Provided by: gdal-bin_3.9.1+dfsg-1build2_amd64 bug

NAME

       ogr2ogr - Converts simple features data between file formats.

SYNOPSIS

          ogr2ogr [--help] [--long-usage] [--help-general]
                  [-of <output_format>] [-dsco <NAME>=<VALUE>]... [-lco <NAME>=<VALUE>]...
                  [[-append]|[-upsert]|[-overwrite]]
                  [-update] [-sql <statement>|@<filename>] [-dialect <dialect>] [-spat <xmin> <ymin> <xmax> <ymax>]
                  [-where <restricted_where>|@<filename>] [-select <field_list>] [-nln <name>] [-nlt <type>]...
                  [-s_srs <srs_def>]
                  [[-a_srs <srs_def>]|[-t_srs <srs_def>]]
                  <dst_dataset_name> <src_dataset_name> [<layer_name>]...

          Field related options:
                 [-addfields] [-relaxedFieldNameMatch] [-fieldTypeToString All|<type1>[,<type2>]...]
                 [-mapFieldType <srctype>|All=<dsttype>[,<srctype2>=<dsttype2>]...] [-fieldmap <field_1>[,<field_2>]...]
                 [-splitlistfields] [-maxsubfields <n>] [-emptyStrAsNull] [-forceNullable] [-unsetFieldWidth]
                 [-unsetDefault] [-resolveDomains] [-dateTimeTo UTC|UTC(+|-)<HH>|UTC(+|-)<HH>:<MM>] [-noNativeData]

          Advanced geometry and SRS related options:
                 [-dim layer_dim|2|XY|3|XYZ|XYM|XYZM] [-s_coord_epoch <epoch>] [-a_coord_epoch <epoch>]
                 [-t_coord_epoch <epoch>] [-ct <pipeline_def>] [-spat_srs <srs_def>] [-geomfield <name>]
                 [-segmentize <max_dist>] [-simplify <tolerance>] [-makevalid] [-wrapdateline]
                 [-datelineoffset <val_in_degree>]
                 [-clipsrc [<xmin> <ymin> <xmax> <ymax>]|<WKT>|<datasource>|spat_extent]
                 [-clipsrcsql <sql_statement>] [-clipsrclayer <layername>] [-clipsrcwhere <expression>]
                 [-clipdst [<xmin> <ymin> <xmax> <ymax>]|<WKT>|<datasource>] [-clipdstsql <sql_statement>]
                 [-clipdstlayer <layername>] [-clipdstwhere <expression>] [-explodecollections] [-zfield <name>]
                 [-gcp <ungeoref_x> <ungeoref_y> <georef_x> <georef_y> [<elevation>]]...
                 [-tps] [-order 1|2|3]
                 [-xyRes <val>[ m|mm|deg]] [-zRes <val>[ m|mm]] [-mRes <val>] [-unsetCoordPrecision]

          Other options:
                 [--quiet] [-progress] [-if <format>]... [-oo <NAME>=<VALUE>]... [-doo <NAME>=<VALUE>]...
                 [-fid <FID>] [-preserve_fid] [-unsetFid]
                 [[-skipfailures]|[-gt <n>|unlimited]]
                 [-limit <nb_features>] [-ds_transaction] [-mo <NAME>=<VALUE>]... [-nomd]

DESCRIPTION

       ogr2ogr  can  be  used  to convert simple features data between file formats. It can also perform various
       operations during the process, such as spatial or attribute selection, reducing the  set  of  attributes,
       setting the output coordinate system or even reprojecting the features during translation.

       --help Show this help message and exit

       --help-general
              Gives a brief usage message for the generic GDAL commandline options and exit.

       -if <format>
              Format/driver  name  to  be  attempted to open the input file(s). It is generally not necessary to
              specify it, but it can be used to skip automatic driver detection, when it  fails  to  select  the
              appropriate  driver.   This  option  can  be  repeated  several times to specify several candidate
              drivers.  Note that it does not force those drivers to  open  the  dataset.  In  particular,  some
              drivers have requirements on file extensions.

