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NAME

       r.terraflow  - Performs flow computation for massive grids.

KEYWORDS

       raster, hydrology, flow, accumulation, sink

SYNOPSIS

       r.terraflow
       r.terraflow --help
       r.terraflow     [-s]     elevation=name      [filled=name]       [direction=name]       [swatershed=name]
       [accumulation=name]   [tci=name]   [d8cut=float]   [memory=integer]   [directory=string]   [stats=string]
       [--overwrite]  [--help]  [--verbose]  [--quiet]  [--ui]

   Flags:
       -s
           SFD (D8) flow (default is MFD)
           SFD: single flow direction, MFD: multiple flow direction

       --overwrite
           Allow output files to overwrite existing files

       --help
           Print usage summary

       --verbose
           Verbose module output

       --quiet
           Quiet module output

       --ui
           Force launching GUI dialog

   Parameters:
       elevation=name [required]
           Name of input elevation raster map

       filled=name
           Name for output filled (flooded) elevation raster map

       direction=name
           Name for output flow direction raster map

       swatershed=name
           Name for output sink-watershed raster map

       accumulation=name
           Name for output flow accumulation raster map

       tci=name
           Name for output topographic convergence index (tci) raster map

       d8cut=float
           Routing using SFD (D8) direction
           If flow accumulation is larger than this value it is routed using SFD (D8) direction (meaningful only
           for MFD flow). If no answer is given it defaults to infinity.

       memory=integer
           Maximum memory to be used (in MB)
           Default: 300

       directory=string
           Directory to hold temporary files (they can be large)

       stats=string
           Name for output file containing runtime statistics

DESCRIPTION

       r.terraflow takes as input a raster digital elevation model (DEM) and computes the flow direction  raster
       and  the  flow  accumulation  raster,  as  well  as  the  flooded elevation raster, sink-watershed raster
       (partition into watersheds around sinks) and TCI (topographic convergence index) raster maps.

       r.terraflow computes these rasters using well-known approaches, with the difference that its emphasis  is
       on  the  computational complexity of the algorithms, rather than on modeling realistic flow.  r.terraflow
       emerged from the necessity of having scalable software able to process efficiently very  large  terrains.
       It  is  based on theoretically optimal algorithms developed in the framework of I/O-efficient algorithms.
       r.terraflow was designed and optimized especially for massive grids and is able to process terrains which
       were impractical with similar functions existing in other GIS systems.

       Flow directions are computed using either the MFD (Multiple Flow Direction) model or the SFD (Single Flow
       Direction, or D8) model, illustrated below. Both methods compute downslope flow directions by  inspecting
       the  3-by-3  window  around  the current cell. The SFD method assigns a unique flow direction towards the
       steepest downslope neighbor. The MFD method  assigns  multiple  flow  directions  towards  all  downslope
       neighbors.

       Flow direction to steepest downslope neighbor (SFD).         Flow direction to all downslope neighbors (MFD).

       The  SFD  and  the  MFD method cannot compute flow directions for cells which have the same height as all
       their neighbors (flat areas) or cells which do not have downslope neighbors (one-cell pits).

           •   On plateaus (flat areas that spill out) r.terraflow routes flow so that globally  the  flow  goes
               towards the spill cells of the plateaus.

           •   On  sinks (flat areas that do not spill out, including one-cell pits) r.terraflow assigns flow by
               flooding the terrain until all the sinks are filled and assigning flow directions on  the  filled
               terrain.

       In  order  to  flood  the  terrain,  r.terraflow  identifies  all  sinks  and partitions the terrain into
       sink-watersheds (a sink-watershed contains all the cells that  flow  into  that  sink),  builds  a  graph
       representing  the  adjacency  information  of  the sink-watersheds, and uses this sink-watershed graph to
       merge watersheds into each other along their lowest common boundary until all watersheds have a flow path
       outside  the terrain. Flooding produces a sink-less terrain in which every cell has a downslope flow path
       leading outside the terrain and therefore every  cell  in  the  terrain  can  be  assigned  SFD/MFD  flow
       directions as above.

       Once  flow  directions are computed for every cell in the terrain, r.terraflow computes flow accumulation
       by routing water using the flow directions and keeping track of how much water flows through each cell.

       If flow accumulation of a cell is larger than the value given by the d8cut option, then the flow of  this
       cell  is routed to its neighbors using the SFD (D8) model. This option affects only the flow accumulation
       raster and is meaningful only for MFD flow (i.e. if the -s flag is not used); If this option is used  for
       SFD flow it is ignored. The default value of d8cut is infinity.

       r.terraflow  also computes the tci raster (topographic convergence index, defined as the logarithm of the
       ratio of flow accumulation and local slope).

       For more details on the algorithms see [1,2,3] below.

NOTES

       One of the techniques used by r.terraflow is the space-time trade-off. In particular, in order  to  avoid
       searches,  which  are I/O-expensive, r.terraflow computes and works with an augmented elevation raster in
       which each cell stores relevant information about its 8 neighbors, in total up to 80B  per  cell.   As  a
       result  r.terraflow  works  with intermediate temporary files that may be up to 80N bytes, where N is the
       number of cells (rows x columns) in the elevation raster (more precisely,  80K  bytes,  where  K  is  the
       number of valid (not no-data) cells in the input elevation raster).

