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I need some help finding information (or an example) of how to use texture compression for Android. I have a lot of PNG's right now and I need to reduce the amount of memory they take up. I was looking at PVR compression but I can't figure out how to use this within OpenGL.

Could some point me in the right direction or offer some examples as I cannot find anything.

4 Answers 4

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There are mainly four texture compression types supported on Android:

  • ETC1 (Ericsson texture compression). This format is supported by all Android phones. But, it doesn't support an alpha channel, so can only be used for opaque textures.
  • PVRTC (PowerVR texture compression). Supported by devices with PowerVR GPUs (Nexus S, Kindle fire, etc.).
  • ATITC (ATI texture compression). Used in devices with Adreno GPU from Qualcomm (Nexus One, etc.).
  • S3TC (S3 texture compression). This texture compression is used in the NVIDIA chipset integrated devices (Motorola Xoom, etc.)

More detailed information here and here.

In short, if your textures don't have alpha, you can use ETC1. If they do have alpha, and you want to support all devices, you must have your textures compressed in the other three types and load them according to the device.

How to use:

  1. Compress your png files (You can use a tool like ETC-Pack, PVRTexTool, ATI Compressonator, Nvidia Texure Tools according to the type of texture) and add to your project assets.

  2. Determine which extensions are available in the device, if you're not using ETC1:

    public void onSurfaceCreated(GL10 gl, EGLConfig config) {
    
         String s = gl.glGetString(GL10.GL_EXTENSIONS);
    
         if (s.contains("GL_IMG_texture_compression_pvrtc")){
              //Use PVR compressed textures         
         }else if (s.contains("GL_AMD_compressed_ATC_texture") ||
                  s.contains("GL_ATI_texture_compression_atitc")){
              //Load ATI Textures           
         }else if (s.contains("GL_OES_texture_compression_S3TC") ||
                    s.contains("GL_EXT_texture_compression_s3tc")){
             //Use DTX Textures
         }else{
             //Handle no texture compression founded.               
         }
    
    }           
    
  3. Load compressed texture as raw data.

  4. Use glCompressedTexImage2D instead of glTexImage2D:

    public void onDrawFrame(GL10 gl) {
    
       ....
    
       gl.glCompressedTexImage2D(GL10.GL_TEXTURE_2D, level, internalformat, width, 
                                 height, border, imageSize, data);
    
    }
    
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  • 2
    Hi @Xilliah, the thread is old and it's possible you're right, but this solution is working quite well in several of my projects. If you think it's incorrect you can do two things, or you tell what do you think is wrong and I'll be glad to try to fix it or please feel free to add another answer with a correct solution... Constructive comments please!.Thanks. Sep 25, 2013 at 15:18
  • Hello Gergonzalez. I made a mistake and was incorrect, but was unable to remove the comment for some reason. Just me being silly again. Your answer helped!
    – Tony
    Sep 27, 2013 at 1:15
  • Nice! Glad to help :) Sep 27, 2013 at 19:36
  • ETC can be used with alpha, see ETC Texture Compression and Alpha Channel Handling malideveloper.arm.com/develop-for-mali/sample-code/…
    – Nianliang
    Apr 27, 2014 at 6:24
  • What about Mali devices, I don't believe they support any of those three formats w/alpha. The newer ones can use ETC2 because it's part of the ES 3.0 spec, but if you have to support four different compressed formats for your textures w/alpha you may be better off just leaving them uncompressed because you're not going to save any disk space.
    – eodabash
    Jun 9, 2014 at 22:43
5

This is an ol thread, so I thought I'd update it with the information available on http://devtools.ericsson.com/etc ETC2 is mandatory in the Khronos standards OpenGL ES 3.0 and OpenGL 4.3.

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You should not use just PVR compression on Android, since that will not work with all models. To get around that you should either only use ETC1 (mandated on all GLES 2.0 devices) or have separate texture packs for separate GPU modes. The android dev guide has a helper class to load the compression format.

You can use etcpack to do compression.

Note that you will not get an alpha channel with ETC1 - you can do some fancy fragment shading tricks to get around that by having the alpha channel as a separate texture.

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  • I did try that however Eclipse doesnt know what ETC1Util is and it cant find an import...any reason for that issue?
    – Chris
    Feb 5, 2012 at 22:14
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    "you should either only use ETC1 (mandated on all GLES 2.0 devices)" I don't think it is mandatory on OpenGL ES - It looks, to me, to be an extension: see khronos.org/registry/gles
    – Simon F
    Feb 23, 2012 at 11:12
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    It is an extension to GLES 1.0/1.1, but is mandated for GLES 2.0. Feb 6, 2014 at 19:48
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Just wanted to point out etc1 isn't supported by all android devices, contrary to what gergonzalez said

Caution: The ETC1 format is supported by most Android devices, but it not guaranteed to be available. To check if the ETC1 format is supported on a device, call the ETC1Util.isETC1Supported() method.

https://developer.android.com/guide/topics/graphics/opengl.html#textures

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    That sucks, so there's only one guarantee it seems: The ETC2/EAC texture compression formats are guaranteed to be available when using the OpenGL ES 3.0 API.. Apr 21, 2014 at 20:56

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