Difference between revisions of "ScummVM Tools/new"

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(Improved manual with details on how to use the new tools, still missing screenshots and details about some tools.)
 
(Added pictures...)
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Most common usage is to compress files, to do that, simply click Next as compression is the default activity. If you are compressing Touche data files, you need to select advanced mode and then compress_touche, as the tools do not support selecting the touche directory automatically.
Most common usage is to compress files, to do that, simply click Next as compression is the default activity. If you are compressing Touche data files, you need to select advanced mode and then compress_touche, as the tools do not support selecting the touche directory automatically.
[[Image:Toolguide1.png]]


Next select the input file, depending on the tool you are using, this file to be selected differs greatly. You can look in the list below for the expected extension or filename, if you don't know it already. For some games this is obvious as there only is a single data file. For games that ship on multiple disks, select the first disk on this page, you will be asked for the second disk on the next page.
Next select the input file, depending on the tool you are using, this file to be selected differs greatly. You can look in the list below for the expected extension or filename, if you don't know it already. For some games this is obvious as there only is a single data file. For games that ship on multiple disks, select the first disk on this page, you will be asked for the second disk on the next page.
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In most cases, the tool to be used will be automatically detected, if there are multiple options, you must manually select the correct tool to be used, this is usually obvious from the name of the tool, if you are unsure, check the list of tools below.
In most cases, the tool to be used will be automatically detected, if there are multiple options, you must manually select the correct tool to be used, this is usually obvious from the name of the tool, if you are unsure, check the list of tools below.


After this, you will be asked for the output directory, note that the directory '''must exist'''. Extraction tools usually generate a large amount of output files, while compression tools generate a single archive. Since ScummVM usually expects a specific filename for compressed archives, you should not change the default after extraction completes.
[[Image:Toolguide2.png]]
 
In this case, the correct tool (compress_quenn) was automatically detected. Now select the output directory, note that the directory '''must exist'''. Extraction tools usually generate a large amount of output files, while compression tools generate a single archive. Since ScummVM usually expects a specific filename for compressed archives, you should not change the default after extraction completes.
 
[[Image:Toolguide3.png]]


Next, you will be asked for target platform. This is the platform that you are running ScummVM on, '''not''' the platform you are running the tools on. Note that this does not make the output files incompatible with other platforms. Instead it affects the default audio settings to be optimized for the platform selected, as support for some are very poor on certain platform (and will make ScummVM run very slow).
Next, you will be asked for target platform. This is the platform that you are running ScummVM on, '''not''' the platform you are running the tools on. Note that this does not make the output files incompatible with other platforms. Instead it affects the default audio settings to be optimized for the platform selected, as support for some are very poor on certain platform (and will make ScummVM run very slow).
[[Image:Toolguide4.png]]


Next page asks audio for audio format to use, in most cases you can leave this at the default setting. If you want to configure bitrate and quality settings manually, check the advanced options checkbox, and you can change this at the next page.
Next page asks audio for audio format to use, in most cases you can leave this at the default setting. If you want to configure bitrate and quality settings manually, check the advanced options checkbox, and you can change this at the next page.


After this, the tool will run. This can take a while and if all went well, you can continue on to the next page. If an error occured, you can go back to adjust settings. Take special care to note that some input files can cause the entire application to crash as many tools don't check too well for mal-formatted input files.
[[Image:Toolguide5.png]]
 
After this, the tool will run. This can take a while and if all went well, you can continue on to the next page. If an error occured, you can go back to adjust settings. Take  
special care to note that some input files can cause the entire application to crash as many tools don't check too well for mal-formatted input files.
 
[[Image:Toolguide6.png]]


If all is well, advance to the next page to finish the guide! Enjoy your newly compressed/extracted data files!
If all is well, advance to the next page to finish the guide! Enjoy your newly compressed/extracted data files!
[[Image:Toolguide7.png]]


== Using the CLI ==
== Using the CLI ==

Revision as of 20:28, 8 August 2009

WORK IN PROGRESS, HELP NEEDED
If you want to contribute, send us a sample of text you'd write for the new manual, and we will consider adding you an account. You can work on the manual in the Wiki, but if you prefer, supplying us with HTML or TeX sources is fine, too (we will then translate them for the Wiki).

You can have a look at our TODO page for a list of tasks that need to be done.

