What is link2GI?

The link2GI package provides a small linking tool to simplify the usage of GRASS GIS, SAGA GIS, Orfeo Toolbox (OTB) and GDAL binaries for R users. the focus is to simplify the the accessibility of this software for non operating system specialists or highly experienced GIS geeks. Acutally it is a direct result of numerous graduate courses with R(-GIS) beginners in the hostile world of university computer pools running under extremely restricted Windows systems.

This vignette:

Why link2GI now?

R has quite a lot of classes for storing and dealing with spatial data. For vector data the sp and recently the great sf packages are well known and the raster data world is widely covered by the raster package. Additionally external spatial data formats are interfaced by wrapping packages as rgdal or gdalUtils. For more specific links as needed for manipulating atmospheric modeling packages as ncdf4 are very helpful.

The spatial analysis itself is often supported by wrapper packages that integrate external libraries, command line tools or a mixture of both in an R-like syntax rgeos, geosphere, Distance, maptools, igraph or spatstat.

A comprehensive introduction to the spatial R-biotope and its backgrounds is excellently treated in Geocomputation with R wich is highly recommend as a reference textbook.

Despite all this capabilities of spatial analysis and data handling in the world of R, it can be stated (at least from a non-R point of view), that there is still a enormous gap between R and the mature open source Geographic Information System (GIS) and even more Remote Sensing (RS) software community. QGIS, GRASS GIS and SAGA GIS are providing a comprehensive, growing and mature collection of highly sophisticated algorithms. The provided algorithms are fast, stable and most of them are well proofed. Probably most of the R users who are somehow related to the GI community know that there are awesome good wrapper packages for bridging this gap. For GRASS GIS 7/8 it is rgrass and for SAGA GIS the RSAGA package. The development of the RQGIS wrapper is the most recent outcome to provide a simple usage of the powerful QGIS command line interface. In addition there is no wrapper for the great OTB. It seems to be at least convenient to provide a lightweight wrapping utility for the usage of OTB modules from R.

Unfortunately one will run into a lot of technical problems depending on the choosen operating system (OS) or library dependencies or GIS software versions. In case of e.g. RSAGA the main problem has been that the SAGA GIS developers are not only changing the syntax and strategy of the command line interface (CLI) but also within the same release the calls differ from OS to OS. So the maintenance of RSAGA is at least laborious (but thumbs up is running again). Another example is given by GRASS GIS which is well known for a sophisticated setup of the environment and the spatial properties of the database. If you “just” want to use a specific GRASS algorithm from R, you will probablys get lost in setting up all OS-dependencies that are neccessary to set up a correct temporary or permanent GRASS-environment from “outside”. This is not only caused due to the strict spatial and projection requirements of GRASS but much more by challenging OS enviroments especially Windows.

To make it short it is a bit cumbersome to deal with all this stuff if one just want to start e.g. GRASS from the R command line for e.g. a powerful random walk cost analysis (r.walk) call as provided by GRASS.

What means linking?

Linking means simply to provide all necessary environment settings that satisfy the existing wrapper packages as well as in addition the full access to the the command line (CLI) APIs of the mentioned software tools. link2GI tries to analyze which software is installed to set up an temporary enviroment meeting the above mentioned needs.

GRASS GIS

GRASS GIS has the most challenging requirements. It needs a bunch of environment and path variables as and a correct setup of the geographical data parameters. The linkGRASS function tries to find all installations let you (optionally) choose the one you want to use and generate the necessary variables. As a result you can use both the rgrass package or the command line API of GRASS.

SAGA GIS

SAGA GIS is a far easier to set up. Again the linkSAGA function tries to find all SAGA installations, let you (optionally) choose one and generate the necessary variables. You may also use RSAGA but you have to hand over the result of linkSAGA like RSAGA::rsaga.env(path = saga$sagaPath). For a straightforward usage you may simply use the R system() call to interface R with the saga_cmd API.

Orfeo Toolbox (OTB)

The Orfeo Toolbox (OTB) is a very powerful remote sensing toolbox. It is widely used for classification, filtering and machine learning applications. You will find some of the implemented algorithm within different R packages but always much slower or only running on small data chunks. link2GI searches and connects all OTB installations of a given search path and provides the result as a clear list. Due to a missing wrapper package, a list-based OTB module and function parser is also available, which can be piped into the function runOTB for a convenient function call.

GDAL

Notwithstanding that GDAL is perfectly integrated in R in some cases it is beneficial to use system calls and grab the binaries directly. In particular the evolution to GDAL 3.x and optionally various boxed versions of GDAL binaries working together with different Python and proj4/proj6 libs makes it sometimes difficult to grab the correct version of GDAL. link2GI generates a list of all pathes and commands of all GDAL installation in the provided search path. With this list, you can easily use all available API calls of each installation.

Usage of the link2GI package - Basic Examples

Brute force search usage

Automatic search and find of the installed GIS software binaries is performed by the find functions. Depending of you OS and the number of installed versions you will get a dataframe providing the binary and module folders.

So the most straightforward call to link temporary to GRASS GIS woud be:

# find all SAGA GIS installations at the default search location
require(link2GI)

grass <- link2GI::linkGRASS()
grass