R3vo/Sandbox1 – User

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Tag: Manual revert
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;Example
;Example
  arma3.exe -malloc=someMalloc
  arma3.exe -malloc=someMalloc
== -hugePages ==
Enables hugepages with the default memory allocator ([[Arma 3: Custom Memory Allocator|malloc]]) for both client and server.
;Example
arma3.exe -hugePages


== -enableHT ==
== -enableHT ==
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;Example
;Example
  arma3.exe -enableHT
  arma3.exe -enableHT
== -hugePages ==
Enables hugepages with the default memory allocator ([[Arma 3: Custom Memory Allocator|malloc]]) for both client and server.
;Example
arma3.exe -hugePages


== -setThreadCharacteristics ==
== -setThreadCharacteristics ==

Revision as of 16:44, 18 October 2024

These parameters can be configured by creating a new shortcut on your desktop and then adding the appropriate option in the target line.

Most of the following parameters can be set with the Arma 3: Launcher.

Steam

  1. Choose the game in Steam\Library
  2. Right click on the game
  3. Select properties
  4. Hit "Set launch options"
Example
-nosplash -mod=test;x\test;c:\arma3\test2

Windows

When working with shortcuts, cmd launch options: there is max characters limit for the executing line, use -par (see: Startup Parameters Config File) to avoid it.

Startup Command Line parameters file
Arma3.exe -par="D:\Arma 3 Startup Parameters.txt"
-skipIntro
-noSplash
-enableHT
-hugePages
-noLogs

Path Definition

There are a few basics to keep in mind when defining path as part of a parameter.

Spaces

The path and -profiles need to be enclosed with quotes if it contains spaces, e.g "-profiles=c:\arma 3\profiles".

Relative vs Absolute

You can define most, if not all path in both ways.

Relative
-profiles=profiles
Absolute
-profiles=C:\arma3\profiles

The relative path is normally based on the game main folder, where the exe resides in. Using beta patches does NOT change this! However when you use -profiles, some commands use this path defined there as base.

Display Options

-window

Displays Arma 3 windowed instead of full screen. Screen resolution / window size are set in arma3.cfg.

Example
arma3.exe -window

-posX

Sets the default X Position of the Window.

Example
arma3.exe -posX=50

-posY

Sets the default Y Position of the Window.

Example
arma3.exe -posY=50

-adapter

Sets the default Video Adapter.

Example
arma3.exe -adapter=MISSING_AN_EXAMPLE

Game Loading Speedup

-noSplash

-noSplash is a startup option that allows you to bypass the splash screens on startup of Arma 3.
Real speed-up gained with this is likely to be negligible in Arma 3, as the loading screens are handled in parallel with the game data being loaded, and the loading itself takes quite long thanks to the amount of data needed.
Example
arma3.exe -noSplash

-skipIntro

Disables world intros in the main menu permanently.

Real speed-up gained with this is likely to be negligible in Arma 3, as the loading screens are handled in parallel with the game data being loaded, and the loading itself takes quite long thanks to the amount of data needed.
Example
arma3.exe -skipIntro

-world

Select a world loaded by default. For faster game loading (no default world loaded and world intro in the main menu, only at game start, disabled): -world=empty.

Example

For faster game loading (no default world loaded and world intro in the main menu, only at game start, disabled)

arma3.exe -world=empty

Load Altis

arma3.exe -world=Altis

-worldCfg

Inits a landscape by the given world config.

Profile Options

-name

Sets the profile name.

Example
arma3.exe -name=PlayerOne

-profiles

Location of user-profile folder. If a custom path is set, default files and folders (logFiles, AnimDataCache, DataCache, SteamPreviewCache....) located by default in %localappdata%/Arma 3 will be created in that new location. However, old files will stay in the old location and will not be copied.

-profiles is a startup option allowing you to choose an alternate location for the user profile files, such as downloaded missions and .cfg files.

