A rio-tiler plugin to read from publicly-available datasets.
Important This is the new module for rio-tiler missions specific (ref: https://github.com/cogeotiff/rio-tiler/issues/195)
Documentation: https://cogeotiff.github.io/rio-tiler-pds/
Source Code: https://github.com/cogeotiff/rio-tiler-pds
You can install rio-tiler-pds using pip
$ pip install -U pip
$ pip install rio-tiler-pds
or install from source:
$ pip install -U pip
$ pip install git+https://github.com/cogeotiff/rio-tiler-pds.git
Data | Level/Product | Format | Owner | Region | Bucket Type |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sentinel 2 | L1C | JPEG2000 | Sinergise / AWS | eu-central-1 | Requester-pays |
Sentinel 2 | L2A | JPEG2000 | Sinergise / AWS | eu-central-1 | Requester-pays |
Sentinel 2 | L2A | COG | Digital Earth Africa / AWS | us-west-2 | Public |
Sentinel 1 | L1C GRD (IW, EW, S1-6) | COG (Internal GCPS) | Sinergise / AWS | eu-central-1 | Requester-pays |
Landsat Collection 2 | L1,L2 | COG | USGS / AWS | us-west-2 | Requester-pays |
CBERS 4/4A | L2/L4 | COG | AMS Kepler / AWS | us-east-1 | Requester-pays |
MODIS (modis-pds) | MCD43A4, MOD09GQ, MYD09GQ, MOD09GA, MYD09GA | GTiff (External Overviews) | - | us-west-2 | Public |
MODIS (astraea-opendata) | MCD43A4, MOD11A1, MOD13A1, MYD11A1 MYD13A1 | COG | Astraea / AWS | us-west-2 | Requester-pays |
Copernicus Digital Elevation Model | GLO-30, GLO-90 | COG | Sinergise / AWS | eu-central-1 | Public |
Adding more dataset:
If you know of another publicly-available dataset that can easily be described with a "scene id", please feel free to open an issue.
On AWS, sentinel2
, sentinel1
, cbers
and modis
(in astraea-opendata) datasets are stored in requester
pays
buckets. This means that the cost of GET and LIST requests and egress fees for
downloading files outside the AWS region will be charged to the accessing
users, not the organization hosting the bucket. For rio-tiler
and
rio-tiler-pds
to work with such buckets, you'll need to set
AWS_REQUEST_PAYER="requester"
in your shell environment.
When reading data, rio-tiler-pds
performs partial reads when possible. Hence
performance will be best on data stored as Cloud Optimized GeoTIFF
(COG). It's important to note that Sentinel-2 scenes hosted
on AWS are not in Cloud Optimized format but in JPEG2000. Partial reads from
JPEG2000 files are inefficient, and GDAL (the library underlying rio-tiler-pds
and rasterio
) will need to make many GET requests and transfer a lot of
data. This will be both slow and expensive, since AWS's JPEG2000 collection of
Sentinel 2 data is stored in a requester pays bucket.
Ref: Do you really want people using your data blog post.
Each dataset has its own submodule (e.g sentinel2: rio_tiler_pds.sentinel.aws
)
from rio_tiler_pds.landsat.aws import LandsatC2Reader
from rio_tiler_pds.sentinel.aws import S1L1CReader
from rio_tiler_pds.sentinel.aws import (
S2JP2Reader, # JPEG2000
S2COGReader, # COG
)
from rio_tiler_pds.cbers.aws import CBERSReader
from rio_tiler_pds.modis.aws import MODISPDSReader, MODISASTRAEAReader
from rio_tiler_pds.copernicus.aws import Dem30Reader, Dem90Reader
All Readers are subclass of rio_tiler.io.BaseReader
and inherit its properties/methods.
All readers take scene id as main input. The scene id is used internaly by the reader to derive the full path of the data.
e.g: Landsat on AWS
Because the Landsat AWS PDS follows a regular schema to store the data (s3://{bucket}/c1/L8/{path}/{row}/{scene}/{scene}_{band}.TIF"
), we can easily reconstruct the full band's path by parsing the scene id.
