/*!
\page gdal_virtual_file_systems GDAL Virtual File Systems (compressed, network hosted, etc...): /vsimem, /vsizip, /vsitar, /vsicurl, ...
\section gdal_virtual_file_systems_toc Contents
- \ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_intro
- \ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_chaining
- \ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_drivers
- \ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsizip
- \ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsigzip
- \ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsitar
- \ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_network
- \ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsicurl
- \ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsicurl_streaming
- \ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsis3
- \ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsis3_streaming
- \ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsigs
- \ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsigs_streaming
- \ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsiaz
- \ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsiaz_streaming
- \ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsioss
- \ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsioss_streaming
- \ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsiswift
- \ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsiswift_streaming
- \ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsistdin
- \ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsistdout
- \ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsimem
- \ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_subfile
- \ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsisparse
- \ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsicache
- \ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsicrypt
\section gdal_virtual_file_systems_intro Introduction
GDAL can access files located on "standard" file systems, ie in the / hierarchy
on Unix-like systems or in C:\, D:\, etc... drives on Windows. But most GDAL
raster and vector drivers use a GDAL specific abstraction to access files. This
makes it possible to access less standard types of files, such as in-memory files,
compressed files (.zip, .gz, .tar, .tar.gz archives), encrypted files, files
stored on network (either publicly accessible, or in private buckets of commercial
cloud storage services), etc.
Each special file system has a prefix, and the general syntax to name a file is
/vsiPREFIX/...
Example:
gdalinfo /vsizip/my.zip/my.tif
\section gdal_virtual_file_systems_chaining Chaining
It is possible to chain multiple file system handlers.
ogrinfo a shapefile in a zip file on the internet:
ogrinfo -ro -al -so /vsizip//vsicurl/http://svn.osgeo.org/gdal/trunk/autotest/ogr/data/poly.zip
ogrinfo a shapefile in a zip file on an ftp:
ogrinfo -ro -al -so /vsizip//vsicurl/ftp://user:password@example.com/foldername/file.zip/example.shp
\section gdal_virtual_file_systems_drivers Drivers supporting virtual file systems
Virtual file systems can only be used with GDAL or OGR drivers supporting the
"large file API", which is now the vast majority of file based drivers. The
full list of these formats can be obtained by looking at the driver marked with
'v' when running either gdalinfo --formats or ogrinfo --formats.
Notable exceptions are the netCDF, HDF4 and HDF5 drivers.
\section gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsizip /vsizip/ (.zip archives)
/vsizip/ is a file handler that allows reading ZIP archives on-the-fly
without decompressing them beforehand.
To point to a file instide a zip file, the filename must be of the form
/vsizip/path/to/the/file.zip/path/inside/the/zip/file, where
path/to/the/file.zip is relative or absolute and path/inside/the/zip/file is
the relative path to the file inside the archive.
To use the .zip as a directory, you can use /vsizip/path/to/the/file.zip or
/vsizip/path/to/the/file.zip/subdir. Directory listing is available with
VSIReadDir(). A VSIStatL("/vsizip/...") call will return the uncompressed size
of the file. Directories inside the ZIP file can be distinguished from regular
files with the VSI_ISDIR(stat.st_mode) macro as for regular file systems.
Getting directory listing and file statistics are fast operations.
Note: in the particular case where the .zip file contains a single file located
at its root, just mentioning "/vsizip/path/to/the/file.zip" will work
Examples:
/vsizip/my.zip/my.tif (relative path to the .zip)
/vsizip//home/even/my.zip/subdir/my.tif (absolute path to the .zip)
/vsizip/c:\\users\\even\\my.zip\\subdir\\my.tif
.kmz, .ods and .xlsx extensions are also detected as valid extensions for
zip-compatible archives.
Starting with GDAL 2.2, an alternate syntax is available so as to enable
chaining and not being dependent on .zip extension :
/vsizip/{/path/to/the/archive}/path/inside/the/zip/file.
Note that /path/to/the/archive may also itself use this alternate syntax.
Write capabilities are also available. They allow creating
a new zip file and adding new files to an already existing (or just created)
zip file.
Read and write operations cannot be interleaved. The new zip must be
closed before being re-opened for read.