The windows user account would need permissions to write to the folder of choice.

An example might be like this
"C:\arma3\arma3.exe" -profiles=C:\arma3\Profiles
or
"C:\arma3\Arma3.exe" -profiles=Profiles

would store all your profiles/configs/downloaded content into your ROOT Arma 3 folder under the folder name "Profiles"

-unit

Parameter passes a unit's ID number to the binary, translates to https://units.arma3.com/my-units#?unit=<number>

Example
arma3.exe -unit=1337

Misc.

-buldozer

Starts Buldozer mode.

Example
arma3.exe -buldozer

-noLand

Starts with no world loaded. (Used for Buldozer)

Example
arma3.exe -noLand

-noSound

Disables sound output.

Example
arma3.exe -noSound

-doNothing

Engine closes immediately after detecting this option.

Example
arma3.exe -doNothing

-mod

Loads the specified mod folders. Multiple folder need to be separated by a semicolon.

Example 1
arma3.exe -mod=test;x\test;c:\arma3\test2
  • "test" is located in the Arma 3 installation folder ("Arma 3\test") (relative path)
  • "x\test" is in the installation folder ("Arma 3\x\test") (relative path; subfolder)
  • "c:\arma3\test2" is in "c:\arma3\test2" (absolute path)
Example 2

On Windows

arma3.exe -mod=test;x\test;c:\arma3\test2
Example 3

On Linux. Note the addtional backslash in front of the semicolon

arma3.exe -mod=test\;x\test\;c:\arma3\test2 #Linux, 
"Relative path" starts from, or is rooted at, the directory from where the Arma 3 executable has been started, and is not always the same where the executable is, like in betas. Usually this is the same as the installation path and the same of what is written in Windows registry. But if you copy or symlink the necessary file and folders, you may have different roots. It is useful when having multiple dedicated servers.

Client Network Options

-connect

Server IP to connect to.

Example
arma3.exe -connect=168.152.15.147

-port

Server port to connect to.

Example
arma3.exe -port=1337

-password

Server password to connect to.

Example
arma3.exe -password=1337abc

-host

Start a non-dedicated multiplayer host.

Example
arma3.exe -host

Server Options

-setUpHost

Start the game in the setup server display, works with the client exe. See reference image

Example
arma3.exe -setUpHost

-server

Start a dedicated server. Not needed for the dedicated server exe.

Example
arma3.exe -server

-port

Port to have dedicated server listen on.

Example
arma3.exe -port=1337

-pid

File to write the server's PID (process ID) to. The file is removed automatically when the exe is stopped. Only works for dedicated servers.

Example
arma3.exe -pid=C:\MyServer\PID.txt

-ranking

Allowing you to output ranking information or otherwise know as player stats to a file.

The windows user account would need permissions to write to the folder of choice.

Output sample:

class Player1
{
	name = "PlayerName";
	killsInfantry = 71;
	killsSoft = 3;
	killsArmor = 5;
	killsAir = 5;
	killsPlayers = 0;
	customScore = 0;
	killsTotal = 84;
	killed = 3;
};
Example
arma3.exe -ranking=C:\arma3\ranking.log

-netlog

Enables multiplayer network traffic logging. For more details see server configuration.

Example
arma3.exe -netlog

-cfg

Selects the Server Basic Config file. Config file for server specific settings like network performance tuning.

Using this parameter overrides the game config (Documents\Arma 3\Arma3.cfg); use at your own risk on clients.
Example
arma3.exe -config=C:\MyServer\basic.cfg

-config

Selects the Server Config File. Config file for server specific settings like admin password and mission selection.

Example
arma3.exe -config=C:\MyServer\config.cfg

-profiles

Path to the folder containing server profile. By default, server logs are written to server profile folder. If folder doesn't exist, it will be automatically created. Does not work on Linux, no profile will be created or used; instead, remove this parameter and the profile will be created in ~/.local/share/Arma 3 - Other Profiles

Example
arma3.exe -profiles=C:\MyServer\profiles

-bePath

By default BattlEye will create BattlEye folder inside server profile folder. With -bePath param it is possible to specify a custom folder.