              New in version 3.2.

       -of <format_name>, -f <format_name>
              Output  file  format name, e.g. ESRI Shapefile, MapInfo File, PostgreSQL.  Starting with GDAL 2.3,
              if not specified, the format is guessed from the extension (previously was ESRI Shapefile).

       -append
              Append to existing layer instead of creating new. This option also enables -update.

       -upsert
              New in version 3.6.

              Variant of -append where the OGRLayer::UpsertFeature() operation  is  used  to  insert  or  update
              features instead of appending with OGRLayer::CreateFeature().

              This is currently implemented only in a few drivers: GPKG -- GeoPackage vector and MongoDBv3.

              The  upsert  operation  uses  the  FID of the input feature, when it is set and is a "significant"
              (that is the FID column name is not the empty string), as the key to update existing features.  It
              is crucial to make sure that the FID in the source and target layers are consistent.

              For  the GPKG driver, it is also possible to upsert features whose FID is unset or non-significant
              (-unsetFid can be used to ignore the FID from the source feature), when there is a  UNIQUE  column
              that is not the integer primary key.

       -overwrite
              Delete the output layer and recreate it empty

       -update
              Open existing output datasource in update mode rather than trying to create a new one

       -select <field_list>
              Comma-delimited list of fields from input layer to copy to the new layer.

              Starting  with GDAL 3.9, field names with spaces, commas or double-quote should be surrounded with
              a starting and ending double-quote character, and double-quote characters in a field  name  should
              be escaped with backslash.

              Depending  on  the  shell  used,  this  might  require  further  quoting.  For  example, to select
              regular_field, a_field_with space, and comma and a field with " double quote with a Unix shell:

                 -select "regular_field,\"a_field_with space, and comma\",\"a field with \\\" double quote\""

              A field is only selected once, even if mentioned several times in the list and if the input  layer
              has duplicate field names.

              Geometry fields can also be specified in the list.

              All  fields are selected when -select is not specified. Specifying the empty string can be used to
              disable selecting any attribute field, and only keep geometries.

              Note this setting cannot be used together with -append. To control the selection  of  fields  when
              appending to a layer, use -fieldmap or -sql.

       -progress
              Display progress on terminal. Only works if input layers have the "fast feature count" capability.

       -sql <sql_statement>
              SQL  statement  to  execute.  The resulting table/layer will be saved to the output. Starting with
              GDAL 2.1, the @filename syntax can be used  to  indicate  that  the  content  is  in  the  pointed
              filename.

       -dialect <dialect>
              SQL  dialect. In some cases can be used to use (unoptimized) OGR SQL dialect instead of the native
              SQL of an RDBMS by passing the OGRSQL dialect value.  The SQL SQLite dialect dialect can be select
              with the SQLITE and INDIRECT_SQLITE dialect values, and this can be used with any datasource.

       -where <restricted_where>
              Attribute query (like SQL WHERE). Starting with GDAL 2.1, the @filename  syntax  can  be  used  to
              indicate that the content is in the pointed filename.

       -skipfailures
              Continue after a failure, skipping the failed feature.

       -spat <xmin> <ymin> <xmax> <ymax>
              spatial  query  extents,  in the SRS of the source layer(s) (or the one specified with -spat_srs).
              Only features whose geometry intersects the extents will be selected. The geometries will  not  be
              clipped unless -clipsrc is specified.

       -spat_srs <srs_def>
              Override spatial filter SRS.

       -geomfield <field>
              Name of the geometry field on which the spatial filter operates on.

