Storing Multi-View Images in OpenEXR Files¶
This document recommends a standard way to represent multi-view images in OpenEXR files. A “multi-view” image shows the same scene from multiple different points of view. A common application is 3D stereo imagery, where a left-eye and a right-eye view of a scene are stored in a single file.
Multi-View OpenEXRs¶
The multi-view conventions are designed to
Allow more than one view to be stored in a single OpenEXR file in a standard way with which all applications can comply. In this respect the format is not limited to mono or stereo views, but allows any arbitrary number of views.
Formalize the names of left and right views so stereo viewing software and hardware always displays the correct view.
Provide a “default view” to software that does not support multi-view images. Software expecting regular single-view OpenEXR files will see all the channels it expects.
Support multiple channels and layers for each view.
Allow each view to be stored in separate files, and provide a standard by which the viewpoint of the file can be identified from internal information, without relying on the filename or user interaction.
View Naming¶
A multi-view OpenEXR file may contain any number of views. If there is a
view which is ultimately intended for viewing in a stereo environment by
the left or right eye, it must be called left
or right
respectively
(in lower-case English).
Stereo viewing software may default to assuming that it should send the
left
and right
views to the left and right eyes respectively, and
may ignore all other views.
Other view names should be kept as short as possible
Single Part and Multi-Part Conventions¶
This document describes two schemes. The preferred scheme requires multi-part file support, which was introduced in OpenEXR-2.0. An older scheme uses a channel naming scheme to store multiple views in a single part file.
In some cases, the single-part scheme may give better performance in stereo playback systems than the multi-part scheme, so may still be advantageous. Since such files are increasingly rare, it is strongly recommended that the multi-part scheme is used when sharing files with others and for long-term storage.
Storing Multi-View Images in Multi-Part OpenEXR Files¶
Multi-part EXR files use the view
attribute within the header for each part
to indicate that all the channels within that part are associated with that view.
A stereo EXR will contain part(s) with the view
attribute set to left
and other part(s)
with the view
attribute set to right
The conventions here should not be combined: if a file contains more than one part,
then no part should contain a multView
attribute.
Default View and Part Ordering¶
The view
attribute of the first part within the file indicates which view is the default view.
This is usually the part that contains the R,G,B channels. Subsequent parts can be in any order.
Software that only reads the first part of a file will therefore read the intended channels from the intended view
Part Naming¶
OpenEXR requires a unique name
attribute in each part, to allow consistent indexing of parts. It is convenient
to include the view and layer name within the part name, but software reading the file should not make
assumptions about name
attribute. Instead, the view name should be read from the view
attribute and the
layer name for each channel derived from the channel name.
Channel Naming¶
The channel names should not include the view name.
Thus, a stereo RGB file will contain two R
channels,
one for left and one for right, in two separate parts.
Channels Not in a View¶
In some cases, channels may not be associated with a view. Such channels should be stored in a part without
a view
attribute. Since the first part specifies the default view, this part cannot be the first part
within the file
Example File Structures¶
Simple stereo EXR, with default view left:
Part 0: view: "left" ; name: "rgbleft"
channels: R G B
Part 1: view: "right" ; name: "rgbright"
channels: R G B
Simple stereo EXR, with default view right:
Part 0: view: "right" ; name: "rightrgb"
channels: R G B
Part 1: view: "left" ; name: "leftrgb"
channels: R G B
Stereo EXR containing diffuse and specular layers (two parts), default view right:
Part 0: view: "right" ; name: "right"
channels: R G B diff.R diff.G diff.B spec.R spec.G spec.B
Part 1: view: "left" ; name: "left"
channels: R G B diff.R diff.G diff.B spec.R spec.G spec.B
Stereo EXR containing diffuse and specular layers (six parts), default view right:
Part 0: view: "right" ; name: "rgb-right"
channels: R G B
Part 1: view: "left" ; name: "rgb-left"
channels: R G B
Part 2: view: "left" ; name: "diff-left"
channels: diff.R diff.G diff.B
Part 3: view: "right" ; name: "diff-right"
channels: diff.R diff.G diff.B
Part 4: view: "left" ; name "spec-left"
channels: spec.R spec.G spec.B
Part 5: view: "right" ; name "spec-right"
channels: spec.R spec.G spec.B
Stereo EXR containing non-view part:
Part 0: view: "right" ; name: "rightrgb"
channels R G B
Part 1: view: "left" ; name: "leftrgb"
channels R G B
Part 2: name: "annotations"
channels notes.R notes.G notes.B
Storing Multi-View Images in Single Part OpenEXR files¶
A single part multi-view OpenEXR file is identified by the presence of a
multiView
attribute in the header, which lists the views stored in the
file. Each view has its own set of image channels. A naming convention
associates the channels with the views.
Channel Naming¶
OpenEXR files use the convention that channel names are
composed of layer names separated by periods, with the final channel
name at the end. Single part multiView
files include the view name within
the channel name. The view name must be the ultimate layer name, that is, the penultimate
period-delimited component in each channel name. In other words, the
view name is followed by a period and a final channel name in the format
layer.view.channel
or view.channel
.
