Provided by: netpbm_11.08.02-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       pamtopng - convert a Netpbm image to PNG

SYNOPSIS

       pamtopng  [-verbose]  [-transparent=color] [-background=color] [-gamma=value] [-chroma='wx
       wy
         rx ry gx gy bx by'] [-srgbintent=intent] [-time=[yy]yy-mm-dd
         hh:mm:ss] [-text=file] [-ztxt=file] [-itxt=file] [-interlace] [pnmfile]

OPTION USAGE

       Minimum unique abbreviation of option is acceptable.  You may use double  hyphens  instead
       of a single hyphen to denote options.  You may use white space in place of the equals sign
       to separate an option name from its value.

DESCRIPTION

       This program is part of Netpbm(1).

       pamtopng reads a Netpbm image as input and produces a PNG image as output.

       Color component values in PNG files are either 8 or  16  bits  wide,  so  where  necessary
       pamtopng  scales  colors  to  have a maxval of 255 or 65535.  In that case, it will add an
       sBIT chunk to indicated the original bit-depth.

       pamtopng works only on images with maxval 1, 3, 15, 255, or 65535.  You can  use  pamdepth
       to convert an image with some other maxval to one of these.

       pamtopng  produces  a color PNG from a color PAM, even if the only colors in the image are
       shades of gray.  To create a graycale PNG, from such an image  (which  might  be  slightly
       smaller), you can use other Netpbm programs to convert the input to grayscale.

   Alternative: pnmtopng
       Netpbm  contains  another program for generating PNG images: pnmtopng.  pnmtopng is a much
       older program - it is in fact the first program in the world that could  generate  a  PNG.
       pnmtopng  is a complex, feature-laden program.  It lets you control various arcane aspects
       of the conversion  and  create  PNGs  with  various  arcane  features.   It  does  various
       transformations on the image to create the greatest compression possible, to a degree that
       probably doesn't make any difference in the modern world.

       The main advantage pamtopng has over pnmtopng is that the former can use the  transparency
       channel  of a PAM image to generate the transparency information in the PNG.  In contrast,
       handling of the alpha channel is very cumbersome with pnmtopng.

       One difference that does not exist, that some people  might  incorrectly  infer  from  the
       names,  is  the  possible  input  formats.   Both programs can take PBM, PGM, PPM, and PAM
       input.

       Because pnmtopng has been around virtually forever, programs and procedures  that  use  it
       are more portable than those that use pamtopng.  Its age and popularity also probably make
       it have fewer bugs.

       pamtopng does not have any way to do what the following do in pnmtopng:

       •      -palette-history-filter-size-paeth-hist-nofilter-sub-up-avg-force-libversion-compression-comp_xxx

       These are some of the other functions of pnmtopng that pamtopng lacks:

       •      When you specify a transparent or background  color  that  is  not  in  the  image,
              pnmtopng  can  optionally  choose  the  closest one that is in the image.  pamtopng
              always uses the exact color you specify.

       Features that exist in both programs are controlled by largely the  same  command  syntax.
       But there are these differences:

       •      pnmtopng's  -rgb  option  is -chroma in pamtopng.  -chroma is a better name, and in
              fact was the name that pnmtopng used originally, but we had to change  it  when  we
              had to change the syntax of the option value to conform to the rest of Netpbm.

       •      pnmtopng's  -modtime  option  is  -time  in  pamtopng.   The  origin of -modtime is
              analogous to that of -rgb.

OPTIONS

       In addition to the options common to all programs based on libnetpbm (most notably -quiet,
       see
        Common  Options  ⟨index.html#commonoptions⟩  ), pamtopng recognizes the following command
       line options:

       -transparent=color
              pamtopng marks the specified color as transparent in the PNG image --  Every  pixel
              of  this  color is fully transparent.  This causes pamtopng to include a tRNS chunk
              in the image identifying that color.

              Specify the color (color) as described for the  argument  of  the  pnm_parsecolor()
              library routine ⟨libnetpbm_image.html#colorname⟩ .  E.g. red or rgb:ff/00/0d.

       -background=color
              This causes pamtopng to create a background color chunk in the PNG output which can
              be used for subsequent  transparency  channel  or  transparent  color  conversions.
              Specify color the same as for -transparent.