       All  these  intermediate  temporary files are stored in the path specified by the directory option. Note:
       directory must contain enough free disk space in order to store up to 2 x 80N bytes.

       The memory option can be used to set the maximum amount of main memory (RAM) the module will  use  during
       processing.  In  practice  its  value  should  be an underestimate of the amount of available (free) main
       memory on the machine. r.terraflow will use at all times at most this much memory, and the virtual memory
       system (swap space) will never be used. The default value is 300 MB.

       The stats option defines the name of the file that contains the statistics (stats) of the run.

       r.terraflow has a limit on the number of rows and columns (max 32,767 each).

       The  internal  type  used  by r.terraflow to store elevations can be defined at compile-time. By default,
       r.terraflow is compiled to store elevations internally as floats. Other versions can be  created  by  the
       user if needed.

       Hints  concerning  compilation  with storage of elevations internally as shorts: such a version uses less
       space (up to 60B per cell, up to 60N intermediate file) and therefore is more space and  time  efficient.
       r.terraflow  is  intended  for  use with floating point raster data (FCELL), and r.terraflow (short) with
       integer raster data (CELL) in which  the  maximum  elevation  does  not  exceed  the  value  of  a  short
       SHRT_MAX=32767  (this  is  not  a constraint for any terrain data of the Earth, if elevation is stored in
       meters).  Both r.terraflow and r.terraflow (short) work with input elevation rasters which can be  either
       integer, floating point or double (CELL, FCELL, DCELL). If the input raster contains a value that exceeds
       the allowed internal range (short for r.terraflow (short), float for r.terraflow), the program exits with
       a  warning  message.  Otherwise,  if  all values in the input elevation raster are in range, they will be
       converted (truncated)  to  the  internal  elevation  type  (short  for  r.terraflow  (short),  float  for
       r.terraflow). In this case precision may be lost and artificial flat areas may be created.  For instance,
       if r.terraflow (short) is used with floating point raster data  (FCELL  or  DCELL),  the  values  of  the
       elevation  will  be  truncated  as  shorts.  This  may  create  artificial  flat areas, and the output of
       r.terraflow (short) may be less realistic than those of r.terraflow on floating point raster  data.   The
       outputs of r.terraflow (short) and r.terraflow are identical for integer raster data (CELL maps).

EXAMPLES

       Example for small area in North Carolina sample dataset to calculate flow accumulation:
       g.region raster=elev_lid792_1m
       r.terraflow elevation=elev_lid792_1m accumulation=elev_lid792_1m_accumulation
       Flow accumulation

       Spearfish sample data set:
       g.region raster=elevation.10m -p
       r.terraflow elev=elevation.10m filled=elevation10m.filled \
           dir=elevation10m.mfdir swatershed=elevation10m.watershed \
           accumulation=elevation10m.accu tci=elevation10m.tci
       g.region raster=elevation.10m -p
       r.terraflow elev=elevation.10m filled=elevation10m.filled \
           dir=elevation10m.mfdir swatershed=elevation10m.watershed \
           accumulation=elevation10m.accu tci=elevation10m.tci d8cut=500 memory=800 \
           stats=elevation10mstats.txt

REFERENCES

       1      The TerraFlow project at Duke University

       2      I/O-efficient  algorithms for problems on grid-based terrains.  Lars Arge, Laura Toma, and Jeffrey
              S. Vitter. In Proc. Workshop on Algorithm Engineering and  Experimentation,  2000.  To  appear  in
              Journal of Experimental Algorithms.

       3      Flow  computation  on  massive grids.  Lars Arge, Jeffrey S. Chase, Patrick N. Halpin, Laura Toma,
              Jeffrey S. Vitter, Dean Urban and Rajiv Wickremesinghe. In Proc.  ACM  Symposium  on  Advances  in
              Geographic Information Systems, 2001.

       4      Flow  computation on massive grid terrains.  Lars Arge, Jeffrey S. Chase, Patrick N. Halpin, Laura
              Toma, Jeffrey S. Vitter, Dean Urban and Rajiv Wickremesinghe.   In  GeoInformatica,  International
              Journal on Advances of Computer Science for Geographic Information Systems, 7(4):283-313, December
              2003.

SEE ALSO

        r.flow, r.basins.fill, r.drain, r.topidx, r.topmodel, r.water.outlet, r.watershed

AUTHORS

       Original version of program: The                             TerraFlow project, 1999, Duke University.
           Lars Arge, Jeff Chase, Pat Halpin, Laura Toma, Dean Urban, Jeff Vitter, Rajiv Wickremesinghe.

       Porting to GRASS GIS, 2002:
           Lars Arge, Helena Mitasova, Laura Toma.

       Contact:  Laura Toma

SOURCE CODE

       Available at: r.terraflow source code (history)

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       © 2003-2019 GRASS Development Team, GRASS GIS 7.8.2 Reference Manual