wiki:WKTRaster/SpecificationWorking03

Version 29 (modified by pracine, 14 years ago) ( diff )

PostGIS Raster Working Specifications for Future Versions


Objective 01 - Being able to return a JPEG, a TIFF or a PNG.

ST_bytea(raster, integer) → raster — the integer parameters is the band number of the raster.
What is does?


Open Question: When exporting a multiband raster to JPEG, TIFF, PNG, SVG or KML, how should we specify the band number in the exporting function.

There is two options to select the band to convert from a multiband raster in all the ST_AsFormat functions.

  1. Precede each call with ST_Band() to return a selected band.
    Pros: This is a general function that can be called before any function that would otherwise require a band parameter.
    Cons: This implies creating a temporary raster. This might be more elegant and general but is this too much overhead comparing with having a band parameter?
  1. Add a band parameter to each ST_AsFormat function.
    Pros: Hypothetically less overhead.
    Cons: Every functions implying access to a band should then have this parameter when in most case it would be equal to 1. In many cases it makes no sence to have to specify a band parameter since it is the whole raster that we want to export, including all the bands.

Pierre: More I think about it more I think that the first option is the best one…

mloskot: Perhaps there is a compromise in form of two sets of functions: 1) ST_As* which always burn the whole raster (all bands) 2) ST_BandAs* which takes number of band as a parameter and return only this requested band.


ST_Band(raster, integer) → raster — the integer parameters are the band number of the rasters.
Return a single band from a multiband raster. If "band" is greater than the value returned by ST_GetNumBands(), the function returns the last band. This function should be used to select a band before converting it to JPEG, TIFF, PNG, SVG or KML with the corresponding function. e.g. ST_AsTIFF(ST_Band(raster, band))


ST_AsJPEG(raster, quality) → JPEG as "bytea"
Return the raster as a JPEG encoded as a PostgreSQL bytea. By default quality is set to 75, but this option can be used to select other values. Values must be in the range 10-100. Low values result in higher compression ratios, but poorer image quality. Values above 95 are not meaningfully better quality but can but substantially larger. (copied from http://www.gdal.org/frmt_jpeg.html)

Open Question: Is JPEG export limited to raster having 8 bit unsigned integer pixeltype (8BUI)?

See how GDAL do it. It converts only 8 bits rasters. Should we do the same?

Otherwise, how do we convert other types to 8BUI? e.g. 16BUI or 8BSI?

Pierre: It might be more simple to ignore pixeltypes other than 8BUI but it would be very convenient to have a way to quickly export elevation data for example as a JPEG. It would be nice to have an elegant solution to this. Maybe something inspired from MapServer.

Proposition one (Pierre): ST_AsJPEG could simply (optionally when the pixeltype is not 8BUI) map the ST_Maximum() and ST_Minimum() value to 0-255. ST_Maximum() and ST_Minimum() are not in the spec yet but this could be on nice usage of it. They will imply caching the min and max when importing and editing. Both function should ignore the NoDataValues. They could also be two parameters passed to ST_AsJPEG(raster, quality, min, max).

Proposition two: There could also be just one parameter (string) defining a mapping method:

  • Method "None": No mapping. This is possible only for 8BUI.
  • Method "MaxMinValue": Use the Max and the Min cached in the raster. e.g. for 16BSI (min, max) → (-2033, 2456) → (round((-2033 - -2033)/(2456 - -2033)*255), round((2456 - -2033)/(2456 - -2033)*255)) → (0, 255).


This is equivalent to ST_AsJPEG(raster, quality, ST_Minimum(rast), ST_Maximum(rast))

  • Method "MaxMinType": Use the Max and the Min allowed by the type. e.g. for 16BSI (min, max) → (-2033, 2456) → (round((-2033 - -32768)/(32767 - -32768)*255), round((2456 - -32768)/(32767 - -32768)*255)) → (120, 137)


This would be equivalent to ST_AsJPEG(raster, quality, ST_BandPixelTypeMin(rast), ST_BandPixelTypeMax(rast)). Both functions (ST_BandPixelTypeMin & ST_BandPixelTypeMax) are not yet planned and I could not find an SQL query that returns the equivalent range for a type. One possible solution.

mloskot: ATM, I have no thoughts on this issue.

Open Question: Is JPEG export limited to raster having 1 or 3 bands?

See how GDAL do it. It converts only 1 or 3 band rasters. Should we do the same? In this case 1 band rasters would be exported as a greyscale JPEG having R G and B identical and 3 band rasters would be interpreted as R, G and B.

