It is a proposal, and the format is subject to change.
Comments on this document can be sent to the PNG specification maintainers at one of the following addresses:
Distribution of this memo is unlimited.At present, the latest version of this document is available on the World Wide Web from
ftp://swrinde.nde.swri.edu/pub/mng/documents/.
The MNG format provides a mechanism for reusing image data without having to retransmit it. Multiple images can be composed into a "frame" and a group of images can be used as an animated "sprite" that moves from one location to another in subsequent frames. "Palette animations" are also possible.
A MNG frame normally contains a two-dimensional image or a two-dimensional layout of smaller images. It could also contain three-dimensional "voxel" data arranged as a series of two-dimensional planes (or tomographic slices), each plane being represented by a PNG or Delta-PNG datastream.
A Delta-PNG datastream defines an image in terms of a parent PNG or Delta-PNG image and the differences from that image. This has been demonstrated to provide a much more compact way of representing subsequent images than using a complete PNG datastream for each.
The MNG and JNG formats use the same chunk structure that is defined in the PNG specification, and they share other features of the PNG format. Any valid PNG or JNG datastream is also a valid MNG datastream.
This document includes examples that demonstrate various capabilities of MNG including simple movies, composite frames, loops, fades, tiling, scrolling, storage of voxel data, and converting GIF animations to MNG format.
Note: This specification depends on the PNG (Portable Network Graphics) [PNG] and the JPEG (Joint Photographic Experts Group) specifications. The PNG specification is available at the PNG home page,
http://www.cdrom.com/pub/png/A MNG datastream describes a sequence of single frames, each of which can be composed of zero or more embedded images or directives to show previously defined images.
A typical MNG datastream consists of:
Images can be "concrete" or "abstract". The distinction allows decoders to use more efficient ways of manipulating images when it is not necessary to retain the image data in its original form or equivalent in order to show it properly on the target display system.
MNG is pronounced "Ming."
When a MNG datastream is stored in a file, it is recommended that ".mng" be used as the file suffix. In network applications, the Media Type "video/x-mng" can be used. Registration of the media type "video/mng" might be pursued at some future date.
The first eight bytes of a MNG datastream are
138 77 78 71 13 10 26 10(decimal) which is similar to the PNG signature with "\212 M N G" instead of "\211 P N G" in bytes 0-3.
MNG does not yet accommodate sound or complex sequencing information,
but these capabilities might be added
at a later date, in a backwards-compatible manner. These issues are being
discussed in the mpng-list@dworkin.wustl.edu
mailing list.
Chunk structure (length, name, data, CRC) and the chunk-naming system are identical to those defined in the PNG specification. As in PNG, all integers that require more than one byte must be in network byte order.
The chunk copying rules for MNG employ the same mechanism as PNG, but with rules that are explained more fully in Chapter 7, below. A MNG editor is not permitted to move unknown chunks across the SAVE and SEEK chunks, across any chunks that can cause images to be displayed, or into or out of a IHDR-IEND or similar sequence.
Note that decoders are not required to follow any decoding models described in this specification nor to follow the instructions in this specification, as long as they produce results identical to those that could be produced by a decoder that did use this model and did follow the instructions.
Each chunk of the MNG datastream or of any embedded object is an independent entity, i.e., no chunk is ever enclosed in the data segment of another chunk.
An independent PNG or JNG datastream, with a PNG or JNG signature, is also a valid MNG datastream that must be recognized and decoded by MNG-compliant decoders. This kind of MNG datastream will contain only a single embedded image.
Because the embedded objects making up a MNG are normally in PNG format, MNG shares the good features of PNG:
The words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in RFC-2119, and the word "CAN" is equivalent to the word "MAY" as described therein. "NOT ALLOWED" and "NOT PERMITTED" describe conditions that "MUST NOT" occur. "ALLOWED" and "PERMITTED" describe conditions that "CAN" occur.
An image whose pixels have a hidden representation, and which does not necessarily carry PNG or JNG chunk data. An image delta cannot be applied to an abstract image. All abstract objects are viewable.
An image produced by applying an image delta to a parent object.
File gamma and chromaticity values, or an sRGB rendering intent, iCCP profile, or whatever is involved in mapping between RGB values and colors.
An image or object whose pixels have a publicly known representation, and which uses a publicly known color encoding. A concrete PNG or JNG image also carries data from other known PNG or JNG chunks that are present.
A concrete object or image that appears in-line in a MNG datastream.
A layout of a background and zero or more images that is to be displayed as a still frame or as part of an animation. An animation would ideally appear to a perfect observer (with an inhumanly fast visual system) as a sequence of still frames.
The portion of the display surface whose pixels are inside the frame clipping boundaries as defined by the CLIP chunk (see the CLIP chunk specification Paragraph 4.3.4, below).
The amount of time a frame should be visible when an animation is played. In reality, it takes a non-zero amount of time to display a frame. No matter which moment is picked as the "start" of the frame, the frame duration measures the time to the "start" of the next frame.
The upper left corner of the output device (frame buffer, screen, window, page, etc.) where the pixels are to be displayed. This is the {0,0} position for the purpose of defining frame clipping boundaries, image locations, and image clipping boundaries. Note that in a windowing system, the frame origin might be moved offscreen, but MOVE and CLIP values would still be measured from this offscreen origin.
An object whose object attributes set and whose object buffer are not allowed to be discarded, replaced, or modified.
An object that can be applied to a concrete image or object to produce another concrete image. For any two concrete images, there exists an image delta that will produce one from the other.
Shorthand for "the object with the object attribute set pointed to by `object_id=N'".
An image or a nonviewable basis object. The object_id is an unsigned sixteen-bit number that serves as the identifier of a set of object attributes.
Properties of an object such as its existence, potential visibility, location, clipping boundaries, and a pointer to an object buffer. See Object attributes below.
A 2D array of pixels or pixel deltas, each of which has color and transparency information. More than one object can point to a given object buffer. See Object buffers below.
An object to which a delta is applied.
The first segment, when there is more than one segment.
Any segment other than the first (also the first segment, when there is only one).
A part of a MNG datastream starting with the MHDR chunk or with a SEEK chunk and extending to just before the next SEEK chunk (or the MEND chunk if there is no next SEEK chunk). The MHDR, MEND, SAVE, SEEK, and TERM chunks are not considered to be a part of any segment.
An entity with a number that can arrive asynchronously at the decoder. More detailed semantics, like whether multiple signals of the same number (or even different numbers) can be queued, are beyond the scope of this specification.
A stored object that is capable of being made visible. An image is viewable, while some objects resulting from decoding a BASI datastream are not viewable.
Actually drawn on a display. If an object is visible, a person looking at the display can see it.
An "image" is a viewable object.
Every object (except for object 0) has an object buffer. Multiple objects can point to the same object buffer. The representation of a pointer is decided by the application; pointers never appear explicitly in a MNG datastream. Decoders can also create an object buffer for object 0, if that is more convenient, but the information in that buffer cannot be depended upon to exist after the image has been displayed, nor can that buffer become "frozen".
All objects are initially "not frozen". Any objects in existence (except for object 0) when the SAVE chunk is encountered become "frozen", along with the object buffers that they point to.
The "potential visibility" of an object is determined by the do_not_show byte of the DEFI or CLON chunk that introduced it. The "potential visibility" of viewable objects can be changed by the SHOW chunk. When an embedded object is "potentially visible," it can be displayed "on-the-fly" as it is being decoded. Later, the SHOW chunk can direct that a "potentially visible" object be displayed.
The X and Y location of an object is determined by the DEFI chunk that introduced it, and can be changed by the MOVE chunk.
The clipping boundaries of an object are determined by the DEFI chunk that introduced it, and can be changed by means of the CLIP chunk.
Object buffers contain a 2D array of pixel data and can contain additional information. In addition, decoders are responsible for keeping track of some properties of the data in the object buffer:
Any object that points to a viewable object buffer can be made potentially visible, but one that points to a nonviewable one cannot. Any attempt to do so must be ignored.
The data format can be:
A concrete object must be stored by the decoder in a form that retains the complete object description, sufficient to regenerate the original object description or its equivalent without loss. Its pixels have a publicly known representation, and it uses a publicly known color encoding.
An abstract image can be stored by the decoder in any form that is convenient, such as an X Window System "pixmap", even though that form might not have sufficient resolution for exact, lossless conversion. In the case of a PNG image, the pixels could be stored after the gamma and chromaticity corrections have been made, and the sample depth could be the same as the display hardware, even though it is smaller than the original sample depth. Similarly, a JNG image could be stored in the same form, after the pixels have been decoded, converted to RGB form, and gamma-corrected. It is always safe, however, to store an abstract image as though it were concrete, if decoders do not wish to take advantage of the distinction between abstract and concrete objects.
All object buffers are initially "not frozen". Any object buffers in existence when the SAVE chunk is encountered become "frozen". Decoders do not actually have to store this flag except as a sanity check, because they can depend on the fact that a "frozen" object buffer will always have at least one "frozen" object whose "buffer pointer" points to it.
When an object buffer is first created, its reference count is set to 1.
When a partial clone is made of an object via the CLON chunk, the reference count for the object buffer is incremented, and no new object buffer is created.
When an object is discarded, the reference count of the object buffer that it points to is decremented, and the object buffer is also discarded if the resulting reference count is zero.
-[This field contained only the first three fields (12 bytes) prior to draft 51]
The MHDR chunk contains exactly 21 bytes:
Frame width: 4 bytes (unsigned integer). Frame height: 4 bytes (unsigned integer). Ticks per second: 4 bytes (unsigned integer). Nominal frame count: 4 bytes (unsigned integer). Nominal play time: 4 bytes (unsigned integer). Simplicity profile: 1 byte: 0: Presence or absence of any features is unspecified. 1-127: Invalid. 128: JNG, transparency, and complex MNG features are not present. 129: Complex MNG features are present. Transparency and JNG are not present. 130: Transparency is present. JNG and complex MNG features are not presnt. 131: JNG is not present. Transparency and complex MNG features are present. 132: JNG is present. Transparency and complex MNG features are not present. 133: JNG and complex MNG features are present. Transparency is not present. 134: JNG and transparency are present. Complex MNG features are not present. 135: JNG, transparency, and complex MNG features are present. 136-191: reserved for expansion. 192-255: available for private expansion.The frame_width and frame_height fields give the intended display size (measured in pixels) and provide default clipping boundaries (see Paragraph 4.3.4, below). It is strongly recommended that these be set to zero if the MNG datastream contains no visible images.
The ticks_per_second field gives the unit used by the FRAM chunk to specify frame duration and sync timeout. It must be nonzero if the datastream contains an animation. When the datastream contains exactly one frame, or if the frames are intended to be displayed one at a time under user control, such as a slide show or a multi-page FAX, this field should be set to zero. When this field is zero, the length of a tick is infinite, and decoders will ignore any attempt to define interframe delay, timeout, or any other variable that depends on the length of a tick. Unless the user intervenes, viewers will only display the first frame in the datastream.
When ticks_per_second is nonzero, and there is no other information available about frame duration, viewers should display animations at the rate of one frame per tick.
If the frame-count field contains a zero, the frame count is unspecified. If it is nonzero, it contains the number of frames that would be displayed, ignoring the fPRI and TERM chunks, and merging any frames that have a zero interframe delay between them. If the frame count is greater than (2^31)-1), encoders should write (2^31)-1, representing an infinite frame count.
If the nominal-play-time field contains a zero, the nominal play time is unspecified. Otherwise, it gives the play time, in ticks, when the file is displayed ignoring the fPRI and TERM chunks. Authors who write this field should choose a value of "ticks_per_second" that will allow the nominal play time to be expressed in a 4-bit integer. If the frame count is greater than (2^31)-1) ticks, encoders should write (2^31)-1, representing an infinite nominal play time.
When the simplicity profile is zero, the simplicity (or complexity) of the MNG datastream is unspecified.
If the simplicity profile is nonzero, it can be regarded as an eight-bit profile, with the one's bit being a "simple MNG" flag, the two's bit being a "transparency" flag, the four's bit being a "JNG" flag, and the 128's bit being a profile-validity flag. The 64's bit is available for private test or experimental versions, and the remaining bits are reserved for future MNG versions, and must be zero in this version. If a bit is zero, the corresponding feature is guaranteed to be absent, and if a bit is one, the corresponding feature may be present in the MNG datastream.
A "simple MNG" (simplicity profile = 128, 130, 132, or 134) does not contain the LOOP/ENDL, DEFI, BASI/IEND, CLON, DHDR/IEND, PAST, DISC, FRAM, MOVE, CLIP, and SHOW chunks. If the BACK chunk is present, it does not define a background image. A MNG with a "complex MNG feature" (simplicity profile = 129, 131, 133, or 135) contains at least one of them.
"Transparency is not present" means that the MNG or PNG tRNS chunk is not present and no PNG or JNG image has an alpha channel.
Encoders that write a nonzero simplicity profile should endeavor to be accurate, so that decoders that process it will not unnecessarily reject datastreams. For example, the simplicity profile 135 indicates that transparency, JNG, and at least one "complex" MNG feature are all present. If the simplicity profile promises that a certain features are absent, but they are actually present in the MNG datastream, the datastream is invalid.
Nest level: 1 byte (unsigned integer). Repeat count: 4 bytes (unsigned integer), range [0..2^31-1]. Termination condition: 1 byte (unsigned integer). Omit if termination_condition=<deterministic>. 1: Decoder discretion. 2: User discretion. 3: External signal. Iteration min: 4 bytes(unsigned integer). Omit if termination_condition is also omitted. Iteration max: 4 bytes (unsigned integer). Omit if termination_condition is also omitted. Signal number: 4 bytes (unsigned integer). Omit if termination_condition != 3. Additional signal number: 4 bytes. Omit if termination_condition != 3. ...etc...
Decoders must treat the chunks enclosed in a loop exactly as if they had been repeatedly spelled out. Therefore, during the first iteration of the loop, the parent objects for any Delta-PNG datastreams in the loop are the images in existence prior to entering the LOOP chunk, but in subsequent iterations these parent objects might have been modified. The termination_condition field can be used to inform decoders that it is safe to change the number of loop iterations.
Simple decoders can ignore all fields except for the repeat_count.
When the LOOP chunk is present, an ENDL chunk with the same nest_level must be present later in the MNG datastream. Loops can be nested. Each inner loop must have a higher value of nest_level than the loop that encloses it, though not necessarily exactly one greater.
The termination condition specifies how the actual number of iterations is determined. It is very similar to the termination condition field of the FRAM chunk, and can take the same values:
This is the default behavior, when the termination condition field is omitted. The loop terminates after exactly the number of iterations specified by the iteration count. This value must be used if altering the number of repetitions would mess up the MNG datastream, but can be used merely to preserve the author's intent.
The number of iterations can be chosen by the decoder, and must not be less than iteration_min nor more than iteration_max. If the decoder has no reason to choose its own value, it should use the iteration count. One example of a decoder wishing to choose its own value is a real-time streaming decoder hovering at a loop while waiting for its input buffer to fill to a comfortable level.
The number of iterations should be chosen by the user (e.g. by pressing the <escape> key), but the decoder must enforce the iteration_min and iteration_max limits. Some decoders might not be able to interact with the user, and many decoders will find that nested user-discretion loops present too great of a user-interface challenge, so the <user-discretion> condition will probably usually degenerate into the <decoder-discretion> condition.
