Command line tool and Python library for working with STAC
Project description
stactools
stactools
is a command line tool and library for working with STAC.
It is based on PySTAC.
This is the core stactools
repository, which provides a basic command line interface (CLI) and API for working with STAC catalogs.
There are a suite of packages available in other repositories for working with a variety of datasets and for doing more complicated oprations on STAC data.
See packages for more information.
Installation
To install the latest stable version:
> pip install stactools
To install the latest pre release:
> pip install stactools --pre
From source repository:
> git clone https://github.com/stac-utils/stactools.git
> cd stactools
> pip install .
Docker
To download the Docker image from the registry:
> docker pull ghcr.io/stac-utils/stactools:latest
Running
> stac --help
Docker
> docker run --rm ghcr.io/stac-utils/stactools:latest --help
Documentation
See the documentation page for the latest docs.
Packages
stactools
is comprised of many other sub-packages that provide library and CLI functionality.
Officially supported packages are hosted in the Github stactools-packages
organization, and other subpackages may be available from other sources.
Below is a list of officially supported packages and their current build status.
Each package can be installed via pip install stactools-{package}
, e.g. pip install stactools-landsat
.
Third-party packages can be installed in the same way, or, if they are not on PyPI, directly from the source repository, e.g. pip install /path/to/my/code/stactools-greatdata
.
Function packages
These extend the stac
command line utility to provide additional funcionality.
name | description | build status |
---|---|---|
stactools-browse | Launch stac-browser against a local catalog |
Dataset packages
These are designed to work with specific types of geospatial data.
name | data type | build status |
---|---|---|
stactools-aster | ASTER | |
stactools-cgls_lc100 | Copernicus Global Land Cover Layers | |
stactools-corine | CORINE Land Cover | |
stactools-landsat | USGS LANDSAT | |
stactools-naip | USDA National Agriculture Imagery Program | |
stactools-planet | Planet | |
stactools-sentinel2 | Sentinel-2 | |
stactools-threedep | USGS 3D Elevation Program (formerly the National Elevation Dataset or NED) |
Developing
Some packages require environments with more complex environments than can be set up just through pip.
For example, the stactools.aster
package uses rasterio functionality that required a GDAL enabled with the HDF4 format.
Because of this, it's recommended to utilize docker or conda to ensure a consistent environment.
Using docker
Build the container with:
> docker/build
Once the container is built, you can run the scripts/
scripts inside a docker console by running:
> docker/console
A complete build and test can be run with:
> docker/cibuild
It is recommended to do a Docker CI build before submitting a pull request to ensure your changes will (likely) pass Github's CI.
In scenarios where you want to run scripts in docker/
but don't want to run the build, images can be downloaded via the pull
script:
> docker/pull
Run a Juypter notebook:
> docker/notebook
Using conda
conda is a useful tool for managing dependencies, both binary and Python-based.
If you have conda installed, you can create a new environment for stactools
development by running the following command from the top-level directory in this repo:
> conda env create -f environment.yml
Then activate the stactools
environment:
> conda activate stactools
Finally, install stactools
in editable mode and all development requirements:
> pip install -e .
> pip install -r requirements-dev.txt
Using virtualenv
If not using docker or conda, it's recommended to use virtualenv to keep isolate the python environment used to develop stactools
.
See virtualenv documentation for more detailed information, but as a shortcut here's some quick steps:
- Make sure virtualenv is installed
- Run
virtualenv venv
- Activate the virtualenv with
source venv/bin/activate
Running the CLI against development code
You can run the CLI through docker by running
> docker/stac --help
or in the local environment with
> scripts/stac --help
Unit Tests
Unit tests are in the tests
folder. To run unit tests, use unittest
:
> python -m unittest discover tests
To run linters, code formatters, and test suites all together, use test
:
> ./docker/test
or
> ./scripts/test
The test script also runs lint and code quality checks.
Run a Juypter notebook:
> scripts/notebook
Documentation
To build and serve the docs, all of the requirements must be installed with scripts/update
.
Make sure Pandoc is installed.
Also make sure sphinx is available, which should be installed with requirements-dev.txt
.
You can also run the following in the docker container using
> docker/console
To build the docs, you can use make html
, and to build the docs and start a server that watches for changes, use make livehtml
:
> cd docs
> make html
> make livehtml
If using make livehtml
, once the server starts, navigate to http://localhost:8000 to see the docs.
Use 'make' without arguments to see a list of available commands.
Adding a new package
To create a new stactools
package, use the stactools
package template.
stactools
utilizes Python's namespace packages to provide a suite of tools all under the stactools
namespace.
If you would like your package to be considered for inclusion as a core stactools
package, please open an issue on this repository with a link to your package repository.
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