\section gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsigzip /vsigzip/ (gzipped file)
/vsigzip/ is a file handler that allows reading on-the-fly
in GZip (.gz) files without decompressing them priorly.
To view a gzipped file as uncompressed by GDAL, you must use the
/vsigzip/path/to/the/file.gz syntax, where
path/to/the/file.gz is relative or absolute
Examples:
/vsigzip/my.gz (relative path to the .gz)
/vsigzip//home/even/my.gz (absolute path to the .gz)
/vsigzip/c:\\users\\even\\my.gz
VSIStatL() will return the uncompressed file size, but this is potentially
a slow operation on large files, since it requires uncompressing the whole file.
Seeking to the end of the file, or at random locations, is similarly slow. To
speed up that process, "snapshots" are internally created in memory so as to
be able being able to seek to part of the files already decompressed in a faster
way. This mechanism of snapshots also apply to /vsizip/ files.
When the file is located in a writable location, a file with extension .gz.properties
is created with an indication of the uncompressed file size (the creation of that
file can be disabled by setting the CPL_VSIL_GZIP_WRITE_PROPERTIES configuration
option to NO).
\section gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsitar /vsitar/ (.tar, .tgz archives)
/vsitar/ is a file handler that allows reading on-the-fly
in regular uncompressed .tar or compressed .tgz or .tar.gz archives,
without decompressing them priorly.
To point to a file instide a .tar, .tgz .tar.gz file, the filename must be of the form
/vsitar/path/to/the/file.tar/path/inside/the/tar/file, where
path/to/the/file.tar is relative or absolute and path/inside/the/tar/file is
the relative path to the file inside the archive.
To use the .tar as a directory, you can use /vsizip/path/to/the/file.tar or
/vsitar/path/to/the/file.tar/subdir. Directory listing is available with
VSIReadDir(). A VSIStatL("/vsitar/...") call will return the uncompressed size
of the file. Directories inside the TAR file can be distinguished from regular
files with the VSI_ISDIR(stat.st_mode) macro as for regular file systems.
Getting directory listing and file statistics are fast operations.
Note: in the particular case where the .tar file contains a single file located
at its root, just mentioning "/vsitar/path/to/the/file.tar" will work
Examples:
/vsitar/my.tar/my.tif (relative path to the .tar)
/vsitar//home/even/my.tar/subdir/my.tif (absolute path to the .tar)
/vsitar/c:\\users\\even\\my.tar\\subdir\\my.tif
Starting with GDAL 2.2, an alternate syntax is available so as to enable
chaining and not being dependent on .tar extension :
/vsitar/{/path/to/the/archive}/path/inside/the/tar/file.
Note that /path/to/the/archive may also itself use this alternate syntax.
\section gdal_virtual_file_systems_network Network based file systems
A generic \ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsicurl "/vsicurl/" file system
handler exists for online resources that do
not require particular signed authentication schemes. It is specialized into
sub-filesystems for commercial cloud storage services, such as
\ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsis3 "/vsis3/",
\ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsigs "/vsigs/",
\ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsiaz "/vsiaz/",
\ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsioss "/vsioss/" or
\ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsiswift "/vsiswift/".
When reading of entire files in a streaming way is possible, prefer using the
\ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsicurl_streaming "/vsicurl_streaming/",
and its variants for the above cloud storage services, for more efficiency.
\subsection gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsicurl /vsicurl/ (http/https/ftp files: random access)
/vsicurl/ is a file system handler that allows on-the-fly random reading of
files available through HTTP/FTP web protocols, without prior download of the
entire file. It requires GDAL to be built against libcurl.
Recognized filenames are of the form /vsicurl/http[s]://path/to/remote/resource
or /vsicurl/ftp://path/to/remote/resource where path/to/remote/resource is
the URL of a remote resource.
Example of ogrinfo a shapefile on the internet:
ogrinfo -ro -al -so /vsicurl/http://svn.osgeo.org/gdal/trunk/autotest/ogr/data/poly.shp
Starting with GDAL 2.3, options can be passed in the filename with the
following syntax:
/vsicurl?[option_i=val_i&]*url=http://...
where each option name and value (including the value of "url") is URL-encoded.