from rio_tiler_pds.landsat.aws import LandsatC2Reader
from rio_tiler_pds.landsat.utils import sceneid_parser
sceneid_parser("LC08_L2SP_001062_20201031_20201106_02_T2")
> {'sensor': 'C',
'satellite': '08',
'processingCorrectionLevel': 'L2SP',
'path': '001',
'row': '062',
'acquisitionYear': '2020',
'acquisitionMonth': '10',
'acquisitionDay': '31',
'processingYear': '2020',
'processingMonth': '11',
'processingDay': '06',
'collectionNumber': '02',
'collectionCategory': 'T2',
'scene': 'LC08_L2SP_001062_20201031_20201106_02_T2',
'date': '2020-10-31',
'_processingLevelNum': '2',
'category': 'standard',
'sensor_name': 'oli-tirs',
'_sensor_s3_prefix': 'oli-tirs',
'bands': ('QA_PIXEL',
'QA_RADSAT',
'SR_B1',
'SR_B2',
'SR_B3',
'SR_B4',
'SR_B5',
'SR_B6',
'SR_B7',
'SR_QA_AEROSOL',
'ST_ATRAN',
'ST_B10',
'ST_CDIST',
'ST_DRAD',
'ST_EMIS',
'ST_EMSD',
'ST_QA',
'ST_TRAD',
'ST_URAD')}
with LandsatC2Reader("LC08_L2SP_001062_20201031_20201106_02_T2") as landsat:
print(landsat._get_band_url("SR_B2"))
> s3://usgs-landsat/collection02/level-2/standard/oli-tirs/2020/001/062/LC08_L2SP_001062_20201031_20201106_02_T2/LC08_L2SP_001062_20201031_20201106_02_T2_SR_B2.TIF
Each dataset has a specific scene id format:
!!! note "Scene ID formats"
- Landsat
- link: [rio_tiler_pds.landsat.utils.sceneid_parser](https://github.com/cogeotiff/rio-tiler-pds/blob/e4421d3cf7c23b7b3552b8bb16ee5913a5483caf/rio_tiler_pds/landsat/utils.py#L35-L56)
- regex: `^L[COTEM]0[0-9]_L\d{1}[A-Z]{2}_\d{6}_\d{8}_\d{8}_\d{2}_(T1|T2|RT)$`
- example: `LC08_L1TP_016037_20170813_20170814_01_RT`
- Sentinel 1 L1C
- link: [rio_tiler_pds.sentinel.utils.s1_sceneid_parser](https://github.com/cogeotiff/rio-tiler-pds/blob/e4421d3cf7c23b7b3552b8bb16ee5913a5483caf/rio_tiler_pds/sentinel/utils.py#L98-L121)
- regex: `^S1[AB]_(IW|EW)_[A-Z]{3}[FHM]_[0-9][SA][A-Z]{2}_[0-9]{8}T[0-9]{6}_[0-9]{8}T[0-9]{6}_[0-9A-Z]{6}_[0-9A-Z]{6}_[0-9A-Z]{4}$`
- example: `S1A_IW_GRDH_1SDV_20180716T004042_20180716T004107_022812_02792A_FD5B`
- Sentinel 2 JPEG2000 and Sentinel 2 COG
- link: [rio_tiler_pds.sentinel.utils.s2_sceneid_parser](https://github.com/cogeotiff/rio-tiler-pds/blob/e4421d3cf7c23b7b3552b8bb16ee5913a5483caf/rio_tiler_pds/sentinel/utils.py#L25-L60)
- regex: `^S2[AB]_[0-9]{2}[A-Z]{3}_[0-9]{8}_[0-9]_L[0-2][A-C]$` or `^S2[AB]_L[0-2][A-C]_[0-9]{8}_[0-9]{2}[A-Z]{3}_[0-9]$`
- example: `S2A_29RKH_20200219_0_L2A`, `S2A_L1C_20170729_19UDP_0`, `S2A_L2A_20170729_19UDP_0`
- CBERS
- link: [rio_tiler_pds.cbers.utils.sceneid_parser](https://github.com/cogeotiff/rio-tiler-pds/blob/e4421d3cf7c23b7b3552b8bb16ee5913a5483caf/rio_tiler_pds/cbers/utils.py#L28-L43)
- regex: `^CBERS_(4|4A)_\w+_[0-9]{8}_[0-9]{3}_[0-9]{3}_L\w+$`
- example: `CBERS_4_MUX_20171121_057_094_L2`, `CBERS_4_AWFI_20170420_146_129_L2`, `CBERS_4_PAN10M_20170427_161_109_L4`, `CBERS_4_PAN5M_20170425_153_114_L4`, `CBERS_4A_WPM_20200730_209_139_L4`
- MODIS (PDS and Astraea)
- link: [rio_tiler_pds.modis.utils.sceneid_parser](https://github.com/cogeotiff/rio-tiler-pds/blob/c533d38330f46738c46cb9927dbe91b299dc643d/rio_tiler_pds/modis/utils.py#L29-L42)
- regex: `^M[COY]D[0-9]{2}[A-Z0-9]{2}\.A[0-9]{4}[0-9]{3}\.h[0-9]{2}v[0-9]{2}\.[0-9]{3}\.[0-9]{13}$`
- example: `MCD43A4.A2017006.h21v11.006.2017018074804`
rio-tiler-pds
Readers assume that bands (e.g eo:band in STAC) are stored in separate files.
