a simple gdal translate/warp/addo python wrapper for raster batch processing
Project description
- Name:
gdalos
gdalos is a simple Python library and GUI for raster processing using GDAL:
creating Cloud Optimized GeoTIFFs
adding overviews
cropping
transforming
and more!
What is Cloud Optimized GeoTIFF?
A Cloud Optimized GeoTIFF (COG) is a regular GeoTIFF file, aimed at being hosted on a HTTP file server, with an internal organization that enables more efficient workflows on the cloud. It does this by leveraging the ability of clients issuing HTTP GET range requests to ask for just the parts of a file they need.
What is GDAL?
GDAL is a translator library for raster and vector geospatial data formats that is released under an X/MIT style Open Source License by the Open Source Geospatial Foundation. As a library, it presents a single raster abstract data model and single vector abstract data model to the calling application for all supported formats. It also comes with a variety of useful command line utilities for data translation and processing.
What is gdalos?
gdalos is a simple multi platform
GDAL
translate/warp/addo python wrapper for raster batch processing. It uses the gdal python interface and on top of it many rules to automate the batch processing. gdalos can be used to make aCloud Optimized GeoTIFF
easily with proper overviews from any raster that can be read with GDAL. I hope some of you might find it useful. look at example.py for some examples.
- What is gdalos_qt?
gdalos_qt is a simple GUI wrapper for gdalos using the Qt5 library with the PyQt5 or PySide backends. gdalos package includes both gdalos and gdalos_qt
Installation
gdalos requires Python >= 3.6. If you want to use the gdalos_qt GUI you would need Python >= 3.7. gdalos also requires gdal to be installed on your Python. You can use install gdal in multiple ways, depending on your OS and configuration:
OSGeo4W
(windows): use the OSGeo4W Python distribution that comes, for instance, with QGIS 3.x.
You can install gdalos using pip using one of these options:
$ pip install gdalos # Installs gdalos without the gdalos_qt UI dependencies $ pip install gdalos[pyqt] # If you want to use gdalos_qt with the PyQt backend $ pip install gdalos[pyside] # If you want to use gdalos_qt with the PySide backend
Usage - Running:
Run with the Graphical UI:
$ python -m gdalos_qt
Creating a
cog
in via the Python shell:>>> from gdalos import gdalos_trans >>> gdalos_trans('/maps/srtm.tif')
Using the gdalos_qt GUI:
- gdalos main UI is very minimalistic…
press on the ‘…’ button next to button “0” to open the “New job GUI”
- New Job UI
press on the ‘…’ button next to “source file” to select a source file
- (optional) use whichever additional process you like
cropping
wrapping
output
press OK
(optional) press on the “0” button to add more job rows and repeat the above
press OK to start
Support
If you find any issue on gdalos or have questions, please open an issue on our repository
Contributing
You want to contribute? Awesome!
We recommend this GitHub workflow to fork the repository. To run the tests, use tox:
$ tox
Before you send us a pull request, remember to reformat all the code:
$ tox -e reformat
This will apply black, isort, and lots of love ❤️
License
gdalos is released under the MIT license, hence allowing commercial
use of the library. Please refer to the LICENSE
file.
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