This article's documentation is for the "GoldSrc" engine. Click here for more information.

BSP (GoldSrc)

From Valve Developer Community
(Redirected from BSP30 Structure)
Jump to: navigation, search
English (en)Русский (ru)Translate (Translate)
<BSP

Stub

This article or section is a stub. You can help by adding to it.

Icon-broom.png
This article or section needs to be cleaned up to conform to a higher standard of quality.
For help, see the VDC Editing Help and Wikipedia cleanup process. Also, remember to check for any notes left by the tagger at this article's talk page.
This documentation is based upon the article BSP30 Structure, created for the defunct Black Engine.

The BSP format used in GoldSrc GoldSrc, called BSP30, is closely derived from the format used in Quake Quake.

Elaborate?: 

The format is basically the same except for the miptex and lightmap lumps. While the expected hull sizes for Half-Life Half-Life are different from Quake Quake, the collision data is stored in the same way (hull 3 is unused in Quake).

Introduction

This file spec uses constructs from the C programming language to describe the different data structures used in the BSP file format. Architecture dependent datatypes like integers are replaced by exact-width integer types of the C99 standard in the stdint.h header file, to provide more flexibillity when using x64 platforms. Basic knowledge about Binary Space Partitioning is recommended. There is a common struct used to represent a point in 3-dimensional space which is used throughout the file spec and the code of the hlbsp project.

#include <stdint.h>

typedef struct _VECTOR3D
{
    float x, y, z;
} VECTOR3D;

Bugs/Limitations

[Todo]

Overview

[Todo]

Versions

This table gives an overview over the different BSP versions being used in some games based on GoldSrc GoldSrc Engine.

Tip.pngTip:BSPFix can be used to losslessly convert between standard BSP30 and Blue Shift BSPs.
  • Paranoia 2: Savior Paranoia 2: Savior uses a modified version of BSP30, called BSP31. This format is deprecated, as BSP30 can be extended to support BSP31's features without breaking compatibility (using BSPX lumps).
  • James Bond 007: Nightfire James Bond 007: Nightfire uses a modified version of BSP30, called BSP42.
Confirm:Are the formats used by Counter-Strike Neo Counter-Strike Neo, Counter-Strike Nexon: Studio Counter-Strike Nexon: Studio, and Cry of Fear Cry of Fear different from BSP30?

Header

Like almost every file also a BSP file starts with a specific file header which is constucted as follows:

#define LUMP_ENTITIES      0
#define LUMP_PLANES        1
#define LUMP_TEXTURES      2
#define LUMP_VERTICES      3
#define LUMP_VISIBILITY    4
#define LUMP_NODES         5
#define LUMP_TEXINFO       6
#define LUMP_FACES         7
#define LUMP_LIGHTING      8
#define LUMP_CLIPNODES     9
#define LUMP_LEAVES       10
#define LUMP_MARKSURFACES 11
#define LUMP_EDGES        12
#define LUMP_SURFEDGES    13
#define LUMP_MODELS       14
#define HEADER_LUMPS      15

typedef struct _BSPHEADER
{
    int32_t nVersion;           // Must be 30 for a valid HL BSP file
    BSPLUMP lump[HEADER_LUMPS]; // Stores the directory of lumps
} BSPHEADER;

The file header begins with an 32bit integer containing the file version of the BSP file (the magic number). This should be 30 for a valid BSP file used by the Half-Life Engine. Subseqently, there is an array of entries for the so-called lumps. A lump is more or less a section of the file containing a specific type of data. The lump entries in the file header address these lumps, accessed by the 15 predefined indexes. A lump entry struct is defined as follows:

typedef struct _BSPLUMP
{
    int32_t nOffset; // File offset to data
    int32_t nLength; // Length of data
} BSPLUMP;

To read the different lumps from the given BSP file, every lump entry file states the beginning of each lump as an offset relativly to the beginning of the file. Additionally, the lump entry also gives the length of the addressed lump in bytes. The Half-Life BSP compilers also define several constants for the maximum size of each lump, as they use static, global arrays to hold the data. The hlbsp project uses malloc() to allocate the required memory for each lump depending on their actual size.