       -dsco <NAME>=<VALUE>
              Dataset creation option (format specific)

       -lco <NAME>=<VALUE>
              Layer creation option (format specific)

       -nln <name>
              Assign an alternate name to the new layer

       -nlt <type>
              Define the geometry type for the created layer. One of NONE, GEOMETRY, POINT, LINESTRING, POLYGON,
              GEOMETRYCOLLECTION,  MULTIPOINT,  MULTIPOLYGON,  MULTILINESTRING,  CIRCULARSTRING,  COMPOUNDCURVE,
              CURVEPOLYGON, MULTICURVE, and MULTISURFACE non-linear geometry types. Add Z, M, or ZM to the  type
              name  to  specify  coordinates with elevation, measure, or elevation and measure. PROMOTE_TO_MULTI
              can be used to automatically promote layers that mix polygon or  multipolygons  to  multipolygons,
              and  layers  that  mix  linestrings  or  multilinestrings  to multilinestrings. Can be useful when
              converting shapefiles to PostGIS and  other  target  drivers  that  implement  strict  checks  for
              geometry types.  CONVERT_TO_LINEAR can be used to to convert non-linear geometry types into linear
              geometry  types  by  approximating  them, and CONVERT_TO_CURVE to promote a non-linear type to its
              generalized curve type (POLYGON to  CURVEPOLYGON,  MULTIPOLYGON  to  MULTISURFACE,  LINESTRING  to
              COMPOUNDCURVE,  MULTILINESTRING  to MULTICURVE). Starting with version 2.1 the type can be defined
              as measured ("25D" remains as an alias for single  "Z").  Some  forced  geometry  conversions  may
              result in invalid geometries, for example when forcing conversion of multi-part multipolygons with
              -nlt POLYGON, the resulting polygon will break the Simple Features rules.

              Starting   with  GDAL  3.0.5,  -nlt  CONVERT_TO_LINEAR  and  -nlt  PROMOTE_TO_MULTI  can  be  used
              simultaneously.

       -dim <val>
              Force the coordinate dimension to val (valid values are XY, XYZ, XYM, and  XYZM  -  for  backwards
              compatibility  2  is  an  alias  for  XY  and  3 is an alias for XYZ). This affects both the layer
              geometry type, and feature geometries. The value can be  set  to  layer_dim  to  instruct  feature
              geometries  to  be  promoted  to the coordinate dimension declared by the layer. Support for M was
              added in GDAL 2.1.

       -a_srs <srs_def>
              Assign an output SRS, but without reprojecting (use -t_srs to reproject)

              The  coordinate  reference  systems  that  can  be  passed   are   anything   supported   by   the
              OGRSpatialReference::SetFromUserInput()   call,  which  includes  EPSG  Projected,  Geographic  or
              Compound CRS (i.e. EPSG:4296), a well known text (WKT) CRS definition, PROJ.4 declarations, or the
              name of a .prj file containing a WKT CRS definition.

       -a_coord_epoch <epoch>
              New in version 3.4.

              Assign a coordinate epoch, linked with the output SRS. Useful when the output  SRS  is  a  dynamic
              CRS. Only taken into account if -a_srs is used.

       -t_srs <srs_def>
              Reproject/transform to this SRS on output, and assign it as output SRS.

              A  source  SRS  must be available for reprojection to occur. The source SRS will be by default the
              one found in the source layer when it is available, or as overridden by the user with -s_srs

              The  coordinate  reference  systems  that  can  be  passed   are   anything   supported   by   the
              OGRSpatialReference::SetFromUserInput()   call,  which  includes  EPSG  Projected,  Geographic  or
              Compound CRS (i.e. EPSG:4296), a well known text (WKT) CRS definition, PROJ.4 declarations, or the
              name of a .prj file containing a WKT CRS definition.

       -t_coord_epoch <epoch>
              New in version 3.4.

              Assign a coordinate epoch, linked with the output SRS. Useful when the output  SRS  is  a  dynamic
              CRS.   Only   taken  into  account  if  -t_srs  is  used.  It  is  also  mutually  exclusive  with
              -a_coord_epoch.

              Before PROJ 9.4, -s_coord_epoch and -t_coord_epoch are mutually exclusive, due to lack of  support
              for transformations between two dynamic CRS.