Pierre: I think the answer should be yes. I don't see how we could have a 2 band raster fit into RGB.

mloskot: I agree, the answer should be yes.

Here is an attempt to define the different versions of the function:

The most minimalistic versions of the function should assume band 1, 2 and 3 as being r, g, b and the quality equal to 75:

ST_AsJPEG(raster) -quality = 75

A variant allow specifying the quality:

ST_AsJPEG(raster, integer)

Another variant should enable us to specify which band correspond to the r, the g and the b:

ST_AsJPEG(raster, integer, integer, integer) - raster, rband, gband, bband, quality=75
ST_AsJPEG(raster, integer, integer, integer, integer) - raster, rband, gband, bband, quality

Another version should be designed to be used with a future ST_Band(raster) function. In this case there is no attempt to extract r, g or b band from any passed raster:

ST_AsJPEG(raster, raster, raster)
ST_AsJPEG(raster, raster, raster, integer) -with the quality param

Another series should allow converting 1 band raster with pixel of type 8BUI to a grayscale JPEG (Carefull study of the GDAL behavior when converting a single band to JPEG should be done before confirming these functions):

ST_AsJPEG(raster, "GRAYSCALE") - convert only band 1 with quality = 75
ST_AsJPEG(raster, "GRAYSCALE", integer) - convert only band 1 with specified quality
ST_AsJPEG(raster, integer, "GRAYSCALE") - allow specifying the band number to convert
ST_AsJPEG(raster, integer, "GRAYSCALE", integer) - allow specifying the band number to convert and the quality

Another series should allow converting 1 band raster of ANY pixel type to a grayscale JPEG. Pixel types different than 8BUI should be mapped according to specified min, max values and a mapping mode: "MaxMinValue" (default) or "MaxMinType".

ST_AsJPEG(raster, "GRAYSCALE", min, max, text) - convert only band 1 with quality = 75
ST_AsJPEG(raster, "GRAYSCALE", integer, min, max, text) - convert only band 1 with specified quality
ST_AsJPEG(raster, integer, "GRAYSCALE", min, max, text) - allow specifying the band number to convert
ST_AsJPEG(raster, integer, "GRAYSCALE", integer, min, max, text) - allow specifying the band number to convert and the quality


ST_AsTIFF(raster, compression) → TIFF as "bytea"
Return the raster as a JPEG encoded as a PostgreSQL bytea. If raster is a multiband raster and no band were selected with ST_Band() every band are written to the resulting TIFF.

compression=[JPEG/LZW/PACKBITS/DEFLATE/CCITTRLE/CCITTFAX3/CCITTFAX4/NONE]: Set the type of compression to use. None is the default. The CCITT compression should only be used with 1bit (NBITS=1) data. JPEG should only be used with Byte data. When using JPEG add a number specifying the quality. 75 is the default. e.g. ST_AsTIFF(raster, "JPEG60") (copied from http://www.gdal.org/frmt_gtiff.html)


Open Question: What if we want to export only the first two band of a three band layer?

Maybe we need a ST_RasterFromBands(band1,band2,etc…) to reconstitute a multiband raster from multiple sources (having the same width, height, pixelsize, etc…)

mloskot: or ST_RasterFromBands(bands) where bands is ARRAY[int]. For instance, ST_RasterFromBands(ARRAY[1,3]) will burn new raster from 1 and 3 bands of input raster.


ST_AsPNG(raster, band) → PNG as "bytea"


Objective 02 - Being able to intersect vector and raster to produce raster.

ST_Intersects(raster, raster)
ST_AsRaster(geometry, pixelsize) → raster
ST_Intersection(geometry, val, raster, band) → raster

The first series of variant return a raster having the same extent as the provided raster.

Variant 1: ST_Intersection(geometry, val, raster, band, pixeltype, nodatavalue) → raster

Variant 2: ST_Intersection(raster, band, geometry, val, pixeltype, nodatavalue) → raster

Variant 3: ST_Intersection(geometry, val, raster, pixeltype, nodatavalue) → raster

Variant 4: ST_Intersection(raster, geometry, val, pixeltype, nodatavalue) → raster

The second series of variant return a raster having the minimal extent.

Variant 5: ST_Intersection(geometry, val, raster, band, pixeltype, nodatavalue, 'TRIM') → raster

Variant 6: ST_Intersection(raster, band, geometry, val, pixeltype, nodatavalue, 'TRIM') → raster

Variant 7: ST_Intersection(geometry, val, raster, pixeltype, nodatavalue, 'TRIM') → raster

Variant 8: ST_Intersection(raster, geometry, val, pixeltype, nodatavalue, 'TRIM') → raster

Returns a two bands raster the first band containing only the pixels from the provided raster intersecting with the geometry and the second band containing the same area filled with the provided value.