The number of iterations must not be less than iteration_min nor more than iteration_max. The exact number can be determined by the arrival of a signal whose number matches one of the signal_number fields.
If repeat_count is zero, the loop is done zero times. Upon encountering a LOOP chunk with repeat_count=0, decoders simply skip chunks until the matching ENDL chunk is found, and resume processing with the chunk immediately following it.
The signal_number can be omitted only if the termination condition is not <external-signal>. There can be any number of signal_number fields. Signal_number = 0 is reserved to represent any input from a keyboard or pointing device, and 1-255 are reserved to represent the corresponding ASCII character, received from a keyboard or simulated keyboard, and values 256-1023 are reserved for future definition by this specification.
The ENDL chunk ends a loop that begins with the LOOP chunk. It contains a single one-byte field:
Nest_level: 1 byte (unsigned integer), range [0..255].When the ENDL chunk is encountered, the loop repeat_count is decremented, if it is not already zero. If the result is nonzero, processing resumes at the beginning of the loop. Otherwise processing resumes with the chunk immediately following the ENDL chunk.
When the ENDL chunk is present, a LOOP chunk with the same nest_level must be present earlier in the MNG datastream. See below.
The SAVE and SEEK chunks are not permitted inside a LOOP-ENDL pair. To rerun an entire datastream that includes these chunks, use the TERM chunk instead. See Paragraph 4.3.6, below.
Object id: 2 bytes (unsigned integer) identifier to be given to the objects that follow the DEFI chunk. Do_not_show flag: 1 byte (unsigned integer) 0: Make the objects potentially visible. 1: Do not make the objects potentially visible. This field can be omitted if the concrete_flag, location, and clipping boundary fields are also omitted. When it is omitted, the image is potentially visible (do_not_show=0). Concrete flag: 1 byte (unsigned integer) 0: Make the objects "abstract" (image can not be the source for a Delta-PNG) 1: Make the objects "concrete" (object can be the source for a Delta-PNG). This field can be omitted if the location and clipping boundary fields are also omitted. When it is omitted, the object is made "abstract" (concrete_flag=0). X_location: 4 bytes (signed integer). The X_location and Y_location fields can be omitted if the clipping boundaries are also omitted. If so, decoders must assume default values {X_location=0, Y_location=0}. Y_location: 4 bytes (signed integer). Left_cb: 4 bytes (signed integer). Left clipping boundary. The left_cb, right_cb, top_cb, and bottom_cb fields can be omitted as a group. If so, decoders must assume default values {0, frame_width, 0, frame_height}. Right_cb: 4 bytes (signed integer). Top_cb: 4 bytes (signed integer). Bottom_cb: 4 bytes (signed integer).If the object number for an object is nonzero, subsequent chunks can use this number to identify it.
When the object number for an object is zero, its object buffer can be discarded immediately after it has been processed, and it can be treated as an "abstract" image, regardless of the contents of the concrete_flag field.
Negative values are permitted for the X and Y location and clipping boundaries. The positive directions are downward and rightward from the frame origin.
Multiple IHDR-IEND, JHDR-IEND, and BASI-IEND objects can follow a single DEFI chunk. When object_id is nonzero, the DEFI chunk values remain in effect until another DEFI chunk or a SEEK chunk appears, unless they are modified by SHOW, MOVE, or CLIP chunks. When object_id=0, the DEFI chunk values are discarded after the object's IEND chunk is processed. The object_id and concrete_flag can only be changed by using another DEFI chunk. If no DEFI chunk is in effect (either because there is none in the datastream, or because a SEEK chunk has caused it to be discarded), the decoder must use the following default values:
Object_id = 0 Do_not_show = 0 Concrete_flag = 0 X_location = 0 Y_location = 0 Left_cb = 0 Right_cb = frame_width Top_cb = 0 Bottom_cb = frame_height
If object_id is an identifier that already exists when a DEFI chunk appears, the object attribute set (except for the pointer to the object buffer) is immediately replaced, but the contents of the object buffer do not change until an IHDR, JHDR, or BASI chunk is encountered; then the contents of the object buffer previously associated with the identifier are replaced with the new embedded object data. Note that if the object has partial clones, the clones will also be affected.
See the PNG specification [PNG] and the PNG Special Purpose Chunks document [PNG-EXT] for the format of the PNG chunks.
Any chunks between IHDR and IEND are written and decoded according to the PNG specification.
If a global PLTE chunk appears in the top-level MNG datastream, the PNG datastream can have an empty PLTE chunk, to direct that the global PLTE data be used. If an empty PLTE chunk is not present, the data is not inherited. MNG applications that recreate PNG files must write the global PLTE chunk rather than the empty one in the output PNG file. It is an error for the PNG datastream to contain an empty PLTE chunk when the global PLTE chunk is not present or has been nullified.
If the PNG sRGB, gAMA, iCCP, or cHRM chunks appear in the top-level MNG datastream (and have not been nullified), but none of them appear in the PNG datastream, then the values are inherited from the top level as though the chunks had actually appeared in the PNG datastream. Data from such chunks appearing in the PNG datastream take preference over the inherited values. If any one of these chunks, or any future chunk that defines the color space, appears in the PNG datastream, none of them is inherited. MNG applications that recreate PNG files must write these chunks, if they are inherited, in the output PNG files. If the sRGB chunk is present, it need not be accompanied by gAMA and cHRM chunks, as recommended in the PNG specification. Any viewer that processes the gAMA chunk must also recognize and process the sRGB chunk. It can treat it as if it were a gAMA chunk containing the value .45455 and it can ignore its "intent" field. If the sRGB chunk is present, editors that write PNG files should add the gAMA and cHRM chunks, even though they are not present in the MNG datastream.
If the PNG sPLT chunk appears in the top-level MNG datastream, it takes preference over any sPLT chunk appearing in the PNG datastream. MNG applications that recreate PNG files should not copy top-level sPLT chunks to the output PNG files, because a suggested palette for rendering a group of images is not necessarily the best palette for rendering a single image.
When framing_mode != 1 and framing_mode != 4 from the MNG FRAM chunk, the PNG oFFs and pHYs chunks and any future chunks that attempt to set the pixel dimensions or the drawing location must be ignored by MNG viewers and simply copied (according to the copying rules) by MNG editors. When framing_mode=1 or framing_mode=4 (i.e., when each PNG image is an individual frame), these chunks must be treated as described in the PNG specification.
The PNG gIFg, gIFt, and gIFx chunks must be ignored by viewers and must be copied according to the copying rules by MNG editors.
If do_not_show=0 for the image when the IHDR chunk is encountered, a viewer can choose to display the image while it is being decoded, perhaps taking advantage of the PNG interlacing method, or to display it after decoding is complete.
If object_id=0, there is no need to store the pixel data after displaying it.
If concrete_flag=1 and object_id != 0, the decoder must store the original pixel data losslessly, along with data from other recognized PNG chunks, because it is possible that a subsequent Delta-PNG datastream might want to modify it. If concrete_flag=0, the decoder can store the pixel data in any form that it chooses.
If an object already exists with the same object_id, the contents of its object buffer are replaced with the new data.
See the JNG specification Chapter 5, below for the format of the JNG datastream.
Any chunks between JHDR and IEND are written and decoded according to the JNG specification.
The remaining discussion in the previous paragraph about PNG datastreams also applies to JNG datastreams.
The first 13 bytes of the BASI chunk are identical to those of the IHDR chunk. An optional 8 additional bytes provide sixteen-bit {red, green, blue, alpha} values that are used to fill the entire basis object when the IDAT chunk is not present, and a 1-byte "viewable" flag can be present.
Width: 4 bytes (unsigned integer). Height: 4 bytes (unsigned integer). Sample_depth: 1 byte (unsigned integer). Color_type: 1 byte (unsigned integer). Compression_method: 1 byte (unsigned integer). Filter_type: 1 byte (unsigned integer). Interlace_type: 1 byte (unsigned integer). Red_sample or gray_sample: 2 bytes (unsigned integer). Green_sample: 2 bytes (unsigned integer). Blue_sample: 2 bytes (unsigned integer) Alpha_sample: 2 bytes (unsigned integer). Viewable: 1 (unsigned integer). 0: Basis object is not viewable. 1: Basis object is viewable.The alpha_sample can be omitted if the viewable field is also omitted. If so, and the color_type is one that requires alpha, the alpha value corresponding to an opaque pixel will be used. If the color samples are omitted, zeroes will be used. The decoder is responsible for converting the color and alpha samples to the appropriate format and sample depth for the specified color_type. When color_type=3, the decoder must generate a palette of length 2^sample_depth, whose first entry contains the given {red_sample, green_sample, blue_sample} triple, and whose remaining entries are filled with zeroes. If the viewable field is omitted, the object is not viewable.
The color and alpha samples are written as four sixteen-bit samples regardless of the color_type and sample_depth. When the sample_depth is less than sixteen, the least significant bits are used and the remaining bits must be zero filled. When color_type=3, the least significant byte of each color sample is used and the upper byte must be zero. When color_type=0 or color_type=4, the green and blue samples must be present but must be ignored by decoders.
The BASI datastream contains PNG chunks, but is not necessarily a PNG datastream. It can be incomplete or empty and it can deviate in certain ways from the PNG specification. It can serve as a parent object for a Delta-PNG datastream, which must supply the missing data or correct the other deviations before the image is displayed. The end of the datastream is denoted by an IEND chunk.
The permitted deviations from the PNG format are:
A BASI chunk appearing in a MNG datastream must be preceded by a DEFI chunk that gives the object_id, location, and potential visibility for the basis object. The concrete_flag can be either 0 (abstract) or 1 (concrete), depending on whether the basis image is intended for subsequent use by a Delta-PNG datastream or not. When it is abstract it must also be viewable. When do_not_show=0 or viewable=1, the resulting image, after the pixel samples are filled in, must be a legal PNG image. If do_not_show=0, a viewer is expected to display it immediately, as if it were decoding a PNG datastream.
If an object already exists with the same object_id, the contents of its object buffer are replaced with the new data.
Top-level gAMA, sRGB, cHRM, iCCP, and sPLT chunks are inherited by a BASI datastream in the same manner as by a PNG datastream.
No provision is made in this specification for storing a BASI datastream as a standalone file. A BASI datastream will normally be found as a component of a MNG datastream. Applications that need to store a BASI datastream separately should use a different file signature and filename extension, or they can wrap it in a MNG datastream consisting of the MNG signature, the MHDR chunk, the BASI datastream, and the MEND chunk.
Source_id: 2 bytes (nonzero unsigned integer). Identifier of the parent object to be cloned. Clone_id: 2 bytes (nonzero unsigned integer). Identifier of the child object that is created. Clone_type: 1 byte (unsigned integer). 0: Full clone of the object attributes set and the object buffer. 1: Partial clone; only object attributes set (the location, clipping boundaries, and potential visibility) are copied and a link is made to the object buffer. 2: Renumber object (this is equivalent to "CLON source_id clone_id 1 DISC source_id"). This field can be omitted if the do_not_show field is also omitted. If it is omitted, the clone_type defaults to zero (full clone). Do_not_show: 1 byte (unsigned integer). 0: Make the clone potentially visible. 1: Do not make the clone potentially visible. This field can be omitted if the concrete flag and location fields are also omitted. When it is omitted, the object retains the potential visibility of the parent object. Concrete flag: 1 byte (unsigned integer). 0: Concrete_flag is the same as that of the parent object. 1: Make the clone "abstract" (concrete_flag=0). This field can be omitted if the location fields are also omitted. When it is omitted, the object retains the concrete flag of the parent object. Loca delta_type: 1 byte (unsigned integer) 0: Location data gives X_location and Y_location directly. 1: New positions are determined by adding the location data to the position of the parent object. This field, together with the X_location and Y_location fields, can be omitted. When they are omitted, the clone has the same location as the parent object. X_location or delta X_location:4 bytes (signed integer). Y_location or delta Y_location:4 bytes (signed integer).The source_id must be an existing object identifier, and the clone_id must not be an existing object identifier.
Negative values are permitted for the X and Y position. The positive directions are downward and rightward from the frame origin.
The clone is initially identical to the parent object except for the location and potential visibility. It has the same clipping boundaries as the parent object. Subsequent DHDR, SHOW, CLON, CLIP, MOVE, PAST, and DISC chunks can use the clone_id to identify it. If the parent object is not a viewable image, neither is the clone.
Subsequent chunks can modify, show, or discard a full clone or modify its potential visibility, location and clipping boundaries without affecting the parent object, or they can modify, show, or discard the parent object or modify its object attribute set without affecting the clone.
The concrete_flag byte must be zero when the clone_type byte is nonzero.
If an object has partial clones, and the data in the object buffer of a parent object or any of its partial clones is modified, the parent object and all of its partial clones are changed. Decoders must take care that when the parent object or any partial clone is discarded, the object buffer is not discarded until the last remaining one of them is discarded. Only the location, potential visibility, and clipping boundaries can be changed independently for each partial clone.
See Chapter 6, The Delta-PNG Format, below, for the format of the Delta-PNG datastream. Any chunks between DHDR and IEND are written and decoded according to the Delta-PNG format. The object_id of the Delta-PNG DHDR chunk must point to an existing parent object. The resulting image is immediately displayed if its do_not_show=0. The parent object must be concrete (i.e., it must have concrete_flag=1).
The PAST chunk contains a 2-byte destination_id and 9 bytes giving a "target location", plus one or more 30-byte source data sequences.
Destination_id: 2 bytes (unsigned integer). Target delta_type: 1 byte (unsigned integer). 0: Target_x and target_y are given directly. 1: Target_x and target_y are deltas from their previous values in a PAST chunk with the same destination_id. 2: Target_x and target_y are deltas from their previous values in the immediately preceding PAST chunk regardless of its destination_id. Target_x: 4 bytes (signed integer), measured rightward from the left edge of the destination image. Target_y: 4 bytes (signed integer), measured downward from the top edge of the destination image. Source_id: 2 bytes (unsigned nonzero integer). An image to be pasted in. Composition mode: 1 byte (unsigned integer). 0: Composite_over. 1: Replace . 2: Composite_under. Orientation: 1 byte (unsigned integer). The source image is flipped to another orientation. 0: Same as source image. 2: Flipped left-right, then up-down. 4: Flipped left-right. 6: Flipped up-down. 8: Tiled with source image, to fill the clipping boundaries. The upper left corner of the assembly is positioned according to the prescribed offsets. Offset delta_type: 1 byte (unsigned integer). 0: Offsets are measured from the {0,0} pixel in the destination image. 1: Offsets are measured from the {target_x,target_y} pixel in the destination image. Xoffset or delta xoffset: 4 bytes (signed integer). Yoffset or delta yoffset: 4 bytes (signed integer). Boundary delta_type: 1 byte (unsigned integer). 0: Boundaries are measured from the {0,0} pixel in the destination image. 1: Boundaries are measured from the {target_x,target_y} pixel in the destination image. Left_pb or delta left_pb: 4 bytes (signed integer). Right_pb or delta right_pb: 4 bytes (signed integer). Top_pb or delta top_pb: 4 bytes (signed integer). Bottom_pb or delta bottom_pb: 4 bytes (signed integer). ...etc...The destination image must have the "abstract" property (concrete_flag=0). When destination_id=0, the resulting image is "write-only" and therefore only "composite-over" (composition_mode=0) operations are permitted.
