Oracle Spatial GeoRaster

This driver supports reading and writing raster data in Oracle Spatial GeoRaster format (10g or later). The Oracle Spatial GeoRaster driver is optionally built as a GDAL plugin, but it requires Oracle client libraries.

When opening a GeoRaster, its name should be specified in the form:

georaster:<user>{,/}<pwd>{,@}[db],[schema.][table],[column],[where]
georaster:<user>{,/}<pwd>{,@}[db],<rdt>,<rid>

Where:

user   = Oracle server user's name login
pwd    = user password
db     = Oracle server identification (database name)
schema = name of a schema                      
table  = name of a GeoRaster table (table that contains GeoRaster columns)
column = name of a column data type MDSYS.SDO_GEORASTER
where  = a simple where clause to identify one or multiples GeoRaster(s)
rdt    = name of a raster data table
rid    = numeric identification of one GeoRaster

Examples:

geor:scott,tiger,demodb,table,column,id=1
geor:scott,tiger,demodb,table,column,"id = 1"
"georaster:scott/tiger@demodb,table,column,gain>10"
"georaster:scott/tiger@demodb,table,column,city='Brasilia'"
georaster:scott,tiger,,rdt_10$,10
geor:scott/tiger,,rdt_10$,10

Note: do note use space around the field values and the commas.

Note: like in the last two examples, the database name field could be left empty (",,") and the TNSNAME will be used.

Note: If  the query results in more than one GeoRaster it will be treated as a GDAL metadata's list of sub-datasets (see below)

Browsing the database for GeoRasters

By providing some basic information the GeoRaster driver is capable of listing the existing rasters stored on the server:

To list all the GeoRaster table on the server that belongs to that user name and database:

% gdalinfo georaster:scott/tiger@db1

To list all the GeoRaster type columns that exist in that table:
% gdalinfo georaster:scott/tiger@db1,table_name

That will list all the GeoRaster objects stored in that table.

% gdalinfo georaster:scott/tiger@db1,table_name,georaster_column

That will list all the GeoRaster existing on that table according to a Where clause.

% gdalinfo georaster:scott/tiger@db1,table_name,georaster_column,city='Brasilia'

Note that the result of those queries are returned as GDAL metadata sub-datasets, e.g.:

% gdalinfo georaster:scott/tiger
Driver: GeoRaster/Oracle Spatial GeoRaster
Subdatasets:

SUBDATASET_1_NAME=georaster:scott,tiger,,LANDSAT
SUBDATASET_1_DESC=Table:LANDSAT
SUBDATASET_2_NAME=georaster:scott,tiger,,GDAL_IMPORT
SUBDATASET_2_DESC=Table:GDAL_IMPORT

Creation Options

% gdal_translate -of georaster landsat_823.tif geor:scott/tiger@orcl,landsat,raster \
  -co DESCRIPTION="(ID NUMBER, NAME VARCHAR2(40), RASTER MDSYS.SDO_GEORASTER)" \
  -co INSERT="VALUES (1,'Scene 823',
SDO_GEOR.INIT())" % gdal_translate -of georaster landsat_825.tif geor:scott/tiger@orcl,landsat,raster \
  -co INSERT="(ID, RASTER) VALUES (2,
SDO_GEOR.INIT())"

Importing GeoRaster

During the process of importing raster into a GeoRaster object it is possible to give the driver a simple SQL table definition and also a SQL insert/values clause to inform the driver about the table to be created and the values to be added to the newly created row. The following example does that:

% gdal_translate -of georaster Newpor.tif georaster:scott/tiger,,landsat,scene \
  -co "DESCRIPTION=(ID NUMBER, SITE VARCHAR2(45), SCENE MDSYS.SDO_GEORASTER)" \
  -co "INSERT=VALUES(1,'West fields', SDO_GEOR.INIT())" \
  -co "BLOCKXSIZE=512" -co "BLOCKYSIZE=512" -co "BLOCKBSIZE=3" \
  -co "INTERLEAVE=PIXEL
" -co "COMPRESS=JPEG-F"