       -gamma=value
              This  causes  pamtopng to create a gAMA chunk.  This information helps describe how
              the color values in the PNG must be interpreted.  Without the gAMA chunk,  whatever
              interprets  the  PNG must get this information separately (or just assume something
              standard).  If your  input  is  a  true  PPM  or  PGM  image,  you  should  specify
              -gamma=.45.   But  sometimes people generate images which are ostensibly PPM except
              the image uses a different gamma transfer function than the one specified for  PPM.
              A  common case of this is when the image is created by simple hardware that doesn't
              have digital computational ability.   Also,  some  simple  programs  that  generate
              images from scratch do it with a gamma transfer in which the gamma value is 1.0.

       -chroma=chroma_list
              This  option specifies how red, green, and blue component values of a pixel specify
              a particular color, by telling the chromaticities of those  3  primary  illuminants
              and of white (i.e. full strength of all three).

              The  chroma_list  value  is  a  blank-separated  list  of  8 floating point decimal
              numbers: the CIE-1931 X and Y chromaticities (in that order) of each of white, red,
              green, and blue, in that order.

              This information goes into the PNG's cHRM chunk.

              In  a  shell  command,  make  sure  you  use  quotation marks so that the blanks in
              chroma_list don't make the shell see multiple command arguments.

       -srgbintent=intent
              This asserts that the input is a pseudo-Netpbm image that uses an sRGB color  space
              (unlike  true  Netpbm)  and indicates how you intend for the colors to be rendered.
              It causes pamtopng to include an sRGB chunk in the PNG image  that  specifies  that
              intent,  so  see  the  PNG  documentation  for more information on what this really
              means.

              intent is one of:

       •      perceptualrelativecolorimetricsaturationabsolutecolorimetric

       -text=filename
              This option lets you include arbitrary text strings in  the  PNG  output,  as  tEXt
              chunks.

              filename is the name of a file that contains your text strings.

              The output contains a distinct tEXt chunk for each entry in the file.

              Here is an example of a text string file:

                   Title           PNG file
                   Author          John Doe
                   Description     how to include a text chunk
                                      PNG file
                   "Creation Date" 2015-may-11
                   Software        pamtopng

              The  file is divided into entries, each entry comprising consecutive lines of text.
              The first line of an entry starts in the first column (i.e. the first column is not
              white  space)  and every other line has white space in the first column.  The first
              entry starts in the first line, so it is not valid for the first line of  the  file
              to have white space in its first column.

              The first word in an entry is the key of the text string (e.g. 'Title').  It begins
              in column one of the line and  continues  up  to,  but  not  including,  the  first
              delimiter  character  or  the end of the line, whichever is first.  You can enclose
              the key in double quotes in which case the key can consists of multiple words.  The
              quotes  are  not  part of the key.  The text string per se begins after the key and
              any delimiter characters after it, plus the text in subsequent continuation lines.

              There is no limit on the length of a file line or entry  or  key  or  text  string.
              There is no limit on the number of entries.

       -ztxt=filename
              The  same  as  -text,  except  the  text  string  is  compressed in the PNG output.
              pamtopng uses zTXt chunks instead of a tEXt chunks.

       -itxt=filename
              Similar to -text, but the text strings can be in a  language  other  than  English.
              The PNG image indicates what language that is and includes the text string key both
              in English and that language.  pamtopng uses iTXt chunks instead of tEXt chunks.

              For each record, you must specify the language and give the key both in English and
              in the text string language.

              Example:

                   Language        nl-NL  Taal             nl-NL
                      Title           nl-NL  Titel            PNG file
                      Author          nl-NL  Auteur           Pietje Puk
                      Description     nl-NL  Omschrijving     Tekst in het Nederlands.

              The   language   specification   is   based   on   the   ISO  639-1  standard,  see
              http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ISO_639-1_codes  for  the  valid  codes.   The
              format is either a two character "nl" or an extended code like "en-US".

       -time='[yy]yy-mm-dd hh:mm:ss'
              This  option  allows you to specify the modification time value to be placed in the
              PNG output.  You can specify the year parameter either  as  a  two  or  four  digit
              value.