The source images can be "abstract" or "concrete" and have any color_type and sample_depth. They must have the "viewable" property. The number of source images is ((chunk_length-11)/30).
The x_offset and y_offset distances and the clipping boundaries are measured, in pixels, positive rightward and downward from either the {0,0} pixel of the destination image or the {target_x, target_y} position in the destination image. They do not necessarily have to fall within the destination image. Only those pixels of the source image that fall within the destination image and also within the specified clipping boundaries will be copied into the destination image. Note that the coordinate system for offsets and clipping is with respect to the upper lefthand corner of the destination image, which is not necessarily the same coordinate system used by the MOVE and CLIP chunks. If the source image has been flipped or rotated, X_offset and Y_offset give the location of its new upper left hand corner. When it is tiled, the offsets give the location of the upper left hand corner of the assembly of tiles.
When composition_mode=0, any non-opaque pixels in the source image are combined with those of the destination image. If the destination pixel is also non-opaque, the resulting pixel will be non-opaque.
When composition_mode=1, all pixels simply replace those in the destination image. This mode can be used to make a transparent hole in an opaque image.
When composition_mode=2, any non-opaque pixels in the destination image are combined with those of the source image. If the source pixel is also non-opaque, the resulting pixel will be non-opaque.
The order of composition is the same as the order that the source_id's appear in the list (but a decoder can do the composition in any order it pleases, or all at once, provided that the resulting destination image is the same as if it had actually performed each composition in the specified order). Decoders must be careful when the destination image equals the source image--the pixels to be drawn are the ones that existed before the drawing operation began.
The MOVE or CLIP information associated with the destination_id and the source_id's is not used in the PAST operation (but if a decoder is simultaneously updating and displaying the destination_id, the MOVE and CLIP for the destination_id is used in the display operation).
The chunk contains a sequence of zero or more two-byte object identifiers. The number of objects to be discarded is the chunk's data length, divided by two.
Discard_id: 2 bytes (nonzero unsigned integer). ...etc...If the DISC chunk is empty, all objects except those preceding the SAVE chunk (i.e., the "frozen" objects) can be discarded. If a SAVE chunk has not been encountered, all objects can be discarded. Note that each appearance of a SEEK chunk in the datastream implies an empty DISC chunk.
If the DISC chunk is not empty, the listed objects can be discarded.
When an object is discarded, any location, potential visibility, and clipping boundary data associated with it is also discarded.
It is not an error to include an object_id in the discard_id list, when no such object has been stored, or when the object has already been discarded.
It is an error to name explicitly any "frozen" object in the DISC list.
When the object is a partial clone or is the source of a partial clone that has not been discarded, only the object attribute set (location, potential visibility, and clipping boundaries) can be discarded. The data in the object buffer must be retained until the last remaining partial clone is discarded.
Red_background: 2 bytes (unsigned integer). Green_background: 2 bytes (unsigned integer). Blue_background: 2 bytes (unsigned integer). Mandatory background: 1 byte (unsigned integer). 0: Background color and background image are advisory. Applications can use them if they choose to. 1: Background color is mandatory. Applications must use it. Background image is advisory. 2: Background image is mandatory. Applications must use it. Background color is advisory. 3: Background color and background image are both mandatory. Applications must use them. This byte can be omitted if the background_image_id is also omitted. If so, the background color is advisory. Background image_id: 2 bytes (unsigned nonzero integer). Object_id of an image that is to be displayed as the background of each frame. If it is not full-frame, the remainder of the frame is filled with the background color. This field can be omitted; if so, no background image is defined, and the background image from a previous BACK chunk becomes undefined. Background tiling: 1 byte (unsigned integer). 0: Do not tile the background. 1: Tile the background with the background image. This field can be omitted; if so, do not tile the background.Viewers are expected to composite every frame in the MNG datastream against a fresh copy of the background. The images and the background are both clipped to the frame boundaries given in the FRAM chunk. The background image (or tiled assembly) is also clipped to its own boundaries and located like any other image. When the background image is used for tiling, the upper left tile is located according to the background image's location attributes and the entire assembly is clipped according to its clipping attributes. Viewers might actually follow some other procedure, but the final appearance of each frame must be the same as if they had filled the area within the frame boundaries with the background color, then displayed the background image, and then displayed the foreground image (or images), without delay.
It is not an error to specify a background_image_id when such an image does not exist or ceases to exist for some reason. Viewers must be prepared to fall back to using the background color in this event. They also must be prepared for the contents, location, and clipping boundaries of the background image to change, just like any other object, if it has not been "frozen".
The three BACK components are always interpreted in the current color space as defined by any top-level gAMA, cHRM, iCCP, sRGB chunks that have appeared prior to the BACK chunk in the MNG datastream. If no such chunks appear, the color space is unknown.
The colorspace of the background image, if one is used, is determined in the same manner as the colorspace of any other image.
When the BACK chunk appears between FRAM chunks, it applies to the upcoming frame, not to the current one. When framing_mode=1, it takes effect immediately prior to the next IHDR, JHDR, DHDR, PAST, or SHOW chunk in the datastream.
Multiple instances of the BACK chunk are permitted in a MNG datastream.
The BACK chunk can be omitted. If a background is required and the BACK chunk is omitted, then the viewer must supply its own background.
In practice, most applications that use MNG as part of a larger composition should ignore the BACK data if mandatory_background=0 and the application already has its own background definition. This will frequently be the case in World Wide Web pages, to achieve nonrectangular transparent animations displayed against the page's background.
An empty FRAM chunk is just a frame delimiter. A nonempty one is a frame delimiter, and it also changes FRAM parameters, either for the upcoming frame or until reset. When the FRAM chunk is not empty, it contains a framing_mode byte, an optional name string, a zero-byte separator, plus four 1-byte fields plus a variable number of optional fields.
Framing mode: 1 byte. 0: Don't change framing mode. 1: Each image is an individual frame; the frame area background is restored before displaying each image and an interframe delay occurs after each image. This is the default framing_mode. 2: The group of images appearing prior to the next FRAM chunk form a composite frame. Images are caused to appear with explicit or implied SHOW chunks. The level, or stacking order, of each image is given by its order of appearance in the datastream. The frame area background is restored prior to displaying the first image, and no interframe delay occurs between the images. 3: The group of "n" images appearing prior to the next FRAM chunk define "n" frames as they accumulate, and an interframe delay occurs after each image is defined or appears in a SHOW chunk. The frame area background is only restored prior to displaying the first image. Images appear one by one and remain visible after being explicitly caused to appear. The level, or stacking order, of each image is given by its order of appearance in the datastream. 4: This is the same as framing_mode=1, except that the frame area background is not restored prior to displaying each image. Use this mode to avoid unnecessary clearing of the display when the first image covers the entire frame area, and subsequent frames can be displayed properly by simply overlaying them on the prior frame. 5: This is the same as framing_mode=2, except that the frame area background is not restored prior to displaying the frame. Frame name: 0 or more bytes (Latin-1 Text). Can be omitted; if so, the frame is nameless. Separator: 1 byte: (null). Must be omitted if all remaining fields are also omitted. Change interframe delay: 1 byte. 0: No. 1: Yes, for the next frame only. 2: Yes, also reset default. This field and the next three must be omitted as a group if no frame parameters other than the framing mode are changed. Change sync timeout and termination: 1 byte 0: No. 1: Deterministic, for the next frame only. 2: Deterministic, also reset default. 3: Decoder-discretion, for the next frame only. 4: Decoder-discretion, also reset default. 5: User-discretion, for the next frame only. 6: User-discretion, also reset default. 7: External-signal, for the next frame only. 8: External-signal, also reset default. Change frame clipping boundaries: 1 byte. 0: No. 1: Yes, for the next frame only. 2: Yes, also reset default. Change sync id list: 1 byte. 0: No. 1: Yes, for this frame only. 2: Yes, also reset default list. Interframe delay: 4 bytes (unsigned integer). Must be omitted if change_interframe_delay=0. The range is [0..2^31-1] ticks. Sync timeout: 4 bytes (unsigned integer). Omit if change_sync_timeout=0. The range is [0..2^31-1]. The value 2^31-1 (0x7fffffff) ticks represents an infinite timeout period. Frame boundary delta type: 1 byte (unsigned integer). 0: Frame clipping boundary values are given directly. 1: Frame clipping boundaries are determined by adding the FRAM data to their previous values. This and the following four fields must be omitted if change_frame_clipping_boundaries=0. Left_fb or delta left_fb: 4 bytes (signed integer). Right_fb or delta right_fb: 4 bytes (signed integer). Top_fb or delta top_fb: 4 bytes (signed integer). Bottom_fb or delta bottom_fb: 4 bytes (signed integer). Sync id: 4 bytes (unsigned integer). Omit if change_sync_id_list=0 or if the new list is empty; repeat until all sync_id's have been listed. The range is [0..2^31-1].When the FRAM parameters are changed, the new parameters affect the frame that is about to be defined, not the one that is being terminated by the FRAM chunk.
Framing modes:
When framing_mode=1, each image that appears is a separate frame. FRAM chunks need not appear to separate them.
The following events trigger the display of a frame:
For example (assuming that objects 1 through 5 are all viewable objects), the sequence
FRAM 1 SHOW 1 5will result in the display of five frames, each containing one of the images against the background according to its location and CLIP data.
When framing_mode=2, viewers are expected to display all of the images at once, if possible, or as fast as can be managed, clearing the frame and restoring the background before displaying the first image, but without clearing the display and restoring the background between images. Clearing the frame is also triggered by the appearance of the next FRAM chunk, which does cause the portion of the display inside the frame clipping boundaries to be cleared and restored, if nothing has been drawn. A frame boundary also occurs when a SEEK chunk or the MEND chunk appears.
For example, the sequence
FRAM 2 SHOW 1 5 (shows images 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5) FRAMwill result in a single frame containing five images, each displayed according to its location and CLIP data.
When images in a frame overlap, viewers are expected to composite the later images against the partially completed frame that includes all earlier images.
This framing_mode is fundamentally declarative; it describes the elements that go into an individual frame. It is up to the decoder to work out an efficient way of making the screen match the desired composition. Simple decoders can handle it as if it were procedural, compositing the images into the frame in the order that they appear, but efficient decoders might do something different, as long as the final appearance of the frame is the same.
When framing_mode=3, a frame boundary occurs after each image appears, but only clearing the frame area and restoring the background between frames when the next FRAM chunk is encountered. Frames are triggered by the same events that trigger a frame when framing_mode=1. A frame is also triggered by the appearance of the next FRAM chunk, which does cause the portion of the display inside the frame clipping boundaries to be cleared and restored, if nothing else has triggered a frame. A frame boundary also occurs when a SEEK chunk or the MEND chunk appears.
When multiple images are caused to appear with a single SHOW chunk, a frame boundary occurs after each one. For example, the sequence
FRAM 3 SHOW 1 5 (shows images 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5) FRAMwould result in five frames being displayed, the first with only image 1, the second with images 1 and 2, etc., and the fifth frame with all five images visible. The resulting output is exactly equivalent to what would have been accomplished (but perhaps less efficiently) with
FRAM 2 SHOW 1 FRAM SHOW 1 2 (shows images 1 and 2) FRAM SHOW 1 3 (shows images 1, 2, and 3) FRAM SHOW 1 4 (shows images 1, 2, 3, and 4) FRAM SHOW 1 5 (shows images 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5) FRAM
When framing_mode=4, a frame boundary occurs after each image appears, without clearing the frame area and restoring the background between frames. Otherwise, framing_mode=4 is identical to framing_mode=1. Frames are triggered by the same events that trigger a frame when framing_mode=1. A frame is also triggered by the appearance of the next FRAM chunk, but this does not cause any portion of the display to be cleared. Decoders should, however, clear the frame area when the very first FRAM chunk in the datastream is found, or the very first FRAM chunk after a SEEK chunk is found, even when framing_mode=4.
When framing_mode=5, a frame boundary occurs only when the next FRAM chunk appears, without clearing the frame area and restoring the background. Otherwise, framing_mode=5 is identical to framing_mode=2. A frame boundary also occurs when a SEEK chunk or the MEND chunk appears.
This table summarizes the behavior of a viewer under the various framing modes.
+--------------+--------------------+-------------------+ | Framing mode | Restore background | Interframe delay | +--------------+--------------------+-------------------+ | 1 | Before each image* | Before each image | | | | after the first | | | | in the datastream | +--------------+--------------------+-------------------+ | 2 | Before first image | Before each FRAM | | | following each | after the first | | | FRAM chunk | in the datastream | +--------------+--------------------+-------------------+ | 3 | Before first image | Before each image | | | following each | after the first | | | FRAM chunk | in the datastream | +--------------+--------------------+-------------------+ | 4 | Before first image | Before each FRAM | | | after first FRAM | after the first | | | in the datastream | in the datastream | | | (or segment, if | | | | jumped to segment) | | +--------------+--------------------+-------------------+ | 5 | Before first image | Before each image | | | after first FRAM | after the first | | | in the datastream | in the datastream | | | (or segment, if | | | | jumped to segment) | | +--------------+--------------------+-------------------+ | *"Each image" means each image that is displayed in | | response to decoding an embedded object or a SHOW | | directive, even if no pixels are actally drawn due | | to the image being outside the clipping boundaries. | +-------------------------------------------------------+The framing_mode also affects the way decoders handle the pHYs chunk (see Paragraph 4.5.4, below).
The frame name must conform to the same formatting rules as those for a SEEK keyword: It must consist only of printable Latin-1 characters and must not have leading or trailing blanks, but can have single embedded blanks. There must be at least one (unless the frame name is omitted) and no more than 79 characters in the keyword. Keywords are case-sensitive. There is no null byte within the keyword. No specific use for the frame name is specified in this document, except that it can be included in the optional index that can appear in the SAVE chunk. Applications can use this field for such purposes as constructing an external list of frames in the datastream. The frame name only applies to the upcoming frame; subsequent frames are unnamed unless they also have their own frame_name field. It is recommended that the same name not appear in any other FRAM chunk or in any SEEK or eXPI chunk. Frame names should not begin with the strings "clock(", "frame(", or "frames(" (all case-insensitive), which are reserved for use in URI queries and fragments.
The interframe delay value is the desired minimum time to elapse from the beginning of displaying one frame until the beginning of displaying the next frame.
The sync timeout field can be a number or <infinity>. Infinity can be represented by 0x7fffffff.
The termination condition given in the change_sync_timeout_and_termination field specifies how much longer, after the normal interframe delay has elapsed, the frame will endure. It can take the following values:
The frame endures no longer than the normal interframe delay. Even though this is the default, a streaming encoder talking to a real-time decoder might write a FRAM with a termination condition of "deterministic" to force the display to be updated while the encoder decides its next move.
The decoder can lengthen the duration of the frame, but by no more than the timeout. A streaming decoder could take the opportunity to wait for its input buffer to fill to a comfortable level.
The decoder should wait for permission from the user (e.g., via a keypress) before proceeding, but must wait no longer than the timeout. If the decoder cannot interact with the user, this condition degenerates into "decoder-discretion".
The decoder should wait for the arrival of a signal whose number matches a sync_id, but must wait no longer than the timeout.
When the sync_id list is changed, the number of sync_id entries is determined by the remaining length of the chunk data, divided by four. This number can be zero, which either inactivates the existing sync_id list for one frame or deletes it.
