Provided by: gdal-bin_2.2.3+dfsg-2_amd64 bug

NAME

       gdalwarpgdalwarp
        - image reprojection and warping utility

SYNOPSIS

       gdalwarp [--help-general] [--formats]
           [-s_srs srs_def] [-t_srs srs_def] [-to "NAME=VALUE"] [-novshiftgrid]
           [-order n | -tps | -rpc | -geoloc] [-et err_threshold]
           [-refine_gcps tolerance [minimum_gcps]]
           [-te xmin ymin xmax ymax] [-te_srs srs_def]
           [-tr xres yres] [-tap] [-ts width height]
           [-ovr level|AUTO|AUTO-n|NONE] [-wo "NAME=VALUE"] [-ot Byte/Int16/...] [-wt Byte/Int16]
           [-srcnodata "value [value...]"] [-dstnodata "value [value...]"]
           [-srcalpha|-nosrcalpha] [-dstalpha]
           [-r resampling_method] [-wm memory_in_mb] [-multi] [-q]
           [-cutline datasource] [-cl layer] [-cwhere expression]
           [-csql statement] [-cblend dist_in_pixels] [-crop_to_cutline]
           [-of format] [-co "NAME=VALUE"]* [-overwrite]
           [-nomd] [-cvmd meta_conflict_value] [-setci] [-oo NAME=VALUE]*
           [-doo NAME=VALUE]*
           srcfile* dstfile

DESCRIPTION

       The gdalwarp utility is an image mosaicing, reprojection and warping utility. The program
       can reproject to any supported projection, and can also apply GCPs stored with the image
       if the image is 'raw' with control information.

       -s_srs srs def:
           source spatial reference set. The coordinate systems that can be passed are anything
           supported by the OGRSpatialReference.SetFromUserInput() call, which includes EPSG PCS
           and GCSes (i.e. EPSG:4296), PROJ.4 declarations (as above), or the name of a .prj file
           containing well known text. Starting with GDAL 2.2, if the SRS has an explicit
           vertical datum that points to a PROJ.4 geoidgrids, and the input dataset is a single
           band dataset, a vertical correction will be applied to the values of the dataset.

       -t_srs srs_def:
           target spatial reference set. The coordinate systems that can be passed are anything
           supported by the OGRSpatialReference.SetFromUserInput() call, which includes EPSG PCS
           and GCSes (i.e. EPSG:4296), PROJ.4 declarations (as above), or the name of a .prj file
           containing well known text. Starting with GDAL 2.2, if the SRS has an explicit
           vertical datum that points to a PROJ.4 geoidgrids, and the input dataset is a single
           band dataset, a vertical correction will be applied to the values of the dataset.

       -to NAME=VALUE:
           set a transformer option suitable to pass to GDALCreateGenImgProjTransformer2().

       -novshiftgrid
           (GDAL >= 2.2) Disable the use of vertical datum shift grids when one of the source or
           target SRS has an explicit vertical datum, and the input dataset is a single band
           dataset.

       -order n:
           order of polynomial used for warping (1 to 3). The default is to select a polynomial
           order based on the number of GCPs.

       -tps:
           Force use of thin plate spline transformer based on available GCPs.

       -rpc:
           Force use of RPCs.

       -geoloc:
           Force use of Geolocation Arrays.

       -et err_threshold:
           error threshold for transformation approximation (in pixel units - defaults to 0.125,
           unless, starting with GDAL 2.1, the RPC_DEM warping option is specified, in which
           case, an exact transformer, i.e. err_threshold=0, will be used).

       -refine_gcps tolerance minimum_gcps:
           (GDAL >= 1.9.0) refines the GCPs by automatically eliminating outliers. Outliers will
           be eliminated until minimum_gcps are left or when no outliers can be detected. The
           tolerance is passed to adjust when a GCP will be eliminated. Not that GCP refinement
           only works with polynomial interpolation. The tolerance is in pixel units if no
           projection is available, otherwise it is in SRS units. If minimum_gcps is not
           provided, the minimum GCPs according to the polynomial model is used.