       -interlace
              This  causes the PNG file to be interlaced, in Adam7 format.  The interlaced format
              is one in which the raster data starts with a low-resolution representation of  the
              entire image, then continues with additional information for the entire image, then
              even more information, etc.  In Adam7 in particular, there are seven such passes of
              the  whole  image.   This  is  useful  when you are receiving the image over a slow
              communication line as someone is waiting to see it.  The simplest thing  to  do  in
              that case is wait for the entire image to arrive and then display it instantly, but
              then the user is wasting time staring at  a  blank  space  until  the  whole  image
              arrives.   With  the  standard  non-interlaced  format, the data arrives row-by-row
              starting at the top, so the displayer could display each row of  the  image  as  it
              arrives  and gradually paint down to the bottom.  But with an interlaced image, the
              displayer can start  by  showing  a  low-resolution  version  of  the  image,  then
              gradually improve the display as more data arrives.

              When  you  specify  this  option,  pamtopng must hold the entire image in memory at
              once, whereas without it, the program holds only one raster row at a time.  If  you
              don't  have enough memory for that, you might suffer extreme slowdowns or failure -
              not just in the process running pamtopng, but  potentially  throughout  the  system
              that  shares memory with it.  pnmtopng does not have this limitation (it holds only
              one row at a time in memory even when generating an interlaced PNG).

              This option was new in Netpbm 10.86 (March 2019).

       -verbose
              This causes the program to display various facts about the conversion.

SEE ALSO

       pngtopam(1), pnmtopng(1), pam(1), pnm(1)

       For    information    on     the     PNG     format,     see     http://www.w3.org/TR/PNG/http://www.w3.org/TR/PNG/⟩  ,  http://libpng.org/pub/png/http://libpng.org/pub/png/⟩ ,
       http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ISO_639-1_codeshttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ISO_639-1_codes⟩        and   http://schaik.com/png/http://schaik.com/png/⟩ .

HISTORY

       pamtopng was new in Netpbm 10.70 (June 2015).

       Before pamtopng, the two  ways  to  create  PNG  images  with  Netpbm  were  pnmtopng  and
       pamrgbatopng.   The  history  of  the  former is discussed above.  The latter was added to
       Netpbm in 2005 as a cheap way to fill a  significant  need  that  pnmtopng  did  not:  the
       ability to turn the alpha channel in a PAM image into the alpha channel in a PNG image.

       Handling  of the alpha channel with pnmtopng is very cumbersome (as was dealing with alpha
       channels in general before the introduction of the PAM  format).   pamrgbatopng  could  do
       what  people wanted with the alpha channel, but nothing else.  It was a very small program
       with literally no command line options.

       The goal in those days was eventually to expand pnmtopng  to  do  the  PAM  alpha  channel
       thing,  rename  it  to  pamtopng, and retire pamrgbatopng.  But pnmtopng is such a complex
       program,  because  of  its  dizzying  array  of  features  and  its  need   for   backward
       compatibility, that adding that one capability to it was a daunting task and for ten years
       nobody attempted it.

       In 2015, one of the authors of the original pnmtopng (from before  it  was  even  part  of
       Netpbm  --  a  program  that  shared  essentially  no lines of code with pnmtopng of 2015)
       decided to go in a different direction.  While  many  features  of  pnmtopng  were  pretty
       important  and  easy to implement, many others were probably of no use in the modern world
       or at least not important enough to justify the complexity they lent to  the  code.   (The
       features  thought  to  be  outdated  were  ones  that were intended to make the PNG output
       slightly smaller - something considerably  less  important  with  the  declining  cost  of
       computer resources).

       And  there was an opportunity to drop those features: We could use the new name 'pamtopng'
       for a new program, keep the existing program under the name  'pnmtopng',  and  avoid  most
       backward compatibility trouble.

       Therefore,  Willem  van  Schaik  wrote an intermediate level program that had all the most
       important features of pnmtopng, plus the alpha  channel  handling  of  pamrgbatopng,  with
       nice, simple code.  That was pamtopng.

       Because pamrgbatopng had no options, pamtopng was backward compatible with it without even
       trying.  Therefore, as soon as we added pamtopng to Netpbm, we  removed  pamrgbatopng  and
       recommended that pamrgbatopng be installed as an alias for pamtopng.

AUTHOR

       Copyright (C) 1995-1997 by Alexander Lehmann and Willem van Schaik.  Copyright (C) 2015 by
       Willem van Schaik.

DOCUMENT SOURCE

       This manual page was generated by the Netpbm tool 'makeman' from HTML source.  The  master
       documentation is at

              http://netpbm.sourceforge.net/doc/pamtopng.html