PDAL Python support allows you to process data with PDAL into Numpy arrays. It provides a PDAL extension module to control Python interaction with PDAL. Additionally, you can use it to fetch schema and metadata from PDAL operations.
Note The PDAL Python bindings require the PDAL base library installed. Source code can be found at https://pdal.io and GitHub.
PDAL Python support is installable via PyPI:
pip install PDAL
Developers can control many settings including debug builds and where the libraries are installed using scikit-build-core settings:
python -m pip install \ -Cbuild-dir=build \ -e \ . \ --config-settings=cmake.build-type="Debug" \ -vv \ --no-deps \ --no-build-isolation
The repository for PDAL's Python extension is available at https://github.com/PDAL/python
Python support released independently from PDAL itself as of PDAL 1.7.
Given the following pipeline, which simply reads an ASPRS LAS file and
sorts it by the X
dimension:
json = """
{
"pipeline": [
"1.2-with-color.las",
{
"type": "filters.sort",
"dimension": "X"
}
]
}"""
import pdal
pipeline = pdal.Pipeline(json)
count = pipeline.execute()
arrays = pipeline.arrays
metadata = pipeline.metadata
log = pipeline.log
The previous example specified the pipeline as a JSON string. Alternatively, a
pipeline can be constructed by creating Stage
instances and piping them
together. For example, the previous pipeline can be specified as:
pipeline = pdal.Reader("1.2-with-color.las") | pdal.Filter.sort(dimension="X")
- A stage is an instance of
pdal.Reader
,pdal.Filter
orpdal.Writer
. - A stage can be instantiated by passing as keyword arguments the options
applicable to the respective PDAL stage. For more on PDAL stages and their
options, check the PDAL documentation on Stage Objects.
- The
filename
option ofReaders
andWriters
as well as thetype
option ofFilters
can be passed positionally as the first argument. - The
inputs
option specifies a sequence of stages to be set as input to the current stage. Each input can be either the string tag of another stage, or theStage
instance itself.
- The
- The
Reader
,Filter
andWriter
classes come with static methods for all the respective PDAL drivers. For example,pdal.Filter.head()
is a shortcut forpdal.Filter(type="filters.head")
. These methods are auto-generated by introspectingpdal
and the available options are included in each method's docstring:
>>> help(pdal.Filter.head) Help on function head in module pdal.pipeline: head(**kwargs) Return N points from beginning of the point cloud. user_data: User JSON log: Debug output filename option_file: File from which to read additional options where: Expression describing points to be passed to this filter where_merge='auto': If 'where' option is set, describes how skipped points should be merged with kept points in standard mode. count='10': Number of points to return from beginning. If 'invert' is true, number of points to drop from the beginning. invert='false': If true, 'count' specifies the number of points to skip from the beginning.
A pdal.Pipeline
instance can be created from:
- a JSON string:
Pipeline(json_string)
- a sequence of
Stage
instances:Pipeline([stage1, stage2])
- a single
Stage
with theStage.pipeline
method:stage.pipeline()
- nothing:
Pipeline()
creates a pipeline with no stages. - joining
Stage
and/or otherPipeline
instances together with the pipe operator (|
):stage1 | stage2
stage1 | pipeline1
pipeline1 | stage1
pipeline1 | pipeline2
Every application of the pipe operator creates a new Pipeline
instance. To
update an existing Pipeline
use the respective in-place pipe operator (|=
):
# update pipeline in-place
pipeline = pdal.Pipeline()
pipeline |= stage
pipeline |= pipeline2
The following more complex scenario demonstrates the full cycling between PDAL and Python:
- Read a small testfile from GitHub into a Numpy array
- Filters the array with Numpy for Intensity
- Pass the filtered array to PDAL to be filtered again
- Write the final filtered array to a LAS file and a TileDB array via the TileDB-PDAL integration using the TileDB writer plugin
import pdal
data = "https://github.com/PDAL/PDAL/blob/master/test/data/las/1.2-with-color.las?raw=true"
pipeline = pdal.Reader.las(filename=data).pipeline()
print(pipeline.execute()) # 1065 points
# Get the data from the first array
# [array([(637012.24, 849028.31, 431.66, 143, 1,
# 1, 1, 0, 1, -9., 132, 7326, 245380.78254963, 68, 77, 88),
# dtype=[('X', '<f8'), ('Y', '<f8'), ('Z', '<f8'), ('Intensity', '<u2'),
# ('ReturnNumber', 'u1'), ('NumberOfReturns', 'u1'), ('ScanDirectionFlag', 'u1'),
# ('EdgeOfFlightLine', 'u1'), ('Classification', 'u1'), ('ScanAngleRank', '<f4'),
# ('UserData', 'u1'), ('PointSourceId', '<u2'),
# ('GpsTime', '<f8'), ('Red', '<u2'), ('Green', '<u2'), ('Blue', '<u2')])
arr = pipeline.arrays[0]
# Filter out entries that have intensity < 50
intensity = arr[arr["Intensity"] > 30]
print(len(intensity)) # 704 points
# Now use pdal to clamp points that have intensity 100 <= v < 300
pipeline = pdal.Filter.expression(expression="Intensity >= 100 && Intensity < 300").pipeline(intensity)
print(pipeline.execute()) # 387 points
clamped = pipeline.arrays[0]
