addtiffo 1.0 ============ The addtiffo utility is used to add overview pyramids to an existing TIFF or GeoTIFF file. Some applications can take advantage of these overviews to accelerate overview display performance of large rasters. This release of addtiffo is primarily intended for compatibility testing with applications, and to see if there is interest in a cleaner release of the capability ... perhaps incorporation into the libtiff tools distribution. Please feel free to contact me with questions, or problems. warmerda@home.com http://home.gdal.org/~warmerda/ Usage ----- Usage: addtiffo [-r {average/nearest} [-subifd] tiff_filename [resolution_reductions] Example: % addtiffo abc.tif 2 4 8 16 The numeric arguments are the list of reduction factors to generate. In this example a 1/2, 1/4 1/8 and 1/16 Limitations ----------- See tif_overview.cpp for up to date details. o Currently only images with bits_per_sample of a multiple of eight will work. o The code will attempt to use the same kind of compression, photometric interpretation, and organization as the source image, but it doesn't copy geotiff tags to the reduced resolution images. o Reduced resolution overviews for multi-sample files will currently always be generated as PLANARCONFIG_SEPARATE. This could be fixed reasonable easily if needed to improve compatibility with other packages. Many don't properly support PLANARCONFIG_SEPARATE. o Overviews are always written as appended IFDs, rather than using the ``tree of tree's'' approach using the SUBIFD tag. I wanted to implement both, but it isn't currently easy to add a SUBIFD tag to an existing main tiff IFD with libtiff. I hope to try this again later. TIFF File Tags -------------- The results of running addtiffo on a 1024x1024 tiled greyscale file with the arguments ``2 4 8 16'' is to add four additional TIFF directories appended on the file with the SUBFILETYPE flag to 0x1 indicating the extra items are reduced resolution images. The tiffinfo output of such a file might look like this: TIFF Directory at offset 0x118008 Image Width: 1024 Image Length: 1024 Tile Width: 256 Tile Length: 112 Bits/Sample: 8 Compression Scheme: none Photometric Interpretation: min-is-black Samples/Pixel: 1 Planar Configuration: single image plane TIFF Directory at offset 0x15e1d2 Subfile Type: reduced-resolution image (1 = 0x1) Image Width: 512 Image Length: 512 Tile Width: 256 Tile Length: 112 Bits/Sample: 8 Compression Scheme: none Photometric Interpretation: min-is-black Samples/Pixel: 1 Planar Configuration: separate image planes TIFF Directory at offset 0x1732b8 Subfile Type: reduced-resolution image (1 = 0x1) Image Width: 256 Image Length: 256 Tile Width: 256 Tile Length: 112 Bits/Sample: 8 Compression Scheme: none Photometric Interpretation: min-is-black Samples/Pixel: 1 Planar Configuration: separate image planes TIFF Directory at offset 0x17a366 Subfile Type: reduced-resolution image (1 = 0x1) Image Width: 128 Image Length: 128 Tile Width: 128 Tile Length: 112 Bits/Sample: 8 Compression Scheme: none Photometric Interpretation: min-is-black Samples/Pixel: 1 Planar Configuration: separate image planes TIFF Directory at offset 0x17b40c Subfile Type: reduced-resolution image (1 = 0x1) Image Width: 64 Image Length: 64 Tile Width: 64 Tile Length: 64 Bits/Sample: 8 Compression Scheme: none Photometric Interpretation: min-is-black Samples/Pixel: 1 Planar Configuration: separate image planes Building -------- You will need a C compiler. You will need to have libtiff already built and installed. The provided Makefile should work on most Unix systems. A similar file will be needed for Windows, but is not provided. The CFLAGS and LIBS macros in the Makefile will have to be updated to point to the correct location of the libtiff include files, and library. Credits ------- o Intergraph Corporation for partially funding the work. o Global Geomatics for partially funding reorganization of the overview building ability as a separate utility. o Orrin Long, and Ed Grissom of Intergraph for explaining what needed to be done. o Max Martinez of Erdas for his discussion of external overviews. o Atlantis Scientific who supported adding averaging, and some other generalizations. o Frank Warmerdam for writing the bulk of the code. o Sam Leffler since this only exists because of his libtiff.