GDAL-RASTER-RECLASSIFY(1) GDAL GDAL-RASTER-RECLASSIFY(1)

gdal-raster-reclassify - Reclassify a raster dataset

Added in version 3.11.

Usage: gdal raster reclassify [OPTIONS] <INPUT> <OUTPUT>
Reclassify values in a raster dataset
Positional arguments:
  -i, --input <INPUT>                                      Input raster dataset [required]
  -o, --output <OUTPUT>                                    Output raster dataset [required]
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 ("GDALG" allowed)
  --co, --creation-option <KEY>=<VALUE>                    Creation option [may be repeated]
  --overwrite                                              Whether overwriting existing output is allowed
  -m, --mapping <MAPPING>                                  Reclassification mappings (or specify a @<filename> to point to a file containing mappings [required]
  --ot, --datatype, --output-data-type <OUTPUT-DATA-TYPE>  Output data type. OUTPUT-DATA-TYPE=Byte|Int8|UInt16|Int16|UInt32|Int32|UInt64|Int64|CInt16|CInt32|Float16|Float32|Float64|CFloat32|CFloat64
Advanced Options:
  --if, --input-format <INPUT-FORMAT>                      Input formats [may be repeated]
  --oo, --open-option <KEY>=<VALUE>                        Open options [may be repeated]

gdal raster reclassify reclassifies values in an input dataset. A file (or string) specifies the mapping of input pixel values or ranges to output files.

An example file is shown below.

# remap land cover types
0       = 10      # land
[2,4]   = 20      # freshwater
1       = 40      # ocean
NO_DATA = NO_DATA # leave NoData pixels unmodified

(The # character indicates a comment that is ignored by the parser but can make the file easier to read.) In this case:

  • input values of 0 will be output as 10
  • input values between 2 and 4 (inclusive) will be output as 20
  • input values of 1 will be output as 40
  • NoData values will be preserved as NoData

The presence of any other values in the input will cause an error. If this is not desired, the input range DEFAULT can be used to specify an output value for pixels not covered by any other input range. These pixels may be converted unto NoData (DEFAULT = NO_DATA), some other constant value (e.g., DEFAULT = 50), or left unmodified (DEFAULT = PASS_THROUGH).

NOTE:

gdal raster reclassify supports writing to VRT format; however, VRT files generated in this way can only be opened using GDAL 3.11 or greater.

A definition of mappings between input and output pixel values, as described above. The mappings may either be provided as text (with each entry separate by a semicolon), or they may be read from a file using @filename.txt.
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.

Which output raster format to use. Allowed values may be given by gdal --formats | grep raster | grep rw | sort
Output data type among Byte, Int8, UInt16, Int16, UInt32, Int32, UInt64, Int64, CInt16, CInt32, Float32, Float64, CFloat32, CFloat64.

This program supports serializing the command line as a JSON file using the GDALG output format. The resulting file can then be opened as a raster dataset using the GDALG: GDAL Streamed Algorithm driver, and apply the specified pipeline in a on-the-fly / streamed way.

$ gdal raster reclassify -m "0=10; [2,4]=20; 1=40" -i wbm.tif -o typ.tif

Dan Baston <dbaston@gmail.com>

1998-2025

May 6, 2025