Currently supported options are :
- use_head=yes/no: whether the HTTP HEAD request can be emitted.
Default to YES.
Setting this option overrides the behaviour of the
CPL_VSIL_CURL_USE_HEAD configuration option.
- max_retry=number: default to 0.
Setting this option overrides the behaviour of the
GDAL_HTTP_MAX_RETRY configuration option.
- retry_delay=number_in_seconds: default to 30.
Setting this option overrides the behaviour of the
GDAL_HTTP_RETRY_DELAY configuration option.
- list_dir=yes/no: whether an attempt to read the file list of the
directory where the file is located should be done. Default to YES.
Partial downloads (requires the HTTP server to support random reading) are
done with a 16 KB granularity by default (starting with GDAL 2.3, the chunk
size can be configured with the CPL_VSIL_CURL_CHUNK_SIZE configuration option,
with a value in bytes.) If the driver detects sequential
reading it will progressively increase the chunk size up to 2 MB to improve
download performance.
The GDAL_HTTP_PROXY, GDAL_HTTP_PROXYUSERPWD and GDAL_PROXY_AUTH configuration
options can be used to define a proxy server. The syntax to use is the one of
Curl CURLOPT_PROXY, CURLOPT_PROXYUSERPWD and CURLOPT_PROXYAUTH options.
Starting with GDAL 2.1.3, the CURL_CA_BUNDLE or SSL_CERT_FILE configuration
options can be used to set the path to the Certification Authority (CA)
bundle file (if not specified, curl will use a file in a system location).
Starting with GDAL 2.3, additional HTTP headers can be sent by setting the
GDAL_HTTP_HEADER_FILE configuration
option to point to a filename of a text file with "key: value" HTTP headers.
Starting with GDAL 2.3, the GDAL_HTTP_MAX_RETRY (number of attempts) and
GDAL_HTTP_RETRY_DELAY (in seconds) configuration option can be set, so that
request retries are done in case of HTTP errors 429, 502, 503 or 504.
More generally options of CPLHTTPFetch() available through configuration
options are available.
The file can be cached in RAM by setting the configuration option
VSI_CACHE to TRUE. The cache size defaults to 25 MB, but can be
modified by setting the configuration option VSI_CACHE_SIZE (in
bytes). Content in that cache is discarded when the file handle is
closed.
In addition, a global least-recently-used cache of 16 MB shared among all
downloaded content is enabled by default, and content in it may be reused
after a file handle has been closed and reopen. Starting with GDAL 2.3, the
size of this global LRU cache can be modified by setting the configuration
option CPL_VSIL_CURL_CACHE_SIZE (in bytes).
Starting with GDAL 2.3, the
CPL_VSIL_CURL_NON_CACHED configuration option can be set to values like
"/vsicurl/http://example.com/foo.tif:/vsicurl/http://example.com/some_directory",
so that at file handle closing, all cached content related to the mentioned
file(s) is no longer cached. This can help when dealing with resources that
can be modified during execution of GDAL related code. Alternatively,
VSICurlClearCache() can be used.
Starting with GDAL 2.1, /vsicurl/ will try to query directly redirected URLs
to Amazon S3 signed URLs during their validity period, so as to minimize
round-trips. This behaviour can be disabled by setting the configuration
option CPL_VSIL_CURL_USE_S3_REDIRECT to NO.
VSIStatL() will return the size in st_size member and file nature- file or
directory - in st_mode member (the later only reliable with FTP resources for
now).
VSIReadDir() should be able to parse the HTML directory listing returned by
the most popular web servers, such as Apache or Microsoft IIS.
\subsection gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsicurl_streaming /vsicurl_streaming/ (http/https/ftp files: streaming)
/vsicurl_streaming/ is a file system handler that allows on-the-fly sequential
reading of files streamed through HTTP/FTP web protocols, without prior download of the
entire file. It requires GDAL to be built against libcurl.
Although this file handler is able seek to random offsets in the file, this
will not be efficient. If you need efficient random access and that the
server supports range dowloading, you should use the /vsicurl/ file system
handler instead.
