Skip site navigation (1)Skip section navigation (2)

FreeBSD Manual Pages

  
 
  

home | help
GDAL-RASTER-MOSAIC(1)		     GDAL		 GDAL-RASTER-MOSAIC(1)

NAME
       gdal-raster-mosaic - Build a mosaic

       Added in	version	3.11.

SYNOPSIS
	  Usage: gdal raster mosaic [OPTIONS] [<INPUTS>...] <OUTPUT>

	  Build	a mosaic, either virtual (VRT) or materialized.

	  Positional arguments:
	    -i,	--input	<INPUTS>					    Input raster datasets (or specify a	@<filename> to point to	a file containing filenames) [1.. values]
	    -o,	--output <OUTPUT>					    Output raster dataset (created by algorithm) [required]

	  Common Options:
	    -h,	--help							    Display help message and exit
	    --json-usage						    Display usage as JSON document and exit
	    --config <KEY>=<VALUE>					    Configuration option [may be repeated]
	    --progress							    Display progress bar

	  Options:
	    -f,	--of, --format,	--output-format	<OUTPUT-FORMAT>		    Output format ("GDALG" allowed)
	    --co, --creation-option <KEY>=<VALUE>			    Creation option [may be repeated]
	    -b,	--band <BAND>						    Input band(s) (1-based index) [may be repeated]
	    --overwrite							    Whether overwriting	existing output	is allowed
	    --resolution <xres>,<yres>|same|average|common|highest|lowest>  Target resolution (in destination CRS units) (default: same)
	    --bbox <BBOX>						    Target bounding box	as xmin,ymin,xmax,ymax (in destination CRS units)
	    --target-aligned-pixels					    Round target extent	to target resolution
	    --src-nodata <SRC-NODATA>					    Set	nodata values for input	bands. [1.. values]
	    --dst-nodata <DST-NODATA>					    Set	nodata values at the destination band level. [1.. values]
	    --hide-nodata						    Makes the destination band not report the NoData.
	    --add-alpha							    Adds an alpha mask band to the destination when the	source raster have none.

DESCRIPTION
       This program builds a mosaic of a list of input GDAL datasets, that can
       be either a virtual mosaic in the VRT (Virtual Dataset) format, or in a
       more conventional raster	format such as GeoTIFF.

       The list	of input GDAL datasets can be specified	at the end of the com-
       mand  line  or put in a text file (one filename per line) for very long
       lists.  Wildcards '*', '?' or '['] of VSIGlob() can be  used,  even  on
       files  located  on  network  file  systems  such	 as  /vsis3/, /vsigs/,
       /vsiaz/,	etc.

       gdal raster mosaic does some checks to ensure that all files that  will
       be  put	in  the	resulting file have similar characteristics: number of
       bands, projection, color	interpretation,	etc. If	not, files that	do not
       match the common	characteristics	will be	skipped.

       If the inputs spatially overlap,	the order of the input list is used to
       determine priority.  Files that are listed at the end are the ones from
       which the content will be fetched. Note that nodata will	be taken  into
       account	to  potentially	 fetch	data from lower-priority datasets, but
       currently, alpha	channel	is not taken into account  to  do  alpha  com-
       positing	 (so  a	source with alpha=0 appearing on top of	another	source
       will override its content). This	might be changed in later versions.

       The following options are available:

       -f, --of, --format, --output-format <OUTPUT-FORMAT>
	      Which output raster format to use. Allowed values	may  be	 given
	      by gdal --formats	| grep raster |	grep rw	| sort

       --co <NAME>=<VALUE>
	      Many formats have	one or more optional creation options that can
	      be  used	to control particulars about the file created. For in-
	      stance, the GeoTIFF driver supports creation options to  control
	      compression, and whether the file	should be tiled.

	      May be repeated.

	      The  creation  options available vary by format driver, and some
	      simple formats have no creation options at all. A	 list  of  op-
	      tions  supported	for  a format can be listed with the --formats
	      command line option but the documentation	for the	format is  the
	      definitive  source  of  information  on driver creation options.
	      See Raster drivers format	specific documentation for legal  cre-
	      ation options for	each format.

       --overwrite
	      Allow  program  to  overwrite  existing  target file or dataset.
	      Otherwise, by default, gdal errors out if	 the  target  file  or
	      dataset already exists.

