OBD:Instance file format

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For other files ending in ".dat", see Oni (folder).

Files named "level[0-19]_Final.dat", together with ".raw" and sometimes ".sep" counterparts, contain the game data for Oni. The same format was used for the tools files, named level0_Tools.dat/.raw/.sep, however the retail Oni game application does not load tools files; for the story behind the tools files, see HERE.

The level 0 files do not actually contain a level, but instances (resources) shared across all levels. Level 0 is loaded when the game starts, and never unloaded. All other level files are only loaded when the corresponding level starts and unloaded when it ends.

Terminology

Oni's level data is broken into two kinds of files in Windows retail Oni. One type ends in ".dat" and is called an instance file. An "instance" is essentially a resource, such as a texture. Initially, all resources would have been stored in the levelX_Final.dat file, so it was rightfully called an "instance file". However eventually much of the resource data was moved to a new type of file ending in ".raw", simply called a raw file. By the time that Oni for the Mac was finalized for release, some of the raw data was moved to a third file type which ends in ".sep", short for "separate". You can read about raw and separate files HERE.

Note that ".dat" is a generic suffix originally used by Oni for all kinds of data, including persist.dat. The only reason that any other suffixes exist at all is that when raw and separate files were created, they needed unique suffixes to distinguish them from the .dat files in the same folder. Therefore, the proper, specific name for the .dat files containing level data, as opposed to the .dat files containing the save-game data, films, etc. is "instance file". That being said, ".dat" has only been used by the community historically to refer to instance files, so you can reasonably assume that's what is meant when you see the suffix. On occasion, ".dat" also refers to the complete set of level data files, .dat/.raw[/.sep].

Introduction

Instance files are the "main" type of data file in the sense that, when loading a level, Oni reads the instance file first, and this file serves as an index that allows it to find resources which are packed into the binary files (OniSplit-generated .oni files are Windows-format .dat files with all the data contained by the .raw/.sep files appended at the end). The binary files are the files ending in .raw, and, on Mac retail/demo and Windows demo Oni, .sep.

The binary files are basically used for large and unstructured data like textures and sounds. They have no file header, since the instance file serves as the table of contents for them. The only rule about binary files is that all data parts are stored 32 byte-aligned and the first 32 bytes of the file are always zero (reserved to represent null pointers). At load-time, the offsets given in the instance file are converted to pointers to the data in the binary files.

During development, Oni had in-game editing tools. These tools presented a GUI for things like placing AIs and setting their attributes, editing particles, etc. When a developer saved his work, the contents of the level, stored in RAM, were written directly to disk. The structure of the .dat/.raw/.sep files reflects the way in which Bungie West chose to store levels in memory, and thus when when we read the data in the files with a hex editor, we can see various eccentricities such as blank space and garbage data that represented unused memory on the development machine.

Additionally, because the levels were built on Intel-based machines, which use a little-endian architecture, sequences of bytes which represent numbers were written from least-significant to most-significant byte, which looks "backwards" from the standpoint of a culture that reads left-to-right. When Macs, which were big-endian at the time due to their PowerPC architecture, read these files, they then had to flip each sequence of bytes in memory before they could be understood.

An exception to this backwards-writing rule is when strings of ASCII characters were written to disk. These are not numbers and thus are not subject to endianness, so they retain their left-to-right order. Now, this may not seem to be the case as you continue reading below. The first two strings of characters which you'll see are "13RV" and "TBUS", which are meant to be read "VR31" and "SUBT". The reason these four-character strings are backwards is that Oni stored them as a 32-bit integer. Any sequence of four characters can be represented as such a number. Writing the integer 1,448,227,633 to disk results in the bytes 0x31, 0x33, 0x52, and 0x56, which produce the ASCII codes for '1', '3', 'R' and 'V' (the computer would have had to be big-endian to be able to naturally write them in the left-to-right order we would prefer to see). This practice of Bungie's provided a combination of convenient storage of a tag in memory as a number, and human-readability when organizing game assets by tag.

File limits

  • Max level number: 127
  • Max number of instance files in GameDataFolder: 512 (Windows), 16 (Windows demo, Mac)
  • Max number of simultaneously loaded instance files: 64
  • Max number of instances in a file: 131071
  • Max length of an instance file name: 31
  • Max length of an instance name: 63 (including the 4 character template tag)

Header

Here is a walkthrough of an instance file using the level0_Final.dat in English Windows Oni. Follow along in a hex editor for maximum learnage. Each term will be explained in-depth when we fully consider the related data. First, here is how the file begins:

Offset Type Raw Hex Value Description
0x00 int64 1F 27 DC 33 DF BC 03 00 0x0003BCDF33DC271F Windows template checksum; Windows demo and Mac retail/demo use 0x0003BCDF23C13061 instead
0x08 int32 31 33 52 56 'VR31' .dat version; .oni files use 'VR32' instead
0x0C int64 40 00 14 00 10 00 08 00 0x0008001000140040 signature
0x14 int32 83 24 00 00 9347 instance descriptor count
0x18 int32 D4 1B 00 00 7124 name descriptor count
0x1C int32 38 00 00 00 56 template descriptor count
0x20 int32 A0 BC 03 00 0x03BCA0 data table offset
0x24 int32 A0 35 25 00 2438560 data table size
0x28 int32 40 F2 28 00 0x28F240 name table offset
0x2C int32 04 4F 02 00 151300 name table size
0x30 int32 00 00 00 00 used by OniSplit only: raw table offset
0x34 int32 00 00 00 00 used by OniSplit only: raw table size
0x38 int32 00 00 00 00 unused
0x3C int32 00 00 00 00 unused

The template checksum tells us that this level data is in the .dat/.raw file scheme, as opposed to the .dat/.raw/.sep file scheme used by Mac Oni and the Windows demo of Oni.