The initial values of the FRAM parameters are:
Framing mode = 1 Frame name = <empty string> Interframe delay = 0 Left frame boundary = 0 Right frame boundary = frame width Top frame boundary = 0 Bottom frame boundary = frame height termination = deterministic Sync timeout = 0x7fffffff (infinite) Sync id = <empty list>The MOVE chunk can be used to specify the placement of each image within the frame. The CLIP chunk can be used to specify clipping boundaries for each image. The frame boundaries are only used for clipping. Even when the left and top frame boundaries are nonzero, the image locations are measured with respect to the {0,0} position in the display area. If the images are transparent or do not cover the entire area defined by the frame clipping boundaries, they are composited against the background defined by the BACK chunk, or against an application-defined background, if the BACK chunk is not present or is not recognized by the decoder. The background, as well as the images, is clipped to the frame clipping boundaries. Any pixels outside the frame clipping boundaries remain unchanged.
The frame_duration field gives the duration of display, which is the minimum time that must elapse from the beginning of displaying one frame until the beginning of displaying the next (or between images, when framing_mode=1). It is measured in "ticks" using the tick length determined from ticks_per_second defined in the MHDR chunk.
A viewer does not actually have to follow the procedure of erasing the screen, redisplaying the background, and recompositing the images against it, but what is displayed when the frame is complete must be the same as if it had. It is sufficient to redraw the parts of the display that change from one frame to the next.
The sync_id list provides a point at which the processor must wait for all pending processes to reach the synchronization point having the same sync_id before resuming, perhaps because of a need to synchronize a sound datastream (not defined in this specification) with the display, to synchronize stereo images, and the like. When the period defined by the sum of the frame_duration and the sync_timeout fields elapses, processing can resume even though the processor has not received an indication that other processes have reached the synchronization point.
Note that the synchronization point does not occur immediately, but at the end of the frame that follows the FRAM chunk. If it is necessary to establish a synchronization point immediately, this can be done by using two consecutive FRAM chunks, the first setting a temporary frame_duration=0, sync_timeout, and sync_id, and the second establishing the synchronization point:
FRAM 4 0 1 1 0 1 0000 sync_timeout sync_id FRAM 0 name
The identifier sync_id=0 is reserved to represent synchronization with a user input from a keyboard or pointing device. The sync_id values 1-255 are reserved to represent the corresponding ASCII letter, received from the keyboard (or a simulated keyboard), and values 256-1023 are reserved for future definition by this specification. If multiple channels (not defined in this specification) are not present, viewers can ignore other values appearing in the sync_id list.
The MOVE chunk gives the position, measured downward and to the right of the frame origin, in pixels, where the named object or group of objects is to be located.
The chunk's contents are:
First object: 2 bytes (nonzero unsigned integer). Last object: 2 bytes (nonzero unsigned integer). Location delta type: 1 byte (unsigned integer). 0: MOVE data gives X_location and Y_location directly. 1: New locations are determined by adding the MOVE data to the location of the parent object. X_location or delta X_location: 4 bytes (signed integer). Y_location or delta Y_location: 4 bytes (signed integer).The new location applies to a single object, if first_object=last_object, or to a group of consecutive object_ids, if they are different. Last_object must not be less than first_object. Negative values are permitted for the X and Y location. The positive directions are downward and rightward from the frame origin. The MOVE chunk can specify an image placement that is partially or wholly outside the display boundaries. In such cases, the resulting image must be clipped to fit within its clipping boundaries, or not displayed at all if it falls entirely outside its clipping boundaries. The clipping boundaries are determined as described in the specification for the CLIP chunk Paragraph 4.3.4, below.
It is not an error for the MOVE chunk to name an object that has not previously been defined. In such cases, nothing is done to the nonexistent object.
When an object is discarded, its object attribute set, which includes the MOVE data, is also discarded.
First object: 2 bytes: (nonzero unsigned integer). Last object: 2 bytes: (nonzero unsigned integer). Clip delta type: 1 byte (unsigned integer). 0: CLIP data gives boundary values directly. 1: CLIP boundaries are determined by adding the CLIP data to their previous values for this object. Left_cb or delta_left_cb: 4 bytes (signed integer). Right_cb or delta_right_cb: 4 bytes (signed integer). Top_cb or delta_top_cb: 4 bytes (signed integer). Bottom_cb or delta_bottom_cb: 4 bytes (signed integer).The new clipping boundaries apply to a single object, if first_object=last_object, or to a group of consecutive objects, if they are different. Last_object must not be less than first_object.
The clipping boundaries are expressed in pixels, measured rightward and downward from the frame origin.
The left and top clipping boundaries are inclusive and the right and bottom clipping boundaries are exclusive, i.e., the pixel located at {x,y} is only displayed if the pixel falls within the physical limits of the display hardware and all of the following are true:
0 <= x < frame_width (from the MHDR chunk) 0 <= y < frame_height Left_fb <= x < right_fb (from the FRAM chunk) Top_fb <= y < bottom_fb Left_cb <= x < right_cb (from the CLIP chunk) Top_cb <= y < bottom_cbIt is not an error for the CLIP chunk to name an object that has not previously been defined. In such cases, nothing is done to the nonexistent object.
When an object is discarded, its object attribute set, which includes the CLIP data, is also discarded.
First image: 2 bytes (nonzero unsigned integer). Last image: 2 bytes (nonzero unsigned integer). This field can be omitted if the show_mode byte is also omitted. If so, decoders must assume the default values, show_mode=0 and last_image=first_image. Show_mode: 1 byte (unsigned integer). 0: Make the images potentially visible. and display them (set do_not_show=0). 1: Make the images invisible (set do_not_show=1). 2: Don't change do_not_show flag; display those that are potentially visible. 3: Mark images "potentially visible" (do_not_show=0), but do not display them. 4: Toggle do_not_show flag; display any that are potentially visible after toggling. 5: Toggle do_not_show flag, but do not display even if potentially visible after toggling. 6: Step through the images in the given range, making the next image potentially visible (set do_not_show=0) and display it. Set do_not_show=1 for all other images in the range. Cycle back to the beginning of the range when reaching the end of the range. Perform one step for each SHOW chunk (in reverse order if last_image < first_image). 7. Make the next image in the range (cycle) potentially visible (do_not_show=0), but do not display it. Set do_not_show=1 for the rest of the images in the range. This field can be omitted. If so, decoders must assume the default, show_mode=0.The decoder processes the objects (or images) named in the SHOW chunk in the order first_image through last_image, and resets the do_not_show flag for each of the objects. If show_mode is even-valued, it also displays the images if they are potentially visible and are viewable images.
When the SHOW chunk is empty, the decoder displays all existing potentially visible images, without changing their do_not_show status. The empty SHOW chunk is equivalent to
SHOW 1 65535 2
If last_image < first_image the images are processed in reverse order.
When show_mode is odd-valued, nothing is displayed unless a subsequent SHOW chunk with an even-valued show_mode appears.
When show_mode=1, 4, 5, 6, or 7, images can be made invisible. This is not permitted when framing_mode != 1 in the FRAM chunk and the images have already appeared in the frame, because simple viewers will have already drawn them and have no way to make them invisible again without redrawing the entire frame.
When show_mode=6 or 7, the decoder must make the next image in the "cycle" visible. To do this, it must examine the do_not_show flag for each image in the range first_image through last_image, and make the next one (the one with the next higher value of image_id that exists and is "viewable") after the first visible one it finds visible and the rest invisible. When first_image > last_image, the cycle is reversed, and the "next" image is the one with the next lower value of image_id. In either case, if the first visible one was last_id, or none were visible, it must make first_image visible. These modes are useful for manipulating a group of sequential images that represent different views of an animated icon. See Example 8 in Chapter 15, below.
When show_mode=0, 2, 4, or 6, an instance of each visible image will be displayed at the location specified by the DEFI, CLON, or MOVE chunk and clipped according to the boundaries specified by the CLIP and FRAM chunks. When the MOVE or CLON chunk is used in the delta form, which will frequently be the case, each image must be displaced from its previous position by the values given in the MOVE or CLON chunk.
Any of the following sequences would cause the image identified by object_id=6 in a composite frame to blink:
LOOP 0 0 10 FRAM 2 SHOW 1 10 # Show images 1 thru 10. FRAM SHOW 1 5 # Show images 1 thru 5. SHOW 7 10 # Show images 7 thru 10. ENDL LOOP 0 0 10 FRAM 2 SHOW 1 5 # Show images 1 thru 5. SHOW 6 6 4 # Toggle potential visibility of image 6 SHOW 7 10 # and show it; show images 7 thru 10. FRAM ENDL LOOP 0 0 10 FRAM 2 SHOW 6 6 5 # Toggle potential visibility of image 6. SHOW 1 10 2 # Show potentially visible images in 1 FRAM # through 10. ENDLIt is not necessary to follow an IHDR-IEND, JHDR-IEND, BASI-IEND, or DHDR-IEND sequence or PAST chunk with a SHOW chunk to display the resulting image, if it was already caused to appear by do_not_show=0 in the DEFI chunk that introduced the image. Similarly, the CLON chunk need not be followed by a SHOW chunk, if do_not_show=0 in the CLON chunk.
It is not an error for the SHOW chunk to name an object that has not previously been defined. In such cases, nothing is done to the nonexistent object.
If a nonviewable object is named, its do_not_show flag is changed, but it is not displayed even if the SHOW chunk requests it.
Termination action: 1 byte (unsigned integer) 0: Show the last frame indefinitely. 1: Cease displaying anything. 2: Show the first frame after the TERM chunk. If processing the fPRI chunk, use a "cost" of 255. 3: Repeat the animation starting immediately after the TERM chunk. Action after iterations: 1 byte 0: Show the last frame indefinitely after iteration_max iterations have been done. 1: Cease displaying anything. 2: Show the first frame after the TERM chunk. If processing the fPRI chunk, use a "cost" of 255. This and the remaining fields must be omitted if termination_action<=2, and must be present otherwise. Delay: 4 bytes (unsigned integer). Delay, in ticks, before repeating the animation. Iteration max: 4 bytes (unsigned integer). Maximum number of times to repeat the animation.The loop created by processing a TERM must always be treated by the decoder as if it were a <user-discretion> loop, with iteration_min=1.
The TERM chunk, if present, must appear either immediately after the MHDR chunk or immediately prior to a SEEK chunk. The TERM chunk is not considered to be a part of any segment for the purpose of determining the copy-safe status of any chunk. Only one TERM chunk is permitted in a MNG datastream.
Simple viewers and single-frame viewers can ignore the TERM chunk. It has been made critical only so MNG editors will not inadvertently relocate it.
Simple decoders that only read MNG datastreams sequentially can safely ignore the SAVE and SEEK chunks, although it is recommended that, for efficient use of memory, they at least mark existing objects as "frozen" when the SAVE chunk is processed and discard all "unfrozen" objects whenever the SEEK or empty DISC chunk is processed.
The SAVE chunk can be empty, or it can contain an index consisting of the following:
Offset size: 1 byte (unsigned integer). 4: Offsets and nominal start times are expressed as 32-bit integers. 8: Offsets and nominal start times are expressed as 64-bit integers.plus zero or more of the following index entries:
Entry type: 1 byte (unsigned integer). 0: Segment with nominal start time and nominal frame number. 1: Segment. 2: Frame. 3: Exported image. Offset: 4 or 8 bytes (unsigned integer). Omit if entry_type > 1, set equal to zero if the offset is unknown. Nominal start time: 4 or 8 bytes: (unsigned integer). Start time of the segment, measured in ticks from the beginning of the animation, assuming that all prior segments were played as intended on an ideal player, ignoring any fPRI chunks. Omit if entry_type > 0. Nominal frame number: 4 bytes (unsigned integer). Sequence number of the first frame in the segment, assuming that all prior segments were played as intended on an ideal player, ignoring any fPRI chunks; the first frame of the first segment being frame 0. Omit if entry_type > 0. Name: 1-79 bytes (Latin-1 text). Omit for unnamed segments. Separator: 1 byte (null) (must be omitted after the final entry).The SAVE chunk must be present when the SEEK chunk is present. It appears after the set of chunks that define information that must be retained for the remainder of the datastream. These chunks, collectively referred to as the prologue segment, are no different from chunks in other segments. They can be chunks that define objects, or they can be chunks that define other information such as gAMA, cHRM, and sPLT. If any chunks appear between the SAVE chunk and the first SEEK chunk, these chunks also form a part of the prologue segment, but their contents are lost when the SEEK chunk appears.
Only one instance of the SAVE chunk is permitted in a MNG datastream. It is not allowed anywhere after the first SEEK chunk.
It is not permitted, at any point beyond the SAVE chunk, to modify or discard any object that was defined ahead of the SAVE chunk.
An object appearing ahead of the SAVE chunk can be the subject of a CLON chunk. If the clone is a partial clone, modifying it is not permitted, because this would also modify the object buffer that the original object points to.
A chunk like gAMA that overwrites a single current value is permitted after the SAVE chunk, even if the chunk has appeared ahead of the SAVE chunk. Decoders are responsible for saving a copy of the chunk data (in any convenient form) when the SAVE chunk is encountered and restoring it when skipping or jumping to a SEEK chunk. If no instance of the chunk appeared ahead of the SAVE chunk, the decoder must restore the chunk data to its original "unknown" condition when it skips or jumps to a SEEK chunk.
It is the encoder's responsibility, if it changes or discards any "saved" data, to restore it to its "saved" condition (or nullifying it, if it was unknown) prior to the end of the segment. This makes it safe for simple decoders to ignore the SAVE/SEEK mechanism.
Known chunks in this category include DEFI, FRAM, BACK, PLTE, cHRM, eXPI, fPRI, gAMA, iCCP, pHYs, and sRGB.
In the case of chunks like sPLT that can occur multiple times, with different "purpose" fields, additional instances of the chunk are permitted after the SAVE chunk, but not with the same keyword as any instances that occurred ahead of the SAVE chunk. The decoder is required to forget such additional instances when it skips or jumps to a SEEK chunk, but it must retain those instances that were defined prior to the SAVE chunk. Encoders are required to nullify such additional instances prior to the end of the segment. Known chunks in this category include only sPLT.
If the optional index is present, every segment, whether named or not, except for the prologue segment, must be listed in it. All entries must appear in the index in the same order that they appear in the MNG datastream. Only named images or frames are permitted, and it is not an error to omit any or all named images or frames from the index.
Offsets are calculated from the first byte of the MNG 8-byte signature, which has offset=0. This is true even if the MNG datastream happens to be embedded in some other file and the signature bytes are not actually present.
Applications with direct access to the datastream can use the index to find segments, frames, and exported images quickly. After processing the prologue segment, they can jump directly to any segment and then process the remaining datastream until the desired frame, image, or time is found. Applications that have only streaming access to the datastream can still use the index to decide whether to decode the chunks in a segment or to skip over them.
Only one instance of the SAVE chunk is permitted in a MNG datastream. If the SEEK chunk is present, the SAVE chunk must be present, prior to the first SEEK chunk. The only chunks not allowed ahead of the SAVE chunk are the SEEK chunk and the MEND chunk. The SAVE chunk must not appear inside a LOOP-ENDL pair.
The SEEK can be empty, or it can contain a segment name.