Example
arma3.exe -bePath=C:\MyBattlEyeFolder

-ip

Command to enable support for Multihome servers. Allows server process to use defined available IP address. (b1.57.76934)

Example
arma3.exe -ip=145.412.123.12

-par

Command to read startup parameters from a file. For more details see Startup parameters config file.

Example
arma3.exe -par="C:\Users\Player\Games\Arma 3\Arma 3 Parameter Files\par_common.txt"

-client

Launch as client (console). Useful for headless clients.

Example
arma3.exe -client

-loadMissionToMemory

Server will load mission into memory on first client downloading it. Then it keeps it pre-processed pre-cached in memory for next clients, saving some server CPU cycles.

Example
arma3.exe -loadMissionToMemory

-autoInit

Automatically initialize mission just like the first client does. The server config file (server.cfg) must contain "Persistent=1;", otherwise autoInit parameter is skipped.

This will break the Arma 3: Mission Parameters function, so do not use it when you work with mission parameters, only default values are returned!
Example
arma3.exe -autoInit

-serverMod

Loads the specified sub-folders for different server-side (not broadcasted to clients) mods. Separated by semi-colons. Absolute path and multiple stacked folders are possible. In Linux multiple folders arguments need the following separation syntax: -mod=mod1\;mod2\;mod3.

Example
arma3.exe -serverMod=myAwesomeMod;anotherAwesomeMod;

-disableServerThread

Option to disable the server send messaging thread in case of random crashing (may also decrease performance of server on multicore CPUs)

Example
arma3.exe -disableServerThread

-bandwidthAlg

Set to 2 to use a new experimental networking algorithm that might be better than the default one.

Example
arma3.exe -bandwidthAlg=2

-limitFPS

Arma 3 logo black.png1.98 Limites the server FPS to given integer between 5-1000 FPS (default 50).

Example
arma3.exe -limitFPS=300

-networkDiagInterval

Arma 3 logo black.png1.30 Polls the status of bandwidth, traffic and similar data every X seconds. Since Arma 3 logo black.png2.18 is also logs size and count of public variables when using the Profiling binary.

Example
arma3.exe networkDiagInterval=10

Performance

-maxMem

Overrides memory allocation limit to a certain amount (in megabytes).

Until Arma 3 logo black.png2.14 there was a bug on the Linux server binary where it parses the maxMem value as a signed integer, therefore making 4096 interpreted as a negative value; in order to avoid this issue, use values like 2047, 4095, 8191, 16383, 32767 (2048 -1, 4096 -1 etc).

1024 MiB is a hard-coded minimum (anything lower falls back to 1024). The maximum is influenced by your operating system (any value over the maximum will be reverted to this value):

  • 32-bit Windows + 32-bit game: 2047
  • 64-bit Windows + 32-bit game: 3071
  • 64-bit Windows + 64-bit game: (physical memory * 4) / 5

Without the -maxMem parameter the engine attempts to set this parameter internaly to a reasonable value often defaulting to max values as described above. The file cache is always excluded from the virtual address limit, see our developers blog: https://www.bistudio.com/blog/breaking-the-32-bit-barrier.

Note that setting maxMem to 2000 does not mean that the game will never allocate more then 2000 MiB. It says that the game will do everything in its power to not cross this limit. In general, it makes sense not using this parameter at all and only resort to it in case you experience issues with memory.
Example
arma3.exe -maxMem=4096

-maxVRAM

Defines video memory allocation limit to number (in megabytes). Use to resolve e.g. Windows problem: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/2026022/en-us?p=1. Minimum value is 128 MiB (anything lower falls back to 128). The value is ignored (under DX11) if engine properly detected VRAM size, minus 20% reserve with ceiling limit 300MB max.

