show/hide this revision's text 3 formatting

It seems the regexp is wrong. That's why I wrote a little C program to do it for me:

#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>

#define MAX_SIZE 1048576

char stuff[MAX_SIZE];

int main (int argc, char **argv)
{
    unsigned int j_off, j_len, p_off, p_len;
    FILE *fp, *jp, *pp;
    fp = fopen (argv[1], "r");
    if (!fp)	goto error;
    if (fseek (fp, 12, SEEK_SET))	goto error;
    if (!fread (&j_off, 4, 1, fp))	goto error;
    if (!fread (&j_len, 4, 1, fp))	goto error;
    if (!fread (&p_off, 4, 1, fp))	goto error;
    if (!fread (&p_len, 4, 1, fp))	goto error;
    fprintf (stderr, "INFO %s \t%d %d %d %d\n",
    	argv[1], j_off, j_len, p_off, p_len);
    if (j_len > MAX_SIZE || p_len > MAX_SIZE) {
    	fprintf (stderr, "%s: Chunk size too big!\n", argv[1]);
    	return EXIT_FAILURE;
    }

    jp = fopen (argv[2], "w");
    if (!jp)	goto error;
    if (fseek (fp, j_off, SEEK_SET))	goto error;
    if (!fread (stuff, j_len, 1, fp))	goto error;
    if (!fwrite (stuff, j_len, 1, jp))	goto error;
    fclose (jp);

    pp = fopen (argv[3], "w");
    if (!pp)	goto error;
    if (fseek (fp, p_off, SEEK_SET))	goto error;
    if (!fread (stuff, p_len, 1, fp))	goto error;
    if (!fwrite (stuff, p_len, 1, pp))	goto error;
    fclose (pp);
    fclose (fp);
    return EXIT_SUCCESS;

error:
    perror (argv[1]);
    return EXIT_FAILURE;
}

It works with the command line parameters input.hpi output.jpg output.png. The error handling is not 100% correct, but it is good enough to always tell you if something's wrong, and most times what it is. *For large files, you will have to enlarge MAX_SIZE.*MAX_SIZE.

Here is a shell script which you can call with *.hpi:

#!/bin/bash

dest=<destination-folder>

for arg in "$@"
do
  base=`echo $arg | cut -d'.' -f1`
  <executable> $arg $dest/original/$base.jpg $dest/mask/$base.png 2>>$dest/log
  #composite -compose CopyOpacity $dest/mask/$base.png $dest/original/$base.jpg $dest/rgba/$base.png
done

The optional composite command (comes with ImageMagick) will create a new PNG image which has the mask applied as alpha channel. Note that this file will be about 5 times larger than the original files.

Note that some HPI files come without mask. In this case, my program will still work, but give an empty PNG file.

show/hide this revision's text 2 additional stuff

It seems the regexp is wrong. That's why I wrote a little C program to do it for me:

#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>

#define MAX_SIZE 1048576

char stuff[MAX_SIZE];

int main (int argc, char **argv)
{
    unsigned int j_off, j_len, p_off, p_len;
    FILE *fp, *jp, *pp;
    fp = fopen (argv[1], "r");
    if (!fp)	goto error;
    if (fseek (fp, 12, SEEK_SET))	goto error;
    if (!fread (&j_off, 4, 1, fp))	goto error;
    if (!fread (&j_len, 4, 1, fp))	goto error;
    if (!fread (&p_off, 4, 1, fp))	goto error;
    if (!fread (&p_len, 4, 1, fp))	goto error;
    fprintf (stderr, "INFO %s \t%d %d %d %d\n",
    	argv[1], j_off, j_len, p_off, p_len);
    if (j_len > MAX_SIZE || p_len > MAX_SIZE) {
    	fprintf (stderr, "%s: Chunk size too big!\n", argv[1]);
    	return EXIT_FAILURE;
    }

    jp = fopen (argv[2], "w");
    if (!jp)	goto error;
    if (fseek (fp, j_off, SEEK_SET))	goto error;
    if (!fread (stuff, j_len, 1, fp))	goto error;
    if (!fwrite (stuff, j_len, 1, jp))	goto error;
    fclose (jp);

    pp = fopen (argv[3], "w");
    if (!pp)	goto error;
    if (fseek (fp, p_off, SEEK_SET))	goto error;
    if (!fread (stuff, p_len, 1, fp))	goto error;
    if (!fwrite (stuff, p_len, 1, pp))	goto error;
    fclose (pp);
    fclose (fp);
    return EXIT_SUCCESS;

error:
    perror (argv[1]);
    return EXIT_FAILURE;
}

It works with the command line parameters input.hpi output.jpg output.png. The error handling is not 100% correct, but it is good enough to always tell you if something's wrong, and most times what it is.

Now vote me up into heaven ;-)*For large files, you will have to enlarge MAX_SIZE.*

Here is a shell script which you can call with *.hpi:

#!/bin/bash

dest=<destination-folder>

for arg in "$@"
do
  base=`echo $arg | cut -d'.' -f1`
  <executable> $arg $dest/original/$base.jpg $dest/mask/$base.png 2>>$dest/log
  #composite -compose CopyOpacity $dest/mask/$base.png $dest/original/$base.jpg $dest/rgba/$base.png
done

The optional composite command (comes with ImageMagick) will create a new PNG image which has the mask applied as alpha channel. Note that this file will be about 5 times larger than the original files.

Note that some HPI files come without mask. In this case, my program will still work, but give an empty PNG file.

show/hide this revision's text 1

It seems the regexp is wrong. That's why I wrote a little C program to do it for me:

#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>

#define MAX_SIZE 1048576

char stuff[MAX_SIZE];

int main (int argc, char **argv)
{
    unsigned int j_off, j_len, p_off, p_len;
    FILE *fp, *jp, *pp;
    fp = fopen (argv[1], "r");
    if (!fp)	goto error;
    if (fseek (fp, 12, SEEK_SET))	goto error;
    if (!fread (&j_off, 4, 1, fp))	goto error;
    if (!fread (&j_len, 4, 1, fp))	goto error;
    if (!fread (&p_off, 4, 1, fp))	goto error;
    if (!fread (&p_len, 4, 1, fp))	goto error;
    fprintf (stderr, "INFO %s \t%d %d %d %d\n",
    	argv[1], j_off, j_len, p_off, p_len);
    if (j_len > MAX_SIZE || p_len > MAX_SIZE) {
    	fprintf (stderr, "%s: Chunk size too big!\n", argv[1]);
    	return EXIT_FAILURE;
    }

    jp = fopen (argv[2], "w");
    if (!jp)	goto error;
    if (fseek (fp, j_off, SEEK_SET))	goto error;
    if (!fread (stuff, j_len, 1, fp))	goto error;
    if (!fwrite (stuff, j_len, 1, jp))	goto error;
    fclose (jp);

    pp = fopen (argv[3], "w");
    if (!pp)	goto error;
    if (fseek (fp, p_off, SEEK_SET))	goto error;
    if (!fread (stuff, p_len, 1, fp))	goto error;
    if (!fwrite (stuff, p_len, 1, pp))	goto error;
    fclose (pp);
    fclose (fp);
    return EXIT_SUCCESS;

error:
    perror (argv[1]);
    return EXIT_FAILURE;
}

It works with the command line parameters input.hpi output.jpg output.png. The error handling is not 100% correct, but it is good enough to always tell you if something's wrong, and most times what it is.

Now vote me up into heaven ;-)