Segment name: 1-79 bytes (Latin-1 string).The segment name is optional. It must follow the format of a tEXt keyword: It must consist only of printable Latin-1 characters and must not have leading or trailing blanks, but can have single embedded blanks. There must be at least one and no more than 79 characters in the keyword. There is no null byte terminator within the segment name, nor is there a separate null byte terminator. Segment names are case-sensitive. Use caution when printing or displaying keywords (Refer to Security considerations, Chapter 14, below). No specific use for the segment name is specified in this document, but applications can use the segment name for such purposes as constructing a menu of SEEK points for a slide-show viewer. It can be included in the optional index that can appear in the SAVE chunk. It is recommended that the same name not appear in any other SEEK chunk or in any FRAM or eXPI chunk. Segment names should not begin with the strings "clock(", "frame(", or "frames(" (all case-insensitive), which are reserved for use in URI queries and fragments.
Applications must not use any information preceding the SEEK chunk, except for:
In addition to providing a mechanism for skipping frames or backspacing over frames, the SEEK chunk provides a means of dealing with a corrupted datastream. The viewer would abandon processing and simply look for the next SEEK chunk before resuming. Note that looking for a PNG IHDR chunk would not be sufficient because the PNG datastream might be inside a loop or a Delta-PNG datastream, or it might need data from preceding MOVE or CLIP chunks.
When the SEEK chunk is encountered, a decoder must restore the information that it saved when it processed the SAVE chunk.
Multiple instances of the SEEK chunk are permitted. The SEEK chunk must not appear prior to the SAVE chunk. The SAVE chunk must also be present if the SEEK chunk is present. The SEEK must not appear between a LOOP chunk and its ENDL chunk.
The chunk contains an object identifier and a name:
Snapshot id: 2 bytes (unsigned nonzero integer). Snapshot name: 1-79 bytes (Latin-1 text).Note that the snapshot_name is associated with the snapshot, not with the snapshot_id nor its future contents; discarding the image identified by snapshot_id will not affect the snapshot. The snapshot_name means nothing inside the scope of the MNG specification, except that it can be included in the optional index that can appear in the SAVE chunk. If two eXPI chunks use the same name, it is the outside world's problem (and the outside world's prerogative to regard it as an error). It is recommended, however, that the snapshot_name not be the same as that appearing in any other eXPI chunk or in any FRAM or SEEK chunk. A decoder that knows of no "outside world" can simply ignore the eXPI chunk. This chunk could be used in MNG datastreams that define libraries of related images, rather than animations.
Names beginning with the word "thumbnail" are reserved for snapshot images that are intended to make good icons for the MNG. Thumbnail images are regular PNG or Delta-PNG images, but they would normally have smaller dimensions and fewer colors than the MNG frames. They can be defined with the potential visibility field set to "invisible" if they are not intended to be shown as a part of the regular display.
The snapshot_name string must follow the format of a tEXt keyword: It must consist only of printable Latin-1 characters and must not have leading or trailing blanks, but can have single embedded blanks. There must be at least one and no more than 79 characters in the keyword. Keywords are case-sensitive. There is no null byte terminator within the snapshot_name string, nor is there a separate null byte terminator. Snapshot names should not begin with the strings "clock(", "frame(", or "frames(" (all case-insensitive), which are reserved for use in URI queries and fragments.
Multiple instances of the eXPI chunk are permitted in a MNG datastream, and they need not have different values of snapshot_id.
fPRI delta type: 1 byte (unsigned integer). 0: Priority is given directly. 1: Priority is determined by adding the fPRI data to the previous value, modulo 256. Priority or delta priority: 1 byte (signed integer). Value to be assigned to subsequent frames until another fPRI chunk is reached.While 256 distinct values of priority are possible, it is recommended that only the values 0 (low priority), 128 (medium priority), and 255 (high priority) be used. Viewers that can only display a single image can look for one with priority=255 and stop after displaying it. If the datastream contains a large number of frames and includes periodic "initial" frames that do not contain Delta-PNG datastreams, each "initial" frame could be preceded by a fPRI with priority=128 and followed by one with priority=0, and the best representative initial frame could be preceded by a fPRI chunk with priority=255. Then single-image viewers would just display the representative frame, slow viewers would display just the "initial" frames, and fast viewers would display everything.
If a viewer has established a nonzero "cost," it must skip any portion of the datastream whose priority is less than that "cost." The "cost" must be established prior to processing the proloque segment, and it cannot be changed unless the prologue segment is processed again according to the new "cost."
The SAVE, SEEK, and MEND chunks always have priority=255; decoders must look for these chunks in addition to the fPRI chunk while skipping a low-priority portion of the datastream.
It is not permissible for a portion of the datastream to depend on any portion of the datastream having a lower value, because a decoder might have skipped the lower value portion. Use of the fPRI chunk is illustrated in Example 5 and Example 9.
Viewers that care about the priority must assume priority=255 for any portion of the MNG datastream that is processed prior to the first fPRI chunk.
Multiple instances of the fPRI chunk are permitted.
The nEED chunk contains a list of keywords that the decoder must recognize. Keywords are typically private critical chunk names.
Keyword: 1-79 bytes. Separator: 1 byte (null). ...etc...The nEED chunk should be placed early in the MNG datastream, preferably immediately after the MHDR chunk.
The keywords are typically 4-character private critical chunk names, but they could be any string that a decoder is required to recognize. No critical chunks defined in this specification or in the PNG specification should be named in a nEED chunk, because MNG-compliant decoders are required to recognize all of them, whether they appear in a nEED chunk or not. The purpose of the nEED chunk is only to identify requirements that are above and beyond the requirements of this document and of the PNG specification.
Each keyword string must follow the format of a tEXt keyword: It must consist only of printable Latin-1 characters and must not have leading or trailing blanks, but can have single embedded blanks. There must be at least one and no more than 79 characters in the keyword. Keywords are case-sensitive. There is no null byte terminator within the keyword. A null separator byte must appear after each keyword in the nEED chunk except for the last one.
Decoders that do not recognize a chunk name or keyword in the list should abandon the MNG datastream or request user intervention. The normal security precautions should be taken when displaying the keywords.
-[During the draft phase of the development of this specification, to specify that the datastream is written in accordance with a certain draft version of MNG, you can use "nEEDdraft nn".]
The MNG top-level pHYs chunk can be nullified by a subsequent empty pHYs chunk appearing in the MNG top level.
The following PNG chunks are also defined at the MNG top level. They provide default values to be used in case they are not provided in subsequent PNG datastreams. Any of these chunks can be nullified by the appearance of a subsequent empty chunk with the same chunk name. Such empty chunks are not legal PNG or JNG chunks and must only appear in the MNG top level.
The following PNG chunk is also defined at the MNG top level. It provides a value that takes precedence over those that might be provided in subsequent PNG or JNG datastreams and provides a value to be used when it is not provided in subsequent PNG or JNG datastreams:
When a decoder needs to choose between a suggested palette defined at the MNG level and a suggested palette defined in the PNG datastream (either with the sPLT chunk, or with the PLTE/hIST chunks for grayscale or truecolor images), it should give preference to the palette from the MNG level, to avoid spurious frame-to-frame color changes.
MNG editors that write PNG datastreams should ignore the sPLT and pHYs data from the MNG level and simply copy any sPLT and pHYs chunks appearing within the PNG datastreams.
JNG (JPEG Network Graphics) is the lossy sub-format for MNG objects.
Note: This specification depends on the PNG Portable Network Graphics specification [PNG]. The PNG specification is available at the PNG home page,
http://www.cdrom.com/pub/png/A JNG datastream consists of a header chunk (JHDR), JDAT chunks that contain a complete JPEG datastream, and optionally, IDAT chunks that contain a PNG-encoded grayscale image that is to be used as an alpha mask. Such a mask must have the same dimensions as the image itself. The JDAT and IDAT chunks can be interleaved. Some of the PNG ancillary chunks are also recognized in JNG datastreams.
While JNG is primarily intended for use as a sub-format within MNG, a single-image JNG datastream can be written in a standalone file. If so, the first eight bytes of a JNG datastream are
139 80 78 74 13 10 26 10(decimal) which is similar to the PNG signature with "\213 J N G" instead of "\211 P N G" in bytes 0-3.
JNG is pronounced "Jing."
Width: 4 bytes (unsigned integer, range 0..65535). Height: 4 bytes (unsigned integer, range 0..65535). Color type: 1 byte 8: Gray (Y). 10: Color (YCbCr). 12: Gray-alpha (Y-alpha). 14: Color-alpha (YCbCr-alpha). JDAT sample depth: 1 byte 8: 8-bit samples and quantization tables. 12: 12-bit samples and quantization tables. 20: 12-bit image followed by an eight-bit image. JDAT compression method: 1 byte 8: ISO-10918-1 Huffman-coded baseline JPEG. JDAT interlace method: 1 byte. 0: Sequential JPEG, single scan. 8: Progressive JPEG. IDAT sample depth: 1 byte. 0, 1, 2, 4, 8, or 16. IDAT compression method: 1 byte. 0: Zlib DEFLATE. IDAT filter method: 1 byte. 0: Adaptive (see PNG spec). IDAT interlace method: 1 byte. 0: Not interlaced.The width, height, JDAT_sample_depth, JDAT_compression_method, and JDAT_interlace_method fields are redundant because equivalent information is also embedded in the JDAT datastream. They appear in the JHDR chunk for convenience. Their values must be identical to their equivalents embedded in the JDAT chunk. We use four bytes in the width and height fields for similarity to MNG and PNG, and to leave room for future expansion, even though two bytes would have been sufficient.
When the color_type is 8 or 10 (no alpha channel), the last four bytes, which describe the IDAT data, must be set to zero. The IDAT_sample_depth must be nonzero when the alpha channel is present.
A JNG baseline JPEG is a baseline JPEG as defined by JPEG Part 1 (ISO IS 10918-1), using only JFIF-compatible component interpretations, with a few additional restrictions that reflect limitations of many existing JPEG implementations.
A baseline JPEG according to Part 1 is DCT-based (lossy) sequential JPEG, using Huffman entropy encoding, with the following further restrictions:
JDAT datastreams must always follow "interchange JPEG" rules: all necessary quantization and Huffman tables must be included in the datastream, no tables can be omitted.
The image data is always stored left-to-right, top-to-bottom, ie, only the default SPIFF orientation is permissible.
The encoded data shall have one of the two colorspace interpretations allowed by the JFIF specification:
Y = Luma_red*R + Luma_green*G + Luma_blue*B Cb = (B - Y) / (2 - 2*Luma_blue) + Half_scale Cr = (R - Y) / (2 - 2*Luma_red) + Half_scaleBy convention, the luminance coefficients are always those defined by CCIR Recommendation 601-1:
Luma_red = 0.299 Luma_green = 0.587 Luma_blue = 0.114The constant Half_scale is 128 when dealing with 8-bit data, 2048 for 12-bit data. With these equations, Y, Cb, and Cr all have the same range as R, G, and B: 0 to 255 for 8-bit data, 0 to 4095 for 12-bit data.
The JFIF convention for YCbCr differs from typical digital television practice in that no headroom/footroom is reserved: the coefficient values range over the full available 8 or 12 bits.
Intercomponent sample alignment shall be such that the first (upper leftmost) samples of each component share a common upper left corner position. This again differs from common digital TV practice, in which the first samples share a common center position. The JFIF convention is simpler to visualize: subsampled chroma samples always cover an integral number of luminance sample positions, whereas with co-centered alignment, chroma samples only partially overlap some luminance samples.
JNG imposes three additional restrictions not found in the text of either JPEG Part 1 or the JFIF specification:
In other words, the chroma components may be downsampled 2:1 or 1:2 horizontally or vertically relative to luminancey, or they may be left full size. These four sampling ratios are the only ones supported by a wide spectrum of implementations (1x2 is relatively new, and is usually the result of a lossless rotation of a 2x1 sampling).
For grayscale images, the sampling factors are irrelevant according to a strict reading of JPEG Part 1. Hence decoder authors should accept any sampling factors for grayscale. However, we recommend that encoders always emit sampling factors 1h1v for grayscale, since some decoders have been observed to malfunction when presented with other sampling factors.
For JNG progressive JPEG datastreams, the JPEG process is progressive Huffman coding (SOF marker type SOF2) rather than baseline (SOF0). All JNG-compliant decoders must support full progression, including both spectral-selection and successive-approximation modes, with any sequence of scan progression parameters allowed by the JPEG Part 1 standard.
Otherwise, all the restrictions listed above apply, except these:
No particular progressive scan sequence is specified or recommended by this specification. Not enough experience has been gained with progressive JPEG to warrant making such a recommendation. To allow for future experimentation with scan sequences, decoders are expected to handle any JPEG-legal sequence. Again, the code savings that might be had by making restrictive assumptions are too small to justify a limitation.
When the JSEP chunk is present, both images must be progressive if one of them is progressive.
The IDAT chunks must precede the JSEP chunk, if the JSEP chunk is present. Minimal viewers that skip the 12-bit JDAT chunks must read the IDAT chunks and apply the alpha samples to the 8-bit image that is contained in the JDAT chunks that follow the JSEP chunk.
A JSEP chunk must appear between the JDAT chunks of a 12-bit datastream and those of an 8-bit datastream, when JDAT_sample_depth=20 in the JHDR chunk. The 12-bit datastream must appear first. Both images must have the same width, height, color type, compression method, and interlace type. Viewers can choose to display one or the other image, but not both.
If the bKGD chunk is present, it must be written as if it were written for a PNG datastream with sample_depth=8. It has one 2-byte entry for grayscale JNGs and three 2-byte entries for color JNGs. The first (most significant) byte of each entry must be 0.
The following chunks have exactly the same meaning and have the same format as given in the PNG specification: cHRM, gAMA, iCCP, sRGB, pHYs, oFFs, tEXt, tIME, and zTXt.
The PNG PLTE, hIST, pCAL, sBIT, and tRNS chunks are not defined in JNG.
When cHRM, gAMA, iCCP, or sRGB are present, they provide information about the colorspace of the decoded JDAT image, and they have no effect on the decoded alpha samples from the IDAT chunks. Any viewer that processes the gAMA chunk must also recognize and process the sRGB chunk. It can treat it as if it were a gAMA chunk containing the value .45455 and it can ignore its "intent" field.
The chunk copying and ordering rules for JNG are the same as those in PNG, except for the fact that JDAT and IDAT chunks can be interleaved.
No provision is made in this specification for storing a Delta-PNG datastream as a standalone file. A Delta-PNG datastream will normally be found as a component of a MNG datastream. Applications that need to store a Delta-PNG datastream separately should use a different file signature and filename extension, or they can wrap it in a MNG datastream consisting of the MNG signature, the MHDR chunk, a BASI chunk with the appropriate dimensions and an IEND chunk, the Delta-PNG datastream, and the MEND chunk.
The decoder must have available a parent (decoded) object from which the original chunk data is known. The parent object can be the result of decoding a PNG, another Delta-PNG datastream, or it could have been generated by a PNG-like datastream introduced by a BASI chunk.
The child image is always of the same basic type (at present only PNG and JNG are defined) as the parent object. The child is always a viewable image even if the parent is not.
The decoder must not have modified the pixel data in the parent object by applying output transformations such as gAMA or cHRM, or by compositing the image against a background. Instead, the decoder must make available to the Delta-PNG decoder the unmodified pixel data along with the values for the gAMA, cHRM, and any other recognized chunks from the parent object datastream.