TODO: describe each ScummVM command line tool in detail. Explain the allowed options, give typical usage examples and so on. Game pages might link to this.

This is a collection of various tools that may be useful to use in conjunction with ScummVM. Please note that although a tool may support a feature, certain ScummVM versions may not. ScummVM 0.6.x does not support FLAC audio, for example.

Using the GUI

The recommended way to use the tools are using the tool GUI, run the program tool program.

Most common usage is to compress files, to do that, simply click Next as compression is the default activity. If you are compressing Touche data files, you need to select advanced mode and then compress_touche, as the tools do not support selecting the touche directory automatically.

Toolguide1.png

Next select the input file, depending on the tool you are using, this file to be selected differs greatly. You can look in the list below for the expected extension or filename, if you don't know it already. For some games this is obvious as there only is a single data file. For games that ship on multiple disks, select the first disk on this page, you will be asked for the second disk on the next page.

In most cases, the tool to be used will be automatically detected, if there are multiple options, you must manually select the correct tool to be used, this is usually obvious from the name of the tool, if you are unsure, check the list of tools below.

Toolguide2.png

In this case, the correct tool (compress_quenn) was automatically detected. Now select the output directory, note that the directory must exist. Extraction tools usually generate a large amount of output files, while compression tools generate a single archive. Since ScummVM usually expects a specific filename for compressed archives, you should not change the default after extraction completes.

Toolguide3.png

Next, you will be asked for target platform. This is the platform that you are running ScummVM on, not the platform you are running the tools on. Note that this does not make the output files incompatible with other platforms. Instead it affects the default audio settings to be optimized for the platform selected, as support for some are very poor on certain platform (and will make ScummVM run very slow).

Toolguide4.png

Next page asks audio for audio format to use, in most cases you can leave this at the default setting. If you want to configure bitrate and quality settings manually, check the advanced options checkbox, and you can change this at the next page.

Toolguide5.png

After this, the tool will run. This can take a while and if all went well, you can continue on to the next page. If an error occured, you can go back to adjust settings. Take special care to note that some input files can cause the entire application to crash as many tools don't check too well for mal-formatted input files.

Toolguide6.png

If all is well, advance to the next page to finish the guide! Enjoy your newly compressed/extracted data files!

Toolguide7.png

Using the CLI

You can access all tools through the command line interface using the following syntax:

./tools_cli [audio mode params] [params] [-o output] [extract|compress] <inputfile N ...>

Normally, all arguments except the input file(s) can be skipped. You can specify extract or compress before the filename to hint the tool what activity you want to perform. In many cases, the tools will output to the directory "out/" relative to the input file, if no directory is specified.

Some tools take additional parameters, use --help <tool name> to display extra arguments for that tool.

Use --list to display a list of all supported tools.

Use the -o or --output flag to specify the output file, if it's a directory, it's strongly recommended to append / to the filename for clarity. Normally the tools will output to the directory "out/" relative to the input file, if no directory is specified, some tools output to a file instead of a directory.

You can also specify the tool explicitly to ignore automatic detection:

./tools_cli --tool <tool name> [audio mode params] [params] [-o output] <inputfile N ...>

Audio mode params

You can specify what compression method to use. Use --mp3, --flac or --vorbis first to select a special format, default is MP3.

MP3 mode params

  • -b raterate is the target bitrate(ABR)/minimal bitrate(VBR).
  • -B raterate is the maximum VBR/ABR bitrate.
  • --vbr — LAME Uses the VBR mode (default).
  • --abr — LAME Uses the ABR mode.
  • -V value — Specifies the value (0 - 9) of VBR quality (0 being the best quality).
  • -q value — Specifies the MPEG algorithm quality (0 - 9) (0 being the best quality).
  • --silent — The output of LAME is hidden.

Vorbis mode params

  • -b raterate is the nominal bitrate.
  • -m raterate is the minimum bitrate.
  • -M raterate is the maximum bitrate.
  • -q value — Specifies the value (0 - 10) of VBR quality 10 is best quality.
  • --silent — The output of oggenc is hidden.

