CesiumGS / 3d-tiles-tools

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3D Tiles Tools

Overview

The 3D Tiles Tools are a collection of tools and utilities for converting, optimizing, processing, and analyzing 3D Tiles data.

Installation

To install the 3D Tiles Tools locally into a directory, run

npm install 3d-tiles-tools

If you want to work directly with a clone of the Git repository, see Developer Setup.

Command Line Usage

Note: All input- and output paths for the 3D Tiles Tools are case sensitive. Even though some operating systems (like Windows) usually do not differentiate between uppercase and lowercase, the file- and directory names that are given at the command line must exactly match the actual names.

Common command line options for each function:

Flag Description Required
-i, --input Input file or directory Yes
-o, --output Output file or directory Yes
-f, --force Overwrite output if it exists No, default false
--logLevel The log level. Valid values are trace, debug, info, warn, error, fatal, and silent No, default info
--logJson Print log messages as JSON instead of pretty-printed No, default false

Command line tools for tilesets

gzip

Gzips the input tileset.

npx 3d-tiles-tools gzip -i ./specs/data/TilesetOfTilesets/ -o ./output/TilesetOfTilesets-gzipped/

Additional command line options:

Flag Description Required
-t, --tilesOnly Only gzip tiles. No, default false

(Note: The exact set of files that are covered with tilesOnly is not specified yet)

ungzip

Ungzips the input tileset.

npx 3d-tiles-tools ungzip -i ./specs/data/TilesetOfTilesets-gzipped/ -o ./output/TilesetOfTilesets-ungzipped/

combine

Combines all external tilesets into a single tileset.

Note about the difference between merge and combine: The combine command takes a tileset that already refers to external tilesets. And it creates a new tileset where the former external tilesets are "inlined". So the result will be a single tileset, without external references.

Example:

npx 3d-tiles-tools combine -i ./specs/data/combineTilesets/input -o ./specs/data/combineTilesets/output

merge

Merge multiple tilesets into a single one that refers to the input tilesets as external tilesets.

Note about the difference between merge and combine: The merge command creates a new tileset that refers to the given ones as external tilsets. This means that the resulting tileset is not complete without the ones that are used as the inputs for the merge command.

Example:

npx 3d-tiles-tools merge -i ./specs/data/mergeTilesets/TilesetA -i ./specs/data/mergeTilesets/sub/TilesetA -o ./specs/data/mergeTilesets/output

mergeJson

Merge multiple tilesets into a single tileset JSON file that refers to the input tilesets as external tilesets.

This differs from the merge command insofar that it does not copy the input tilesets to the output directory, but only creates the JSON file for the merged tileset, which uses relative paths to refer to the input tilesets. A common use case for this is to create a tileset JSON file in a certain directory, with the input tilesets being located in subdirectories.

Example:

npx 3d-tiles-tools mergeJson -i ./example/TilesetA/tileset.json -i ./example/TilesetB/tileset.json -o ./example/mergedTileset.json

upgrade

Upgrade a tileset to the latest 3D Tiles version.

npx 3d-tiles-tools upgrade -i ./specs/data/TilesetOfTilesets/tileset.json -o ./output/upgraded

Additional command line options:

Flag Description Required
--targetVersion The target version to upgrade to. May be 1.0 or 1.1. No. Default: 1.0
--options All arguments past this flag are consumed by gltf-pipeline. No

By default, this will upgrade legacy tilesets to comply to the 3D Tiles 1.0 specification.

These upgrades include:

Implementation note:

Internally, the conversion of glTF 1.0 assets into glTF 2.0 assets is performed by processing the GLB data with gltf-pipeline. This will include the attempt to convert materials that are given with the KHR_technique_webgl extension into PBR materials. Options that are given after the --options parameter are passed to gltf-pipeline. These options may include the names of uniform variables that should indicate whether a certain texture is used as the "base color" texture of a PRB material. For example, when a tileset contains B3DM or I3DM data that contains GLB with the KHR_technique_webgl extension where the uniform names u_diff_tex and u_diffuse indicate that a texture should be a base color texture, then the command line

npx 3d-tiles-tools upgrade -i ./input/tileset.json -o ./output/tileset.json --options --baseColorTextureNames u_diff_tex --baseColorTextureNames u_diffuse

can be used.