A Delta-PNG datastream consists of a DHDR and IEND enclosing other optional chunks (if there are no other chunks, the decoder simply copies the parent image, and displays it if its do_not_show=0).
Chunk structure (length, name, CRC) and the chunk-naming system are identical to those defined in the PNG specification. Definitions of compression_type, filter_type, and interlace_type are also the same as defined in the PNG specification.
The DHDR chunk can contain 4, 12, or 20 bytes:
Object id: 2 bytes (nonzero unsigned integer). Identifies the parent object from which changes will be made. This is also the object_id of the child image, which can be used as the parent image for a subsequent Delta-PNG. Image type: 1 byte. 0: Image type is unspecified. An IHDR, JHDR, IPNG, or IJNG chunk must be present. 1: Image type is PNG. IHDR and IPNG can be omitted under certain conditions. 2: Image type is JNG. JHDR and IJNG can be omitted under certain conditions. Delta_type must not be 1 or 3. Delta type: 1 byte. 0: Entire image replacement. 1: Block pixel addition, by samples, modulo 2^sample_depth. 2: Block alpha addition, by samples, modulo 2^sample_depth. Regardless of the color type of the parent image, the IDAT data are written as a grayscale image (color type 0), but the decoded samples are used as deltas to the alpha samples in the parent image. The parent image must have (or be promoted to via the PROM chunk) color type 4 or color type 6. 3: Block pixel replacement. 4: Block alpha replacement. 5: No change to pixel data. Block width: 4 bytes (unsigned integer). Omit when delta_type=5. Block height: 4 bytes (unsigned integer). Omit when delta_type=5. Block X_location: 4 bytes (unsigned integer), measured in pixels from the left edge of the parent object. Omit when delta_type=0 or when delta_type=5. Block Y_location: 4 bytes (unsigned integer), measured in pixels from the top edge of the parent object. Omit when delta_type=0 or when delta_type=5.The object_id must identify an existing object, and the object must be a "concrete" object, i.e., it must have the property concrete_flag=1.
The image_type, whether given explicitly as 1 or 2 or implied by the presence of an IHDR, IPNG, JHDR, or IJNG chunk, must be the same as that of the parent object.
When delta_type=0, the width and height of the child image are given by the block_width and block_height fields.
For all other values of delta_type, the width and height of the child image are inherited from the parent object.
When delta_type=1, 2, 3, or 4, the block_width and block_height fields give the size of the block of pixels to be modified or replaced, and block_X_location and block_Y_location give its location with respect to the top left corner of the parent object. The block must fall entirely within the parent object.
When delta_type=0 in the DHDR chunk, the pixel data in the IDAT chunks represent a completely new image, with dimensions given by the block_width and block_height fields of the DHDR chunk. Data from chunks other than IDAT or JDAT can be inherited from the parent object.
When delta_type=1 in the DHDR chunk, the pixel data in the IDAT chunks represent deltas from the pixel data in a parent object known to the decoder.
The compression method, filter method, and interlace method need not be the same as those of the parent object.
The IDAT chunk data contains a filtered and perhaps interlaced set of delta pixel samples. The delta samples are presented in the order specified by interlace_method, filtered according to the filter_method and compressed according to the compression_method given in the IHDR chunk. The actual pixel values are calculated using the method defined in the delta_type field of the DHDR chunk. Only the pixels in the block defined by the block location and dimensions given in the DHDR chunk are changed. The size of the IDAT data must correspond exactly to this rectangle.
An encoder calculates the new sample values from the samples in the parent object and those in the child image by subtracting the parent object samples from the child image samples, modulo 2^sample_depth. When decoding the IDAT chunk, the child image bytes are obtained by adding the delta bytes to the parent object bytes, modulo 2^sample_depth. This is similar in operation to the PNG SUB filter, except that it works by samples instead of by bytes.
When color_type=3, the deltas are differences between index values, not between color samples.
When delta_type=2 in the DHDR chunk, the pixel data in the IDAT chunks represent deltas from the alpha data in a parent object known to the decoder. The color samples are not changed, and the updated alpha samples are calculated in the same manner as the updated pixel samples are calculated when delta_type=1.
The sample_depth of the data must match that of the parent object, and color_type is 0 (grayscale), regardless of the color_type of the parent object. The parent object must have an alpha channel or must have been promoted to a type that has an alpha channel. The compression method, filter method, and interlace method need not be the same.
When delta_type=3 in the DHDR chunk, the pixel data in the IDAT chunks represent replacement values for the pixel samples in the rectangle given by the block location and dimension fields in the DHDR chunk.
The sample_depth and color_type of the data must match that of the parent object. The compression method, filter method, and interlace method need not be the same.
When delta_type=4 in the DHDR chunk, the pixel data in the IDAT chunks represent replacement values of the alpha samples in the rectangle given by the block location and dimension fields in the DHDR chunk. The sample_depth of the data must match that of the parent object, and color_type is 0 (grayscale), regardless of the color_type of the parent object. The parent object must have an alpha channel or must have been promoted to a type that has an alpha channel. The compression method, filter method, and interlace method need not be the same.
When delta_type=5 in the DHDR chunk, there is no change to the pixel data, and it is an error for IDAT or JDAT to appear.
The IEND chunk is empty.
New color type: 1 byte. New sample depth: 1 byte. Fill method: 1 byte. 0: Left-bit-replication 1: Zero fillWhen a decoder encounters the PROM chunk, it must promote the pixel data. The cases are:
Don't change the gray values. Set all the alpha values to fully opaque, except for pixels marked transparent by cheap transparency--set their alpha values to fully transparent. Discard the cheap transparency information (the PNG tRNS chunk data).
Don't change the RGB values. Convert the tRNS chunk data to alpha values as in the G -> GA promotion.
Set R, G, and B equal to the gray value. Apply the same operation to the cheap transparency data (if any).
Set R, G, and B equal to the gray value. Don't change the alpha values.
Set R, G, and B equal to the gray value. Handle transparency as in the G -> GA promotion.
Set R, G, and B according to the palette entry corresponding to the index. Discard the cheap transparency information (if any).
Set R, G, and B as in indexed -> RGB. Set the alpha value according to the cheap transparency information (if any). Discard the cheap transparency information.
Don't change the gray values. Set all the alpha values to fully opaque. The given sample depth is the new sample depth for the alpha channel.
Don't change the color values. Set all the alpha values to fully opaque. The given sample depth is the new sample depth for the alpha channel.
Only the sample depth is changed. The new sample depth must be larger than the old one.
If the basis object contains data from the PNG bKGD chunk, this data must be promoted as well. If a grayscale object is being promoted to a truecolor object, the background RGB samples are set equal to the grayscale background sample. If the bit depth has been changed, the background samples are widened in accordance with the specified fill_method. If the basis object is a JNG, the bKGD chunk is not affected.
If the basis object contains data from the PNG sBIT chunk, this data must also be promoted. If a grayscale object is being promoted to a truecolor object, the new RGB bytes are set equal to the grayscale byte. When an alpha channel is added, the alpha byte is set equal to the sample depth of the basis image. If the sample depth has been changed, the sBIT bytes do not change.
The PROM chunk is not permitted to "demote" a parent object to an object with a lesser bit depth or from one with an alpha channel to one without an alpha channel.
The PROM chunk must appear ahead of the IHDR chunk, if IHDR is present, and ahead of any chunks that would have followed IHDR, if IHDR is omitted.
If the IHDR chunk is present, its width, height, sample_depth, and color_type fields are ignored. The values for these parameters are inherited from the parent object or from the PROM chunk.
The compression_method, interlace_type, and filter_type fields, if different from those of the parent object, are used in decoding any subsequent IDAT chunks, and the new values will be inherited by any subsequent image that uses this object as its parent.
See the PNG specification for the format of the PNG chunks. The PNG datastream must contain at least IHDR and IEND (whether actually present in the datastream or omitted and included by implication, as described below), but can inherit other chunk data from the parent object. Except for IDAT and PPLT, any chunks appearing between IHDR and IEND are always treated as replacements or additions and not as deltas.
The IPNG chunk can be used instead of the IHDR chunk if the IHDR chunk is not needed for resetting the value of compression_method, filter_type, or interlace_type. The purpose of this chunk is to identify the beginning of the PNG datastream, so decoders can start interpreting PNG chunks instead of Delta-PNG chunks. The decoder must treat this datastream as though the IHDR chunk were present in the location occupied by the IPNG chunk.
The IHDR chunk can also be omitted when image_type=1 and the PNG datastream begins with a PLTE chunk, a PPLT chunk, or an IDAT chunk. In this case, no IPNG chunk is required, either. The decoder must treat this datastream as though the IHDR chunk were present, immediately preceding the first PNG chunk. If the first PNG chunk is neither a PLTE chunk, a PPLT chunk, nor an IDAT chunk, then either the IPNG or IHDR must be present to introduce the PNG datastream.
When processing the tRNS chunk, if color_type=3 and PLTE is not supplied, then the number of allowable entries is determined from the number of PLTE entries in the parent object. A tRNS chunk appearing in a Delta-PNG datastream is always treated as a complete replacement for the tRNS chunk data in the parent object. All entries beyond those actually supplied are overwritten with the "opaque" value (255).
The PPLT chunk contains a delta_type byte and one or more groups of palette entries:
PPLT delta type: 1 byte. 0: Values are replacement RGB samples. 1: Values are delta RGB samples. 2: Values are replacement alpha samples. 3: Values are delta alpha samples. 4: Values are replacement RGBA samples. 5: Values are delta RGBA samples. First index, first group: 1 byte. Last index, first group: 1 byte. First set of samples: 1, 3, or 4 bytes. ...etc... Last set of samples: 1, 3, or 4 bytes. First index, second group: 1 byte. ...etc...The last_index must be equal to or greater than first_index. The groups are not required to appear in ascending order. If any index of any group is beyond the end of the parent object's palette, the palette and tRNS data must be extended just as if a longer complete PLTE chunk had appeared. If there are gaps in the resulting extended palette, the colors must be filled with {0,0,0} and the alphas filled with 255. If alpha samples are supplied (PPLT_delta_type > 1) and no tRNS data is present in the parent object, a tRNS chunk must be created in the child object as though a complete tRNS chunk had appeared. The new palette must not be longer than the object's sample_depth would allow.
When PPLT_delta_type=0, the values are replacements for the existing samples in the palette.
When PPLT_delta_type=1, the values are added to the existing samples (modulo 256) to obtain the new samples.
If the new entry is beyond the range of the original palette, the values are simply appended, regardless of the contents of PPLT_delta_type.
If the JHDR chunk is present, its width, height, JDAT_sample_depth, JDAT_color_type, JDAT_Filter_type, and JDAT_interlace_type fields are ignored. The values for these parameters are inherited from the parent object.
The IDAT_compression_method, IDAT_interlace_type, and IDAT_Filter_type fields, if different from those of the parent object, are used in decoding any subsequent IDAT chunks, and the new values will be inherited by any subsequent image that uses this object as its parent.
See the JNG specification above for the format of the JNG chunks. The PNG datastream must contain at least JHDR and IEND, but can inherit other chunk data from the parent object. Except for IDAT, any chunks appearing between IHDR and IEND are always treated as replacements or additions and not as deltas.
The IJNG chunk can be used instead of the JHDR chunk if the JHDR chunk is not needed for resetting the value of any of the JHDR fields. The purpose of this chunk is to identify the beginning of the JNG datastream, so decoders can start interpreting JNG chunks instead of Delta-PNG chunks. The decoder must treat this datastream as though the JHDR chunk were present in the location occupied by the IJNG chunk.
The JHDR chunk can also be omitted when image_type=2 and the JNG datastream begins with a JDAT chunk. Note: Be sure that the first JDAT chunk precedes the first IDAT chunk. In this case, no IJNG chunk is required, either. The decoder must treat this datastream as though the JHDR chunk were present, immediately preceding the first JDAT chunk. If the first JNG chunk is not a JDAT chunk, then either the IJNG or JHDR must be present to introduce the JNG datastream.
Chunk name: 4 bytes (ASCII text). etc.If multiple names appear in the DROP chunk, it is shorthand for multiple DROP chunks.
Chunk name: 4 bytes (ASCII text). Polarity: 1 byte (unsigned integer). 0: Only. 1: All-but. Keywords (null-separated Latin-1 text strings).The chunk name must be the name of a chunk whose data begins with a null-terminated text string. Some parent object chunks with the specified chunk name are inhibited from being copied into the child image. If polarity is <only>, then any parent chunk whose keyword appears in the keywords list is inhibited. If polarity is <all-but>, then any parent object chunk whose keyword does not appear in the keywords list is inhibited.
The format of the keyword is the same as that specified for the parent chunk. Comparisons of keywords in the parent chunk and the DBYK chunk are case sensitive.
Use caution when printing or displaying keywords (Refer to Security considerations, Chapter 14, below).
Chunk name: 4 bytes (ASCII text). Order type: 1 byte. 0: Anywhere. 1: After IDAT and/or JDAT. 2: Before IDAT and/or JDAT. 3: Before IDAT, but not before PLTE. 4: Before IDAT, but not after PLTE. etc.Critical chunk names must not appear in the ORDR chunk. The applier needs to know everything about them anyway.
If a chunk name appears in the ORDR chunk, it is a promise that any chunk of that name appearing in the parent object which is not inhibited by DROP/DBYK will not be broken by this Delta-PNG, and therefore the applier must copy it into the child image at a location compatible with its ordering restrictions.
If any ancillary chunk appears in the parent object, and it is not inhibited, and its name does not appear in the ORDR chunk, then the applier should copy it into the child only if it knows the chunk well enough to be sure that it is consistent with the changes made by the Delta-PNG, and knows where it can be placed in the child. Those conditions are always true of safe-to-copy chunks.
If any critical chunk defined in neither this specification nor the PNG specification appears in the parent object or in the Delta-PNG, it is a fatal error unless the applier knows how to handle it. The specification of the critical chunk can include provisions for this scenario.
The copy-safe status of an unknown chunk is determined from the chunk name, just as in PNG. If bit 5 of the first byte of the name is 0 (Normally corresponding to an uppercase ASCII letter), the unknown chunk is critical and cannot be processed or copied. If it is 1 (usually corresponding to a lowercase ASCII letter), the unknown chunk is ancillary and its copy-safe status is determined by bit 5 of the fourth byte of the name, 0 meaning copy-unsafe and 1 meaning copy-safe.
If an editor makes changes to the MNG datastream that render unknown chunks unsafe-to-copy, this does not affect the copy-safe status of any chunks beyond the next SEEK chunk or prior to the previous one. However, if it makes such changes prior the SAVE chunk, this affects the copy-safe status of all top-level unknown chunks in the entire MNG datastream.
Changes to the MHDR chunk do not affect the copy-safe status of any other chunk.
The SAVE, SEEK, and TERM chunks are not considered to be a part of any segment. Changes to the data in the SAVE or SEEK chunks do not affect the copy-safe status of any other chunks. Adding or removing a SEEK chunk affects the copy-safe status of unknown chunks in the newly-merged or newly-separated segments. Adding, removing, or changing the TERM chunk has no effect on the copy-safe status of any chunk.