$ aws s3 ls s3://usgs-landsat/collection02/level-2/standard/oli-tirs/2020/001/062/LC08_L2SP_001062_20201031_20201106_02_T2/ --request-payer
LC08_L2SP_001062_20201031_20201106_02_T2_ANG.txt
LC08_L2SP_001062_20201031_20201106_02_T2_MTL.json
LC08_L2SP_001062_20201031_20201106_02_T2_MTL.txt
LC08_L2SP_001062_20201031_20201106_02_T2_MTL.xml
LC08_L2SP_001062_20201031_20201106_02_T2_QA_PIXEL.TIF
LC08_L2SP_001062_20201031_20201106_02_T2_QA_RADSAT.TIF
LC08_L2SP_001062_20201031_20201106_02_T2_SR_B1.TIF
LC08_L2SP_001062_20201031_20201106_02_T2_SR_B2.TIF
LC08_L2SP_001062_20201031_20201106_02_T2_SR_B3.TIF
LC08_L2SP_001062_20201031_20201106_02_T2_SR_B4.TIF
LC08_L2SP_001062_20201031_20201106_02_T2_SR_B5.TIF
LC08_L2SP_001062_20201031_20201106_02_T2_SR_B6.TIF
LC08_L2SP_001062_20201031_20201106_02_T2_SR_B7.TIF
LC08_L2SP_001062_20201031_20201106_02_T2_SR_QA_AEROSOL.TIF
LC08_L2SP_001062_20201031_20201106_02_T2_SR_stac.json
LC08_L2SP_001062_20201031_20201106_02_T2_ST_ATRAN.TIF
LC08_L2SP_001062_20201031_20201106_02_T2_ST_B10.TIF
LC08_L2SP_001062_20201031_20201106_02_T2_ST_CDIST.TIF
LC08_L2SP_001062_20201031_20201106_02_T2_ST_DRAD.TIF
LC08_L2SP_001062_20201031_20201106_02_T2_ST_EMIS.TIF
LC08_L2SP_001062_20201031_20201106_02_T2_ST_EMSD.TIF
LC08_L2SP_001062_20201031_20201106_02_T2_ST_QA.TIF
LC08_L2SP_001062_20201031_20201106_02_T2_ST_TRAD.TIF
LC08_L2SP_001062_20201031_20201106_02_T2_ST_URAD.TIF
LC08_L2SP_001062_20201031_20201106_02_T2_ST_stac.json
LC08_L2SP_001062_20201031_20201106_02_T2_thumb_large.jpeg
LC08_L2SP_001062_20201031_20201106_02_T2_thumb_small.jpeg
When reading data or metadata, readers will merge them.
e.g
with S2COGReader("S2A_L2A_20170729_19UDP_0") as sentinel:
img = sentinel.tile(78, 89, 8, bands=("B01", "B02"))
assert img.data.shape == (2, 256, 256)
stats = sentinel.statistics(bands=("B01", "B02"))
print(stats)
>> {
'B01': BandStatistics(
min=2.0,
max=17132.0,
mean=2183.7570706659685,
count=651247.0,
sum=1422165241.0,
std=3474.123975478363,
median=370.0,
majority=238.0,
minority=2.0,
unique=15112.0,
histogram=[
[476342.0, 35760.0, 27525.0, 24852.0, 24379.0, 23792.0, 20891.0, 13602.0, 3891.0, 213.0],
[2.0, 1715.0, 3428.0, 5141.0, 6854.0, 8567.0, 10280.0, 11993.0, 13706.0, 15419.0, 17132.0]
],
valid_percent=62.11,
masked_pixels=397329.0,
valid_pixels=651247.0,
percentile_2=179.0,
percentile_98=12465.0
),
'B02': BandStatistics(
min=1.0,
max=15749.0,
mean=1941.2052554560712,
count=651247.0,
sum=1264204099.0,
std=3130.545395156859,
median=329.0,
majority=206.0,
minority=11946.0,
unique=13904.0,
histogram=[
[479174.0, 34919.0, 27649.0, 25126.0, 24913.0, 24119.0, 20223.0, 12097.0, 2872.0, 155.0],
[1.0, 1575.8, 3150.6, 4725.4, 6300.2, 7875.0, 9449.8, 11024.6, 12599.4, 14174.199999999999, 15749.0]
],
valid_percent=62.11,
masked_pixels=397329.0,
valid_pixels=651247.0,
percentile_2=134.0,
percentile_98=11227.079999999958
)}
print(stats["B01"].min)
>> 2.0
The Copernicus DEM GLO-30 and GLO-90 readers are not per scene but mosaic readers. This is possible because the dataset is a global dataset with file names having the geo-location
of the COG, meaning we can easily contruct a filepath from a coordinate.
from rio_tiler_pds.copernicus.aws import Dem30Reader
with Dem30Reader() as dem:
print(dem.assets_for_point(-57.2, -11.2))
>> ['s3://copernicus-dem-30m/Copernicus_DSM_COG_10_S12_00_W058_00_DEM/Copernicus_DSM_COG_10_S12_00_W058_00_DEM.tif']
See CHANGES.md.
See CONTRIBUTING.md
See LICENSE.txt
The rio-tiler project was begun at Mapbox and has been transferred in January 2019.
See AUTHORS.txt for a listing of individual contributors.