The version of the instance file is the format version. Reading it backwards, as discussed under "Introduction", we get "VR31", which is probably "version 31". This is the format version of all instance files in all releases of Oni.

The signature is identical in all instance files.

The descriptor counts are the sizes of some arrays which are coming up soon in this file: the instance, name and template descriptors. For instance, the size of the instance descriptor array will be 0x2483, or 9,347 items, in length.

Next we are told the addresses and sizes of the data and name tables in this file. The name table simply follows the data table, as you'll see if you add the data table offset plus the data table size, but that doesn't mean the name table offset is redundant; if its start was not 32-bit-aligned, it probably would be moved down to start at the next 32-bit word, but this is unnecessary because it happens to be aligned already.

After this comes four "int"s of zeroes. Empty space like this is common in the data files, and indicates that something stored in memory at this relative position was not written to disk (probably pointers, or sometimes a space reserved for possible future use in a resource type).

That concludes the header of the instance file. Immediately after this header, we find the instance descriptors array.

Instance descriptors

The instance descriptor array tells Oni where to find the data and the name of every instance (resource) indexed by the .dat file. The descriptors start at 0x40 in the .dat file, but below is a descriptor found at 0x017B50 in the file which makes a better example. In the table below, we use offsets relative to the start of this descriptor.

There are 3 types of instance descriptors:

  • unnamed - they are referenced by other instances in the same file and the engine never reaches them directly
  • named and not empty - they can be referenced by other instances in any file and the engine can use their name or template tag to find them
  • named and empty - the instance data is stored in a different file and they exist only to associate an instance id with a name; when an instance references such an instance id the engine searches all the loaded files for a non empty instance with the same name
Offset Type Raw Hex Value Description
0x00 tag 54 42 55 53 'SUBT' template tag
0x04 int32 C8 30 22 00 0x2230C8 data offset (relative to data table)
0x08 int32 01 CB 00 00 0xCB01 name offset (relative to name table)
0x0C int32 C0 09 00 00 0x09C0 data size
0x10 int32 00 00 00 00 0 flags; possible values:
0x01 00 00 00 - unnamed
0x02 00 00 00 - empty
0x04 00 00 00 - never used; appears to mean "big-endian" data
0x08 00 00 00 - shared

This descriptor tells us that a resource of type SUBT (a subtitle file for Oni; there are only two of these, one for speech subtitles and one for help messages) has data that can be found 0x2230C8 bytes into the data table, which we learned from the file header starts at 0x03BCA0. Its name can be found 0xCB01 bytes into the name table that starts, according to the file header, at 0x28F240. The data is 0x09C0, or 2,496, bytes long.

Peeking at instance name

If you want to see the name of this resource, let's look at address 0xCB01 + 0x28F240 (the file header's address for the name table) = 0x29BD41. There we find the string "SUBTsubtitles". The actual subtitle data should be found at the address 0x2230C8 + 0x03BCA0 (the file header's address for the data table) = 0x25ED68. Let's go there now....

Peeking at instance data

For some reason, the addresses we calculate from the descriptor data offsets are all off by eight bytes, so we need to subtract 8 from 0x25ED68 and go to 0x25ED60. Compare what you see here to the documentation for the SUBT type. Below is the data you should actually see for the English Oni SUBT file at this address. Note that we still haven't found the actual subtitle data, because SUBT stores its data in the raw file. The princess is in another castle:

Offset Type Raw Hex Value Description
0x00 res_id 01 F4 12 00 4852 04852-subtitles.SUBT
0x04 lev_id 01 00 00 00 0 level 0
0x08 char[16] AD DE dead unused
0x18 offset 80 44 44 01 0x01444480 raw file data address
0x1C int32 61 02 00 00 609 array size

The first two words, or 32-bit sequences, are the standard resource header. The second and third bytes of the first word are the resource ID. The second and third bytes of the second word are the level number where this resource is found.

After a buffer of 16 unused bytes, we find the address of the actual data: it's in the level's raw file. Open level0_Final.raw and jump to address 0x01444480, and you should see "01_01_01 Griffin: Give me another reading.", and the rest of some very familiar dialogue continuing from there.

The array size of 609 tells us that this is a chunk of 609 subtitled lines of dialogue.