#define MAX_MAP_HULLS        4

#define MAX_MAP_MODELS       400
#define MAX_MAP_BRUSHES      4096
#define MAX_MAP_ENTITIES     1024
#define MAX_MAP_ENTSTRING    (128*1024)

#define MAX_MAP_PLANES       32767
#define MAX_MAP_NODES        32767
#define MAX_MAP_CLIPNODES    32767
#define MAX_MAP_LEAFS        8192
#define MAX_MAP_VERTS        65535
#define MAX_MAP_FACES        65535
#define MAX_MAP_MARKSURFACES 65535
#define MAX_MAP_TEXINFO      8192
#define MAX_MAP_EDGES        256000
#define MAX_MAP_SURFEDGES    512000
#define MAX_MAP_TEXTURES     512
#define MAX_MAP_MIPTEX       0x200000
#define MAX_MAP_LIGHTING     0x200000
#define MAX_MAP_VISIBILITY   0x200000

#define MAX_MAP_PORTALS     65536

The following sections will focus on every lump of the BSP file.

Lumps

Entities

The entity lump is basically a pure ASCII text section. It consists of the string representations of all entities, which are copied directly from the input file to the output BSP file by the compiler. An entity might look like this:

{
"origin" "0 0 -64"
"angles" "0 0 0"
"classname" "info_player_start"
}

Every entity begins and ends with curly brackets. In between there are the attributes of the entity, one in each line, which are pairs of strings enclosed by quotes. The first string is the name of the attribute (the key), the second one its value. The attribute "classname" is mandatory for every entity specifiying its type and therefore, how it is interpreted by the engine.

The map compilers also define two constants for the maximum length of key and value:

#define MAX_KEY     32
#define MAX_VALUE   1024

Planes

This lump is a simple array of binary data structures:

#define PLANE_X 0     // Plane is perpendicular to given axis
#define PLANE_Y 1
#define PLANE_Z 2
#define PLANE_ANYX 3  // Non-axial plane is snapped to the nearest
#define PLANE_ANYY 4
#define PLANE_ANYZ 5

typedef struct _BSPPLANE
{
    VECTOR3D vNormal; // The planes normal vector
    float fDist;      // Plane equation is: vNormal * X = fDist
    int32_t nType;    // Plane type, see #defines
} BSPPLANE;

Each of this structures defines a plane in 3-dimensional space by using the Hesse normal form: normal * point - distance = 0

Where vNormal is the normalized normal vector of the plane and fDist is the distance of the plane to the origin of the coord system. Additionally, the structure also saves an integer describing the orientation of the plane in space. If nType equals PLANE_X, then the normal of the plane will be parallel to the x axis, meaning the plane is perpendicular to the x axis. If nType equals PLANE_ANYX, then the plane's normal is nearer to the x axis then to any other axis. This information is used by the renderer to speed up some computations.

Textures

The texture lump is somehow a bit more complex then the other lumps, because it is possible to save textures directly within the BSP file instead of storing them in external WAD files. This lump also starts with a small header:

typedef struct _BSPTEXTUREHEADER
{
    uint32_t nMipTextures; // Number of BSPMIPTEX structures
} BSPTEXTUREHEADER;

The header only consists of an unsigned 32bit integer indicating the number of stored or referenced textures in the texture lump. After the header follows an array of 32bit offsets pointing to the beginnings of the seperate textures.

typedef int32_t BSPMIPTEXOFFSET;

Every offset gives the distance in bytes from the beginning of the texture lump to one of the beginnings of the BSPMIPTEX structure, which are equal in count to the value given in the texture header.

#define MAXTEXTURENAME 16
#define MIPLEVELS 4
typedef struct _BSPMIPTEX
{
    char szName[MAXTEXTURENAME];  // Name of texture
    uint32_t nWidth, nHeight;     // Extends of the texture
    uint32_t nOffsets[MIPLEVELS]; // Offsets to texture mipmaps BSPMIPTEX;
} BSPMIPTEX;

Each of this structs describes a texture. The name of the texture is a string and may be 16 characters long (including the null-character at the end, char equals a 8bit signed integer). The name of the texture is needed, if the texture has to be found and loaded from an external WAD file. Furthermore, the struct contains the width and height of the texture. The 4 offsets at the end can either be zero, if the texture is stored in an external WAD file, or point to the beginnings of the binary texture data within the texture lump relative to the beginning of it's BSPMIPTEX struct.

Vertices

This lump simply consists of all vertices of the BSP tree. They are stored as a primitve array of triples of floats.

typedef VECTOR3D BSPVERTEX;

Each of this triples, obviously, represents a point in 3-dimensional space by giving its three coordinates.