Example
arma3.exe -maxVRAM=4096

-maxFileCacheSize

Arma 3 logo black.png2.14 Sets the default filecache size (when files are loaded from disk, they are cached in RAM. If the cache is full, the oldest file is thrown out).

  • Default size was either maxMemory - 448 MB or if you had more than 2 GB of memory available to Arma 3, it would be limited to max 2048 MB.
  • Setting lower than 1 GB is not recommended.
  • Minimum possible value is 512 MB
Example
arma3.exe -maxFileCacheSize=2048

-noCB

Turns off multicore use. It slows down rendering but may resolve visual glitches.

Example
arma3.exe -noCB

-CPUCount

Change to a number less or equal than numbers of available cores. This will override auto detection (which equate to native cores). The best way to simulate dual core on quad core is to use -cpuCount=2 when you run the game and then change the affinity to 2 cores to make sure additional cores can never be used when some over-scheduling happens. It might be also possible to set the affinity in the OS before you launch the process, that would work as well.

Example
arma3.exe -exThreads=8

-exThreads

Change to a number 0,1,3,5,7. This will override auto detection (which use 3 for dualcore and 7 for quadcore). All file operations go through a dedicated thread. This offloads some processing from the main thread, however it adds some overhead at the same time. The reason why threaded file ops were implemented was to serve as a basement for other threads ops. When multiple threads are running at the same time, OS is scheduling them on different cores. Geometry and Texture loading (both done by the same thread) are scheduled on different cores outside the main rendering loop at the same time with the main rendering loop.

Ex(tra)threads table
Parameter Description
Number Geometry loading Texture loading File operations
0 0 0 0
1 0 0 1
3 0 1 1
5 1 0 1
7 1 1 1
Example
arma3.exe -exThreads=7

-malloc

Sets the particular memory allocator to be used. Significantly affects both performance and stability of the game. More details.

Example
arma3.exe -malloc=someMalloc

-hugePages

Enables hugepages with the default memory allocator (malloc) for both client and server.

Example
arma3.exe -hugePages

-enableHT

Enables the use of all logical CPU cores for parallel tasks processing. If your CPU does not support Hyper-Threading or similar technology, this parameter is ignored. When disabled, only physical cores are used.

Note that enabling this parameter may slightly improve or harm the performance depending on a scenario. This parameter may be overridden by -cpuCount so if you want to use the maximum number of CPU cores use "-enableHT" without "-cpuCount".
Example
arma3.exe -enableHT

-setThreadCharacteristics

Arma 3 logo black.png2.10 Registers the game's executable as "Game" in Windows for performance improvements.

This flag can freeze the whole Operating System if running Windows Server!
Example
arma3.exe -setThreadCharacteristics

Developer Options

-noPause

Allow the game running even when its window does not have focus (i.e. running in the background)

Example
arma3.exe -noPause

-noPauseAudio

Arma 3 logo black.png2.10 Keeps audio running in background while tabbed out. Should be used together with -noPause to work correctly

Example
arma3.exe -noPauseAudio

-showScriptErrors

Introduced to show errors in scripts on-screen. In Eden Editor, script errors are always shown, even when this parameter is not used.

Example
arma3.exe -showScriptErrors

-debug

Enables more verbose error logging. See Arma 3: Debug Mode

Example
arma3.exe -debug

-noFreezeCheck

Disables the freeze check. It creates otherwise max 4 dumps per game run in total - 2 per distinct freeze. Similar to Crash Files.

Example
arma3.exe -noFreezeCheck

-noLogs

Be aware this means none errors saved to RPT file (report log). Yet in case of crash the fault address block info is saved. More details here.

Example
arma3.exe -noLogs

-filePatching

Arma 3 logo black.png1.50 Allow the game to load unpacked data. For more info see CMA:DevelopmentSetup

Example
arma3.exe -filePatching

-init

Run scripting command once in the main menu. For example to start a certain SP mission of choice automatically. See also playMission. The Mission has to reside in the "arma3\Missions" folder, NOT the user directory.

