Provided by: gdal-bin_3.5.1+dfsg-1build1_amd64 bug

NAME

       gdal_rasterize - Burns vector geometries into a raster.

SYNOPSIS

          gdal_rasterize [-b band]* [-i] [-at]
              {[-burn value]* | [-a attribute_name] | [-3d]} [-add]
              [-l layername]* [-where expression] [-sql select_statement]
              [-dialect dialect] [-of format] [-a_srs srs_def] [-to NAME=VALUE]*
              [-co "NAME=VALUE"]* [-a_nodata value] [-init value]*
              [-te xmin ymin xmax ymax] [-tr xres yres] [-tap] [-ts width height]
              [-ot {Byte/Int16/UInt16/UInt32/Int32/UInt64/Int64/Float32/Float64/
                      CInt16/CInt32/CFloat32/CFloat64}]
              [-optim {[AUTO]/VECTOR/RASTER}] [-q]
              <src_datasource> <dst_filename>

DESCRIPTION

       This program burns vector geometries (points, lines, and polygons) into the raster band(s)
       of a raster image.  Vectors are read from OGR supported vector formats.

       Note that on the fly reprojection of vector data to the coordinate system  of  the  raster
       data is only supported since GDAL 2.1.0.

       -b <band>
              The  band(s) to burn values into.  Multiple -b arguments may be used to burn into a
              list of bands.  The default is to burn into band 1.  Not used when creating  a  new
              raster.

       -i     Invert rasterization.  Burn the fixed burn value, or the burn value associated with
              the first feature into all parts of the image not inside the provided polygon.

       -at    Enables the ALL_TOUCHED rasterization option so that all pixels touched by lines or
              polygons  will  be updated, not just those on the line render path, or whose center
              point is within the polygon.  Defaults to disabled for normal rendering rules.

       -burn <value>
              A fixed value to burn into a band for all objects.  A list of -burn options can  be
              supplied, one per band being written to.

       -a <attribute_name>
              Identifies  an attribute field on the features to be used for a burn-in value.  The
              value will be burned into all output bands.

       -3d    Indicates that a burn value should be extracted from the "Z" values of the feature.
              Works  with  points  and  lines  (linear  interpolation  along  each segment).  For
              polygons, works properly only if the are flat (same Z value for all vertices).

       -add   Instead of burning a new value, this adds the new value  to  the  existing  raster.
              Suitable for heatmaps for instance.

       -l <layername>
              Indicates  the  layer(s)  from the datasource that will be used for input features.
              May be specified multiple times, but at least one layer name or a -sql option  must
              be specified.

       -where <expression>
              An  optional  SQL  WHERE style query expression to be applied to select features to
              burn in from the input layer(s).

       -sql <select_statement>
              An SQL statement to be evaluated against the datasource to produce a virtual  layer
              of features to be burned in.

       -dialect <dialect>
              SQL  dialect. In some cases can be used to use (unoptimized) OGR SQL instead of the
              native SQL of an RDBMS by passing OGRSQL. The "SQLITE" dialect  can  also  be  used
              with any datasource.

              New in version 2.1.

       -of <format>
              Select  the  output format. Starting with GDAL 2.3, if not specified, the format is
              guessed from the extension (previously was GTiff). Use the short format name.

       -a_nodata <value>
              Assign a specified nodata value to output bands.

       -init <value>
              Pre-initialize the output image bands with these values.  However, it is not marked
              as the nodata value in the output file.  If only one value is given, the same value
              is used in all the bands.

       -a_srs <srs_def>
              Override the projection for the output file. If not specified,  the  projection  of
              the  input  vector  file  will  be  used  if  available. When using this option, no
              reprojection of features from the SRS of the input vector to the specified  SRS  of
              the  output  raster, so use only this option to correct an invalid source SRS.  The
              <srs_def> may be any of the usual GDAL/OGR forms, complete WKT, PROJ.4, EPSG:n or a
              file containing the WKT.

       -to NAME=VALUE
              set  a  transformer  option suitable to pass to GDALCreateGenImgProjTransformer2().
              This is used when converting geometries coordinates to target raster  pixel  space.
              For example this can be used to specify RPC related transformer options.

              New in version 2.3.

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

              The  creation options available vary by format driver, and some simple formats have
              no creation options at all. A list of options 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 creation options for each format.

       -te <xmin> <ymin> <xmax> <ymax>
              Set georeferenced extents. The values must be expressed in georeferenced units.  If
              not specified, the extent of the output file will  be  the  extent  of  the  vector
              layers.

       -tr <xres> <yres>
              Set  target  resolution. The values must be expressed in georeferenced units.  Both
              must be positive values.

       -tap   (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.
              Alignment means that xmin / resx, ymin / resy, xmax / resx  and  ymax  /  resy  are
              integer values.

       -ts <width> <height>
              Set output file size in pixels and lines. Note that -ts cannot be used with -tr

       -ot <type>
              Force the output bands to be of the indicated data type. Defaults to Float64

       -optim {[AUTO]/VECTOR/RASTER}}
              Force  the  algorithm used (results are identical). The raster mode is used in most
              cases and optimise read/write operations. The vector mode is useful with  a  decent
              amount  of  input features and optimise the CPU use. That mode have to be used with
              tiled images to be efficient. The auto mode (the default) will chose the  algorithm
              based on input and output properties.

              New in version 2.3.

       -q     Suppress progress monitor and other non-error output.

       <src_datasource>
              Any OGR supported readable datasource.

       <dst_filename>
              The  GDAL  supported output file.  Must support update mode access.  This file will
              be created (or overwritten if  it  already  exists):option:-of,  -a_nodata,  -init,
              -a_srs, -co, -te, -tr, -tap, -ts, or -ot options are used.

       The  program  create  a  new  target  raster  image when any of the -of, -a_nodata, -init,
       -a_srs, -co, -te, -tr, -tap, -ts, or -ot options are used.  The resolution or size must be
       specified  using  the  -tr  or  -ts option for all new rasters.  The target raster will be
       overwritten if it already exists and any of these creation-related options are used.

C API

       This utility is also callable from C with GDALRasterize().

       New in version 2.1.

EXAMPLE

       The following would burn all polygons from mask.shp into the RGB TIFF file  work.tif  with
       the color red (RGB = 255,0,0).

          gdal_rasterize -b 1 -b 2 -b 3 -burn 255 -burn 0 -burn 0 -l mask mask.shp work.tif

       The  following  would burn all "class A" buildings into the output elevation file, pulling
       the top elevation from the ROOF_H attribute.

          gdal_rasterize -a ROOF_H -where "class='A'" -l footprints footprints.shp city_dem.tif

       The following would burn all polygons from footprint.shp into a new 1000x1000 rgb TIFF  as
       the  color  red.   Note that -b is not used; the order of the -burn options determines the
       bands of the output raster.

          gdal_rasterize -burn 255 -burn 0 -burn 0 -ot Byte -ts 1000 1000 -l footprints footprints.shp mask.tif

AUTHOR

       Frank Warmerdam <warmerdam@pobox.com>

COPYRIGHT

       1998-2022

                                           Jun 30, 2022                         GDAL_RASTERIZE(1)