       -s_srs <srs_def>
              Override  source  SRS. If not specified the SRS found in the input layer will be used. This option
              has only an effect if used together with -t_srs to reproject.

              The  coordinate  reference  systems  that  can  be  passed   are   anything   supported   by   the
              OGRSpatialReference::SetFromUserInput()   call,  which  includes  EPSG  Projected,  Geographic  or
              Compound CRS (i.e. EPSG:4296), a well known text (WKT) CRS definition, PROJ.4 declarations, or the
              name of a .prj file containing a WKT CRS definition.

       -xyRes "<val>[ m|mm|deg]"
              New in version 3.9.

              Set/override the geometry X/Y coordinate resolution. If only a numeric value is specified,  it  is
              assumed  to  be  expressed  in  the  units  of  the  target SRS.  The m, mm or deg suffixes can be
              specified to indicate that the value must be interpreted as being in meter, millimeter or degree.

              When specifying this option, the OGRGeometry::SetPrecision() method is run on geometries (that are
              not curves) before passing them to the output driver, to avoid generating invalid  geometries  due
              to the potentially reduced precision (unless the OGR_APPLY_GEOM_SET_PRECISION configuration option
              is set to NO)

              If  neither  this  option nor -unsetCoordPrecision are specified, the coordinate resolution of the
              source layer, if available, is used.

       -zRes "<val>[ m|mm]"
              New in version 3.9.

              Set/override the geometry Z coordinate resolution. If only a numeric value  is  specified,  it  is
              assumed  to be expressed in the units of the target SRS.  The m or mm suffixes can be specified to
              indicate that the value must be interpreted as being in meter  or  millimeter.   If  neither  this
              option  nor  -unsetCoordPrecision are specified, the coordinate resolution of the source layer, if
              available, is used.

       -mRes <val>
              New in version 3.9.

              Set/override   the   geometry   M   coordinate   resolution.    If   neither   this   option   nor
              -unsetCoordPrecision  are  specified, the coordinate resolution of the source layer, if available,
              is used.

       -unsetCoordPrecision
              New in version 3.9.

              Prevent the geometry coordinate resolution from being set on target layer(s).

       -s_coord_epoch <epoch>
              New in version 3.4.

              Assign a coordinate epoch, linked with the source SRS. Useful when the source  SRS  is  a  dynamic
              CRS. Only taken into account if -s_srs is used.

              Before  PROJ 9.4, -s_coord_epoch and -t_coord_epoch are mutually exclusive, due to lack of support
              for transformations between two dynamic CRS.

       -ct <string>
              A PROJ string (single step operation or multiple step string starting with +proj=pipeline), a WKT2
              string describing  a  CoordinateOperation,  or  a  urn:ogc:def:coordinateOperation:EPSG::XXXX  URN
              overriding the default transformation from the source to the target CRS. It must take into account
              the axis order of the source and target CRS.

              New in version 3.0.

       -preserve_fid
              Use the FID of the source features instead of letting the output driver automatically assign a new
              one  (for  formats that require a FID). If not in append mode, this behavior is the default if the
              output driver has a FID layer creation option, in which case the name of  the  source  FID  column
              will  be  used  and  source  feature  IDs  will be attempted to be preserved. This behavior can be
              disabled by setting -unsetFid.  This option is not compatible with -explodecollections.

       -fid <fid>
              If provided, only the feature with the specified feature id will be processed.  Operates exclusive
              of the spatial or attribute queries. Note: if you want to select several features based  on  their
              feature  id,  you  can  also  use the fact the 'fid' is a special field recognized by OGR SQL. So,
              -where "fid in (1,3,5)" would select features 1, 3 and 5.

       -limit <nb_features>
              Limit the number of features per layer.

       -oo <NAME>=<VALUE>
              Input dataset open option (format specific).

       -doo <NAME>=<VALUE>
              Destination dataset open option (format specific), only valid in -update mode.

