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Ramifications of BSA Extraction in Mod Organizer


z929669

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This will graduate to wiki guide format once we get sufficient community input ...



 
I am creating this thread to address some important information about BSA extraction and related modding concepts that come up over an over again with respect to STEP's use of Mod Organizer (MO) and MO/STEP critics that disagree with STEP's general advocacy of BSA extraction and MO's BSA-extraction functionality. In order for this to be meaningful to all users, I am providing some background information required for understanding the ramifications of BSA extraction and why STEP advocates it while other respected modders do not.
 
WARNING: Extracting BSAs deviates from the intent and expectation of the respective mod provider, so it is fair to expect that once a user extracts a BSA supplied with a given mod, that mod's author has every right to refuse support on the basis that the user implementation is no longer the same mod. Further, if a user extracts vanilla Skyrim BSAs, ALL mod authors and the modding community at large have the right to refuse ANY support to said user!
 
NOTE: The STEP community follows Wrye's cathedral model of modding, and since we advocate experimentation and an open modding approach, we also try to encourage 'creativity' (but not flagrant stupidity, TYVM) and users are welcome to support each other in this community, and we'll do our best to help as we are able, particularly with regard to what we advise in any of our guides. After all, modding is a largely creative endeavor and a learning experience!


 
Executive Summary
 
STEP provides instruction for a range of methods to mod Skyrim. Novice users can follow the STEP Guide, which is pretty straight forward and adheres to conventional modding methods. More advanced users or users that want to take it further can follow the additional guides and employ some more advanced and less conventional techniques (like BSA extraction and texture optimization) that we have found to be viable and optimal for the 'perfectionistic' or 'adventurous' modder. Some of these techniques are traditionally the jobs of the mod providers rather than the mod users, but we encourage and empower our community to take on these tasks if they wish, because many mod providers do not optimize their mods, and we advocate customization of mods by the user.
 
STEP advocates BSA extraction because it allows for more granular control of the modded Skyrim (but see 'cons' below). Critics object that this practice 'breaks' the fundamental standards of install-order and load-order methodology that many mods and modding utilities are built around. Nevertheless, I and many STEP staff and members have not found this to be the case and propose that these concerns likely stem as a result of Mod Organizer users having problems and complaining and blaming the mod authors on mod threads like the USkP when something goes wrong with their game. Why MO users? Because MO is the only mod manager that exposes BSA extraction to any user that installs a mod with a BSA in it (basically, all MO users).
  • STEP advocates BSA extraction (given the user understands the ramifications!)
    • It is a prerequisite to texture optimization (NOTE: repackaging vanilla BSAs is possible with CK's Archive.exe but problematic with BSAopt)
    • Used properly, it does not cause any load-order issues at all
    • It allows more granular control of a modded setup
    • It can theoretically lead to excess disk fragmentation (HDDs only, not SSDs)
    • It can theoretically reduce in-game performance if most/all game assets are loose files under a heavily-modded game
  • BSA extraction is not 'bad' (NOTE: it can alter the intended behavior of a mod's interaction with other mods if used improperly)
  • BSAs are not 'bad'
    • simplify mod distribution
    • simplify user maintenance (NOTE: particularly for manual installation and traditional mod management ... but NOT for Mod Organizer users!)
    • simplify support by mod providers
    • BSAs are the future trend in Bethesda modding, so best to get used to them



 
Install Order vs Load Order
 
A word about game assets: Game assets are any files (resources) that get used by Skyrim. Plugins (*.esm & *.esp) are special assets that are used by Skyrim to call upon other assets and to provide instructions for their use. Thus, plugins are the 'brain' of the game. The only plugins needed to play Skyrim are Skyrim.esmUpdate.esm. Other plugins are from the DLC add-ons or other mods made by the modding community like the USkPs, etc.
 
Install order: The order of mod files installed onto disk. If two mod packages contain the same file names along the same file paths (e.g., textures/blah.dds), then the last installed version overwrites (i.e., overrides) any previous version and is thus the version that will be used by the game if it is called upon by the game (via a plugin). These mod files can be anything at all (e.g., text, images, ... whatever), but only certain file types are used by the game: textures, meshes, scripts, plugins, etc. Therefore, install order affects what resources the game will use.
 
