DDS Creation with ATI Compressonator: Difference between revisions

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== Introduction ==
== Introduction ==
ATI's "The Compressonator" is an old program and should not be your first choice, but may still have its uses.
ATI's "The Compressonator" - described here - was important during early TDM development. Now, this ATI-branded program is old and should not be your first choice, but may still have its uses. See also the "Successors" section at the end.


Find [http://darkmod.taaaki.za.net/tools/ati_compressonator_v1.21.zip "The Compressonator" version 1.21.1044 here]. Install/unzip it to a folder and create a shortcut if you like. (At one time, the foregoing exact version was required, because it alone could compress DXT5 RXGB normalmaps. Compression of normalmaps should no longer be done.)
Find [http://darkmod.taaaki.za.net/tools/ati_compressonator_v1.21.zip "The Compressonator" version 1.21.1044 here]. Install/unzip it to a folder and create a shortcut if you like. (At one time, the foregoing exact version was required, because it alone could compress DXT5 RXGB normalmaps. Compression of normalmaps should no longer be done.)

Revision as of 16:41, 1 September 2020

Note - Prior to August, 2020, a longer version of this content lived at DDS creation. Go there for a newly-written tool-independent overview of DDS creation.

Introduction

ATI's "The Compressonator" - described here - was important during early TDM development. Now, this ATI-branded program is old and should not be your first choice, but may still have its uses. See also the "Successors" section at the end.

Find "The Compressonator" version 1.21.1044 here. Install/unzip it to a folder and create a shortcut if you like. (At one time, the foregoing exact version was required, because it alone could compress DXT5 RXGB normalmaps. Compression of normalmaps should no longer be done.)

After running the installer, you will likely find when you try to run "The Compressonator", that the installation was incomplete. To complete it, inspect the distribution .zip for a folder that contains MSVCP71.DLL. With Admin privileges, copy MSVCP71.DLL to where the program lives, typically c:/Program Files (x86)/ATI Technologies Inc/The Compressonator.

Please review DDS creation for general information about

  • working with TGA and DDS, and where files should be placed in your FM
  • suggested DDS creation settings

Compressing Diffuse and Specular Maps

  • Open your source (TGA) file
  • In the Mip Maps toolbar's pulldown, select Box-Filter. Press "Generate", and then a Lowest Mip-Level size of 1x1.

01 mips.jpg

  • In the Compression toolbar's pulldown, select DirectX Texture Compression. Click the "Compress" button.
  • Choose the correct compression type:
    • Diffusemap: Does the texture have transparency(i.e., leaves, spiderwebs, etc)? NO: DXT1. YES: DXT5
    • Specularmap: DXT1 - specular does not require alpha information.
    • Normalmap: NONE - Use TGA!
  • Don't change the default channel weighting values of :
red=0.3086
green=0.6094
blue=0.082
  • Click "Compress"

02 compression.jpg

  • Save your DDS to the /dds/ tree

Change the File Extension to Lowercase

The Compressonator automatically names the file *.DDS, but all files should be lowercase (including TGAs). Be sure to rename the files to a lowercase .dds extension before game testing:

Option A: Use Windows Explorer. You need to change your Explorer settings to display the file extension:

  1. Open up Windows Explorer
  2. Go Tools > Folder Options
  3. Click the View tab and disable Hide extensions for known file types

Then you can highlight your file and hit F2 (or right-click > Rename) and change the extension to lowercase.

Option B: This can also be done via the command line Start > Run... > cmd (then cd to your textures folder) and rename the files via:

ren *.DDS *.dds

About Transparency

At this time TDM only supports hard edges for transparency, so you won't get a gradual blending. However, saving the 8-bit alpha channel - and using DXT5 compression - "future-proofs" your material for a day when TDM could support this smooth blending. In the meantime, hard edge clipping occurs by default at 50%; use the the "alphaTest" keyword in your material to easily control this.

When converting from TGA with Alpha to DDS, the alpha doesn't always work correctly. Causes for this vary, but:

  • One easy workaround is to save your texture out as a TIFF and then open that in The Compressonator.
  • If you are saving from Photoshop/GIMP, disable Layers in the save options, but make sure it's set to preserve transparency.
  • When opening it in The Compressonator, right click in the image and view RGBA/Alpha to check that it is correct, before generating mipmaps or compressing.

Batch Processing

Choose File > Batch Compress or hit F4 to open the batch compression dialog. Choose the same compression settings described above, while taking care to separate file groups that use different compression settings.

Dds batch screenshot.jpg

Command Line Parameters

ATI's compressonator provides some command line parameters to compress the textures:

thecompressonator -convert "specular.tga" "specular.dds" DXT1 -mipmaps 
thecompressonator -convert "diffuse.tga" "diffuse.dds" DXT1 -mipmaps 
thecompressonator -convert "diffuse_with_alpha.tga" "diffuse.dds" DXT5 -mipmaps

Converting From DDS to Common Image File Formats

This is trivial but slightly confusing on The Compressonator:

  • File Menu > Save Original
  • At the bottom of the dialog, below the file name input, select save as type. It may show DDS by default; don't be put off.
  • Select file format from BMP, PNG, or TGA (use TGA generally for Dark Mod.)
  • Make sure the filename you want is shown in the input box and click save.

Exploring This Version of ATI's Compressonator Further

There is a fuller tutorial available.

The Compressonator has additional Mip-maps and Compress settings not mentioned above. In particular, the "D3D" and "D3DX" settings use the Microsoft DirectX 3D and DirectX 3D Extension libraries. The version discussed above probably uses version 9 of these. More about version 9 mipmap filtering choices can be found at:

Successors

From ATI

The Compressonator's final version 1.50 from ATI (circa Dec 2008; some sites 2010) supports 64-bit Windows. Downloadable and Release Notes here. According to the Release Notes, versions 1.40 - 1.50 use DirectX 3D 10 and its updated Mip-map filtering, and have better support for command line options.

Note that ATM acquired ATI in 2006, and retired the ATI brand by 2010.

ATM's Compressonator

An up-to-date successor, under Windows 10 and using DirectX 12, "Compressonator 4.0" is an open-source project supportive of ATM's graphic cards:

See also