GDAL-RASTER-CLEAN-COLLAR(1) GDAL GDAL-RASTER-CLEAN-COLLAR(1)

gdal-raster-clean-collar - Clean the collar of a raster dataset, removing noise

Added in version 3.11.

Usage: gdal raster clean-collar [OPTIONS] <INPUT> [<OUTPUT>]
Clean the collar of a raster dataset, removing noise.
Positional arguments:
  -i, --input <INPUT>                                  Input raster dataset [required]
  -o, --output <OUTPUT>                                Output raster dataset
Common Options:
  -h, --help                                           Display help message and exit
  --json-usage                                         Display usage as JSON document and exit
  --config <KEY>=<VALUE>                               Configuration option [may be repeated]
  --progress                                           Display progress bar
Options:
  -f, --of, --format, --output-format <OUTPUT-FORMAT>  Output format
  --co, --creation-option <KEY>=<VALUE>                Creation option [may be repeated]
  --overwrite                                          Whether overwriting existing output is allowed
  --update                                             Whether to open existing dataset in update mode
  --color <COLOR>                                      Transparent color(s): tuple of integer (like 'r,g,b'), 'black', 'white' (default: black) [may be repeated]
  --color-threshold <COLOR-THRESHOLD>                  Select how far from specified transparent colors the pixel values are considered transparent. (default: 15)
  --pixel-distance <PIXEL-DISTANCE>                    Number of consecutive transparent pixels that can be encountered before the giving up search inwards. (default: 2)
  --add-alpha                                          Adds an alpha band to the output dataset.
                                                       Mutually exclusive with --add-mask
  --add-mask                                           Adds a mask band to the output dataset.
                                                       Mutually exclusive with --add-alpha
  --algorithm <ALGORITHM>                              Algorithm to apply. ALGORITHM=floodfill|twopasses (default: floodfill)
Advanced Options:
  --oo, --open-option <KEY>=<VALUE>                    Open options [may be repeated]
  --if, --input-format <INPUT-FORMAT>                  Input formats [may be repeated]

gdal raster clean-collar scans a (8-bit) image and sets all pixels that are nearly or exactly black (the default), white or one or more custom colors around the collar to black or white. This is often used to "fix up" lossy compressed air photos so that color pixels can be treated as transparent when mosaicing. The output format must use lossless compression if either alpha band or mask band is not set.

Which output raster format to use. Allowed values may be given by gdal --formats | grep raster | grep + | sort
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.

May be repeated.

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.

Allow program to overwrite existing target file or dataset. Otherwise, by default, gdal errors out if the target file or dataset already exists.
If only an input dataset is specified, ask for it to be opened in update mode If an output dataset is specified, ask for it to be opened in update mode (this implies that it already exists). Note that updating an existing dataset may lead to file size increase if the dataset is compressed, and/or quality loss if lossy compression is used.
Search for pixels near the specified color. May be specified multiple times. When this option is specified, the pixels that are considered as the collar are set to 0, unless only white is specified, in which case there are set to 255.
Select how far from black, white or custom colors the pixel values can be and still considered near black, white or custom color. Defaults to 15.
Number of consecutive transparent pixels that can be encountered before the giving up search inwards. Said otherwise, the collar will be extended by this number of pixels. Defaults to 2.
Adds an alpha band to the output file. The alpha band is set to 0 in the image collar and to 255 elsewhere. This option is mutually exclusive with --addmask.
Adds a mask band to the output file, The mask band is set to 0 in the image collar and to 255 elsewhere. This option is mutually exclusive with --addalpha.
Selects the algorithm to apply.

twopasses uses a top-to-bottom pass followed by a bottom-to-top pass. It may miss with concave areas. The algorithm processes the image one scanline at a time. A scan "in" is done from either end setting pixels to black or white until at least "non_black_pixels" pixels that are more than "dist" gray levels away from black, white or custom colors have been encountered at which point the scan stops. The nearly black, white or custom color pixels are set to black or white. The algorithm also scans from top to bottom and from bottom to top to identify indentations in the top or bottom.

floodfill (default) uses the Flood Fill algorithm and will work with concave areas. It requires creating a temporary dataset and is slower than twopasses. When a non-zero value for --pixel-distance is used, twopasses is actually called as an initial step of floodfill.

$ gdal raster clean-collar --update my.tif

$ gdal raster clean-collar --addalpha --color=black --color=white --color-threshold=5 in.tif out.tif

Even Rouault <even.rouault@spatialys.com>

1998-2025

May 6, 2025