(NOTE: MO does not install mods to the data directory, but rather mods are extracted into mod folders within a user-specified location. MO creates a virtual /Data/ that appears to Skyrim as the actual /Data/, and it populates this virtual directory with mod assets from the install directory as specified by the MO installation priority. Otherwise, there is effectively no difference between MO and other mod managers, but this difference is fundamental and confers a significant advantage to MO users).
 
Load Order: The order that plugins are loaded into the game. Like install order, the last plugin loaded overrides all previous plugins. Since plugins reference assets within /Data/ by file name, there is potential for two different plugins to reference the same named resource.  Additionally, since plugins provide instructions as to the use of these resources, load order can also affect game behavior. Therefore, load order affects both what the game will use and how the game will use it.
 
What are BSAs?
 
Mandatory reading: read this important background information!
 
BSA: A proprietary archive of game assets that mirrors /Data/ directory structure. Thus, a BSA file is an archive exactly like a folder that is simply packaged as a file. The same is true of any ZIP or 7z archive.
 
How do BSAs Work?
 
For Skyrim to be 'aware' of a BSA, it must either be registered in Skyrim.ini or loaded with a plugin of same name. Once recognized, the game sees any BSA as part of /Data/ itself; however, when conflicts exist between files contained within a registered BSA, a plugin-loaded BSA or within /Data/ as loose files, things are a little trickier:
  • Registered BSAs: These load at Skyrim start in the order that they are listed in Skyrim.ini, last loaded BSA 'wins' in event of resource conflicts of contents within.
  • Plugin-loaded BSAs: These load when a new or saved game is loaded after Skyrim starts. Each BSA is loaded at the time the plugin of same name is loaded. So any BSA with content resource conflicts corresponding to a plugin will 'win' if its plugin is loaded after the conflicting plugin. Basically, these BSAs (and all of their asset content) are referenced by their plugin and loaded according to plugin load order. Plugin-loaded BSAs always 'win' where they conflict with Registered BSAs. The only exception is with respect to resources required at Skyrim start but before savegame (or new game) load, like No Menu and Loading Smoke.
  • Note about loose files: Loose files always override same files inside of registered AND plugin-loaded BSAs!

 
Summarizing in terms of prioritization and load order ...
 
Skyrim asset priority:

  1. Loose assets always win
  2. Plugin-loaded BSAs win all but #1 (EXCEPTION: plugins are only loaded when a new or saved game is started, so plugin-loaded BSAs have zero priority with regard to pre-game assets)
  3. Registered-BSA assets lose to all #1 & #2
  4. Registered Skyrim BSAs and other official content and DLCs behave no differently than "after market", mod BSAs

Plugin/BSA load order:

  1. Registered BSAs load according to list order in Skyrim.ini
  2. Plugin-loaded BSAa load with respect to the corresponding plugin load order
  3. Plugins load according to %USERPROFILE%/Appdata/Local/Skyrim/plugins.txt, which is managed by BOSS/LOOT

BSA Pros:

  • Keep the Data directory clean and uncluttered (NOTE: this does not apply to MO users though, since MO uses the virtual file system).
  • Allow easy mod management, since all of a mod's files are much simpler to identify and update or remove (mitigates user error= less support burden)
  • Make it easier for mod authors to distribute and maintain control over how the mod functions (mitigates user error = less support burden)
  • UPDATE:
  • Better performance (NOTE: a lot of loose files slows down game startup, especially when using MO)
  • Less disk usage (NOTE: BSAs can be compressed; HDD fragmentation is less of an issue)

BSA Cons:

  • Removes an element of user-level control ... and many mod users are control freaks (STEP especially)
  • Users can no longer efficiently see contents of a mod (NOTE: although Wrye Bash does expose this information, albeit with a performance hit ... is this functionality inherent or is it off by default??)
  • Incentivizes mod authors to provide BSA 'hotfixes' as loose files (NOTE: This has undesireable ramifications for MO users due to behavior of BSA extraction in MO ... BSA extracts last, so loose file hotfix is overridden by original version within the BSA! EDIT: this is fixed in the current beta and next release of MO)
  • Mod authors are forced to upload all files (the entire BSA) for any updates (all files are contained within a BSA), and users are forced to either download again or deal with the issue just previous if the mod author has supplied a 'hotfix'-type update.