Recognized filenames are of the form /vsicurl_streaming/http[s]://path/to/remote/resource
or /vsicurl_streaming/ftp://path/to/remote/resource where path/to/remote/resource is
the URL of a remote resource.
The GDAL_HTTP_PROXY, GDAL_HTTP_PROXYUSERPWD and GDAL_PROXY_AUTH configuration
options can be used to define a proxy server. The syntax to use is the one of
Curl CURLOPT_PROXY, CURLOPT_PROXYUSERPWD and CURLOPT_PROXYAUTH options.
Starting with GDAL 2.1.3, the CURL_CA_BUNDLE or SSL_CERT_FILE configuration
options can be used to set the path to the Certification Authority (CA)
bundle file (if not specified, curl will use a file in a system location).
The file can be cached in RAM by setting the configuration option VSI_CACHE
to TRUE. The cache size defaults to 25 MB, but can be modified by setting the
configuration option VSI_CACHE_SIZE (in bytes).
VSIStatL() will return the size in st_size member and file nature- file or
directory - in st_mode member (the later only reliable with FTP resources for
now).
\subsection gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsis3 /vsis3/ (AWS S3 files: random reading)
/vsis3/ is a file system handler that allows on-the-fly random reading of
(primarily non-public) files available in AWS S3 buckets, without prior download of the
entire file. It requires GDAL to be built against libcurl.
It also allows sequential writing of files (no seeks or read operations are
then allowed). Deletion of files with VSIUnlink() is also supported.
Starting with GDAL 2.3, creation of directories with VSIMkdir() and deletion
of (empty) directories with VSIRmdir() are also possible.
Recognized filenames are of the form /vsis3/bucket/key where
bucket is the name of the S3 bucket and key the S3 object "key", i.e.
a filename potentially containing subdirectories.
The generalities of \ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsicurl "/vsicurl/" apply.
Several authentication methods are possible. In order of priorities (first
mentioned is the most prioritary)
- If AWS_NO_SIGN_REQUEST=YES configuration option is set, request signing
is disabled. This option might be used for buckets with public access rights.
Available since GDAL 2.3
- The AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY and AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID configuration options can
be set. The AWS_SESSION_TOKEN configuration option must be set when
temporary credentials are used.
- Starting with GDAL 2.3, alternate ways of providing credentials similar to
what the "aws" command line utility or Boto3 support can be used. If the
above mentioned environment variables are not provided, the ~/.aws/credentials
or %UserProfile%/.aws/credentials file will be read (or the file pointed by
CPL_AWS_CREDENTIALS_FILE). The profile may be
specified with the AWS_PROFILE environment variable (the default profile is "default")
- The ~/.aws/config or %UserProfile%/.aws/config file may also be used (or the
file pointer by AWS_CONFIG_FILE) to retrieve credentials and the AWS region.
- If none of the above method succeeds, instance profile credentials will be
retrieved when GDAL is used on EC2 instances.
The AWS_REGION (or AWS_DEFAULT_REGION
starting with GDAL 2.3) configuration option may be
set to one of the supported
S3
regions and defaults to 'us-east-1'.
Starting with GDAL 2.2, the
AWS_REQUEST_PAYER configuration option may be set to "requester" to
facilitate use with
Requester
Pays buckets.
The AWS_S3_ENDPOINT configuration option defaults to s3.amazonaws.com.
On writing, the file is uploaded using the S3
multipart upload API.
The size of chunks is set to 50 MB by default, allowing creating files up to
500 GB (10000 parts of 50 MB each). If larger files are needed, then increase
the value of the VSIS3_CHUNK_SIZE config option to a larger value (expressed
in MB). In case the process is killed and the file not properly closed, the
multipart upload will remain open, causing Amazon to charge you for the parts
storage. You'll have to abort yourself with other means such "ghost" uploads
(e.g. with the s3cmd utility) For
files smaller than the chunk size, a simple PUT request is used instead of
the multipart upload API.