       -gt <n>
              Group n features per transaction (default 100 000). Increase the value for better performance when
              writing into DBMS drivers that have transaction support. n can be set to  unlimited  to  load  the
              data into a single transaction.

       -ds_transaction
              Force the use of a dataset level transaction (for drivers that support such mechanism), especially
              for drivers such as FileGDB that only support dataset level transaction in emulation mode.

       -clipsrc [<xmin> <ymin> <xmax> <ymax>]|WKT|<datasource>|spat_extent
              Clip geometries (before potential reprojection) to one of the following:

              • the specified bounding box (expressed in source SRS)

              • a WKT geometry (POLYGON or MULTIPOLYGON expressed in source SRS)

              • one or more geometries selected from a datasource

              • the spatial extent of the -spat option if you use the spat_extent keyword.

              When  specifying  a  datasource,  you  will  generally  want to use -clipsrc in combination of the
              -clipsrclayer, -clipsrcwhere or -clipsrcsql options.

       -clipsrcsql <sql_statement>
              Select desired geometries from the source clip datasource using an SQL query.

       -clipsrclayer <layername>
              Select the named layer from the source clip datasource.

       -clipsrcwhere <expression>
              Restrict desired geometries from the source clip layer based on an attribute query.

       -clipdst [<xmin> <ymin> <xmax> <ymax>]|<WKT>|<datasource>
              Clip geometries (after potential reprojection) to one of the following:

              • the specified bounding box (expressed in destination SRS)

              • a WKT geometry (POLYGON or MULTIPOLYGON expressed in destination SRS)

              • one or more geometries selected from a datasource

              When specifying a datasource, you will generally want to use  -clipdst  in  combination  with  the
              -clipdstlayer, -clipdstwhere or -clipdstsql options.

       -clipdstsql <sql_statement>
              Select desired geometries from the destination clip datasource using an SQL query.

       -clipdstlayer <layername>
              Select the named layer from the destination clip datasource.

       -clipdstwhere <expression>
              Restrict desired geometries from the destination clip layer based on an attribute query.

       -wrapdateline
              Split geometries crossing the dateline meridian (long. = +/- 180deg)

       -datelineoffset
              Offset  from  dateline  in degrees (default long. = +/- 10deg, geometries within 170deg to -170deg
              will be split)

       -simplify <tolerance>
              Distance tolerance for simplification. Note: the algorithm used preserves topology per feature, in
              particular for polygon geometries, but not for a whole layer.

       -segmentize <max_dist>
              Maximum distance between 2 nodes. Used to create intermediate points.

       -makevalid
              Run         the         OGRGeometry::MakeValid()          operation,          followed          by
              OGRGeometryFactory::removeLowerDimensionSubGeoms(),   on  geometries  to  ensure  they  are  valid
              regarding the rules of the Simple Features specification.

       -fieldTypeToString All|<type1>[,<type2>]...
              Converts any field of the specified type to a field of type string in the destination layer. Valid
              types are  :  Integer,  Integer64,  Real,  String,  Date,  Time,  DateTime,  Binary,  IntegerList,
              Integer64List,  RealList,  StringList.  Special  value  All  can  be used to convert all fields to
              strings.  This is an alternate way to using the CAST operator of OGR SQL, that may avoid typing  a
              long  SQL  query. Note that this does not influence the field types used by the source driver, and
              is only an afterwards conversion.  Also note that this option is without effects on  fields  whose
              presence and type is hard-coded in the output driver (e.g KML, GPX)