BSAs & Steam Workshop
Steam Workshop only allows mods that use the BSA + ESP format. STEP finds this overly restrictive and unnecessarily 'controlling'. I personally resent it and only deal with Steam because it is the wrapper for Skyrim (unfortunately, IMO). The Steam Workshop and Steam-Skyrim community are valid entities that do not deserve to be totally ignored, but STEP does not recommend that it be used as a primary source for mods or modding information. The Nexus is the STEP-preferred source for all modding needs. For information, STEP is a good primary source, and we point to the best alternative sources, but here are a few others:

BSAs & Mod Organizer
 
Since Mod Organizer allows users to extract BSAs during mod installation, MO potentially obviates any functionality of registered or plugin-loaded BSAs. Thus, any mod that uses a BSA is effectively constrained henceforth by rules pertaining to loose files, so its assets are no longer linked to hierarchies of BSA registration order or plugin load order. This and the fact that all or user-specified mod resources can be loose and manageable by MO confers a clear advantage to the user.
 
BSA Extraction Pros:

  • MO users have a much more granular level of asset control and can prioritize BSA contents at the loose-files level
  • It is a prerequisite to texture optimization (NOTE: repackaging vanilla BSAs is possible with CK's Archive.exe but problematic with BSAopt)

Other issues can arise though, so only informed users that understand the ramifications should be using this functionality (unpacking BSAs). Following are some things to be aware of when unpacking BSAs (that mod authors intended to remain packed as delivered!).
 
UPDATE: There does not seem to be any need for standard users to extract mod BSAs in MO, because once can subvert the constraints of the standard load order/asset prioritization system from the Archives Tab:

  • Plugin checked, BSA checked - Follows mod priority order for conflict resolution. Plugin does not affect the situation at all.
  • Plugin checked, BSA unchecked - Follows plugin load order for all unchecked BSAs. All loose file assets will "overwrite." OTHER checked BSAs will NOT overwrite, which is why unchecking BSAs can lead to unpredictable results or dificult-to-resolve conflicts (hence the :!: warning).
  • Plugin unchecked, BSA checked - Follows mod priority order for conflict resolution. Plugin does not affect the situation at all.
  • Plugin unchecked, BSA unchecked - As if the plugin and BSA don't even exist in the mod setup.
  • Furthermore, MO will scan all mod BSAs (aside from those in /Data/) and include these assets in the Mod > Information > Conflicts tab. So in MO, BSAs effectively behave like loose files when checked in the Archives Tab! Mod developers will still find the BSA extraction functionality handy for testing purposes during production of updates to their existing BSA-packed mods or when developing new ones dependent on assets contained within BSAs. 

BSA Extraction Cons:

  • BSA assets are now given loose files priority, so this alters the mod author's original design intent and may introduce false 'bugs' that nobody on any forums will likely want to or know how to diagnose or fix ;)
  • BSA extraction in MO happens after loose files are installed. This means that any loose 'hotfixes' would be overwritten by the BSA version, which is outdated. EDIT: this is fixed in the current beta and next release of MO

MO exposes BSA extraction functionality using a prompt when a mod containing a BSA is first encountered. This functionality can henceforth be "always allowed" or selective, based on user preference in response to this prompt. Users that do not fully understand the ramifications of BSA extraction on the specific mods they are using together should not use this feature. If "automatic BSA extraction" is in effect, it can be reset from Settings (click the wrench icon in the toolbar) > Reset Dialogs > click 'yes' at the prompt.
 
First, STEP recommends that users NEVER "always allow" automatic BSA extraction ... why? Because there is no need to do this at all, since the granular functionality already resides within the Archive Tab. More importantly, because many unknown or unintended prioritization issues can come into play as described previously. It is always safer to use the BSA unless it will cause a de facto undesirable result.
 
BSAs that have optimized textures and can be overridden completely by downstream mods should stay inside BSAs (or repackaged using CK's Archive.exe). If assets from inside a BSA need to overwrite some mods and be overwritten by others, then sometimes it makes sense to extract the BSA. MO has a beautiful tool accessible from within its Archive Tab. If a BSA is present in the load order, it will appear in the Archives Tab. Leave it unchecked to allow it to behave normally and be loaded by its plugin (if the plugin is active), and check it to extract the BSA to the mod folder and effectively confer loose-files prioritization.
 