As in PNG, unsafe-to-copy ancillary chunks in the top-level MNG datastream can have ordering rules only with respect to critical chunks. Safe-to-copy ancillary chunks in the top-level MNG datastream can have ordering rules only with respect to the SAVE, SEEK, SHOW, and PAST chunks, IHDR-IEND, DHDR-IEND, JHDR-IEND, and BASI-IEND sequences, or with respect to any other critical "header-end" sequence that might be defined in the future that could contain IDAT or similar chunks.
The copying rules for unknown chunks inside IHDR-IEND, BASI-IEND, DHDR-IEND, and JHDR-IEND sequences are governed by the PNG and JNG specifications, and any changes inside such sequences have no effect on the copy-safe status of any top-level MNG chunks.
The copy-safe status of chunks inside a DHDR-IEND sequence depends on the copy-safe status of the chunks in its parent object.
Anything less than this level of support would require subsetting. We are allowing minimal decoders to skip 12-bit JNGs because those are likely to be rarely encountered and used only for special purposes.
All PNG critical chunks must be fully supported. All values of color_type, bit_depth, compression_method, filter_method and interlace_method must be supported (interlacing, as in PNG, need not necessarily be displayed on-the-fly; the image can be displayed after it is fully decoded). The alpha-channel must be supported, at least to the degree that fully opaque pixels are opaque and fully transparent ones are transparent. It is recommended that alpha be fully supported.
The PNG tRNS chunk, while it is an ancillary chunk, must be supported in MNG-compliant viewers, at least to the degree that fully opaque pixels are opaque and fully transparent ones are transparent. It is recommended that alpha data from the tRNS chunk be fully supported in the same manner as alpha data from an RGBA image or a JNG with an alpha channel contained in IDAT chunks.
Ancillary chunks other than PNG tRNS can be ignored, and do not even have to be recognized.
It is highly recommended that decoders support at least the gAMA chunk to allow platform-independent color rendering.
All JNG critical chunks must be fully supported. All values of color_type, bit_depth, compression_method, filter_method and interlace_method must be supported (interlacing, as in PNG, need not necessarily be displayed on-the-fly; the image can be displayed after it is fully decoded). The alpha-channel must be supported, at least to the degree that fully opaque pixels are opaque and fully transparent ones are transparent. It is recommended that alpha be fully supported.
All JNG ancillary chunks can be ignored, and do not even have to be recognized.
Only sample_depth=8 must be supported. The JSEP chunk must be recognized and must be used by minimal decoders to select the 8-bit version of the image, when both 12-bit and 8-bit versions are present, as indicated by JDAT_sample_depth=20 in the JHDR chunk. When JDAT_sample_depth=12, minimal decoders are not obligated to display anything, but should display an empty transparent rectangle of the width and height specified in the JHDR chunk. This can be done by processing the JNG as though a viewable transparent BASI object had appeared:
BASI width height 1 4 0 0 0 0 00 00 00 00 1 IEND
Ticks_per_second must be supported by animation viewers. The simplicity profile, frame count, and nominal play time can be ignored. Decoders that provide less than minimal support can use the simplicity profile to identify datastreams that they are incapable of processing.
The MEND chunk must be recognized but does not require any processing.
The repeat_count must be supported. The nest_level should be used as a sanity check but is not required.
Must be fully supported. All objects can be treated as "concrete" if the decoder does not wish to take advantage of the distinction between "abstract" and "concrete".
Must be fully supported.
The framing_mode and clipping parameters must be supported. The interframe_delay must be supported except by single-frame viewers. The sync_id and sync_timeout data can be ignored.
Must be fully supported.
Partial support is required: All existing objects must be marked "frozen" when the SAVE chunk is processed, so that unneeded objects can be discarded when the SEEK chunk or an empty DISC chunk is processed. The SEEK chunk must be processed as if it were an empty DISC chunk, as a minimum. Other information need only be "saved" and "restored" when the viewer is able to skip or jump to random SEEK chunk locations. The optional index can be ignored. Slide-show controllers may wish to support SAVE and SEEK fully.
Can be ignored.
Must be fully supported.
Can be recognized and ignored. These are only of concern to MNG editors and to MNG viewers that handle private chunks or chunks that can be selected by keyword, such as pCAL and iCCP. If you decide to support such chunks, then you will also have to support these three chunks.
Ancillary chunks appearing in Delta-PNG datastreams must be treated in the same manner as if they appeared in a PNG or JNG datastream. See the recommendations, above. Note that the PNG tRNS chunk must be supported, despite its being an ancillary chunk in PNG.
When the encoder converts all images to a single colorspace before putting them in the MNG datastream, this will allow decoders to improve the speed and consistency of the display.
For single-frame MNG datastreams, however, where decoding speed is less important and exact color rendition might be more important, it is best to leave the images in their original colorspace, as recommended in the PNG specification, to avoid any loss of data due to conversion, and to retain the individual colorspace chunks if the images have different colorspaces.
Pixels in PNG and JNG images are represented using gamma-encoded RGB (or gray) samples along with a linear alpha value. Alpha processing can only be performed on linear samples. This chapter assumes that R, G, B, and A values have all been converted to real numbers in the range [0..1], and that any gamma encoding has been undone.
For a top pixel {Rt,Gt,Bt,At} and a bottom pixel {Rb,Gb,Bb,Ab}, the composite pixel {Rc,Gc,Bc,Ac} is given by:
Ac = 1 - (1 - At)(1 - Ab) if (Ac != 0) then s = At / Ac t = (1 - At) Ab / Ac else s = 0.0 t = 1.0 endif Rc = s Rt + t Rb Gc = s Gt + t Gb Bc = s Bt + t BbWhen the bottom pixel is fully opaque (Ab = 1.0), the function reduces to:
Ac = 1 Rc = At Rt + (1 - At) Rb Gc = At Gt + (1 - At) Gb Bc = At Bt + (1 - At) BbWhen the bottom pixel is not fully opaque, the function is much simpler if premultiplied alpha is used. A pixel that uses non-premultiplied alpha can be converted to premultiplied alpha by multiplying R, G, and B by A.
For a premultiplied top pixel {Rt,Gt,Bt,At} and a premultiplied bottom pixel {Rb,Gb,Bb,Ab}, the premultiplied composite pixel {Rc,Gc,Bc,Ac} is given by:
Ac = 1 - (1 - At)(1 - Ab) Rc = Rt + (1 - At) Rb Gc = Gt + (1 - At) Gb Bc = Bt + (1 - At) BbAs mentioned in the PNG specification, the equations become much simpler when no pixel has an alpha value other than 0.0 or 1.0, and the RGB samples need not be linear in that case.
The following information must be retained, for each nonzero object that is defined and not subsequently discarded:
When the encoder knows that data in the object buffer will not be needed by subsequent frames, it can make life easier for decoders by using object_id=0 or by using the DISC or the SEEK chunk. Abstract images rather than concrete objects should be used if the encoder knows that the data will not later be used as the parent object for a Delta-PNG.
When an error occurs within a image datastream, such as an unknown critical PNG chunk or a missing parent object where one was required, only that image should be abandoned and the associated object should be discarded. If a bad CRC is found, indicating a corrupted datastream, the entire segment should be abandoned, as above.
MNG editors, on the other hand, should be more strict and reject any datastream with errors unless the user intervenes.
If PLTE or PPLT is present in a Delta-PNG datastream, the new palette is used in displaying the image defined by the Delta-PNG; if no IDAT chunk is present and the image type is PNG indexed-color, then the resulting image is displayed using the old pixel samples as indices into the new palette, which provides a "palette animation" capability.
If a frame contains two or more images, the PLTE chunk in one image does not affect the display of the other, unless one image is a subsequent Delta-PNG without a PLTE chunk, that has been declared by the DHDR object_id field to depend on the other.
A composite frame consisting only of indexed-color images should not be assumed to contain 256 or fewer colors, since the individual palettes do not necessarily contain the same set of colors. Encoders can supply a top-level sPLT chunk with a suggested reduced global palette, to help decoders build an appropriate palette when necessary.
The frame_width and frame_height are defined in the MHDR chunk and cannot be changed.
Decoders can use these parameters to establish the size of a window in which to display the MNG frames. When the frame_width or frame_height exceeds the physical dimensions of the display hardware, the contents of the area outside those dimensions is undefined. If a viewer chooses, it can create "scroll bars" or the like, to enable persons to pan and scroll to the offscreen portion of the frame. If this is done, then the viewer is responsible for maintaining and updating the offscreen portion of the frame.
In the case of a MNG datastream that consists of a PNG or JNG datastream, with the PNG or JNG signature, the frame_width and frame_height are defined by the width and height fields of the IHDR (or JHDR) chunk.
The frame clipping boundaries are optionally defined in the FRAM chunk, and cannot be changed within a frame. Viewers must, prior to displaying each frame, clear the area within the frame clipping boundaries to the background color. Viewers must not change any pixels outside the framing boundaries; encoders must be able to rely on the fact that the part of the display that is outside the frame clipping boundaries (but inside the area defined by frame_width and frame_height) will remain on the display from frame to frame without being explicitly redisplayed. See Example 8, which displays a large background image once, and then, in each frame, only redisplays the portion of the background surrounding the moving sprite.
The frame clipping boundaries are defined in the DEFI and CLIP chunks. They are associated with individual objects, not with the frames, and they can be changed within a frame. They are useful for exposing only a portion of an image in a frame, to achieve effects such as scrolling, panning, or gradual exposure.
The SAVE chunk is not considered to be in any MNG segment, so changing it has no effect on the copy-safe status of unknown chunks in any other part of the MNG datastream.
When the SAVE chunk is expanded to include an index, all chunks that follow will have their offsets changed by an amount equal to the change in the length of the data segment of the SAVE chunk, so the offset table will have to be adjusted accordingly. If a SAVE chunk is already present with zero offsets, the correct offsets can be written without adjustment.
Although we define a standalone JNG format, we recommend that such files be used only temporarily while compiling or disassembling MNG datastreams. We do not intend to register an Internet Media Type for JNG files.
SRC=file.mng#segment_name SRC=file.mng#frame_name SRC=file.mng#snapshot_name SRC=file.mng?segment_name#segment_name SRC=file.mng?snapshot_name#snapshot_nameWhen the URI specializer ("#" or "?") is "#", and the fragment identifier (the string following the specializer) is the name of a segment, i.e., a named SEEK chunk, the viewer should display the animation from the beginning of the named segment up to the next segment. When it refers to a frame or an image, i.e., a named FRAM or eXPI chunk, it should display the single frame or image that is identified by the fragment identifier. If the SAVE chunk is present and contains the optional index, this can help the client find the needed segment quickly.
When the URI specializer is "?" (server side query), the "query component" is the string following the "?" specializer and up to but not including the "#" if the "#" specializer is also present. The server should find the segment that is named in the query component or the segment that contains the frame or image named in the query component, and it should return a datastream consisting of:
The client can process this as a complete MNG datastream, either displaying the entire segment, if no fragment identifier is present, or extracting the segment, frame or image that is named in a fragment identifier and displaying it, if a fragment identifier is present (a fragment identifier must be present if a frame or image is being requested).
A part of the MNG datastream can also be requested by timecode, as in
SRC=file.mng#clock(10s-20s) SRC=file.mng#clock(0:00-0:15) SRC=file.mng?clock(0:00-0:15#clock=0:00-0:15)or by frame number, as in
SRC=file.mng#frame(10) SRC=file.mng#frames(30-60) SRC=file.mng?frames(30-60#frames=30-60)The timecode must consist of starting and ending clock values, as defined in the W3C SMIL recommendation, separated by a hyphen (ASCII code 45).
When the URI specializer is "#", the viewer should play that part of the animation beginning and ending at the requested times, measuring from zero time at the beginning of the MNG datastream, or beginning and ending with the specified frame numbers.
When the URI specializer is "?", the server can send the entire MNG datastream, or, preferably, it should construct a complete MNG file containing:
The query component should always be repeated as a fragment identifier, so clients can find the requested item in case the server sends more than what was requested.
MNG datastreams should not contain segment, frame, or image names that begin with the strings "clock(", "frame(", or "frames(" (all case-insensitive), which are reserved for use in URI queries and fragments.
See [RFC-2396], Uniform Resource Identifiers (URI): Generic Syntax and the W3C SMIL recommendation.
Boutell, T., et. al.,
PNG (Portable Network Graphics Format Version 1.0),
RFC 2083,
ftp://ds.internic.net/rfc/rfc2083.txt
also available at
ftp://swrinde.nde.swri.edu/pub/png/documents/.
This specification has also been published as a W3C Recommendation, which
is available at
http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-png.html.
PNG Special-Purpose Public Chunks,
ftp://swrinde.nde.swri.edu/pub/png/documents/.
Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", RFC 2119/BCP 14, Harvard University, March 1997.
Freed, N., and N. Borenstein, "Multipurpose Internet Mail
Extensions (MIME) Part One: Format of Internet Message Bodies",
RFC 2045, Innosoft, First Virtual, November 1996.
ftp://ds.internic.net/rfc/rfc2045.txt.
Freed, N., Klensin, J., and J. Postel, "Multipurpose Internet
Mail Extensions (MIME) Part Four: Registration Procedures", RFC
2048, Innosoft, MCI, USC/Information Sciences Institute,
November 1996.
ftp://ds.internic.net/rfc/rfc2048.txt
Berners-Lee, T., Masinter, L., McCahill, M., "Uniform Resource Locators (URL)",
RFC 1738, CERN, Xerox Corporation, University of Minnesota, December 1994.
ftp://ds.internic.net/rfc/rfc1738.txt
An infinite or just overly long loop could give the appearance of having locked up the machine, as could an unreasonably long interframe delay or a misplaced sync_id with a long sync_timeout value. Therefore a decoder should always provide a simple method for users to escape out of a loop or delay, either by abandoning the MNG entirely or just proceeding to the next SEEK chunk. (The SEEK chunk makes it safe for a viewer to resume processing after it encounters a corrupted portion of a MNG datastream.)
Some people may experience epileptic seizures when they are exposed to certain kinds of flashing lights or patterns that are common in everyday life. This can happen even if the person has never had any epileptic seizures. All graphics software and file formats that support animation and/or color cycling make it possible to encode effects that may induce an epileptic seizure in these individuals. It is the responsibility of authors and software publishers to issue appropriate warnings to the public in general and to animation creators in particular.