@since GDAL 2.1
\subsection gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsis3_streaming /vsis3_streaming/ (AWS S3 files: streaming)
/vsis3_streaming/ is a file system handler that allows on-the-fly sequential
reading of files (primarily non-public) files available in AWS S3 buckets,
without prior download of the
entire file. It requires GDAL to be built against libcurl.
Recognized filenames are of the form /vsis3_streaming/bucket/key where
bucket is the name of the S3 bucket and resource the S3 object "key", i.e.
a filename potentially containing subdirectories.
Authentication options, and read-only features, are identical to
\ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsis3 "/vsis3/"
@since GDAL 2.1
\subsection gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsigs /vsigs/ (Google Cloud Storage files: random reading)
/vsigs/ is a file system handler that allows on-the-fly random reading of
(primarily non-public) files available in Google Cloud Storage buckets,
without prior download of the
entire file. It requires GDAL to be built against libcurl.
Starting with GDAL 2.3, it also allows sequential writing of files (no seeks
or read operations are then allowed). Deletion of files with VSIUnlink(),
creation of directories with VSIMkdir() and deletion of (empty) directories with
VSIRmdir() are also possible.
Recognized filenames are of the form /vsigs/bucket/key where
bucket is the name of the bucket and key the object "key", i.e.
a filename potentially containing subdirectories.
The generalities of \ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsicurl "/vsicurl/" apply.
Several authentication methods are possible. In order of priorities (first
mentioned is the most prioritary)
- The GS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY and GS_ACCESS_KEY_ID configuration options can be
set for AWS style authentication
- The GDAL_HTTP_HEADER_FILE configuration
option to point to a filename of a text file with "key: value" headers.
Typically, it must contain a "Authorization: Bearer XXXXXXXXX" line.
- (GDAL >= 2.3) The GS_OAUTH2_REFRESH_TOKEN
configuration option can be set to use OAuth2 client authentication.
See http://code.google.com/apis/accounts/docs/OAuth2.html
This refresh token can be obtained with the "gdal_auth.py -s storage" or
"gdal_auth.py -s storage-rw" script
Note: instead of using the default GDAL application credentials, you may
define the GS_OAUTH2_CLIENT_ID and GS_OAUTH2_CLIENT_SECRET configuration
options (need to be defined both for gdal_auth.py and later execution of /vsigs)
- (GDAL >= 2.3) The GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS configuration option
an be set to point to a JSon file containing OAuth2 service account credentials,
in particular a private key and a client email.
See https://developers.google.com/identity/protocols/OAuth2ServiceAccount
for more details on this authentication method.
The bucket must grant the "Storage Legacy Bucket Owner" or "Storage Legacy Bucket Reader"
permissions to the service account. The GS_OAUTH2_SCOPE configuration option
can be set to change the default permission scope from
"https://www.googleapis.com/auth/devstorage.read_write"
to "https://www.googleapis.com/auth/devstorage.read_only" if needed.
- (GDAL >= 2.3) Variant of the previous method.
The GS_OAUTH2_PRIVATE_KEY (or GS_OAUTH2_PRIVATE_KEY_FILE)
and GS_OAUTH2_CLIENT_EMAIL can be set to use OAuth2 service account authentication.
See https://developers.google.com/identity/protocols/OAuth2ServiceAccount
for more details on this authentication method.
The GS_OAUTH2_PRIVATE_KEY configuration option must contain the private key
as a inline string, starting with "-----BEGIN PRIVATE KEY-----"
Alternatively the GS_OAUTH2_PRIVATE_KEY_FILE configuration option can be set
to indicate a filename that contains such a private key.
The bucket must grant the "Storage Legacy Bucket Owner" or "Storage Legacy Bucket Reader"
permissions to the service account. The GS_OAUTH2_SCOPE configuration option
can be set to change the default permission scope from
"https://www.googleapis.com/auth/devstorage.read_write"
to "https://www.googleapis.com/auth/devstorage.read_only" if needed.
- (GDAL >= 2.3) An alternate way of providing credentials similar to
what the "gsutil" command line utility or Boto3 support can be used. If the
above mentioned environment variables are not provided, the ~/.boto
or %UserProfile%/.boto file will be read (or the file pointed by
CPL_GS_CREDENTIALS_FILE) for the gs_secret_access_key and gs_access_key_id
entries for AWS style authentication. If not found, it will look for the
gs_oauth2_refresh_token (and optionally client_id and client_secret) entry
for OAuth2 client authentication.