       -mapFieldType {<srctype>|All=<dsttype>[,<srctype2>=<dsttype2>]...}
              Converts  any  field  of the specified type to another type. Valid types are : Integer, Integer64,
              Real, String, Date, Time, DateTime,  Binary,  IntegerList,  Integer64List,  RealList,  StringList.
              Types  can  also include subtype between parenthesis, such as Integer(Boolean), Real(Float32), ...
              Special value All can be used to convert all fields to another type. This is an alternate  way  to
              using  the  CAST  operator  of  OGR  SQL,  that  may  avoid  typing  a  long  SQL query. This is a
              generalization of -fieldTypeToString.  Note that this does not influence the field types  used  by
              the  source  driver,  and is only an afterwards conversion.  Also note that this option is without
              effects on fields whose presence and type is hard-coded in the output driver (e.g KML, GPX)

       -dateTimeTo {UTC|UTC(+|-)<HH>|UTC(+|-)<HH>:<MM>}
              Converts date time values from the timezone specified in the source value to the  target  timezone
              expressed with -dateTimeTo.  Datetime whose timezone is unknown or localtime are not modified.

              HH must be in the [0,14] range and MM=00, 15, 30 or 45.

       -unsetFieldWidth
              Set field width and precision to 0.

       -splitlistfields
              Split  fields of type StringList, RealList or IntegerList into as many fields of type String, Real
              or Integer as necessary.

       -maxsubfields <val>
              To be combined with -splitlistfields to limit the number  of  subfields  created  for  each  split
              field.

       -explodecollections
              Produce  one  feature  for  each  geometry  in any kind of geometry collection in the source file,
              applied after any -sql option. This options is not compatible with -preserve_fid but -sql  "SELECT
              fid AS original_fid, * FROM ..." can be used to store the original FID if needed.

       -zfield <field_name>
              Uses the specified field to fill the Z coordinate of geometries.

       -gcp <ungeoref_x> <ungeoref_y> <georef_x> <georef_y> [<elevation>]
              Add  the  indicated  ground control point. This option may be provided multiple times to provide a
              set of GCPs.

       -order <n>
              Order of polynomial used for warping (1 to 3). The default is to select a polynomial  order  based
              on the number of GCPs.

       -tps   Force use of thin plate spline transformer based on available GCPs.

       -fieldmap
              Specifies  the  list  of  field indexes to be copied from the source to the destination. The (n)th
              value specified in the list is the index of the field in the target layer definition in which  the
              n(th)  field  of  the  source  layer  must be copied. Index count starts at zero. To omit a field,
              specify a value of -1. There must be exactly as many values in the list as the count of the fields
              in the source layer. We can use the 'identity' setting  to  specify  that  the  fields  should  be
              transferred by using the same order.  This setting should be used along with the -append setting.

       -addfields
              This  is  a  specialized  version  of  -append.  Contrary to -append, -addfields has the effect of
              adding, to existing target layers, the new fields found in source layers. This  option  is  useful
              when  merging  files  that  have non-strictly identical structures. This might not work for output
              formats that don't support adding fields to existing non-empty layers. Note that if  you  plan  to
              use -addfields, you may need to combine it with -forceNullable, including for the initial import.

       -relaxedFieldNameMatch
              Do  field  name  matching  between  source  and existing target layer in a more relaxed way if the
              target driver has an implementation for it.

       -forceNullable
              Do not propagate not-nullable constraints to target layer if they exist in source layer.

       -unsetDefault
              Do not propagate default field values to target layer if they exist in source layer.

       -unsetFid
              Can be specified to prevent the name of the source FID column and source feature  IDs  from  being
              re-used  for  the target layer. This option can for example be useful if selecting source features
              with a ORDER BY clause.

       -emptyStrAsNull
              New in version 3.3.

              Treat empty string values as null.

       -resolveDomains
              New in version 3.3.

              When this is specified, any selected field that  is  linked  to  a  coded  field  domain  will  be
              accompanied by an additional field ({dstfield}_resolved), that will contain the description of the
              coded value.

       -nomd  To disable copying of metadata from source dataset and layers into target dataset and layers, when
              supported by output driver.

       -mo <META-TAG>=<VALUE>
              Passes a metadata key and value to set on the output dataset, when supported by output driver.