       -b <band>
	      Select  an input <band> to be processed. Bands are numbered from
	      1.  If input bands not set all bands will	be added to  the  out-
	      put.   Multiple -b switches may be used to select	a set of input
	      bands.

       --resolution {<xres,yres>|same|highest|lowest|average}
	      In case the resolution of	all input files	is not the  same,  the
	      --resolution flag	enables	the user to control the	way the	output
	      resolution is computed.

	      same,  the default, checks that all source rasters have the same
	      resolution and errors out	when this is not the case.

	      highest will pick	the smallest values of pixel dimensions	within
	      the set of source	rasters.

	      lowest will pick the largest values of pixel  dimensions	within
	      the set of source	rasters.

	      average  will  compute an	average	of pixel dimensions within the
	      set of source rasters.

	      common determines	the greatest  common  divisor  of  the	source
	      pixel  dimensions,  e.g.	0.2 for	source pixel dimensions	of 0.4
	      and 0.6.

	      <xres>,<yres>. The values	must  be  expressed  in	 georeferenced
	      units.  Both must	be positive values.

       --bbox <xmin>,<ymin>,<xmax>,<ymax>
	      Set georeferenced	extents	of output file.	The values must	be ex-
	      pressed in georeferenced units.  If not specified, the extent of
	      the  output  is  the  minimum  bounding box of the set of	source
	      rasters.	Pixels within the extent of the	output but not covered
	      by a source raster will be read as valid pixels with a value  of
	      zero unless a NODATA value is specified using --dst-nodata or an
	      alpha mask band is added with --add-alpha.

       --target-aligned-pixels
	      (target  aligned	pixels)	align the coordinates of the extent of
	      the output file to the values of the --resolution, such that the
	      aligned extent includes the  minimum  extent.   Alignment	 means
	      that  xmin  / resx, ymin / resy, xmax / resx and ymax / resy are
	      integer values.

       --src-nodata <value>[,<value>]...
	      Set nodata values	for input bands	(different values can be  sup-
	      plied  for  each band).  If the option is	not specified, the in-
	      trinsic nodata settings on the source datasets will be used  (if
	      they  exist). The	value set by this option is written in the NO-
	      DATA element of each ComplexSource element.

       --dst-nodata <value>[,<value>]...
	      Set nodata values	at the output band level (different values can
	      be supplied for each band).  If more than	one value is supplied,
	      all values should	be quoted to keep them together	 as  a	single
	      operating	 system	 argument  (Example  1).  If the option	is not
	      specified, intrinsic nodata settings on the first	 dataset  will
	      be used (if they exist). The value set by	this option is written
	      in  the NoDataValue element of each VRTRasterBand	element. Use a
	      value of None to ignore intrinsic	nodata settings	on the	source
	      datasets.

       --add-alpha
	      Adds  an	alpha  mask  band to the output	when the source	raster
	      have  none.  Mainly  useful  for	RGB  sources  (or   grey-level
	      sources).	  The alpha band is filled on-the-fly with the value 0
	      in areas without any source raster, and with value 255 in	 areas
	      with source raster. The effect is	that a RGBA viewer will	render
	      the  areas  without source rasters as transparent	and areas with
	      source rasters as	opaque.

       --hide-nodata
	      Even if any band contains	nodata value, giving this option makes
	      the output band not report the NoData. Useful when you  want  to
	      control the background color of the dataset. By using along with
	      the  --add-alpha option, you can prepare a dataset which doesn't
	      report nodata value but is transparent in	areas with no data.

GDALG OUTPUT (ON-THE-FLY / STREAMED DATASET)
       This program supports serializing the command line as a JSON file using
       the GDALG output	format.	 The resulting file can	then be	 opened	 as  a
       raster dataset using the	GDALG: GDAL Streamed Algorithm driver, and ap-
       ply the specified pipeline in a on-the-fly / streamed way.

EXAMPLES
   Example 1: Make a virtual mosaic with blue background colour	(RGB: 0	0 255)

	  gdal raster mosaic --hide-nodata --dst-nodata=0,0,255	doq/*.tif doq_index.vrt

AUTHOR
       Even Rouault <even.rouault@spatialys.com>

COPYRIGHT
       1998-2025

				 Jul 12, 2025		 GDAL-RASTER-MOSAIC(1)

Want to link to this manual page? Use this URL:
<https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=gdal-raster-mosaic&sektion=1&manpath=FreeBSD+Ports+15.0>

home | help