Flac mode params

  • --fast — FLAC uses compression level 0.
  • --best — FLAC uses compression level 8.
  • -value — Specifies the value (0 - 8) of compression, with 8 being the best quality.
  • -b value — Specifies a blocksize of value samples, must be a multiple of 8 between 8 and 160.
  • --verify' — Files are encoded and then decoded to check accuracy.
  • --silent — The output of FLAC is hidden.


Compression Tools

compress_agos

Used to compress the Feeble Files or Simon 1/2 voc/wav files to MP3, Vorbis or FLAC.

compress_gob

Pending content...

compress_kyra

Used to compress The Legend of Kyrandia's speech files with MP3, Vorbis or FLAC.

Example of usage:

 compress_kyra <flags here> input/GEMCUT.VRM output/GEMCUT.VRM

Note: You have to keep the VRM extension, else it will NOT work. Use it like shown above, copy all *.VRM files to a directory and let the tool put the output file in another directory.

compress_queen

Used to rebuild the datafile of Flight of the Amazon Queen, and allow optional MP3, Vorbis or FLAC compression.

compress_saga

Used to compress SAGA engine digital sound files to MP3, Vorbis or FLAC.

Example of usage:

 compress_saga <flags here> <file>

Where <file> is the sound file you with to compress, without the extension.

For Inherit the Earth, the digital music (music.rsc), speech (voices.rsc or "inherit the earth voices") and sound effects (sounds.rsc) files can be compressed. For I have no mouth, the speech (voices*.res) files can be compressed.

The compressed files have the ".cmp" extension. Once compressed, you only need the respective .cmp files.

There is no compression support yet for the following versions: - The Mac CD Guild version of Inherit the Earth (uses MacBinary *.bin files) - The unsupported early DOS demo of Inherit the Earth

compress_scumm_bun

Used to the compress '.bun' music/voice files with MP3, Vorbis or FLAC.

Example of usage:

 compress_scumm.bun digmusic.bun uncomp comp --flac

Please note that FLAC compression will produce larger files than the original, for The Curse of Monkey Island!


compress_scumm_san

Compresses '.san' smush animation files. It uses lossless zlib for compressing FOBJ gfx chunks inside a san file. It also can create a separate Ogg file with the audio track.

Example of usage:

 compress_scumm_san opening.san uncomp comp

In order to use such compressed files, your ScummVM binary must have been built with zlib support enabled (you can find out whether that's the case by looking at the About dialog). For the Ogg or MP3 compression feature, your ScummVM binary naturally must have been built with Ogg or MP3 support enabled.

NOTE: For some '.san' files there is a corresponding '.flu' file, which contains offsets into the '.san' file. Hence, the compress_scumm_san has to modify the '.flu' file. This happens automatically, if the '.san' and '.flu' files are in the same directory (which is normally the case). If you want to move the '.san' files before compressing them, make sure to move the '.flu' files, too!

compress_scumm_sou

Used to compress .sou files to .so3 (MP3), .sog (Vorbis), or .sof (FLAC).

compress_sword1

Used to compress Broken Sword 1's music and speech files to MP3 or Vorbis or FLAC.

compress_sword2

Used to compress Broken Sword 2's music and speech .clu files to .cl3 (MP3), .clg (Vorbis) or .clf (FLAC).

Please note that FLAC compression will produce a larger file than the original! This is because the original files already use lossy compression.

compress_tinsel

Pending content...

compress_touche

Used to compress and pack Touche speech files ('Vxxx' and 'OBJ') to MP3, Vorbis or FLAC to a single file named TOUCHE.SO3/.SOG/.SOF depending on the sound compression. Once compressed, only TOUCHE.DAT and TOUCHE.SOx files are required to play the game under ScummVM.

compress_tucker

Pending content...

Encoder Tools

encode_dxa <filename>

Creates DXA file out of extracted Smacker video.

To extract a video use RAD Game Tools and perform 2 passes on it. For example, if your video is called 'intro.smk'.

1. Extract the video to PNG, 256 colors (choose PNG format and tick the checkbox). It will create bunch of files named 'introXXX.png', where XXX is frame number. Make sure you have extracted 256 colors PNGs, otherwise encode_dxa will complain.