VIS

The VIS lump contains data, which is irrelevant to the actual BSP tree, but offers a way to boost up the speed of the renderer significantly. Especially complex maps profit from the use if this data. This lump contains the so-called Potentially Visible Sets (PVS) (also called VIS lists) in the same amout of leaves of the tree, the user can enter (often referred to as VisLeaves). The visiblilty lists are stored as sequences of bitfields, which are run-length encoded.

Icon-Important.pngImportant:The generation of the VIS data is a very time consuming process if a map is poorly optimized (several hours) and also done by a separate compiler. It can therefore be skipped when compiling the map, resulting in BSP files with no VIS data at all!

Nodes

This lump is simple again and contains an array of binary structures, the nodes, which are a major part of the BSP tree.

typedef struct _BSPNODE
{
    uint32_t iPlane;            // Index into Planes lump
    int16_t iChildren[2];       // If > 0, then indices into Nodes // otherwise bitwise inverse indices into Leafs
    int16_t nMins[3], nMaxs[3]; // Defines bounding box
    uint16_t firstFace, nFaces; // Index and count into Faces
} BSPNODE;

Every BSPNODE structure represents a node in the BSP tree and every node equals more or less a division step of the BSP algorithm. Therefore, each node has an index (iPlane) referring to a plane in the plane lump which devides the node into its two child nodes. The childnodes are also stored as indexes. Contrary to the plane index, the node index for the child is signed. If the index is larger than 0, the index indicates a child node. If it is equal to or smaller than zero (no valid array index), the bitwise inversed value of the index gives an index into the leaves lump. Additionally two points (nMins, nMaxs) span the bounding box (AABB, axis aligned bounding box) delimitting the space of the node. Finally firstFace indexes into the face lump and spezifies the first of nFaces surfaces contained in this node.

Texinfo

The texinfo lump contains informations about how textures are applied to surfaces. The lump itself is an array of binary data structures.

typedef struct _BSPTEXTUREINFO
{
    VECTOR3D vS;
    float fSShift;    // Texture shift in s direction
    VECTOR3D vT;
    float fTShift;    // Texture shift in t direction
    uint32_t iMiptex; // Index into textures array
    uint32_t nFlags;  // Texture flags
} BSPTEXTUREINFO;

This struct is mainly responsible for the calculation of the texture coordinates (vS, fSShift, vT, fTShift). This values determine the position of the texture on the surface. The iMiptex integer refers to the textures in the texture lump and would be the index in an array of BSPMITEX structs. Finally, there are 4 Bytes used for flags. Only one flag is used by the vanilla engine, being 0x1 for disabling lightmaps and subdivision for the surface (used by sky and liquids).

Faces

The face lump contains the surfaces of the scene. Once again an array of structs:

typedef struct _BSPFACE
{
    uint16_t iPlane;          // Plane the face is parallel to
    uint16_t nPlaneSide;      // Set if different normals orientation
    uint32_t iFirstEdge;      // Index of the first surfedge
    uint16_t nEdges;          // Number of consecutive surfedges
    uint16_t iTextureInfo;    // Index of the texture info structure
    uint8_t nStyles[4];       // Specify lighting styles
    int32_t nLightmapOffset; // Offsets into the raw lightmap data; if less than zero, then a lightmap was not baked for the given face.
} BSPFACE;

The first number of this data structure is an index into the planes lump giving a plane which is parallel to this face (meaning they share the same normal). The second value may be seen as a boolean. If nPlaneSide equals 0, then the normal vector of this face equals the one of the parallel plane exactly. Otherwise, the normal of the plane has to be multiplied by -1 to point into the right direction. Afterwards we have an index into the surfedges lump, as well as the count of consecutive surfedges from that position. Furthermore there is an index into the texture info lump, which is used to find the BSPTEXINFO structure needed to calculate the texture coordinates for this face. Afterwards, there are four bytes giving some lighting information (partly used by the renderer to hide sky surfaces). Finally we have an offset in byes giving the beginning of the binary lightmap data of this face in the lighting lump.

Lightmap

This is one of the largest lumps in the BSP file. The lightmap lump stores all lightmaps used in the entire map. The lightmaps are arrays of triples of bytes (3 channel color, RGB) and stored continuously.

Clipnodes

This lump contains the so-called clipnodes, which build a second BSP tree used only for collision detection.

typedef struct _BSPCLIPNODE
{
    int32_t iPlane;       // Index into planes
    int16_t iChildren[2]; // negative numbers are contents
} BSPCLIPNODE;

This structure is a reduced form of the BSPNODE struct from the nodes lump. Also the BSP tree built by the clipnodes is simpler than the one described by the BSPNODEs to accelerate collision calculations.