       -te xmin ymin xmax ymax:
           set georeferenced extents of output file to be created (in target SRS by default, or
           in the SRS specified with -te_srs)

       -te_srs srs_def:
           (GDAL >= 2.0) Specifies the SRS in which to interpret the coordinates given with -te.
           The srs_def may be any of the usual GDAL/OGR forms, complete WKT, PROJ.4, EPSG:n or a
           file containing the WKT. This must not be confused with -t_srs which is the target SRS
           of the output dataset. -te_srs is a convenience e.g. when knowing the output
           coordinates in a geodetic long/lat SRS, but still wanting a result in a projected
           coordinate system.

       -tr xres yres:
           set output file resolution (in target georeferenced units)

       -tap:
           (GDAL >= 1.8.0) (target aligned pixels) align the coordinates of the extent of the
           output file to the values of the -tr, such that the aligned extent includes the
           minimum extent.

       -ts width height:
           set output file size in pixels and lines. If width or height is set to 0, the other
           dimension will be guessed from the computed resolution. Note that -ts cannot be used
           with -tr

       -ovr level|AUTO|AUTO-n|NONE>:
           (GDAL >= 2.0) To specify which overview level of source files must be used. The
           default choice, AUTO, will select the overview level whose resolution is the closest
           to the target resolution. Specify an integer value (0-based, i.e. 0=1st overview
           level) to select a particular level. Specify AUTO-n where n is an integer greater or
           equal to 1, to select an overview level below the AUTO one. Or specify NONE to force
           the base resolution to be used (can be useful if overviews have been generated with a
           low quality resampling method, and the warping is done using a higher quality
           resampling method).

       -wo 'NAME=VALUE':
           Set a warp option. The GDALWarpOptions::papszWarpOptions docs show all options.
           Multiple -wo options may be listed.

       -ot type:
           For the output bands to be of the indicated data type.

       -wt type:
           Working pixel data type. The data type of pixels in the source image and destination
           image buffers.

       -r resampling_method:
           Resampling method to use. Available methods are:

       near:
           nearest neighbour resampling (default, fastest algorithm, worst interpolation
           quality).

       bilinear:
           bilinear resampling.

       cubic:
           cubic resampling.

       cubicspline:
           cubic spline resampling.

       lanczos:
           Lanczos windowed sinc resampling.

       average:
           average resampling, computes the average of all non-NODATA contributing pixels. (GDAL
           >= 1.10.0)

       mode:
           mode resampling, selects the value which appears most often of all the sampled points.
           (GDAL >= 1.10.0)

       max:
           maximum resampling, selects the maximum value from all non-NODATA contributing pixels.
           (GDAL >= 2.0.0)

       min:
           minimum resampling, selects the minimum value from all non-NODATA contributing pixels.
           (GDAL >= 2.0.0)

       med:
           median resampling, selects the median value of all non-NODATA contributing pixels.
           (GDAL >= 2.0.0)

       q1:
           first quartile resampling, selects the first quartile value of all non-NODATA
           contributing pixels. (GDAL >= 2.0.0)

       q3:
           third quartile resampling, selects the third quartile value of all non-NODATA
           contributing pixels. (GDAL >= 2.0.0)

       -srcnodata value [value...]:
           Set nodata masking values for input bands (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. Masked values will not be used in
           interpolation. Use a value of None to ignore intrinsic nodata settings on the source
           dataset.

       -dstnodata value [value...]:
           Set nodata values for output bands (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. New files will be initialized to this value and
           if possible the nodata value will be recorded in the output file. Use a value of None
           to ensure that nodata is not defined (GDAL>=1.11). If this argument is not used then
           nodata values will be copied from the source dataset (GDAL>=1.11).

       -srcalpha:
           Force the last band of a source image to be considered as a source alpha band.

       -nosrcalpha:
           Prevent the alpha band of a source image to be considered as such (it will be warped
           as a regular band) (GDAL>=2.2).

       -dstalpha:
           Create an output alpha band to identify nodata (unset/transparent) pixels.

       -wm memory_in_mb:
           Set the amount of memory (in megabytes) that the warp API is allowed to use for
           caching.

       -multi:
           Use multithreaded warping implementation. Multiple threads will be used to process
           chunks of image and perform input/output operation simultaneously.