# Write our intensity data to a LAS file and a TileDB array. For TileDB it is
# recommended to use Hilbert ordering by default with geospatial point cloud data,
# which requires specifying a domain extent. This can be determined automatically
# from a stats filter that computes statistics about each dimension (min, max, etc.).
pipeline = pdal.Writer.las(
filename="clamped.las",
offset_x="auto",
offset_y="auto",
offset_z="auto",
scale_x=0.01,
scale_y=0.01,
scale_z=0.01,
).pipeline(clamped)
pipeline |= pdal.Filter.stats() | pdal.Writer.tiledb(array_name="clamped")
print(pipeline.execute()) # 387 points
# Dump the TileDB array schema
import tiledb
with tiledb.open("clamped") as a:
print(a.schema)
Streamable pipelines (pipelines that consist exclusively of streamable PDAL
stages) can be executed in streaming mode via Pipeline.iterator()
. This
returns an iterator object that yields Numpy arrays of up to chunk_size
size
(default=10000) at a time.
import pdal
pipeline = pdal.Reader("test/data/autzen-utm.las") | pdal.Filter.expression(expression="Intensity > 80 && Intensity < 120)")
for array in pipeline.iterator(chunk_size=500):
print(len(array))
# or to concatenate all arrays into one
# full_array = np.concatenate(list(pipeline))
Pipeline.iterator()
also takes an optional prefetch
parameter (default=0)
to allow prefetching up to to this number of arrays in parallel and buffering
them until they are yielded to the caller.
If you just want to execute a streamable pipeline in streaming mode and don't
need to access the data points (typically when the pipeline has Writer stage(s)),
you can use the Pipeline.execute_streaming(chunk_size)
method instead. This
is functionally equivalent to sum(map(len, pipeline.iterator(chunk_size)))
but more efficient as it avoids allocating and filling any arrays in memory.
Some PDAL stages (for instance filters.delaunay
) create TIN type mesh data.
This data can be accessed in Python using the Pipeline.meshes
property, which returns a numpy.ndarray
of shape (1,n) where n is the number of Triangles in the mesh.
If the PointView contains no mesh data, then n = 0.
Each Triangle is a tuple (A,B,C)
where A, B and C are indices into the PointView identifying the point that is the vertex for the Triangle.
The meshes property provides the face data but is not easy to use as a mesh. Therefore, we have provided optional Integration into the Meshio library.
The pdal.Pipeline
class provides the get_meshio(idx: int) -> meshio.Mesh
method. This
method creates a Mesh object from the PointView array and mesh properties.
Note
The meshio integration requires that meshio is installed (e.g. pip install meshio
). If it is not, then the method fails with an informative RuntimeError.
Simple use of the functionality could be as follows:
import pdal
...
pl = pdal.Pipeline(pipeline)
pl.execute()
mesh = pl.get_meshio(0)
mesh.write('test.obj')
USE-CASE : Take a LiDAR map, create a mesh from the ground points, split into tiles and store the tiles in PostGIS.
Note
Like Pipeline.arrays
, Pipeline.meshes
returns a list of numpy.ndarray
to provide for the case where the output from a Pipeline is multiple PointViews
(example using 1.2-with-color.las and not doing the ground classification for clarity)
import pdal
import psycopg2
import io
pl = (
pdal.Reader(".../python/test/data/1.2-with-color.las")
| pdal.Filter.splitter(length=1000)
| pdal.Filter.delaunay()
)
pl.execute()
conn = psycopg(%CONNNECTION_STRING%)
buffer = io.StringIO
for idx in range(len(pl.meshes)):
m = pl.get_meshio(idx)
if m:
m.write(buffer, file_format = "wkt")
with conn.cursor() as curr:
curr.execute(
"INSERT INTO %table-name% (mesh) VALUES (ST_GeomFromEWKT(%(ewkt)s)",
{ "ewkt": buffer.getvalue()}
)
conn.commit()
conn.close()
buffer.close()
- PDAL 2.6+
- Python >=3.9
- Pybind11 (eg
pip install pybind11[global]
) - Numpy >= 1.22 (eg
pip install numpy
) - scikit-build-core (eg
pip install scikit-build-core
)