MNG and JNG: Status Report 20010209

MNG: A Multiple-Image Format in the PNG Family
and
JNG: JPEG Network Graphics Format

On January 11, 2001, the PNG Development Group approved the MNG-1.0 (Multiple-image Network Graphics) [1]. and JNG-1.0 (JPEG Network Graphics) [2]. specifications, and the documents were released on January 31. MNG and JNG are additions to the PNG family. MNG is for storing and transmitting multiple-image animations and composite frames, and JNG is a MNG sub-format for encapsulating JPEG images, with alpha-channel transparency, in a format usable by MNG.

The Portable Network Graphics (PNG) [3] format for bit-mapped images was approved in October 1996 by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) as a W3C Recommendation and has also been published as RFC-2083 [4]. The PNG group has since released Version 1.2 [5], which has not yet been approved by any standards body, but it is being considered for ISO standardization.

Because the images making up a MNG are in PNG and JNG format, MNG shares the good features of PNG:

In addition,

A Simple MNG Datastream

The MNG format uses the same chunk structure (length, name, data, check value) as that used by PNG. The simplest form of MNG is an 8-byte MNG file signature, a MNG header chunk (MHDR), plus a series of one or more PNG or JNG datastreams (less their 8-byte signatures), followed by a MEND chunk. MNG is more powerful than that, however. It is frequently true that the images will be similar, and data from the first image can be reused in constructing the second to conserve on the amount of data that must be stored or transmitted. In this example, the palette and the gamma and chromaticity data from the first image are reused in the second image:

    138 M N G CR LF 26 LF       # MNG 8-byte signature
    MHDR maxwidth maxheight ... # MNG Header chunk
    DEFI 1 visible concrete     # MNG Define image chunk
    IHDR width height ...       # PNG Header chunk
    gAMA 50000                  # PNG Gamma chunk
    cHRM ...                    # PNG Chromaticity chunk
    PLTE ...                    # PNG Palette
    IDAT ...                    # PNG Pixel data
    IEND                        # End of first PNG datastream
    DHDR 1 png replace width ht # Delta-PNG header
    IDAT ...                    # Delta-PNG pixels
    DEND                        # End of Delta-PNG
    MEND                        # End of MNG datastream

When only a smaller rectangle within the second image has pixels that are different from those in the first image, the DHDR chunk can specify that only a smaller rectangle of pixels (sometimes called a "change box") will be transmitted. Whether the pixels for the full image or for a smaller rectangle are changed, the data can be presented as new values that replace the old ones or as deltas (differences) from the corresponding pixels in the previous image. Usually the data in delta form is much more compressible. Several movies of finite-element calculational results by the U. S. Army Research Laboratory required only about a quarter of the file space when converted from a simple series of PNGs to delta-encoded PNGs.

It is possible to change just the alpha samples or just the color samples in the image, or in selected parts of it, to fade an image in or out against a background image.

Further dramatic savings in the size of the datastream can be achieved when an image or a portion of one is merely relocated. MNG provides a MOVE chunk in which the new coordinates of the image are transmitted instead of having to retransmit the entire image. A CLIP chunk is also available, to make it possible to show only a portion of a previously transmitted image. The MOVE and CLIP chunks can be used for scrolling or panning across an image that is larger than the display area.

Loops

MNG has a simple loop structure that can be used for repeating images. In this example, five images are defined and displayed in order 1-2-3-4-5 and then played ten times in order 4-3-2-1- 2-3-4-5:

  138 M N G CR LF 26 LF               # MNG 8-byte signature
  MHDR maxwidth maxheight ...         # MNG Header Chunk
  IHDR width height ...               # PNG Header Chunk
  DHDR 1 ... PLTE ...   IDAT ... IEND # Define Image 1
  CLON 1 2   DHDR 2 1 1 IDAT ... IEND # Define Image 2
  CLON 2 3   DHDR 3 1 1 IDAT ... IEND # Define Image 3
  CLON 3 4   DHDR 4 1 1 IDAT ... IEND # Define Image 4
  CLON 4 5   DHDR 5 1 1 IDAT ... IEND # Define Image 5
  LOOP 0 10                           # Begin Loop
  SHOW 4 2 SHOW 1 5                   # Show images 4-2, 1-5
  ENDL 0                              # End Loop
  MEND                                # End MNG

Composite Frames and Sprites

In addition to the simple single-image frames described thus far, MNG can also describe composite images that are built up of two or more PNG images. For example, one image could be a full-screen background while others could be small sprites that are moved around by means of the MOVE chunk. Examples that demonstrate these capabilities and others (including scrolling, tiling, storing 3-D tomographic data, and converting GIF animations to MNG format) are given as appendices in the MNG proposal.

MNG provides four framing modes that can be used with composite images. The framing modes include:

Status of MNG

The MNG specification was designed by the PNG developers and is being discussed in the "mng-list@ccrc.wustl.edu" mailing list. Interested persons can subscribe by sending a message to

majordomo@ccrc.wustl.edu
that contains the line "subscribe mng-list" (and nothing else) in the body.