Critics of Mod Organizer and STEP (for Officially Advocating BSA Extraction) 

Some within the well-respected modding community are at odds with the idea of BSA extraction advocated by STEP and facilitated by MO. The most notable contingent is the USkP team. This is relatively old news and nothing that should be shocking, so please do not treat it that way. The reasons are not unfounded and actually valid. I bring this up solely to address the idea to remove BSA-extraction from MO that Tannin suggested if MO-detected load order issues are not resolved properly (by submitting a ticket). In fact, I created this thread to address this one issue as much as to address the knowledge gap that is the real cause of any issues associated with BSA extraction.
 
Some modders are more or less happy with MO's ability to invoke BSA extraction. Generally, mod authors who have gotten a lot of grief with respect to their mods --for problems caused by the ramifications of rampant BSA extraction-- seem to have more of a problem with MO (see note below!). This has been somewhat problematic for STEP and MO with respect to outsiders privy to the argument but not privy to STEP or MO ... never mind that the 'fault' should be shouldered solely by the unwitting mod user for invoking BSA extraction without understanding the ramifications of doing so ... and ours for not properly educating our user base to that effect (hence this thread).
 
Let it be said that the STEP modding community and the vast majority of modders are the kinds of users that use PCs instead of Macs and tend to be somewhat removed from computing 'norms' imposed by Apple and Microsoft and their ilk. In general, we do not like our control restricted in favor of provider control over our resources to make their lives simpler. We are generally in favor of digital freedom, open source software, and the honor system. Big Brother and his methods are generally unwelcome. Demonizing BSA extraction in general and removing it from MO in particular in order to enhance level-of-conrtol by mod providers would be a big mistake, as STEP itself somewhat relies on this feature (and will to a larger extent in the future). However, I think that it is very important that our users understand the ramifications of using BSA extraction, and we need to address explicitly in the STEP Guide.
 
The MO user base (not its 'critic' base) should guide Tannin's direction of MO, IMHO ...  :yes:
 
I want to explore what we do (and do not) know with regard to the ramifications of BSA extraction to our MO users and how best to make MO a broadly accepted utility among all within the modding community ... not just STEP. In order to do so, we must not dredge up combative arguments. Constructive argument is good for all respective modding endeavors, so what has been said in the past is water under the bridge. So keep it lively and fact filled ... but keep it polite and considerate!
 
Please report bugs as Tannin requests using the link above. Also please post to this thread and help us to improve the breadth and accuracy of this OP!
 

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So... what does that mean for my game.

I dont unpack original game and USKP BSAs and only unpack 3-4 mods where i made some small changes regarding textures and need to hide certain files.

 

 

Do i have to check anything in the archive tab to prevent problems with USKP?

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The specific issues that came up recently about about extraction were related to the Unofficial Skyrim patches and the Skyrim BSAs. If you follow the comments in SRB's post (make mods from the DLC, install these with MO, use the install order shown above) you should be OK. The newly created DLC mods and the various Unofficial Skyrim Patch mods should be installed without BSA extraction, the BSAs will show up in the Archives tab, and the BSAs should be checked in that tab.

 

sigh. Ninja'd.

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I think you are right, but that sounds like a pain to do. I think I'll just surrender and stop extracting unofficial patches. I had originally tried to do that when I first got MO to have all the official BSA/DLC's extracted, but I found it somewhat confusing at the time and decided against it.

 

I do see the false flag development as a "wrench" thrown into the works because it ruined the logic that had I relied upon and replaced it with something I can't actually "see".

 

Just make some folders for each DLC, DG, HF, and DB in the mods folder of MO. Now go into your Skyrim/Data folder and move the BSA and ESMs to their corresponding folder. Open MO, and move them to the order I just laid out there. The priority should start with Skyrim Opted textures at 0. That is if you have Opted textures.

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I've just redid my install order with what I laid out and it was super easy to do. Move six DLC files from Skyrim/Data to three new DLC folders MO/mods. I already had the UPPs and Opted textures in MO, so just had to reorder them properly. It took up the first 15 slots in install order priority (0-14) and less than five minutes.

 

If you have to reinstall the UPPs it is easy, just be sure to click 'replace' so it will delete what is in the folder first, then reinstall the BSA version. If you don't have Opted textures then just ignore what I'm saying and untick all the UPP and DLC BSAs and it will load the way it is intended.

 

Thank god it only took us 2.5 years of modding Skyrim to figure this out.

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So... is this a normal thing?

 

No matter how often i disable or untick a BSA in the tab i, the second i switch to "Plugins", "Saves" or whatever and back to "Archives" they are all ticked again.???

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So... is this a normal thing?