- (GDAL >= 2.3) Finally if none of the above method succeeds, the code
will check if the current machine is a Google Compute Engine instance, and
if so will use the permissions associated to it (using the default service
account associated with the VM). To force a machine to be detected as a GCE instance
(for example for code running in a container with no access to the boot logs), you
can set CPL_MACHINE_IS_GCE to YES.
@since GDAL 2.2
\subsection gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsigs_streaming /vsigs_streaming/ (Google Cloud Storage files: streaming)
/vsigs_streaming/ is a file system handler that allows on-the-fly sequential
reading of files (primarily non-public) files available in Google Cloud Storage
buckets, without prior download of the
entire file. It requires GDAL to be built against libcurl.
Recognized filenames are of the form /vsigs_streaming/bucket/key where
bucket is the name of the bucket and key the object "key", i.e.
a filename potentially containing subdirectories.
Authentication options, and read-only features, are identical to
\ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsigs "/vsigs/"
@since GDAL 2.2
\subsection gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsiaz /vsiaz/ (Microsoft Azure Blob files: random reading)
/vsiaz/ is a file system handler that allows on-the-fly random reading of
(primarily non-public) files available in Microsoft Azure Blob containers,
without prior download of the entire file.
It requires GDAL to be built against libcurl.
It also allows sequential writing of files (no seeks
or read operations are then allowed). A block blob will be created if the
file size is below 4 MB. Beyond, an append blob will be created (with a
maximum file size of 195 GB).
Deletion of files with VSIUnlink(), creation of directories with VSIMkdir()
and deletion of (empty) directories with VSIRmdir() are also possible.
Note: when using VSIMkdir(), a special hidden .gdal_marker_for_dir empty
file is created, since Azure Blob does not support natively empty directories.
If that file is the last one remaining in a directory, VSIRmdir() will
automatically remove it. This file will not be seen with VSIReadDir().
If removing files from directories not created with VSIMkdir(), when the
last file is deleted, its directory is automatically removed by Azure, so
the sequence VSIUnlink("/vsiaz/container/subdir/lastfile") followed by
VSIRmdir("/vsiaz/container/subdir") will fail on the VSIRmdir() invocation.
Recognized filenames are of the form /vsiaz/container/key where
container is the name of the container and key the object "key", i.e.
a filename potentially containing subdirectories.
The generalities of \ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsicurl "/vsicurl/" apply.
Several authentication methods are possible. In order of priorities (first
mentioned is the most prioritary)
- The AZURE_STORAGE_CONNECTION_STRING configuration option, given in the
access key section of the administration interface. It contains both the
account name and a secret key.
- The AZURE_STORAGE_ACCOUNT and AZURE_STORAGE_ACCESS_KEY configuration
options pointing respectively to the account name and a secret key.
@since GDAL 2.3
\subsection gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsiaz_streaming /vsiaz_streaming/ (Microsoft Azure Blob files: streaming)
/vsiaz_streaming/ is a file system handler that allows on-the-fly sequential
reading of files (primarily non-public) files available in Microsoft Azure Blob containers,
buckets, without prior download of the
entire file. It requires GDAL to be built against libcurl.
Recognized filenames are of the form /vsiaz_streaming/container/key where
container is the name of the container and key the object "key", i.e.
a filename potentially containing subdirectories.
Authentication options, and read-only features, are identical to
\ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsiaz "/vsiaz/"
@since GDAL 2.3
\subsection gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsioss /vsioss/ (Alibaba Cloud OSS files: random reading)
/vsioss/ is a file system handler that allows on-the-fly random reading of
(primarily non-public) files available in Alibaba Cloud Object Storage Service
(OSS) buckets, without prior download of the entire file.
It requires GDAL to be built against libcurl.
It also allows sequential writing of files (no seeks or read operations are
then allowed). Deletion of files with VSIUnlink() is also supported.
Creation of directories with VSIMkdir() and deletion
of (empty) directories with VSIRmdir() are also possible.
