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SIXEL to DBK Converter

Export terminal visuals as DBK format online for free

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Cloud Processing

Conversion runs on remote servers, so your computer stays fast. Even large SIXEL images are handled without slowing your device.

Fast Conversion

SIXEL to DBK processing completes in seconds for typical image sizes. Cloud infrastructure keeps turnaround times consistently short.

No Install Required

The entire SIXEL to DBK conversion runs in your browser. No desktop software, no plugins — just upload and convert.

How to convert SIXEL 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

SIXEL (Six Pixel) is a bitmap graphics encoding format created by Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) in 1983 for rendering images on character-cell printers and video terminals. The name derives from the encoding's fundamental unit: a column of six pixels represented by a single ASCII character. Each printable character in the sixel data stream (ASCII 63-126) encodes a 6-pixel vertical column, with the character's binary value determining which pixels are on or off. Color is specified through register-based palette control: a Select Color Sequence assigns an HLS or RGB color value to a numbered register, and subsequent sixel characters use that color until another register is selected. The encoding supports raster attributes for specifying pixel aspect ratio and image dimensions, repeat sequences (! followed by a count and character) for run-length compression of identical columns, and $ (carriage return) and - (new line) for navigating the sixel grid. DEC implemented SIXEL support in their VT240, VT241, VT330, and VT340 terminals, as well as multiple printer models. One advantage of the SIXEL encoding is its ASCII-clean nature: the data stream consists entirely of printable characters and standard control sequences, meaning SIXEL graphics can be transmitted through any text-based communication channel — serial terminals, SSH sessions, telnet connections — without requiring binary-safe transport or protocol modifications. The format's modern renaissance provides another remarkable dimension: after decades of obscurity, SIXEL support has been implemented in numerous contemporary terminal emulators, enabling inline image display in command-line workflows. SIXEL output can be generated by ImageMagick, libsixel, chafa, and various plotting libraries.
Initial release: 1983
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 SIXEL to DBK?

SIXEL graphics are designed for terminal display, not general use. Converting to DBK produces a portable image for sharing or editing.

What programs can open DBK?

DocBook XML editors, oXygen XML Editor, and tools like Pandoc process DBK files. LibreOffice can import some DocBook content.

Will I lose image quality converting SIXEL to DBK?

DBK preserves image data without lossy compression, so the visual content from your SIXEL is retained faithfully during conversion.

How quickly can I convert SIXEL to DBK?

Most SIXEL images convert to DBK within seconds. The exact time depends on the resolution and complexity of the source, but it is typically quick.

Can I queue several SIXEL files for conversion?

Yes — upload multiple SIXEL files in one session and convert them all to DBK simultaneously. Batch processing saves time on repetitive tasks.

Is SIXEL the same as SIX format?

They are the same encoding — SIXEL is the full name, SIX is the short extension. Convertio handles both identically for conversion.