Example
arma3.exe -init=playMission["","M04Saboteur.Sara"]

<path>\mission.sqm

Load a mission directly in the editor. Example: "c:\arma3\users\myUser\missions\myMission.intro\mission.sqm"

-autotest

Loads automatically a series of defined missions and on error writes to a log file.

The parameter can be used to automatically run a series of test missions. For example FPS measurement or scripting validation.

  • The game runs in special mode. It runs all missions from the given list.
  • If any mission fails (ends with other than END1), it is logged into the rpt file (search: <autotest).
  • In case of any fail, the game also returns an errorlevel to DOS. This can be used to issue an notification by a secondary application.
Launch Arma 3 with
-autotest=c:\arma3\autotest\autotest.cfg

The autotest.cfg looks like:

class TestMissions
{
	class TestCase01
	{
		campaign = "";
		mission = "autotest\TestCase01.Desert_E"; // relative path to the arma directory
	};
	class TestCase02
	{
		campaign = "";
		mission = "C:\arma3\autotest\TestCase02.Desert_E"; // absolute path
	};
};
If -profiles is used, the relative path is relative to the specified profile path.
Example
arma3.exe -autotest=c:\arma3\autotest\autotest.cfg
RPT entry
<AutoTest result="FAILED">
	EndMode = LOSER
	Mission = autotest\TestCase01.Desert_E
</AutoTest>

If possible use simple worlds, like Desert, to keep the loading times short. The loading screen command might be useful as well to speed up task that need no rendering.

-beta

Loads the specified beta sub-folders. Separated by semicolons. Absolute path and multiple stacked folders are possible. In Linux multiple folders arguments need the following separation syntax:

Example
arma3.exe -mod=betamod1\;betamod2\;betamod3

This allows use of beta build w/o disabling in-game mod/extension management (in UI menu).

-checkSignatures

Provide a thorough test of all signatures of all loaded banks at the start game. Output is in .rpt file.

Example
arma3.exe -checkSignatures

-d3dNoLock

Doesn't lock the VRAM.

Example
arma3.exe -d3dNoLock

-d3dNoMultiCB

D3D uses Single Constant Buffers instead of Multiple Constant Buffers.

Example
arma3.exe -d3dNoMultiCB

-noFilePatching

Ensures that only PBOs are loaded and NO unpacked data.

It was replaced in favor of the -filePatching parameter.
Example
arma3.exe -noFilePatching

-debugCallExtension

Logs extension calls in the rpt log like this: arma3-startup parameter debugCallExtension output.png

Example
arma3.exe -debugCallExtension

-command

Creates named pipe "\\.\pipe\name" for receiving predefined set of commands. See Arma 3: Named Pipe

Example
arma3.exe -command=

-language

Arma 3 logo black.png2.04 Starts client with preferred language. See Stringtable.xml - Supported Languages for a list of supported languages. Case-sensitive! (className column) Arma 3 logo black.png2.18 The parameter now works properly

Example
arma3.exe -language=German

-preprocDefine

Arma 3 logo black.png2.06 Defines a macro and optionally its value. Multiple macro can be defined by using this parameter multiple times.

Example
arma3.exe -preprocDefine="CMD__MACRONAME=MACROVALUE"
arma3.exe -preprocDefine=CMD__MACRONAME
arma3.exe -preprocDefine=CMD__MACRO1 -preprocDefine=CMD__MACRO2
The macro name will start with CMD__, the engine automatically adding the prefix if it is not present.
-preprocDefine=MACRO // will be CMD__MACRO

-dumpAddonDependencyGraph

Arma 3 logo black.png2.14 dumps Graphviz text file into the RPT directory with a graph of all addon dependencies (requiredAddons)

Example
arma3.exe -dumpAddonDependencyGraph