Leaves

The leaves lump contains the leaves of the BSP tree. Another array of binary structs:

#define CONTENTS_EMPTY        -1
#define CONTENTS_SOLID        -2
#define CONTENTS_WATER        -3
#define CONTENTS_SLIME        -4
#define CONTENTS_LAVA         -5
#define CONTENTS_SKY          -6
#define CONTENTS_ORIGIN       -7
#define CONTENTS_CLIP         -8
#define CONTENTS_CURRENT_0    -9
#define CONTENTS_CURRENT_90   -10
#define CONTENTS_CURRENT_180  -11
#define CONTENTS_CURRENT_270  -12
#define CONTENTS_CURRENT_UP   -13
#define CONTENTS_CURRENT_DOWN -14
#define CONTENTS_TRANSLUCENT  -15

typedef struct _BSPLEAF
{
    int32_t nContents;                         // Contents enumeration
    int32_t nVisOffset;                        // Offset into the visibility lump
    int16_t nMins[3], nMaxs[3];                // Defines bounding box
    uint16_t iFirstMarkSurface, nMarkSurfaces; // Index and count into marksurfaces array
    uint8_t nAmbientLevels[4];                 // Ambient sound levels
} BSPLEAF;

The first entry of this struct is the type of the content of this leaf. It can be one of the predefined values, found in the compiler source codes, and is litte relevant for the actual rendering process. All the more important is the next integer containing the offset into the vis lump. It defines the start of the raw PVS data for this leaf. If this value equals -1, no VIS lists are available for this leaf, usually if the map has been built without the VIS compiler. The next two 16bit integer triples span the bounding box of this leaf. Furthermore, the struct contains an index pointing into the array of marksurfaces loaded from the marksufaces lump as well as the number of consecutive marksurfaces belonging to this leaf. The marksurfaces are looped through during the rendering process and point to the actual faces. The final 4 bytes specify the volume of ambient sounds in Quake Quake, but are unused in GoldSrc.

Marksurfaces

The marksurfaces lump is a simple array of short integers.

typedef uint16_t BSPMARKSURFACE;

This lump is a simple table for redirecting the marksurfaces indexes in the leafs to the actial face indexes. A leaf inserts it's marksurface indexes into this array and gets the associated faces contained within this leaf.

Edges

The edges are defined as an array of structs:

typedef struct _BSPEDGE
{
    uint16_t iVertex[2]; // Indices into vertex array
} BSPEDGE;

The edges delimit the face and further refer to the vertices of the face. Each edge is pointing to the start and end vertex of the edge.

Surfedges

Another array of integers.

typedef int32_t BSPSURFEDGE;

This lump represents pretty much the same mechanism as the marksurfaces. A face can insert its surfedge indexes into this array to get the corresponding edges delimitting the face and further pointing to the vertexes, which are required for rendering. The index can be positive or negative. If the value of the surfedge is positive, the first vertex of the edge is used as vertex for rendering the face, otherwise, the value is multiplied by -1 and the second vertex of the indexed edge is used.

Models

Array of structs:

#define MAX_MAP_HULLS 4

typedef struct _BSPMODEL
{
    float nMins[3], nMaxs[3];          // Defines bounding box
    VECTOR3D vOrigin;                  // Coordinates to move the // coordinate system
    int32_t iHeadnodes[MAX_MAP_HULLS]; // Index into nodes array
    int32_t nVisLeafs;                 // ???
    int32_t iFirstFace, nFaces;        // Index and count into faces
} BSPMODEL;

A model is kind of a mini BSP tree. Its size is determinded by the bounding box spaned by the first to members of this struct. The major difference between a model and the BSP tree holding the scene is that the models use a local coordinate system for their vertexes and just state its origin in world coordinates. During rendering the coordinate system is translated to the origin of the model (glTranslate()) and moved back after the models BSP tree has been traversed. Furthermore their are 4 indexes into node arrays. The first one has proofed to index the root node of the mini BSP tree used for rendering. The other three indexes could probably be used for collision detection, meaning they point into the clipnodes, but I am not sure about this. The meaning of the next value is also somehow unclear to me. Finally their are direct indexes into the faces array, not taking the redirecting by the marksurfaces.

Other

[Todo]

External links