When --targetVersion 1.1 is given, then this will upgrade legacy tilesets to comply to the 3D Tiles 1.1 specification, including an attempt to convert PNTS, B3DM, and I3DM tile content into glTF assets. The upgrades then include:

Implementation note:

The conversion of the legacy tile formats to glTF should be considered as a preview feature. There are corner cases where the conversion is not possible generically - for example, when I3DM tile content contains glTF data that contains animations, or when a CMPT (indirectly) contains multiple glTF assets that already use the EXT_structural_metadata extension. The conditions under which the conversion is possible may be specified more explicitly in the future.

convert

(This replaces the databaseToTileset and tilesetToDatabase commands)

Convert between tilesets and tileset package formats.

npx 3d-tiles-tools convert -i ./specs/data/TilesetOfTilesets/tileset.json -o ./output/TilesetOfTilesets.3tz

Additional command line options:

Flag Description Required
--inputTilesetJsonFileName The name of the input file that should be considered to be the top-level tileset JSON file No

The input- and output arguments for this command may be

The input may also be a .zip file that contains a tileset.json file.

When the input is a .zip file or a directory that contains multiple tileset JSON files, and none of them is called tileset.json, then the --inputTilesetJsonFileName argument can be used to define the JSON file that should be considered to be the top-level tileset JSON. For example, when there is an ambiguous.zip tile that does contain two JSON files called tilesetA.json and tilesetB.json, the following command can be used to designate tilesetA.json as the top-level tileset JSON file:

npx 3d-tiles-tools convert -i ./specs/data/convert/ambiguous.zip -o ./output/ambiguous.3tz --inputTilesetJsonFileName tilesetA.json

databaseToTileset

Deprecated. This functionality is now offered via the convert command.

tilesetToDatabase

Deprecated. This functionality is now offered via the convert command.

Command line tools for tile content

glbToB3dm

Creates a b3dm from a glb with an empty batch table.

npx 3d-tiles-tools glbToB3dm -i ./specs/data/CesiumTexturedBox/CesiumTexturedBox.glb -o ./output/CesiumTexturedBox.b3dm

glbToI3dm

Creates a i3dm from a glb with a single instance at position [0, 0, 0] and an empty batch table.

npx 3d-tiles-tools glbToI3dm -i ./specs/data/CesiumTexturedBox/CesiumTexturedBox.glb -o ./output/CesiumTexturedBox.i3dm

b3dmToGlb

Extracts the glb from a b3dm.

npx 3d-tiles-tools b3dmToGlb -i ./specs/data/batchedWithBatchTableBinary.b3dm -o ./output/extracted.glb

i3dmToGlb

Extracts the glb from a i3dm.

npx 3d-tiles-tools i3dmToGlb -i ./specs/data/instancedWithBatchTableBinary.i3dm -o ./output/extracted.glb

cmptToGlb

Extracts the glb models from a cmpt tile. If multiple models are found a number will be appended to the output file name.

npx 3d-tiles-tools cmptToGlb -i ./specs/data/composite.cmpt -o ./output/extracted.glb

splitCmpt

Split a cmpt tile into its inner tiles. The output file name for each inner tile will be determined by appending a number to the given output file name, and an extension that depends on the type of the inner tile data.

npx 3d-tiles-tools splitCmpt -i ./specs/data/compositeOfComposite.cmpt -o ./output/inner --recursive

For an input file compositeOfComposite.cmpt that contains a composite tile that contains one B3DM and one I3DM content, this will generate the files inner_0.b3dm and inner_1.i3dm in the output directory.

Additional command line options:

Flag Description Required
--recursive Whether the split operation should be applied to inner tiles that are composite No, default: false

convertB3dmToGlb

Convert a b3dm file into a glTF asset that uses glTF extensions to represent the batch- and feature table information.

npx 3d-tiles-tools convertB3dmToGlb -i ./data/example.b3dm -o ./data/example.glb

convertPntsToGlb

Convert a pnts file into a glTF asset that uses glTF extensions to represent the point properties and batch- and feature table information.

npx 3d-tiles-tools convertPntsToGlb -i ./data/example.pnts -o ./data/example.glb

convertI3dmToGlb

Convert an i3dm file into a glTF asset that uses glTF extensions to represent the batch- and feature table information. This conversion may be lossy if the GLB of the input i3dm contains animations.

npx 3d-tiles-tools convertI3dmToGlb -i ./data/example.i3dm -o ./data/example.glb

optimizeB3dm

Optimize a b3dm using gltf-pipeline.