For example, each of the following names corresponds to a channel in
either the left
or the right
view:
lighting.left.R lighting.left.G lighting.left.B
lighting.right.R lighting.right.G lighting.right.B
noshadows.nearscene.right.R noshadows.nearscene.right.G
noshadows.nearscene.left.R noshadows.nearscene.left.G
left.R left.G left.B left.A left.X left.Y left.shadows
Note that, although view.channel
is a valid name under this
scheme, layer.view
(for example, speed.left
) is not
valid. (Either use left.speed
or speed.left.data
.)
Where a channel is present in more than one view, the names of the
channel’s instances must differ only in the view part: if a channel in
view1
is called xxx.yyy.view1.zzz
, then the same channel in
view2
must be called xxx.yyy.view2.zzz
.
Default Channel Naming¶
For compatibility with single-view OpenEXR files, each multi-view file
identifies one of its views as the “default view.” All channel instances
whose names contain no periods (for example, R
, G
, B
, A
,
or Z
) belong to the default view.
If a file contains RGBA data, then the corresponding channels in the
default view should be labeled R
, G
, B
and A
. For example, if
a file has a right
and a left
view, and the right
view is the
default view, then the channels must be named
R G B A left.R left.G left.B left.A
rather than
right.R right.G right.B right.A left.R left.G left.B left.A.
Channels labeled R
, G
, B
and A
will be understood by any OpenEXR
viewing software, even if the software does not explicitly recognize
multi-view OpenEXR images.
If view1 is the default view, and xxx is a channel in the default view, then the same channel in view2 is called view2.xxx.
Channels Not in a View¶
If a channel contains image data that is not associated with any view, then the channel must have at least one period in its name, otherwise it will be considered to belong to the default view. The channel’s name must also not contain any view name.
For example, background.data
is not associated with any view, but
background
belongs to the default view, and got.it.right.now
may be
part of the right
view.
The multiView
Attribute¶
A single part multi-view OpenEXR file is identified by the presence of an attribute
called multiView
in the file header. The value of the attribute is of
type “array of strings” (C++ type Imf::StringVector
or
std::vector<std::string>
). The attribute contains a list of view
names, one per array element. View names are arbitrary, except that
periods and spaces are not permitted within a name. The first listed
view (array element 0) is always the default view. Other view names may
appear in any order.
For example, the following table shows several different combinations of
multiView
attribute values and channel names:
views listed in |
channel names |
---|---|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Files with Only One View¶
Multiple views of the same scene may sometimes be stored in separate
files rather than in a single multi-view file.
A single-part OpenEXR file that contains one of multiple views of a scene should identify the stored
view using the multiView
header attribute as well as the view
attribute.
This is because a single part, single view file can be represented by either scheme.
Files which have multiple parts, but all those parts are the same view, should use a view
attribute
on each part instead of a multiView
attribute.
For example, if RGBA data for the left
and right
views of a scene
are stored in two separate files, both files should contain
multiView
and view
attributes. In one file the attributes are set to left
; in they are set to right
.
Each file has four channels, called R
, G
, B
and A
.
It is recommended that stereo viewing software use the view
and multiView
attribute to identify views rather than relying on file names, user
interaction or other external information.
Software reading files should look for a view
attribute and fall back to the multiView
attribute
if it is not present.
Library Support¶
The OpenEXR file I/O library, OpenEXR, provides utility functions to
support reading and writing multi-view files. Header file
ImfStandardAttributes.h
defines functions to add a multiView
attribute to a file header, to test if a file header contains a
multiView
attribute, and to access the value of the multiView
attribute. Header file ImfMultiView.h
defines functions related to
accessing channels and views, such as finding all channels in a given
view, or finding the same channel in all views.
The view
attribute is read and written directly using the
hasView()
, view()
and setView()
methods in Imf::Header
File Name Extension Support¶
Users may wish to save multi-view OpenEXR files with a file name
extension other than the commonly used .exr
, for example, .sxr
for Stereo eXR, or .mxr
for Multi-view eXR. The 3-letter extension
space is crowded, but SXR and MXR are not heavily used. Either or both
of these may become a standard for multi-view OpenEXR files.
Meanwhile, it is recommended that software vendors provide a mechanism allowing users to identify which file name extensions they will employ for multi-view OpenEXR files. For example, software may understand the environment variable
MULTIVIEW_EXR_EXT=”SXR”
or provide a similar facility in a configuration file or registry entry.
Software can then default to saving multi-view OpenEXR files with this
extension, and also try loading files with this extension as OpenEXR
files before resorting to brute force attempts to interpret the file
format from the header data. If not specified, the default extension for
multi-view OpenEXR files should be .exr
.
Using a different extension for multiview OpenEXR files can help to prevent inadvertently loading them into software packages that are not designed for multiview or 3D stereo workflows.