       -noNativeData
              To  disable copying of native data, i.e. details of source format not captured by OGR abstraction,
              that are otherwise preserved by some drivers (like GeoJSON) when converting to same format.

              New in version 2.1.

       <dst_dataset_name>
              Output dataset name.

       <src_dataset_name>
              Source dataset name.

       <layer_name>
              One or more source layer names to copy to the output dataset. If no layer names are  passed,  then
              all source layers are copied.

PERFORMANCE HINTS

       When  writing  into  transactional  DBMS  (SQLite/PostgreSQL,MySQL,  etc...),  it  might be beneficial to
       increase the number of INSERT statements  executed  between  BEGIN  TRANSACTION  and  COMMIT  TRANSACTION
       statements.  This  number  is specified with the -gt option. For example, for SQLite, explicitly defining
       -gt 65536 ensures optimal performance while populating some table containing many hundreds  of  thousands
       or  millions of rows. However, note that -skipfailures overrides -gt and sets the size of transactions to
       1.

       For PostgreSQL, the PG_USE_COPY config option can be set to YES for a significant  insertion  performance
       boost. See the PG driver documentation page.

       More generally, consult the documentation page of the input and output drivers for performance hints.

KNOWN ISSUES

       Starting with GDAL 3.8, ogr2ogr uses internally an Arrow array based API (cf RFC 86: Column-oriented read
       API for vector layers) for some source formats (in particular GeoPackage or FlatGeoBuf), and for the most
       basic types of operations, to improve performance.  This substantial change in the ogr2ogr internal logic
       has  required  a  number of fixes throughout the GDAL 3.8.x bugfix releases to fully stabilize it, and we
       believe most issues are resolved with GDAL 3.9.  If you hit errors not met with  earlier  GDAL  versions,
       you  may  specify  --config  OGR2OGR_USE_ARROW_API  NO on the ogr2ogr command line to opt for the classic
       algorithm using an iterative feature based approach. If that flag is needed with GDAL >= 3.9, please file
       an issue on the GDAL issue tracker.

C API

       This utility is also callable from C with GDALVectorTranslate().

EXAMPLES

       Basic conversion from Shapefile to GeoPackage:

          ogr2ogr output.gpkg input.shp

       Change the coordinate reference system from EPSG:4326 to EPSG:3857:

          ogr2ogr -s_srs EPSG:4326 -t_srs EPSG:3857 output.gpkg input.gpkg

       Example appending to an existing layer:

          ogr2ogr -append -f PostgreSQL PG:dbname=warmerda abc.tab

       Clip input layer with a bounding box (<xmin> <ymin> <xmax> <ymax>):

          ogr2ogr -spat -13.931 34.886 46.23 74.12 output.gpkg natural_earth_vector.gpkg

       Filter Features by a -where clause:

          ogr2ogr -where "\"POP_EST\" < 1000000" \
            output.gpkg natural_earth_vector.gpkg ne_10m_admin_0_countries

       Example reprojecting from ETRS_1989_LAEA_52N_10E to EPSG:4326 and clipping to a bounding box:

          ogr2ogr -wrapdateline -t_srs EPSG:4326 -clipdst -5 40 15 55 france_4326.shp europe_laea.shp

       Example for using the -fieldmap setting. The first field of the source layer is used to  fill  the  third
       field  (index  2 = third field) of the target layer, the second field of the source layer is ignored, the
       third field of the source layer used to fill the fifth field of the target layer.

          ogr2ogr -append -fieldmap 2,-1,4 dst.shp src.shp

       Note that not all formats preserve geometries on layer creation by default. E.g., here we need -lco:

          ogr2ogr -lco GEOMETRY=AS_XYZ TrackWaypoint.csv TrackWaypoint.kml

       More examples are given in the individual format pages.

AUTHOR

       Frank Warmerdam <warmerdam@pobox.com>, Silke Reimer <silke@intevation.de>

COPYRIGHT

       1998-2024

                                                  Jun 23, 2024                                        OGR2OGR(1)