Note that the create option DESCRIPTION requires to inform table name (in bold). And column name (underlined) should match the description:

% gdal_translate -of georaster landsat_1.tif georaster:scott/tiger,,landsat,scene \
  -co "DESCRIPTION=(ID NUMBER, SITE VARCHAR2(45), SCENE MDSYS.SDO_GEORASTER)" \
  -co "INSERT=VALUES(1,'West fields', 
SDO_GEOR.INIT())"

If the table "landsat" exist, the option "DESCRIPTION" is ignored. The driver can only update one GeoRaster column per run of gdal_translate. Oracle create default names and values for RDT and RID during the initialization of the SDO_GEORASTER object but user are also able to specify a name and value of their choice.

% gdal_translate -of georaster landsat_1.tif georaster:scott/tiger,,landsat,scene \
  -co "INSERT=VALUES(10,'Main building', 
SDO_GEOR.INIT('RDT', 10))"

If no information is given about where to store the raster the driver will create (if doesn't exist already) a default table named GDAL_IMPORT with just one GeoRaster column named RASTER and a table GDAL_RDT as the RDT, the RID will be given automatically by the server, example:

% gdal_translate -of georaster input.tif “geor:scott/tiger@dbdemo”

Exporting GeoRaster

A GeoRaster can be identified by a Where clause or by a pair of RDT & RID:

% gdal_translate -of gtiff geor:scott/tiger@dbdemo,landsat,scene,id=54 output.tif
% gdal_translate -of gtiff geor:scott/tiger@dbdemo,st_rdt_1,130 output.tif

Cross schema access

As long as the user was granted full access the GeoRaster table and the Raster Data Table, e.g.:

% sqlplus scott/tiger
SQL> grant select,insert,update,delete on gdal_import to spock;
SQL> grant select,insert,update,delete on gdal_rdt to spock;

It is possible to an user access to extract and load GeoRaster from another user/schema by informing the schema name as showed here:

Browsing:

% gdalinfo geor:spock/lion@orcl,scott.
%
gdalinfo geor:spock/lion@orcl,scott.gdal_import,raster,"t.raster.rasterid > 100"
% gdalinfo geor:spock/lion@orcl,scott.gdal_import,raster,t.raster.rasterid=101

Extracting:

% gdal_translate geor:spock/lion@orcl,scott.gdal_import,raster,t.raster.rasterid=101 out.tif
% gdal_translate geor:spock/lion@orcl,gdal_rdt,101 out.tif

Note: On the above example that accessing by RDT/RID doesn't need schame name as long as the users is granted full access to both tables.

Loading:

% gdal_translate -of georaster input.tif geor:spock/lion@orcl,scott.
% gdal_translate -of georaster input.tif geor:spock/lion@orcl,scott.cities,image \
  -co INSERT="(1,'Rio de Janeiro',sdo_geor.init('cities_rdt'))"

General use of GeoRaster

GeoRaster can be used in any GDAL command line tool with all the available options. Like a image subset extraction or re-project:

% gdal_translate -of gtiff geor:scott/tiger@dbdemo,landsat,scene,id=54 output.tif \
  -srcwin 0 0 800 600

% gdalwarp -of png geor:scott/tiger@dbdemo,st_rdt_1,130 output.png -t_srs EPSG:9000913

Two different GeoRaster can be used as input and output on the same operation:

% gdal_translate -of georaster geor:scott/tiger@dbdemo,landsat,scene,id=54 geor:scott/tiger@proj1,projview,image -co INSERT="VALUES (102, SDO_GEOR.INIT())"

Applications that use GDAL can theoretically read and write from GeoRaster just like any other format but most of then are more inclined to try to access files on the file system so one alternative is to create VRT to represent the GeoRaster description, e.g.:

% gdal_translate -of VRT geor:scott/tiger@dbdemo,landsat,scene,id=54 view_54.vrt
% openenv view_54.vrt