may ignore DEST.[4]

Type Name Description
numPlanes Number of bitplanes in source image
pad1 unused; use 0 for consistency
planePick How to pick planes to scatter them into the destination image
planeOnOff Default data for Plane Pick
planeMask Selects which bitplanes to store into

The low order depth number of bits in planePick, planeOnOff, and planeMask correspond one-to-one with destination bitplanes. Bit 0 with bitplane 0, etc. Any higher order bits should be ignored.[4]

"1" bits in planePick mean "put the next source bitplane into this bitplane", so the number of "1" bits should equal numPlanes. "0" bits mean "put the corresponding bit from planeOnOff into this bitplane".[4]

Bits in planeMask gate writing to the destination bitplane: "1" bits mean "write to this bitplane" while "0" bits mean "leave this bitplane alone". The normal case (with no DEST chunk) is equivalent to planePick = planeMask = (2 ^ numPlanes) - 1.[4]

Remember that color numbers are formed by pixels in the destination bitmap (depth planes deep) not in the source bitmap (numPlanes planes deep).[4]

GRAB: Hotspot

The optional GRAB chunk locates a "handle" or "hotspot" of the image relative to its upper left corner, e.g., when used as a mouse cursor or a "paint brush". It is optional.[4]

Type Name Description
x X coordinate of hotspot, in pixels relative to top-left corner of the image
y Y coordinate of hotspot, in pixels relative to top-left corner of the image

SPRT: Z-order

The SPRT chunk indicates that an image is intended to be a sprite. It should thus have a mask plane or transparent colour and shouldn't be fullscreen. How this is handled depends on the program using the image. The only data stored here is the sprite order, used by many programs to place the sprite in the foreground (a sprite of order 1 appears behind one of order 0, etc.) It is optional.[4]

TINY: Thumbnail

The TINY chunk contains a small preview image for various graphics programs, including Deluxe Paint. It is compressed and is similar in format to the BODY chunk.

Type Name Description
width Thumbnail width, in pixels
height Thumbnail height, in pixels
BYTE[] data Pixel data, stored in exactly the same way as the BODY chunk. Use exactly the same algorithm, substituting the width and height from the TINY chunk in place of those taken from the BMHD chunk.

Notes for working with ILBM

Color Maps

Sometimes an ILBM file contains only a colour map and no image data. Often used to store a palette of colours that can be applied to an image separately. In this case the BODY chunk should be empty and the numPlanes field in the BMHD chunk will be 0.[4]

Deep Images

Some ILBM files contain 'true-colour' information rather than indexed colours. These so-called 'deep images' files have no CMAP chunk and usually have 24 or 32 bitplanes. The standard ordering for the bitplanes will put the least significant bit of the red component first:[4]

R0 R1 R2 R3 R4 R5 R6 R7 G0 G1 G2 G3 G4 G5 G6 G7 B0 B1 B2 B3 B4 B5 B6 B7

If there are 32 bit planes, the last 8 bit planes will be an alpha channel:

R0 R1 ... R7 G0 ... G7 B0 ... B6 B7 A0 A1 A2 A3 A4 A5 A6 A7

An image containing no colour map and only 8 bitplanes may be a greyscale image:

I0 I1 I2 I3 I4 I5 I6 I7

Extra Half-Brite

If the ILBM file contains a CAMG chunk in which bit 7 is set (i.e. 0x80 in hexadecimal). The file expects to make use of the EHB (Extra Half-Brite) mode of the Amiga chipset. The colour map will have no more than 32 entries, but the image will have 6 bitplanes. The most significant bitplane should be regarded as a flag, when unset, use the lower 5 bits as an index into the colour map as usual. When the flag is set; use the lower 5 bits as an index into the colour map, but the actual colour to be used should be half as bright, which can be achieved by shifted the RGB components of the colour one bit to the right. Alternatively, create a colour map with 64 entries, and copy the lower 32 entries into the upper half, converting them to half brightness; then use all 6 bitplanes as a colour index.[4]

PBM images cannot exist in extra half-brite mode.

Hold and Modify

If the ILBM file contains a CAMG chunk in which bit 11 is set (i.e. 0x800 in hexadecimal) the file expects to make use of the HAM (Hold-And-Modify) mode of the Amiga chipset. In HAM6 format the colour map will have up to 16 entries, but the image will have 6 (or possibly 5 bitplanes). In HAM8 format the colour map will have up to 64 entries but the image will have 8 (or possibly 7 bitplanes).[4]

The last two bitplanes (if an odd number of bitplanes assume an extra bitplane which is always 0) are control flags which indicate how to use the first 4 (or 6) bitplanes.[4]

Control Flags Description
00 Use bitplanes 0-3 (or 0-5) as a colour map index as normal
10 Use the colour of the previous pixel but replace the Blue component with bits from bitplanes 0-3 (or 0-5)
01 Use the colour of the previous pixel but replace the Red component with bits from bitplanes 0-3 (or 0-5)
11 Use the colour of the previous pixel but replace the Green component with bits from bitplanes 0-3 (or 0-5)

If the first pixel of a scanline is a modification pixel, then modify and use the image border colour.[4]

Note that when using 4 bits to modify a colour component you should use the 4 bits in the upper 4 bits of the component AND in the lower 4 bits (to avoid reducing the overall colour gamut). When using 6 bits this is less important, but you can still put the 2 most significant bits of the modification bits into the least significant two bits of the colour component.[4]

PBM images cannot exist in hold and modify mode.

Utilities

Most utilities that work with ILBM and PBM files are rather dated, such as MacPaint or Deluxe Paint. IrfanView allows viewing files, is free for non commercial use, and can work under Linux. Netpbm can convert images from ILBM to its own PPM format[5] and back.[6] The Deluxe Paint-inspired GrafX2pixel art graphics editor can load and save ILBM files, but is limited to 256 colors maximum, so HAM or 24-bit ILBM images will not show all colors. ImageMagick and GraphicsMagick can also display and convert ILBM images if the ilbmtoppm and ppmtoilbm utilities from Netpbm are installed.

Notes

In the Commander Keen Dreams series of games, compressed standalone ILBM images are used for title screens, but the game does not read most of the ILBM chunks. This is because the images were edited in DeluxePaint, then imported directly into the game's files.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: EA IFF 85: Standard for Interchange Format Files. Jerry Morrison. Electronic Arts. 1985-01-14. 2014-03-06.
  2. Web site: "ILBM" IFF Interleaved Bitmap . 1986-01-17 . Jerry Morrison . . 2014-03-06 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140613000343/http://home.comcast.net/~erniew/lwsdk/docs/filefmts/ilbm.html . 2014-06-13.
  3. Book: Encyclopedia of Graphics File Formats, Second Edition. April 1996. James D. Murray . William vanRyper . 1-56592-161-5. O'Reilly. 2014-02-27. registration.
  4. Web site: ILBM IFF Interleaved Bitmap. 8 June 2012 . 2018-07-30.
  5. Web site: ilbmtoppm. 12 November 2014. Jef Poskanzer . Ingo Wilken . 2019-06-13.
  6. Web site: ppmtoilbm. 28 June 2015. Jef Poskanzer . Ingo Wilken . 2019-06-13.