Name descriptors

The name descriptor array starts immediately after the instance descriptors array. To find the end of the instance descriptors, we can simply take the size of an instance descriptor, 20 bytes, and multiply it by the number of instance descriptors in the file header. In level 0 there are 9347 instance descriptors, so 20 * 9347 = 186940. In hex, that's 0x02DA3C. Adding that to 0x40 (the start of the instance descriptors) takes us to address 0x02DA7C. Voila, the start of the name descriptors.

The name descriptor array stores the numbers of all named instances in alphabetical order. This allows the engine to do a binary search to quickly find instances by name. It is also used when finding instances by type. However the addresses of these instances in memory cannot be known until the file is loaded into RAM, so a space of 32 bits is reserved for that runtime pointer.

Offset Type Raw Hex Value Description
0x00 int32 15 16 00 00 5653 instance number
0x04 int32 60 2C 1C 0E (garbage) runtime: pointer to instance name

Template descriptors

Likewise, the template descriptor array starts directly after the name descriptors. Since name descriptors are 8 bytes, 8 * 7124 (taken from the header) = 56992, or 0xDEA0, and adding that to the name descriptor array's start address (0x02DA7C) gives us 0x03B91C: the start of the template descriptors.

The template descriptor array contains information about all templates (that is, resource types, AKA tags), used in the file (56 in this case). So any resource occurring in this instance file has to have its type listed here.

The template checksum is used to prevent loading of instance files that are not compatible with the current engine version. The number of resources is self-explanatory. Note that "TBUS" has a usage number of 2, which corresponds to what we learned earlier about Oni having only two subtitle files, "SUBTsubtitles" and "SUBTmessages".

Offset Type Raw Hex Value Description
0x00 int64 A0 6D 12 00 00 00 00 00 0x126DA0 template checksum
0x0C tag 41 4E 42 41 'ABNA' template tag
0x08 int32 01 00 00 00 1 number of resources in file that use this template
Template checksum

An instance can have pointers to other instances but since pointers are only valid in memory they are converted to instance identifiers when the file is saved and converted back to pointers when the file is loaded into memory. To be able to do this, the engine must know where pointers are, and this is done using "templates". A template contains:

  • a checksum of the data contained by the template (the checksum algorithm is unknown)
  • a 4-letter tag used to identify the template (ABNA, ONCC, WMDD etc.)
  • a short description of the data structure like "BSP Tree Node Array"
  • a list of all data structure's fields and their types
  • other data that appears to be unused like size of the fixed part and size of an array element for data structures that contain variable length arrays

Data table

The data table stores all the instance data. We peeked at this before when we looked at the instance descriptor for SUBTsubtitles.

The start of each instance's record, the ID number, is always 32 byte-aligned. Thus, even though the template descriptors ended at 0x03BC9C, there are four empty bytes here so that the data table can begin at 0x03BCA0, which divides evenly by 32. This alignment also means that the instance-specific data will always be found at an offset like 0x0008, 0x0028, 0x0148 etc.

The instance ID and file ID are not actually part of the instance data. The engine always keeps pointers to the start of the type-specific data, and the instance ID and file ID are accessed using negative offsets when needed (usually to find the name or template tag of an instance, given a pointer to it).

Offset Type Raw Hex Value Description
0x00 res_id 01 00 00 00 0 instance ID
0x04 lev_id 01 00 00 00 0 file ID
0x08 ... ... ... type-specific data...
Instance ID

The ID of an instance is computed as:

(instance_descriptor_index << 8) | 1. 

The 1 allows the engine to know which IDs have already been converted to pointers (a instance pointer will always be 8 byte aligned so it can never have the bit 0 set).


File ID

The file ID is computed from the name of the instance file. For "_Final" files the file ID is computed as:

(level_number << 25) | 1

Again the 1 allows the engine to know which file IDs have already been converted to pointers.

As you can see, the size of a given instance's data can be almost anything. Thus, we cannot compute the end of this table in any simple way. That's why the instance file header explicitly gives us the address of the name table.

By the way, how do we know which resource's data we're looking at in the table? Let's look at the very first data, at 0x03BCA0. Noting that the first two numbers, the instance and file ID, do not count as data, and knowing that the instance descriptor gives the offset into the data table for the start of each instance's data, that means that there must be a resource with a data offset of 0x08, the lowest offset possible into the table. We can find this right at the start of the instance descriptor array:

Offset Type Raw Hex Value Description
0x00 tag 53 47 4E 4F 'ONGS' template tag
0x04 int32 08 00 00 00 0x08 data offset (relative to data table)
0x08 int32 00 00 00 00 0x00 name offset (relative to name table)
0x0C int32 60 0F 00 00 3936 data size

{{OBDtr| 0x10 | int32 | | 00 00 00 00 | 0 | flags

So this tells us that the first data in the data table belongs to the ONGS resource, and that it extends for 3,936 bytes.

Name table

The name table stores all the instance names as C-style strings (terminated by a zero byte). We peeked at this before when we looked at the instance descriptor for SUBTsubtitles.

Offset Type Raw Hex Value Description
0x00 string 53 55 ... 00 "SUBTsubtitles" name string (zero-terminated)

These names can be up to 63 characters long, counting the tag.