2. Extract the audio to WAV format, you will get an 'intro.wav' file.

3. Put files 'intro.smk', 'intro.wav' and 'intro*.png' into a single directory.

4. Run `encode_dxa intro.smk` in that directory

5. You will get an intro.dxa file and intro.flac/mp3/ogg file in result.

Additionally you may use batch processing mode of SMK files in RAD Game Tools. Just select more than one file and push the 'Convert' button. It will ask you either you want them processed in batch mode and will do this for you. All buttons and conversion options work the same.

convert_dxa.bat, convert_dxa_one.bat

To ease your life we also provide batch files to autoconvert all files. It should work with any game version.

1. Copy *.smk files from all CDs to some directory

2. Edit paths in convert_dxa.bat file.

3. Run the batch. If you set everything correct, it will be almost unattended conversion, just for several files there are no audio, and RAD Game Tools converter will ask you to press OK

convert_dxa.sh

Same as above convert_dxa.bat, just for *nix-based systems. It uses Wine to run RAD Game Tools.

Extraction Tools

Many games package together all their game data in a few big archive files. The following tools can be used to extract these archives, and in some cases are needed to make certain game versions usable with ScummVM. In general, though, they are mostly intended for ScummVM developers and not useful to end users.

extract_agos

Extracts the packed files used in the Amiga and AtariST versions of Elvira 1/2, Waxworks and Simon the Sorcerer 1.

extract_cine

...

extract_gob_stk

...

extract_kyra

Unpacks .PAK files from Kyrandia games.

extract_loom_tg16

Extracts data files from the PC-Engine version of Loom.

You will need to extract the code track from the CD with one of the following utilities

Windows

Use dumpcd [dumpcd]/[GUI]

Alternatively use TurboRip from [here].

Linux

Use dumpcd [dumpcd]

Alternatively you may compile dumpcd using the source code available [here].

extract_mm_apple

Extracts data files from the Apple II version of Maniac Mansion.

extract_mm_c64

Extracts data files from the Commodore 64 version of Maniac Mansion.

extract_mm_nes

Extracts data files from the NES version of Maniac Mansion.

extract_parallaction

Extracts the contents of archives used by Nippon Safes

extract_scumm_mac

Extracts Macintosh "single file" SCUMM games into their component parts, for use with ScummVM. This is required for ScummVM up to version 0.6.x; all later versions directly support reading this file format.

extract_t7g_mac

...

extract_zak_c64

Extracts data files from the Commodore 64 version of Zak McKracken.

Script Tools

The following tools can be used to analyze the game scripts (controlling the behavior of certain scenes and actors in a game). They are intended for use by developers, and as such in general not helpful to normal users.

descumm

Decompiles SCUMM scripts.

Syntax:
 descumm [-o] filename
Flags:
 -0	Input Script is C64
 -1	Input Script is v1
 -2	Input Script is v2
 -3	Input Script is v3
 -4	Input Script is v4
 -5	Input Script is v5
 -6	Input Script is v6
 -7	Input Script is v7
 -8	Input Script is v8
 -p	Input Script is from Humongous Entertainment game
 -n	Use Indy3-256 specific hacks
 -z	Use Zak256 specific hacks
 -u	Script is Unblocked/has no header
 -o	Always Show offsets
 -i	Don't output ifs
 -e	Don't output else
 -f	Don't output else-if
 -w	Don't output while
 -b	Don't output breaks
 -c	Don't show opcode
 -x	Don't show offsets
 -h	Halt on error

descumm sends the results to standard output, so you should redirect the output using the ">" character, like so:

descumm -5 inscript.tmp > outscript.txt

Each version of the SCUMM engine has a different instruction set, so you must specify which set to use when interpreting the input. If you're not sure which version number to use, consult the table at SCUMM/Versions. Note that Indy3-256 and Zak256 have a few instructions that differ from the standard SCUMM V3 instruction set, so you should also specify the "-n" or "-z" option.

By default, descumm attempts to interpret most instructions that jump to another address as "if/else" or "while" blocks. If you like, you can retain just the basic instruction, which will appear in the form of:

unless ([boolean-expression]) goto [address];

You can also disable outputting the opcode hex values and address offsets, although you may have trouble understanding where jumps go to.

If the script has been "unblocked", it is missing the header information as described in SCUMM/Technical_Reference/Script_resources. This information is not necessary to interperet the code, but you must tell descumm if is not present via the "-u" option.

desword2

Disassembles Broken Sword II scripts

dekyra

Basic script disassembler for Legend of Kyrandia games



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