The second band gets its pixeltype and nodatavalue from the parameters.

Non intersecting pixels are filled with nodata values.

Variant 1 return a raster having the same extent as the provided raster.

Variant 3, 4, 7 and 8 defaults the band number to 1.

Variant 5 to 8 "trim" or "crop" the raster to the withvalue extent (removing extra nodata value pixels surrounding the extent of the resulting withvalue extent).

Open question

PR: Shoud we return one raster per raster/geometry couple or split the raster into as many small rasters as there are areas sharing a same value? The second behavior seems more coherent with the present behavior of ST_Intersection(raster, geometry) → geometry even if this would produce tons of small two bands rasters.

Implementation details

Rasterize the geometry as a new raster (ST_AsRaster(geometry, pixeltype, val, nodataval, raster)) and then copy only pixels for which both raster bands have a value. Should be implemented as a wrapper around ST_MapAlgebra after rasterizing the geometry to a raster having the same alignment as the raster.


Objective 03 - Being able to use "group by" to accumulate tiles to form a new raster.

ST_Union(raster|geometry, raster|geometry, ‘raster’|’geometry’) → raster/geometry
ST_Accum(raster set|geometry set, ‘raster’|’geometry’) → raster/geometry


Objective 05 - Being able to reproject a raster.

ST_Transform(raster|geometry, SRID) → same type as input


Objective 06 - Being able to do some base raster operations.

ST_Area(raster|geometry) → double
ST_Count(raster, value) → integer

ST_Resample(raster, method, originx, originy, pixelsizex, pixelsizey) → raster

Variant

1) ST_Resample(raster, method, raster) → raster

Recompute a raster in order to change its pixel size and/or the position of its upper left corner.

The second parameter is the resampling method performed when computing new pixel values:

1) 'NEAREST NEIGHBOR'
2) 'LINEAR'
3) 'BICUBIC'

The 3rd or 3rd-6th parameters define the pixel size of the resampling operation. For the 3rd parameter variant, the pixel size is taken from the pixel size of the raster parameter. For the 3rd-6th parameter variant, the pixel origin and dimensions are explicitly defined.

ST_SelectByValue(raster|geometry, ‘expression’) → same type as first argument
ST_Reclass(raster|geometry,string) → same type as first argument

ST_MapAlgebra(raster|geometry, [raster|geometry,…] ‘mathematical expression’, ‘raster’ |’geometry’) → raster/geometry

Variant 1: ST_MapAlgebra(raster|geometry, [raster|geometry,…] ‘mathematical expression’, ‘raster’ |’geometry’, originx, originy, pixelsizex, pixelsizey) → raster/geometry

Variant 2: ST_MapAlgebra(raster|geometry, [raster|geometry,…] 'mathematical expression', 'raster' |'geometry', integer) →raster/geometry

Variant 3: ST_MapAlgebra(raster|geometry, [raster|geometry,…] 'mathematical expression', 'raster' |'geometry', raster) →raster/geometry

ST_MapAlgebra performs the specified mathematical expression on the input rasters, returning a raster or geometry. Both rasters must have the same SRID. If both rasters do not have the same SRID, ST_MapAlgebra will return an error:

ERROR: Operation on two geometries with different SRIDs

The first raster passed to ST_MapAlgebra is the 'master' raster, unless either:

1 additional parameter specifies the index (in the parameter list) of the 'master' raster.
1 additional parameter specifies a raster whose origin and cell size should be used to compute the output raster.
4 additional parameters are passed specifying the origin, cell size, and raster rotation.

This function implicitly calls ST_Intersects(raster|geometry, [raster|geometry,…]) to detect if the rasters are overlapping before performing any computation. Additionally, the resulting raster will have the same extent as the result of ST_Intersection(raster, integer, geometry).

One of the implications of the ST_Intersects inclusion is that:

SELECT ST_MapAlgebra(rast1, rast2, mathExpr) FROM mytable WHERE ST_Intersects(rast1, rast2)

will be faster than:

SELECT ST_MapAlgebra(rast1, rast2, mathExpr) FROM mytable

Open Question:

DZ: Should ST_MapAlgebra resample rasters internally, or produce a raster that can be processed by ST_Resample? If so, variant 1 and variant 3 can be removed, and all ST_MapAlgebra results can be processed through ST_Resample, like:

ST_Resample(ST_MapAlgebra(raster, [raster,…] 'mathematical expression', integer), originx, originy, pixelsizex, pixelsizey)
ST_Resample(ST_MapAlgebra(raster, [raster,…] 'mathematical expression', integer), rastergrid)

PR: I think this would greatly contribute to simplify the API.

