DOKK / manpages / debian 11 / montage / mHdrtbl.1.en
MHDRTBL(1) Montage MHDRTBL(1)

mHdrtbl - Generate metadata from a set of header files

mHdrtbl [-rcdb] [-s statusfile] [-t imglist] directory images.tbl

mHdrtbl operates in a fashion similar to mImgtbl, but is used on a set of header template files instead of FITS images.

mHdrtbl can also be used as a standalone program to gather image metadata for other purposes (to populate a database, as a basis for spatial coverage searches, etc.) In this case it is often desirable to collect information on all the files in a directory tree recursively. The "-r" (recursive) flag instructs mHdrtbl to search the given directory and all its subdirectories recursively.
The "-c" (corners) option in mHdrtbl will cause eight extra columns to be added to the output metadata table containing the RA, Dec coordinates (ra1, dec1, ... ra4, dec4) of the image corners. The output is always Equatorial J2000, even if the input is some other system. This has been done to make the metadata uniform so that it can easily be used for coverage searches, etc. The "-c" option is not needed for normal Montage processing.
Turn on debugging
When this switch is set, mHdrtbl will explicitly output each header file it finds that does not appear to be valid, along with information on the error.
Output and errors are written to statusfile instead of being written to stdout.
mHdrtbl will only process files with names specified in table imglist, ignoring any other files in the directory. Example: example.imglist.

Path to directory containing set of input header templates.

Path of output metadata table.

Output table contains metadata information from all readable header templates in the directory specified by directory. count is the number of records in the table, and badhdrs is the number of files for which FITS/WCS metadata could not be extracted.

A unique counter (row number)
Image position in decimal degree format
Right ascension in HHMMSS.SS format. Declination in DDMMSS.S format
The size of the image in pixels for dimensions 1 and 2
The coordinate system (the first four characters) and WCS map projection (last three characters) for dimensions 1 and 2
The pixel coordinates of the reference location (can be fractional and can be off the image) for dimensions 1 and 2
The coordinates of a reference location on the sky (often at the center of the image) for dimensions 1 and 2
The pixel scale (in degrees on the sky per pixel) at the reference location for dimensions 1 and 2
The rotation angle from the "up" direction to the celestial pole
Precessional year associated with the coordinate system
Numerical identifier for the FITS extension that the image info is extracted from, for FITS files with multiple HDUs.
Filesize (in bytes) of the input FITS file
The path to the input FITS file

[struct stat="OK", count=count, badfits=badfits]
Illegal argument: -arg
Cannot open status file: statusfile
Cannot open field list file: fieldlistfile
Cannot open image list file: imgfile
Image table needs column fname/file
Illegal field name: string]
Illegal field type: string]
Cannot access directory
directory is not a directory
Can't open output table.
Can't open copy table.
Can't open tmp (in) table.
Can't open tmp (out) table.
Can't open final table.
FITS library error

The following example runs mHdrtbl on a directory containing header templates stripped from 14 2MASS images:

$ mHdrtbl input/2mass headers.tbl
[struct stat="OK", count=14, badfits=0]

Output: headers.tbl.

The drizzle algorithm has been implemented but has not been tested in this release.

If a header template contains carriage returns (i.e., created/modified on a Windows machine), the cfitsio library will be unable to read it properly, resulting in the error: [struct stat="ERROR", status=207, msg="illegal character in keyword"]

It is best for the background correction algorithms if the area described in the header template completely encloses all of the input images in their entirety. If parts of input images are "chopped off" by the header template, the background correction will be affected. We recommend you use an expanded header for the reprojection and background modeling steps, returning to the originally desired header size for the final coaddition. The default background matching assumes that there are no non-linear background variations in the individual images (and therefore in the overlap differences). If there is any uncertainty in this regard, it is safer to turn on the "level only" background matching (the "-l" flag in mBgModel.

2001-2015 California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California

If your research uses Montage, please include the following acknowledgement: "This research made use of Montage. It is funded by the National Science Foundation under Grant Number ACI-1440620, and was previously funded by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Earth Science Technology Office, Computation Technologies Project, under Cooperative Agreement Number NCC5-626 between NASA and the California Institute of Technology."

The Montage distribution includes an adaptation of the MOPEX algorithm developed at the Spitzer Science Center.

Dec 2016 Montage 5