 

No matter how often i disable or untick a BSA in the tab i, the second i switch to "Plugins", "Saves" or whatever and back to "Archives" they are all ticked again.???

MO beta version?? If so report it to Tannin.

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Yeah, i did some testing. the actual "archives.txt" file in the profile folder is correct and has the right order and amount of ticked BSAs stored (if you did it in one clean swoop), but the program at least displays, that they are all ticked, after switching back to the tab. Even after a restart. If you now do any change in the Archive tab, the "archives.txt" gets updated.

 

So afaik as long as you dont change anything in the tab after you adjusted it to your preferences, its fine, but you have to do it all over again if you want to make a single change =/

 

Its the 1.2.1 Beta. I will make a post on Nexus.

 

Edit: Well, it this issue is already in the BugTracker, even if mentioned in the FNV section, seems to be a problem with the new Beta and should be fixed in next version

according to Tannis.

Edited by plaGGy
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Obviously, we are discussing a bunch of viable workarounds, but all workarounds nonetheless, so not ideal.

 

The best solution is to request that Tannin allow DLC under /Data/ to behave as any other 'mod'. This resolves all of the issues at the source, alleviating the inconsistency whereby Official DLC are treated 'specially'. Remove this special treatment and all of the installation instructions that come with all of the mods we install will hold true ... that is key. We don't want 'special' instructions that differ for MO users. All users should be able to follow any mods instructions and trust that those instructions apply.

 

There are probably a couple of different ways that Tannin could do this (if he so chooses), but it likely includes some alteration of Archive Tab behavior and/or exceptions applied to DLCs and USPs.

 

Regardless, there could be many edge cases caused by uniqueness of MO prioritization intelligence that we are still not aware of. Modding in Skyrim is a complex cascade of conflict resolution that mods are built around, and obviously some mod builders are developing with the expectation that standards are not being circumvented. There is something to be said for following standards by default.

 

The STEP team will be revising some things and doing some testing before 2.2.9 release to make changes necessary to prevent variations among users installing STEP with MO versus other mod management utilities.

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The DLC is treated differently because the DLC is in the Data folder. MO exists so you don't put crap into the Data folder.

 

Thus, adding the DLC to the MO mods folder isn't any more of a workaround than adding Steam Workshop-downloaded mods to the MO mods folder.

 

Just because the core ESM/BSA files are downloaded by Steam into the Data folder doesn't mean you should keep them there when you're using MO.

Edited by fireundubh
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I did not say anything about putting 'crap' in /Data/. I only said that the DLC assets could be treated as exceptions and excluded by MO from the rest of /Data/ such that the DLC BSAs could be decoupled from plugin prioritization like all of the other plugin-loaded BSAs.

 

If my logic is correct, this is a more elegant solution than the proposed workarounds and makes MO methods fully compatible with Bethsoft standards.

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Okay I guess this is as good a time as ever to voice this. 

 

I do honestly think you are making a much larger issue out of this then it needs to be (Or I am just failing rather badly in even understanding the issues you have)! As I tried to tell in the vampire issue thread.. I was not able to reproduce it the way I loaded my assets! 

I use all (cleaned) official .esm´s (in overwrite) before any .esp and nothing selected in archives at all. 

In mod order then only optimized HDDLC are before USKP fixes followed by everything else in profiles that have that. Other then the texture.bsa´s nothing is unpacked. 

 

I have never had any issues with this method at all, even during the giant weekend spent looking through every .esp for conflicts and fixing them as I went along did I see any issues out of what would be expected in .esp conflicts. 

 

My Data dir is as pristine as the day I installed skyrim... I could delete MO and all mods and still start the game without any issues what so ever! 

This was the main reason I even started using MO! It could do this where all other managers would require a revalidation of the data dir to make sure. 

 

The most elegant solution if any would in my opinion be to just remove the archives tab since it apparently cause a lot of confusion for certain folk. 

 

So to sum up 

1: Data dir is as it is downloaded from steam 

2: Have a cleaned version of the official .esm´s in overwrite. 

3: Load the .esm´s before ANY .esp in priority order. 

4: ALL bsa´s from mods are unpacked. Only the texture ones from official are. 

 

That is how it works for me, and I really am confused how it can confuse anyone at all. 

 

So sorry if this all sounded a bit angry or annoyed etc... but I am really getting confused as to the overall issue you seem to have. 

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