Recognized filenames are of the form /vsioss/bucket/key where
bucket is the name of the OSS bucket and key the OSS object "key", i.e.
a filename potentially containing subdirectories.
The generalities of \ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsicurl "/vsicurl/" apply.
The OSS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY and OSS_ACCESS_KEY_ID configuration options *must*
be set. The OSS_ENDPOINT configuration option should normally be set to the
appropriate value, which reflects the region attached to the bucket.
The default is oss-us-east-1.aliyuncs.com. If the bucket is
stored in another region than oss-us-east-1, the code logic will redirect to
the appropriate endpoint.
On writing, the file is uploaded using the OSS
multipart upload API.
The size of chunks is set to 50 MB by default, allowing creating files up to
500 GB (10000 parts of 50 MB each). If larger files are needed, then increase
the value of the VSIOSS_CHUNK_SIZE config option to a larger value (expressed
in MB). In case the process is killed and the file not properly closed, the
multipart upload will remain open, causing Alibaba to charge you for the parts
storage. You'll have to abort yourself with other means. For
files smaller than the chunk size, a simple PUT request is used instead of
the multipart upload API.
@since GDAL 2.3
\subsection gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsioss_streaming /vsioss_streaming/ (Alibaba Cloud OSS files: streaming)
/vsioss_streaming/ is a file system handler that allows on-the-fly sequential
reading of files (primarily non-public) files available in Alibaba Cloud Object
Storage Service (OSS) buckets, without prior download of the
entire file. It requires GDAL to be built against libcurl.
Recognized filenames are of the form /vsioss_streaming/bucket/key where
bucket is the name of the bucket and key the object "key", i.e.
a filename potentially containing subdirectories.
Authentication options, and read-only features, are identical to
\ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsioss "/vsioss/"
@since GDAL 2.3
\subsection gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsiswift /vsiswift/ (OpenStack Swift Object Storage: random reading)
/vsiswift/ is a file system handler that allows on-the-fly random reading of
(primarily non-public) files available in
OpenStack Swift Object Storage
(swift) buckets, without prior download of the entire file.
It requires GDAL to be built against libcurl.
It also allows sequential writing of files (no seeks or read operations are
then allowed). Deletion of files with VSIUnlink() is also supported.
Creation of directories with VSIMkdir() and deletion
of (empty) directories with VSIRmdir() are also pswiftible.
Recognized filenames are of the form /vsiswift/bucket/key where
bucket is the name of the swift bucket and key the swift object "key", i.e.
a filename potentially containing subdirectories.
The generalities of \ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsicurl "/vsicurl/" apply.
Two authentication methods are possible. In order of priorities (first
mentioned is the most prioritary)
- The SWIFT_STORAGE_URL and SWIFT_AUTH_TOKEN configuration options are set
respectively to the storage URL (e.g http://127.0.0.1:12345/v1/AUTH_something)
and the value of the x-auth-token authorization token.
- The SWIFT_AUTH_V1_URL, SWIFT_USER and SWIFT_KEY configuration options are
set respectively to the endpoint of the Auth V1 authentication
(e.g http://127.0.0.1:12345/auth/v1.0), the user name and the key/password.
This authentication endpoint will be used to retrieve the storage URL and
authorization token mentioned in the first authentication method.
This file system handler also allows sequential writing of files (no seeks
or read operations are then allowed)
@since GDAL 2.3
\subsection gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsiswift_streaming /vsiswift_streaming/ (OpenStack Swift Object Storage: streaming)
/vsiswift_streaming/ is a file system handler that allows on-the-fly sequential
reading of files (primarily non-public) files available in
OpenStack Swift Object Storage
(swift) buckets, without prior download of the entire file.
It requires GDAL to be built against libcurl.
Recognized filenames are of the form /vsiswift_streaming/bucket/key where
bucket is the name of the bucket and key the object "key", i.e.
a filename potentially containing subdirectories.
Authentication options, and read-only features, are identical to
\ref gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsiswift "/vsiswift/"
@since GDAL 2.3
\section gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsistdin /vsistdin/ (standard input streaming)
/vsistdin/ is a file handler that allows reading from the standard input stream.
