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A GPU-accelerated image generation toolkit for building image tiles and MRF files on-demand from Earth science data

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GPU-Data-To-Image Prototype for Tiled Raster Data

This prototype allows you to quickly generate image tiles and MRF files from raw data and on-demand using GPUs, using different colormaps and formats.

Setup

This library requires NVIDIA CUDA, which can be downloaded here. The remaining requirements are Python requirements and can be installed with pip install -r requirements.txt. The data folder contains a small (1 tile) pickled data file which can be used to run the default scripts. However, the only imagery which can be generated is the (0, 0, 0) overview and a one-tile MRF file.

To get more data, download a large data file like 20160628-JPL-L4UHfnd-GLOB-v01-fv04-MUR.nc and drag it to the data folder in this repository. Then update the product by passing a different name to the Product class. By default, the program will look for the appropriate colormap in the colormaps folder (same name) and online using NASA GIBS. Try to name the data file the same thing as the official NASA product designation. You can also use the parser.py file to pull date from the public NEXUS/SDAP backend.

core.py

core.py contains the core algorithms for generating mrf files and producing tiles from data. This has been tested mostly on a binary data file 20160628-JPL-L4UHfnd-GLOB-v01-fv04-MUR.nc, but should work with minor adjustments for other data files and data pulled directly from the NEXUS backend. In particular, you can preload tiles from the NEXUS backend and save them in a pickle format or use the data directly. See parser.py for this utility.

server.py

server.py is a simple flask server supporting a subset of the WMTS protocol. If run directly, it can be used to query tiles in a WMTS format. This is very primitive, and the WMTS support extends only to the TileMatrix, TileCol, and TileRow fields in the WMTS string, as well as any keywords you define in server.py. To start the server, use ./run.sh, which will run a local server at localhost:5000 by default.

mrfgen.py

mrfgen.py generates an MRF with desired configurations from the raw data. See core.py for configuration options supported.

parser.py

parser.py loads data from the NEXUS JSON backend and formats it into a Numpy array. This is largely unfinished and will need some tweaking. Hopefully when this is incorporated directly into the backend we will receive Numpy arrays directly instead of JSON files.

Algorithm Overview

This code uses PyTorch for GPU acceleration, a near Numpy-clone with built-in GPU support for PyTorch Tensors, equivalents of Numpy arrays. You can simply call my_tensor.to("cuda:0") or my_tensor.to("cpu") to make all code run on the GPU or CPU. Basically, all we do is download and parse colormaps from GIBS or the Sea Level Change portal, load the raw data into a PyTorch tensor, apply some appropriate scalings (some netcdf files are stored as long integers with a floating point offset specified), rescale to integers in the range [0, len(colormap)), convert to RGB colors, copy back to the CPU, and server to the user. Downsampling is accomplished either by simply indexing the arrays with arr[::2, ::2] (for 2x downsampling), or using torch.nn.functional.avg_pool2d (which does average downsampling). This second method can be replicated in Numpy using PyTorch, Numpy convolutions, or skimage.measure.block_reduce.

This can be run on the cpu by passing device="cpu" or the appropriate dictionary config to mrfgen or gettile.

To adapt this to the Apache Spark backend, basically don't load data in the Product constructor and dispatch Apache Spark workers to handle a subset of the data tile requested by the user. For downsampled layers, you should take every 2 ** n column, i.e. use arr[::2] to downsample, or do average downsampling, and then apply the appropriate colormap and encode the result as a PNG or JPEG (faster) and serve it back to the user with an image ContentType.

The current implementation assumes that colormaps are evenly spaced, so just dividing by the bin spacing works for binning. This isn't always true, but you can probably use a dictionary or numpy digitize function for more exotic colormaps.

The algorithm only loads the data needed for each tile, which is the entire dataset for the level 0 TileMatrix, but drops by a factor of 4 for each lower-level overview.

MRF Generation

MRF generation uses the same basic algorithm, but loads the entire dataset and segments it into all possible tiles which are saved in the MRF format. This can use various image formats within the MRF and different downsampling methods. This could be significantly improved by parallelizing the process of encoding the image files, since the main overhead is not computation but the expense of creating PNG or JPEG strings from the Numpy arrays.

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