npx 3d-tiles-tools optimizeB3dm -i ./specs/data/batchedWithBatchTableBinary.b3dm -o ./output/optimized.b3dm

Additional command line options:

Flag Description Required
--options All arguments past this flag are consumed by gltf-pipeline. No

Examples:

To use Draco compression, pass the draco flags

npx 3d-tiles-tools optimizeB3dm -i ./specs/data/Textured/batchedTextured.b3dm -o ./output/optimized.b3dm --options --draco.compressMeshes --draco.compressionLevel=9

This example optimizes the b3dm and compresses the meshes using Draco, with a high compression level.

optimizeI3dm

Optimize an i3dm using gltf-pipeline.

npx 3d-tiles-tools optimizeI3dm -i ./specs/data/instancedWithBatchTableBinary.i3dm -o ./output/optimized.i3dm

See optimizeB3dm for further examples.

updateAlignment

Update a B3DM, I3DM, PNTS or CMPT file to ensure that the alignment requirements for the batch- and feature tables and the tile data as a whole are met. For CMPT tile data, the data of inner tiles will be updated recursively.

npx 3d-tiles-tools updateAlignment -i ./specs/data/updateAlignment/testComposite.cmpt -o ./output/testCompositeFixed.cmpt

analyze

Analyze the input file, and write the results to the output directory.

npx 3d-tiles-tools analyze -i ./specs/data/batchedWithBatchTableBinary.b3dm -o ./output/analyzed/

This will accept B3DM, I3DM, PNTS, CMPT, and GLB files (both for glTF 1.0 and for glTF 2.0), and write files into the output directory that contain the feature table, batch table, layout information, the GLB, and the JSON of the GLB. This is primarily intended for debugging and analyzing tile data. Therefore, the exact naming and content of the generated output files are not specified.

createTilesetJson

Create a tileset JSON file from a given set of tile content files.

Additional command line options:

Flag Description Required
--cartographicPositionDegrees An array of either two or three values, which are the (longitude, latitude) or (longitude, latitude, height) of the target position. The longitude and latitude are given in degrees, and the height is given in meters. No

If the input is a single file, then this will result in a single (root) tile with the input file as its tile content. If the input is a directory, then all content files in this directory will be used as tile content, recursively. The exact set of file types that are considered to be 'tile content' is not specified, but it will include GLB, B3DM, PNTS, I3DM, and CMPT files.

Examples:

npx 3d-tiles-tools createTilesetJson -i ./input/ -o ./output/tileset.json --cartographicPositionDegrees -75.152 39.94 10

This creates the specified tileset JSON file, which will refer to all tile content files in the given input directory as its tile contents. The root node of the tileset will have a transform that will place it at the given cartographic position.

Pipeline

Execute a sequence of operations that are described in a JSON file.

Note: The pipeline execution feature is preliminary. Many aspects of the pipeline definition, including the JSON representation and the exact set of operations that are supported as parts of pipelines may change in future releases.

The basic structure of a pipeline JSON file is summarized here:

A simple example pipline may therefore look like this:

{
  "input": "./specs/data/TilesetOfTilesetsWithUris",
  "output": "./output/TilesetOfTilesetsWithUris.3tz",
  "tilesetStages": [
    {
      "name": "_b3dmToGlb",
      "description": "Convert B3DM to GLB",
      "contentStages": [
        {
          "name": "b3dmToGlb",
          "description": "Convert each B3DM content into GLB"
        }
      ]
    }
  ]
}

The name of a tileset- or content stage can refer to a predefined set of operations that can be executed. If a name is not one of the known operations, it should start with an _ underscore.

The description of a tileset- or content stage is intended as a human-readable summary, to be shown as log output.

The predefined operations largely correspond to the command-line functionality.

The known tileset stages are:

The known content stages are:

An example of a pipeline that combines a sequence of multiple operations is shown in examplePipeline.json.

Developer Setup

When the tools are not installed as a package from NPM, but supposed to be used directly in a cloned repository, then the command line usage is as follows:

After this, the tools can be executed using the same command line options as described above - for example:

npx ts-node .\src\cli\main.ts gzip -i ./specs/data/TilesetOfTilesets/ -o ./output/TilesetOfTilesets-gzipped/

See the implementation notes for details about the project structure.