Hm. Well the prj is 3857 ...but I reprojected it from 4326....would -
I did run this on one tile - came out fine:
gdaldem hillshade DCM_N00E116.tif hillshade_test.tif -compute_edges -z 5 -s
111120 -az 90
but this returned the same result on the global file:
gdaldem hillshade -of GTiff infile_3857.tif hillshade.tif -compute_edges -z 5
-s 111120 -az 90
On Tuesday, June 30, 2015 2:41 AM, Even Rouault
<[email protected]> wrote:
#yiv0977550860 p, #yiv0977550860 li {white-space:pre-wrap;}Le mardi 30 juin
2015 01:20:13, Ruth Simm a écrit :> I ran this command on a completely NORMAL
(but large) global .tiff with a> few tiles missing - but nothing else
suspicious - and after 40 minutes it> returned a dud file with '181' being the
only value. Has this ever> happened to anyone before?> gdaldem hillshade -of
GTiff infile.tif hillshd.tifRuth,I guess this might be an issue with the ratio
of vertical units to
horizontal.http://gdal.org/gdaldem.html#gdaldem_hillshade:-s scale:ratio of
vertical units to horizontal. If the horizontal unit of the source DEM is
degrees (e.g Lat/Long WGS84 projection), you can use scale=111120 if the
vertical units are meters (or scale=370400 if they are in feet) I'd suggest you
experiment a bit on a subwindow of your big raster or a subsampled version of
it first.Even-- Spatialys - Geospatial professional
serviceshttp://www.spatialys.com
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