       -q:
           Be quiet.

       -of format:
           Select the output format. The default is GeoTIFF (GTiff). Use the short format name.

       -co 'NAME=VALUE':
           passes a creation option to the output format driver. Multiple -co options may be
           listed. See format specific documentation for legal creation options for each format

       -cutline datasource:
           Enable use of a blend cutline from the name OGR support datasource.

       -cl layername:
           Select the named layer from the cutline datasource.

       -cwhere expression:
           Restrict desired cutline features based on attribute query.

       -csql query:
           Select cutline features using an SQL query instead of from a layer with -cl.

       -cblend distance:
           Set a blend distance to use to blend over cutlines (in pixels).

       -crop_to_cutline:
           (GDAL >= 1.8.0) Crop the extent of the target dataset to the extent of the cutline.

       -overwrite:
           (GDAL >= 1.8.0) Overwrite the target dataset if it already exists.

       -nomd:
           (GDAL >= 1.10.0) Do not copy metadata. Without this option, dataset and band metadata
           (as well as some band information) will be copied from the first source dataset. Items
           that differ between source datasets will be set to * (see -cvmd option).

       -cvmd meta_conflict_value:
           (GDAL >= 1.10.0) Value to set metadata items that conflict between source datasets
           (default is '*'). Use '' to remove conflicting items.

       -setci:
           (GDAL >= 1.10.0) Set the color interpretation of the bands of the target dataset from
           the source dataset.

       -oo NAME=VALUE:
           (starting with GDAL 2.0) Dataset open option (format specific)

       -doo NAME=VALUE:
           (starting with GDAL 2.1) Output dataset open option (format specific)

       srcfile:
           The source file name(s).

       dstfile:
           The destination file name.

       Mosaicing into an existing output file is supported if the output file already exists. The
       spatial extent of the existing file will not be modified to accommodate new data, so you
       may have to remove it in that case, or use the -overwrite option.

       Polygon cutlines may be used as a mask to restrict the area of the destination file that
       may be updated, including blending. If the OGR layer containing the cutline features has
       no explicit SRS, the cutline features must be in the SRS of the destination file. When
       writing to a not yet existing target dataset, its extent will be the one of the original
       raster unless -te or -crop_to_cutline are specified.

       When doing vertical shift adjustments, the transformer option -to
       ERROR_ON_MISSING_VERT_SHIFT=YES can be used to error out as soon as a vertical shift value
       is missing (instead of 0 being used).

EXAMPLES

       • For instance, an eight bit spot scene stored in GeoTIFF with control points mapping the
         corners to lat/long could be warped to a UTM projection with a command like this:

       gdalwarp -t_srs '+proj=utm +zone=11 +datum=WGS84' -overwrite raw_spot.tif utm11.tif

       • For instance, the second channel of an ASTER image stored in HDF with control points
         mapping the corners to lat/long could be warped to a UTM projection with a command like
         this:

       gdalwarp -overwrite HDF4_SDS:ASTER_L1B:"pg-PR1B0000-2002031402_100_001":2 pg-PR1B0000-2002031402_100_001_2.tif

       • (GDAL >= 2.2) To apply a cutline on a un-georeferenced image and clip from pixel
         (220,60) to pixel (1160,690):

       gdalwarp -overwrite -to SRC_METHOD=NO_GEOTRANSFORM -to DST_METHOD=NO_GEOTRANSFORM -te 220 60 1160 690 -cutline cutline.csv in.png out.tif

       where cutline.csv content is like:

       id,WKT
       1,"POLYGON((....))"

       • (GDAL >= 2.2) To transform a DEM from geoid elevations (using EGM96) to WGS84
         ellipsoidal heights:

       gdalwarp -override in_dem.tif out_dem.tif -s_srs EPSG:4326+5773 -t_srs EPSG:4979

SEE ALSO

       http://trac.osgeo.org/gdal/wiki/UserDocs/GdalWarp : Wiki page discussing options and
       behaviours of gdalwarp

AUTHORS

       Frank Warmerdam warmerdam@pobox.com, Silke Reimer silke@intevation.de