There has been discussion of MNG since the completion of the PNG design in March 1995, and the first informal MNG draft appeared on June 25, 1996. As of January 10, 2001, 88 drafts had been produced for review by the PNG group. The major changes since Draft 33 (issued in late January, 1997) have been the addition of several fields to the MHDR chunk, revision of framing modes, addition of the JNG format, improvement of palette animation via a new PPLT chunk, addition of the global PLTE and tRNS chunks, making the SAVE/SEEK chunks ignorable by simple decoders, minor redesign of the LOOP chunk, and recent addition of the MAGN and JDAA chunks.

The examples shown above are consistent with Draft 33, except for the reordering of the LOOP chunk fields. Draft 55 was designated MNG-0.9, signifying a move from "alpha" to "beta" status and an intention to "freeze" or at least "gel" the design. On May 11, 1999, the PNG group voted to approve version MNG-0.95 and agreed that any subsequent technical changes to the specification would require a vote. Several minor changes were approved in May and July 1999, and these were incorporated in the MNG-0.96 release. There was another spurt of development activity during the fall of 2000, based on experience with beta implementations, and the changes were incorporated in the MNG-0.98 through MNG-0.999 releases. MNG-0.995 was the document voted on in January 2001 for elevation to MNG-1.0 status, and the later documents reflect only editorial changes. The MNG-1.0 specification was released on January 31, 2001, and re-released on February 9, 2001 to correct a typographical error in the description of the MNG and JNG signature bytes.

In addition to MNG itself, two subset formats have also been defined, namely MNG-LC (Low Complexity) and MNG-VLC (Very Low Complexity). These are proper subsets of MNG without the reusable-object, Delta-PNG, and LOOP capability, which can be used for simple animations, storage of multiple-page fax documents, and the like.

A supporting library for MNG is being developed by Gerard Juyn. It is freeware, available at <http://www.libmng.com>.

A number of prototype MNG datastreams have been written, and several viewers have been written that are able to process a subset of MNG datastreams (simple movies and composite frames), including delta-encoded images. One was used by the U. S. Army for real presentation work as early as September 1996. The prototype MNG files and a testbed viewer ("ARL viewpng", written at the U.S. Army Research Laboratory for use on SGI workstations running IRIX 5.3) and the latest version of the MNG proposal from the PNG Development Group are available at the MNG ftp site,

<ftp://swrinde.nde.swri.edu/pub/mng/>
"ARL viewpng" is no longer being updated, having served its purpose as a testbed for demonstrating the MNG concept. A more complete viewer, "MNGeye" for Windows-95 and Windows NT, by Gerard Juyn, was released on August 1, 1998. It is available at <http://www.3-t.com/3-T/products/mngi/Homepage.html> ImageMagick and Paint Shop Pro are supporting subsets of MNG. The ImageMagick subset includes a complete implementation of MNG-LC, and the source code is freely available at <http://www.imagemagick.org>. ImageMagick has been shown to be able to convert typical animated banners found on the Internet from GIF to MNG with about a 10 percent reduction in file size. Mozilla and Netscape 6 are supporting MNG via libmng.

JNG

JNG (JPEG Network Graphics) [2] is a subformat that was designed in June 1998 for use with MNG. It consists of a JPEG datastream wrapped in PNG-style chunks along with an alpha channel that is encoded in PNG IDAT format. The alpha channel can also be encoded as a grayscale JPEG and wrapped in JDAA chunks. This offers JPEG with transparency that can be used as a standalone image or as an image within a MNG datastream.

Competing proposals

Two competing proposals have also been written, both around January 1997, but have been dormant since then. The drafts for these proposals can be found in the "documents/history" subdirectory at the MNG ftp site mentioned above. They are

References

1.Randers-Pehrson, G., et. al., MNG (Multiple-image Network Graphics) Format, Version 1.0, January 2001, <ftp://swrinde.nde.swri.edu/pub/mng/documents/>.

2.Randers-Pehrson, G., et. al., JNG (JPEG Network Graphics) Format, Version 1.0, January 2001, <ftp://swrinde.nde.swri.edu/pub/mng/documents/>.

3.Boutell, T., et. al., PNG (Portable Network Graphics) Specification, Version 1.0, October 1996, <http://www.w3.org/pub/WWW/TR/REC-png-multi.html>.

4. Boutell, T., et. al., PNG (Portable Network Graphics) Specification, Version 1.0, RFC 2083, January 1997, <ftp://ds.internic.net/rfc/rfc2083.txt>

5. Randers-Pehrson, G., et. al., PNG (Portable Network Graphics) Specification, Version 1.2, January 1999, <ftp://swrinde.nde.swri.edu/pub/png/documents/>

Trademarks

Author

Glenn Randers-Pehrson
611 Rivershore Court
Edgewood, Maryland 21040
This is a revised version of an article that appeared in the Winter 1997 issue of the World Wide Web Journal

Request for Comments

Comments on the MNG and JNG formats are welcome and should be addressed to mng-list@ccrc.wustl.edu