No known additional security concerns are raised by this format.
copy file.png file.mngThe resulting MNG file looks like:
\211 P N G \r \n ^z \n # PNG signature. IHDR 720 468 8 0 0 0 0 # Width and Height, etc. IDAT ... IEND
\212 M N G \r \n ^z \n # MNG signature. MHDR 256 300 # Width and height. 30 # 30 ticks per second. tERm 2 0 120 10 # When done, repeat from SAVE 10 times. FRAM 4 0 2 0 0 0 30 # Set framing_mode=4 (because the # images are opaque) and frame_duration to 1 sec. DEFI 1 IHDR ... IDAT ... IEND # Eight PNG datastreams DEFI 2 IHDR ... IDAT ... IEND # are read and stored as DEFI 3 IHDR ... IDAT ... IEND # abstract images, and DEFI 4 IHDR ... IDAT ... IEND # are displayed as they DEFI 5 IHDR ... IDAT ... IEND # are read. DEFI 6 IHDR ... IDAT ... IEND DEFI 7 IHDR ... IDAT ... IEND DEFI 8 IHDR ... IDAT ... IEND SAVE SHOW 1 8 MEND
\212 M N G \r \n ^z \n # MNG signature. MHDR 720 468 # Width and height. 1 # 1 tick per second. FRAM 4 0 2 2 0 2 0 600 0 # Set frame_duration to 0, # sync_timeout to 600 sec, and sync_id list to {0}. SAVE SEEK "Briefing to the Workforce" IHDR ... IDAT ... IEND # DEFI 0, visible, abstract SEEK "Outline" # is implied. IHDR ... IDAT ... IEND SEEK "Our Vision" IHDR ... IDAT ... IEND SEEK "Our Mission" IHDR ... IDAT ... IEND SEEK "Downsizing Plans" IHDR ... IDAT ... IEND MEND
\212 M N G \r \n ^z \n # MNG signature. MHDR 720 468 # Width and height. 1 # 1 tick per second. DEFI 1 1 1 # Define image 1, invisible, concrete. IHDR ... IDAT ... IEND FRAM 4 0 2 2 0 2 0 600 0 # set frame_duration to 0, # sync_timeout to 600 sec and sync_id list to {0}. SAVE SEEK "Briefing to the Workforce" CLON 1 2 DHDR 2 ... IDAT ... IEND SHOW 2 SEEK "Outline" CLON 1 2 DHDR 2 ... IDAT ... IEND SHOW 2 SEEK "Our Vision" CLON 1 2 DHDR 2 ... IDAT ... IEND SHOW 2 SEEK "Our Mission" CLON 1 2 DHDR 2 ... IDAT ... IEND SHOW 2 SEEK "Downsizing Plans" CLON 1 2 DHDR 2 ... IDAT ... IEND SHOW 2 MEND
\212 M N G \r \n ^z \n # MNG signature. MHDR 720 468 # Width and height. 30 # 30 ticks per second. tEXtTitle\0Sample Movie fPRI 0 128 # Default frame priority is "medium". FRAM 1 0 2 0 0 0 3 # Set frame_duration to 1/10 sec. DEFI 1 0 1 # Set default image to 1 (concrete). SAVE SEEK "start" IHDR 720 468 8 2 0 0 0 # DEFI 1 is implied. IDAT ... IEND DHDR 1 1 1 20 30 100 220 # A PNG-delta frame. IDAT ... # The IDAT gives the 20x30 block IEND # of deltas. DHDR 1 1 1 20 30 102 222 # Another PNG-delta frame. IDAT ... # This time the deltas are in a 20 x 30 IEND # block at a slightly different location. SEEK "frame 3" # OK to restart here because a # complete PNG frame follows. fPRI 0 255 # This is the representative frame that IHDR 720 468 ...# will be displayed by single-frame IDAT ... # viewers. IEND fPRI 0 128 # Return to medium frame priority. DHDR 1 1 1 720 468 0 0 # Another PNG-delta frame. IDAT ... # The entire 720x468 rectangle changes IEND # this time. SEEK "end" MEND # End of MNG datastream.
\212 M N G \r \n ^z \n # MNG signature. MHDR 1024 512 0 # Width, height, ticklength. BACK 16448 16448 52800 1 # Must use sky blue background. DEFI 1 1 # Define invisible abstract thumbnail image. IHDR 64 64 4 3 0 0 0 IDAT IEND eXPI 1 "thumbnail 1" DEFI 1 1 # Also define a larger thumbnail. IHDR 96 96 4 3 0 0 0 IDAT IEND eXPI 1 "thumbnail 2" DISC # Discard the thumbnail image. FRAM 2 "Two views of the data" DEFI 1 0 1 6 6 # Define first (bottom) image. IHDR 500 500 16 0 .. # A 16-bit graylevel image. gAMA 50000 IDAT ... IEND # End of image. CLON 1 2 0 0 1 0 518 6 # Make a full "concrete" clone. DHDR 2 1 5 # Modify it (no change to pixels). ORDR faLT 2 # Establish chunk placement. gAMA 100000 # Gamma value is 100000 (gamma=1.0). tEXtComment\0The faLT chunk is described in ftp://swrinde... faLT ... # Apply pseudocolor to parent image. IEND # End of image. DEFI 3 0 0 900 400 # Overlay near lower right-hand corner. IHDR 101 101 2 3 ... gAMA 50000 # We need a new gAMA because PLTE ... # this is not a Delta-PNG datastream. tRNS ... # It is transparent (maybe a logo). IDAT ... # Note that the color type can differ IDAT ... # from that of the other images. IEND # End of image. MEND # End of MNG datastream.
\212 M N G \r \n ^z \n # MNG signature. MHDR 512 512 30 # Start of MNG datastream. FRAM 2 "frame 1" 0 2 0 0 0 3 # First frame # sets frame_duration=3 ticks. DEFI 1 # Define image 1 (abstract, LOCA 0 0). IHDR 512 512 ... # It is a full-display PNG image. etc # Chunks according to PNG spec. IEND # SHOW 1 is implied by DEFI 1. DEFI 2 0 1 300 200 # Define image 2, concrete. IHDR 32 32 ... # It is a small PNG. gAMA 50000 IDAT ... IEND FRAM 0 "frame 2" # Start new frame. # New location for image 1 is still 0,0. SHOW 1 # Display image 1 from previous frame. MOVE 2 2 1 10 5 # New (delta) location for image 2. SHOW 2 # Retrieve image 2 from previous frame, CLON 2 3 0 0 1 # make a full clone of it as image 3. 0 400 500 # Location for image 3. DHDR 3 1 3 0 0 0 0 # Modify image 3. tRNS ... # Make it semitransparent. IEND # SHOW 3 is implied by CLON visibility. FRAM 0 "frame 3" # Next frame (repeat this FRAM-SHOW 1 3 # sequence with different locations to # move the images around). # New location for image 1 is still 0,0. MOVE 2 2 1 10 5 # New (delta) location for image 2. MOVE 3 3 1 5 -2 # New location for image 3. SHOW 1 3 # Show images 1 through 3. FRAM 0 "frame 4" # Another frame. etc. FRAM 0 "frame 99" etc. # More frames. MEND # End of MNG datastream.
\212 M N G \r \n ^z \n # MNG signature. MHDR 512 512 30 # Start of MNG datastream. FRAM 2 "frame 1" 0 2 0 0 0 3 # First frame. DEFI 1 IHDR 512 512 ... # Background PNG image. etc ... IEND # Chunks according to PNG spec. DEFI 10 1 0 x0 y0 # Static part of sprite. IHDR 64 64 ... IDAT ... IEND DEFI 11 1 0 x0 y1 # View 1 of animated part. IHDR 64 32 ... IDAT ... IEND # (y1=y0+64) DEFI 12 1 0 x0 y1 # View 2 of animated part. IHDR 64 32 ... IDAT ... IEND DEFI 13 1 0 x0 y1 # View 3 of animated part. IHDR 64 32 ... IDAT ... IEND FRAM 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 x0-dx x0+64+dx y0-dy y1+32+dy LOOP 0 0 10 LOOP 1 0 150 FRAM 0 "left-to-right" 0 0 2 0 1 dx dx dy dy MOVE 10 13 1 dx dy # Move animated icon {dx, dy}. SHOW 1 SHOW 10 # Show background and static part. SHOW 11 13 6 # Select the next view of the ENDL 1 # animated part and show it. FRAM SHOW 1 PAST 10 0 0 0 10 1 4 0 0 0 0 0 64 64 PAST 11 0 0 0 11 1 4 0 0 0 0 0 64 32 PAST 12 0 0 0 12 1 4 0 0 0 0 0 64 32 PAST 13 0 0 0 13 1 4 0 0 0 0 0 64 32 LOOP 1 0 150 FRAM 0 "right-to-left" 0 0 2 0 1 -dx -dx -dy -dy MOVE 10 13 1 -dx -dy # Move animated icon {-dx, -dy}. SHOW 1 SHOW 10 # Show background and static part. SHOW 11 13 6 # Select the next view of the ENDL 1 # animated part and show it. ENDL 0 FRAM MEND
\212 M N G \r \n ^z \n # MNG signature. MHDR 64 64 30 # Width, height, ticklength. BACK 52800 52800 52800 # "Browser gray" default background. FRAM 1 0 2 0 0 0 3 # Set frame_duration=3 ticks. DEFI 1 1 1 # Invisible and "concrete". IHDR ... # PNG header. PLTE ... tRNS 0 # Entries are zero for the transparent (0) # color and 255 for the nontransparent ones. IDAT ... IEND fPRI 0 0 # Give the fade-in sequence a low priority. CLON 1 2 1 # Make a working concrete copy of the image # that will be modified during the low-priority # part of the datastream. It is a full clone. DHDR 2 1 5 # No change to pixel data. tRNS 0 0 0 0 0 0 ... # Make all pixels fully transparent. IEND SHOW 2 2 3 # Make it visible but don't show it now. LOOP 0 0 15 DHDR 2 1 5 # An image delta. # Delta-type is no change to pixels. PPLT 1 10 3 16 16 16 16 ... # Increment all alphas except IEND # for entry 0 by 16. SHOW 2 ENDL 0 # Nontransparent pixel alpha=15, 31, ... 240. DISC 2 # Discard the working copy. fPRI 0 255 # Give the final frame the highest value FRAM 0 0 1 0 0 0 60 # Hold the last frame for at least # 60 ticks (2 sec). Applications might show it longer. SHOW 1 # This copy still has alpha=255 for the # opaque pixels and alpha=0 for the others. MEND # End of MNG.
\212 M N G \r \n ^z \n # MNG signature. MHDR 150 150 1 # Width, height, ticklength. tEXtTitle\0Weather modeling results tEXtComment\0The xxSC, yySC, zzSC, and ttSC chunks in this file are written according to the Proposed chunk specifications version 19970203 and Sci-Vis chunks specification version 19970203 available at ftp://swrinde.nde.swri.edu/pub/png-group/documents/ xxSC kch\0 [sig\0] kilometers\0 0\0 150 yySC kch\0 [sig\0] kilometers\0 0\0 150 zzSC kch\0 [sig\0] Height (kilometers)\0 0\0 15 ttSC kch\0 [sig\0] Time (hours)\0 0\0 24 pCAL kch\0 0 255 0 2 Degrees Celsius\0 0\0 45 DEFI 1 0 1 # All images will have image = 1 SAVE # and be visible and "concrete". SEEK FRAM 2 # Initial composite image. IHDR 150 150 16 # Width, height, bit depth for top layer. 0 0 0 0 # Color, comp, filter, interlace. IDAT ... IEND # No DEFI chunk, so it is image 0. DHDR 1 1 0 # Source=0, PNG, pixel subtraction, 150 150 0 0 # Block is entire image. IDAT ... # IHDR is omitted; everything matches top. IEND # IEND is also omitted. etc. # Repeat DHDR through IEND 148 more times. SEEK FRAM # End of first block. etc. # Repeat FRAM through SEEK 19 more times. SEEK MEND # End of MNG.
\212 M N G \r \n ^z \n # MNG signature. MHDR 1024 768 0 # Start of MNG datastream. FRAM 2 DEFI 1 1 0 0 -64 # Set up an offscreen "abstract" copy IHDR 128 64 ... PLTE ... IDAT ... IEND # of the tile. LOOP 0 0 12 # Y loop -- make 12 rows of tiles. MOVE 1 1 1 0 64 # Move the first copy down 64 rows. SHOW 1 # Display it. CLON 1 2 1 # Create a partial clone of the tile. LOOP 1 0 7 # X loop - 7 additional columns. MOVE 2 2 1 0 128 # Move it to the right 128 columns. SHOW 2 # Use the second copy. ENDL 1 ENDL 0 MENDHere is a better approach, which creates a reusable tiled image by means of the PAST chunk.
\212 M N G \r \n ^z \n # MNG signature. MHDR 1024 768 0 # Start of MNG datastream. DEFI 1 1 # Set up an offscreen "abstract" copy IHDR 128 64 ... PLTE ... IDAT ... IEND # of the tile. DEFI 2 # The abstract, visible, viewable image to BASI 1024 768 8 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 # be tiled. Initially IEND # all pixels are zero. PAST 2 0 0 0 # Destination and target location. # src mod orient offset clipping 1 0 8 0 0 512 0 0 1024 0 768 # End of PAST chunk data. MEND
\212 M N G \r \n ^z \n # MNG signature. MHDR 512 256 30 # Width and height on screen. BACK 50000 50000 50000 0 # advisory gray background DEFI 1 1 0 0 256 # Define image 1 but don't display now. # Initially it is offscreen, just # below the 512 by 256 window. IHDR 512 3000 1 0 ... # A PNG datastream containing the PLTE ... # text (or whatever) to be scrolled. IDAT ... IEND DEFI 2 IHDR 512 256 8 6 ... # A PNG datastream containing some kind PLTE ... # of alpha-blended border that is tRNS ... # transparent in the center. IDAT ... IEND LOOP 0 0 3256 MOVE 1 1 1 0 -1 # Jack image 1 up one scanline, 3256 times. # It ends up just above the 512 by 256 window. # The border does not move. FRAM 4 0 2 0 0 0 0 # Frame_duration = 0 ticks. # We use Framing_mode=4 to avoid unnecessary # screen clearing between frames. SHOW 1 # Show first image and continue without delay. FRAM 4 0 2 0 0 0 1 # Frame_duration = 1 tick. SHOW 2 # Composite second image over first, wait 1 tick. ENDL 0 MENDAlternatively, we can declare the scrolling object to be the background:
(Same as above down to the LOOP chunk.) BACK 50000 50000 50000 2 1 # Advisory gray background. # Mandatory image background. FRAM 1 0 2 0 0 0 1 # Frame_duration = 1 tick. LOOP 0 0 3256 MOVE 1 1 1 0 -1 # Jack background up one scanline, 3256 times. SHOW 2 # Composite the second image over it, wait 1 tick. ENDL 0 MEND
begin write "MHDR" and "BACK" chunks saved_images := 0 Frame_duration := 0 First_frame := TRUE if(loops>1) "write tERm 2 0 0 loops" chunk for subimage in gif89a file do if(Frame_duration != gif_duration) then Frame_duration := gif_duration write "FRAM 2 0 2 2 0 2 0 Frame_duration 0" chunk First_frame := FALSE else if(First_frame == TRUE)then write "FRAM 2" chunk First_frame := FALSE else write "FRAM" chunk endif if(X_loc == 0 AND Y_loc == 0) then write "DEFI saved_images 1 1" chunk else write "DEFI saved_images 1 1 X_loc Y_loc" chunk write "<image>" write "SHOW 0 saved_images" chunk if (gif_disposal_method == 0 OR gif_disposal_method == 2) then /* (undefined or restore background) */ write "DISC" chunk saved_images := 0 else if (gif_disposal_method == 1) then /* (keep) */ saved_images := saved_images + 1 else if (gif_disposal_method == 3) then /* (restore previous) */ write "DISC saved_images" chunk endif endfor write "FRAM" and "MEND" chunks endWhere "<image>" represents a PNG or Delta-PNG containing a GIF frame converted to PNG format.
Caution: if you write such a program, you might have to pay royalties in order to convey it to anyone else.
Phone: (410) 278-6554
EMail: randeg @ alumni.rpi.edu
End of MNG Specification.
This document expires on 15 April 1999