The filename syntax must be only "/vsistdin/"
The file operations available are of course limited to Read() and forward Seek().
Full seek in the first MB of a file is possible, and it is cached so that
closing, re-opening /vsistdin/ and reading within thist first megabyte, is
possible multiple times in the same process.
\section gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsistdout /vsistdout/ (standard output streaming)
/vsistdout/ is a file handler that allows writing into the standard output stream.
The filename syntax must be only "/vsistdout/"
The file operations available are of course limited to Write().
A variation of this file system exists as the /vsistdout_redirect/ file
system handler, where the output function can be defined with
VSIStdoutSetRedirection().
\section gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsimem /vsimem/ (in-memory files)
/vsimem/ is a file handler that allows block of memory to be
treated as files. All portions of the file system underneath the base
path "/vsimem/" will be handled by this driver.
Normal VSI*L functions can be used freely to create and destroy memory
arrays treating them as if they were real file system objects. Some
additional methods exist to efficient create memory file system objects
without duplicating original copies of the data or to "steal" the block
of memory associated with a memory file. See VSIFileFromMemBuffer() and
VSIGetMemFileBuffer()
Directory related functions are supported.
/vsimem/ files are visible within the same process. Multiple threads can
access in reading to the same underlying file, provided they used different
handles, but concurrent write and read operations on the same underlying file
are not supported (locking is left to the responsibility of calling code)
\section gdal_virtual_file_systems_subfile /vsisubfile/ (portions of files)
The /vsisubfile/ virtual file system handler allows access to subregions of
files, treating them as a file on their own to the virtual file
system functions (VSIFOpenL(), etc).
A special form of the filename is used to indicate a subportion
of another file:
/vsisubfile/<offset>[_<size>],<filename>
The size parameter is optional. Without it the remainder of the file from
the start offset as treated as part of the subfile. Otherwise only
<size> bytes from <offset> are treated as part of the subfile.
The <filename> portion may be a relative or absolute path using normal
rules. The <offset> and <size> values are in bytes.
eg.
/vsisubfile/1000_3000,/data/abc.ntf
/vsisubfile/5000,../xyz/raw.dat
Unlike the /vsimem/ or conventional file system handlers, there
is no meaningful support for filesystem operations for creating new
files, traversing directories, and deleting files within the /vsisubfile/
area. Only the VSIStatL(), VSIFOpenL() and operations based on the file
handle returned by VSIFOpenL() operate properly.
\section gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsisparse /vsisparse/ (sparse files)
The /vsisparse/ virtual file handler allows a virtual file to be composed
from chunks of data in other files, potentially with large spaces in
the virtual file set to a constant value. This can make it possible to
test some sorts of operations on what seems to be a large file with
image data set to a constant value. It is also helpful when wanting to
add test files to the test suite that are too large, but for which most
of the data can be ignored. It could, in theory, also be used to
treat several files on different file systems as one large virtual file.
The file referenced by /vsisparse/ should be an XML control file
formatted something like:
\verbatim
87629264
251_head.dat
0
0
2768
251_rasterdms.dat
87313104
0
160
251_tail.dat
87611924
0
17340
0
87629264
0
\endverbatim
Hopefully the values and semantics are fairly obvious.
\section gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsicache File caching
This is not a proper virtual file system handler, but a C function that
takes a virtual file handle and return a new handle that caches read-operations
on the input file handle.
The VSICachedFile class only handles read operations at that time, and will
error out on write operations.
This is done with the VSICreateCachedFile() function, that is implictly used
by a number of the above mentioned file systems if the VSI_CACHE configuration
option is set to YES. The default size of caching for each file is 25 MB, and
can be controlled with the VSI_CACHE_SIZE configuration option (value in bytes).
Content in that cache is discarded when the file handle is closed.
\section gdal_virtual_file_systems_vsicrypt /vsicrypt/ (encrypted files)
/vsicrypt/ is a special file handler is installed that allows reading/creating/update
encrypted files on the fly, with random access capabilities.
Refert to VSIInstallCryptFileHandler() for more details.
*/