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PFM to DBK Converter

Free PFM to DBK document conversion online

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Privacy First

Convertio automatically deletes uploaded PFM files after processing and purges DBK results within 24 hours. Your data stays yours.

Cloud-Powered

PFM to DBK conversion runs on Convertio's infrastructure, not your machine. Your device stays fast while the server handles the heavy lifting.

Zero Install

Run the entire PFM to DBK conversion in your web browser. No downloads, plugins, or system requirements beyond an internet connection.

How to convert PFM to DBK

1

Select files from Computer, Google Drive, Dropbox, URL or by dragging it on the page.

2

Choose dbk or any other format you need as a result (more than 200 formats supported)

3

Let the file convert and you can download your dbk file right afterwards

About formats

PFM (Portable Float Map) is a floating-point raster image format devised by Paul Debevec around 2001, designed to store high-dynamic-range image data with the simplicity of the Netpbm family of formats. PFM extends the PBM/PGM/PPM philosophy — minimal header, raw data, no compression — to 32-bit IEEE floating-point samples, providing direct access to HDR pixel values without the encoding overhead of formats like OpenEXR or the limited range of Radiance HDR's RGBE encoding. The file structure is deliberately minimal: a two-character magic number ('Pf' for grayscale, 'PF' for color), width and height on the next line, a scale/endianness indicator (negative for little-endian, positive for big-endian, with magnitude indicating scale factor), and then the raw 32-bit float data for each pixel. PFM files store one float per pixel for grayscale or three floats (RGB) per pixel for color, with no compression, alpha channel, or metadata support. The format emerged from the HDR imaging research community where Debevec's work on image-based lighting and light stage capture required a simple, unambiguous way to store linear floating-point radiance values that could be easily exchanged between research tools. One advantage is absolute simplicity for HDR data: PFM can be read and written in a few lines of code in any language that supports IEEE floats, with no library dependencies — ideal for research prototyping and quick data exchange between custom tools. The format's widespread adoption in the computer vision and computational photography research community is another practical strength — optical flow benchmarks (Middlebury), depth estimation datasets, and radiance field captures commonly use PFM. The format is supported by ImageMagick, OpenCV, HDR Shop, and Luminance HDR.
Developer: Paul Debevec
Initial release: 2001
DBK is a file extension associated with DocBook, a semantic markup language for technical documentation defined in XML (and originally SGML). DocBook was created around 1991 by HaL Computer Systems and O'Reilly & Associates, later maintained by the OASIS DocBook Technical Committee. The vocabulary provides over 400 element types designed specifically for books, articles, reference pages, and technical manuals — including structural elements (book, chapter, section, appendix), block elements (para, programlisting, table, figure), and inline elements (emphasis, filename, command, classname). Authors write content focusing on meaning rather than appearance, and separate stylesheets transform the DocBook source into output formats like HTML, PDF, EPUB, and man pages. One advantage is strict separation of content and presentation — a single DocBook source document can generate a printed book, a website, an ebook, and Unix man pages through different transformation pipelines, without any content duplication. The rich semantic vocabulary is another strength: because elements like <command>, <filename>, and <errorcode> carry precise meaning, toolchains can index, cross-reference, and validate technical content in ways that generic markup cannot. DocBook has been adopted by major open-source projects including the Linux kernel documentation, GNOME, KDE, and FreeBSD for their official documentation, and it remains the standard for single-source technical publishing.
Initial release: 1991

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert PFM to DBK?

PFM files are niche and rarely supported outside scientific software. DBK offers broad compatibility across all platforms and applications.

What programs open DBK files?

DBK files can be opened in XML editors, oXygen, LibreOffice, and DocBook-compatible publishing toolchains.

Does the converter handle batch PFM uploads?

Absolutely. You can upload multiple PFM sources simultaneously and convert all of them to DBK in one go — no need to repeat the process.

Is the conversion process fast?

Yes — PFM to DBK conversion on Convertio usually completes in seconds. Cloud-based processing handles the work without taxing your device.

Will my image quality survive the conversion?

Your original PFM pixel data is converted accurately to DBK. The output quality matches what the DBK format supports — no unnecessary degradation.

Does this work on Mac and Linux?

Convertio is entirely browser-based, so it works on macOS, Linux, Windows, and even mobile platforms without any software installation.