ST_Clip(raster|geometry,geometry) → same type as first argument
ST_Flip(raster|geometry, ’vertical’|’horizontal’) → same type as first argument


Objective 07 - Being able to convert a raster to standards formats.

ST_AsKML(raster|geometry) → string
ST_AsSVG(raster|geometry) → string


Objective 08 - Being able to control the validity of a raster.

ST_IsEmpty(raster|geometry) → boolean
ST_mem_size(raster|geometry) → integer
ST_isvalid(raster|geometry) → boolean


Objective 09 - Being able to use other major topological operators

ST_Within(raster|geometry A, raster|geometry B)
ST_Contains(raster|geometry A, raster|geometry B)
ST_Overlaps(raster|geometry, raster|geometry)


Objective 10 - Being able to derive a raster layer from vector layer.

ST_Interpolate(points, pixelsize, method) → raster


Objective 11 - Being able to do on rasters most operations available on geometries

ST_Centroid(raster|geometry) → point geometry
ST_PointOnSurface(raster|geometry) → point geometry
ST_Buffer(raster|geometry, double) → same type as first arg.
ST_Difference(raster|geometry A, raster|geometry B) → same type as first argument
ST_SymDifference(raster|geometry,raster|geometry,‘raster’|’geometry’) → raster/geometry


Objective 12 - Being able to use all the other topological operators

ST_Equals(raster|geometry, raster|geometry)
ST_Disjoint(raster|geometry, raster|geometry)
ST_Touches(raster|geometry, raster|geometry)
ST_Crosses(raster|geometry, raster|geometry)
ST_Covers(raster|geometry A, raster|geometry B)
ST_IsCoveredBy(raster|geometry A, raster|geometry B)
ST_Relate(raster|geometry, raster|geometry, intersectionPatternMatrix )


Objective 13 - Being able to edit a raster

ST_Affine(raster|geometry,…) → same type as input
ST_Translate(raster|geometry,…) → same type as input
ST_Scale(raster|geometry,…) → same type as input
ST_TransScale(raster|geometry,…) → same type as input
ST_RotateZ,Y,Z(raster|geometry, float8) → same type as input


Objective 14 - Being able to intersect two rasters to get a raster.

ST_Intersection(raster, integer, raster, integer) → raster - Returns a two bands raster with values only in the intersecting areas of both rasters. Integer parameters are the band number of the raster.

Variants

1) ST_Intersection(raster, integer, raster, integer) → raster — the integer parameters are the band number of the rasters
2) ST_Intersection(raster, raster, integer) → raster — default first raster to band # 1
3) ST_Intersection(raster, integer, raster) → raster — default second raster to band # 1
4) ST_Intersection(raster, raster) → raster — default both rasters to band # 1


Objective 15 - Being able to intersect two rasters to get a geometry.

ST_Intersection(raster, integer, raster, integer, 'geometry') → geometry - Returns a two bands raster with values only in the intersecting areas of both rasters. Integer parameters are the band number of the raster.

Variants

1) ST_Intersection(raster, integer, raster, integer, 'geometry') → geometry
2) ST_Intersection(raster, raster, integer, 'geometry') → geometry — default first raster to band # 1
3) ST_Intersection(raster, integer, raster, 'geometry') → geometry — default second raster to band # 1
4) ST_Intersection(raster, raster, 'geometry') → geometry — default both raster to band # 1


Objective 16 - Being able to quickly get raster statistics.

Add cached basic raster statistic to the base raster WKB format.


Objective 17 - Being able to refer to band by textual name.

Add 8 digit string to each band in the base raster WKB format.

Adjust gdal2wktraster.py to be able to give names to each band when importing.

Adjust/overlaod every function to be able to refer to raster band by name.


Objective 18 - Being able to load rasters from SQL

The idea is to change the rt_band_get_data core function so it load filesystem registered raster data using GDAL into the data base. This allow us to create a list of raster with a new ST_MakeRegisteredRaster("c:/temp/mytiff/*.tif") and to convert them witinot a CREATE TABLE with a ST_MakeBandInDB(rast, band)

Changes to the rt_band_get_data core function
ST_MakeRegisteredRaster(wildcardPath)
ST_SetPath(raster, band, string)
ST_MakeBandInDB(rast, band)


Other functions

ST_AsBinary(raster, compression)
ST_RasterFromWKB(raster, [<srid>])
ST_RasterFromText(string, [<srid>])
ST_AsText(raster)

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