/cityscapesScripts

README and scripts for the Cityscapes Dataset

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The Cityscapes Dataset

This repository contains scripts for inspection, preparation, and evaluation of the Cityscapes dataset. This large-scale dataset contains a diverse set of stereo video sequences recorded in street scenes from 50 different cities, with high quality pixel-level annotations of 5 000 frames in addition to a larger set of 20 000 weakly annotated frames.

Details and download are available at: www.cityscapes-dataset.net

Dataset Structure

The folder structure of the Cityscapes dataset is as follows:

{root}/{type}{video}/{split}/{city}/{city}_{seq:0>6}_{frame:0>6}_{type}{ext}

The meaning of the individual elements is:

  • root the root folder of the Cityscapes dataset. Many of our scripts check if an environment variable CITYSCAPES_DATASET pointing to this folder exists and use this as the default choice.
  • type the type/modality of data, e.g. gtFine for fine ground truth, or leftImg8bit for left 8-bit images.
  • split the split, i.e. train/val/test/train_extra/demoVideo. Note that not all kinds of data exist for all splits. Thus, do not be surprised to occasionally find empty folders.
  • city the city in which this part of the dataset was recorded.
  • seq the sequence number using 6 digits.
  • frame the frame number using 6 digits. Note that in some cities very few, albeit very long sequences were recorded, while in some cities many short sequences were recorded, of which only the 19th frame is annotated.
  • ext the extension of the file and optionally a suffix, e.g. _polygons.json for ground truth files

Possible values of type

  • gtFine the fine annotations, 2975 training, 500 validation, and 1525 testing. This type of annotations is used for validation, testing, and optionally for training. Annotations are encoded using json files containing the individual polygons. Additionally, we provide png images, where pixel values encode labels. Please refer to helpers/labels.py and the scripts in preparation for details.
  • gtCoarse the coarse annotations, available for all training and validation images and for another set of 19998 training images (train_extra). These annotations can be used for training, either together with gtFine or alone in a weakly supervised setup.
  • gtBboxCityPersons pedestrian bounding box annotations, available for all training and validation images. Please refer to helpers/labels_cityPersons.py as well as the CityPersons publication (Zhang et al., CVPR '17) for more details. The four values of a bounding box are (x, y, w, h), where (x, y) is its top-left corner and (w, h) its width and height.
  • leftImg8bit the left images in 8-bit LDR format. These are the standard annotated images.
  • leftImg8bit_blurred the left images in 8-bit LDR format with faces and license plates blurred. Please compute results on the original images but use the blurred ones for visualization. We thank Mapillary for blurring the images.
  • leftImg16bit the left images in 16-bit HDR format. These images offer 16 bits per pixel of color depth and contain more information, especially in very dark or bright parts of the scene. Warning: The images are stored as 16-bit pngs, which is non-standard and not supported by all libraries.
  • rightImg8bit the right stereo views in 8-bit LDR format.
  • rightImg16bit the right stereo views in 16-bit HDR format.
  • timestamp the time of recording in ns. The first frame of each sequence always has a timestamp of 0.
  • disparity precomputed disparity depth maps. To obtain the disparity values, compute for each pixel p with p > 0: d = ( float(p) - 1. ) / 256., while a value p = 0 is an invalid measurement. Warning: the images are stored as 16-bit pngs, which is non-standard and not supported by all libraries.
  • camera internal and external camera calibration. For details, please refer to csCalibration.pdf
  • vehicle vehicle odometry, GPS coordinates, and outside temperature. For details, please refer to csCalibration.pdf

More types might be added over time and also not all types are initially available. Please let us know if you need any other meta-data to run your approach.

Possible values of split

  • train usually used for training, contains 2975 images with fine and coarse annotations
  • val should be used for validation of hyper-parameters, contains 500 image with fine and coarse annotations. Can also be used for training.
  • test used for testing on our evaluation server. The annotations are not public, but we include annotations of ego-vehicle and rectification border for convenience.
  • train_extra can be optionally used for training, contains 19998 images with coarse annotations
  • demoVideo video sequences that could be used for qualitative evaluation, no annotations are available for these videos

Scripts

Installation

Install cityscapesscripts with pip

python -m pip install cityscapesscripts

Graphical tools (viewer and label tool) are based on Qt5 and can be installed via

python -m pip install cityscapesscripts[gui]

Usage

The installation installs the cityscapes scripts as a python module named cityscapesscripts and exposes the following tools

  • csDownload: Download the cityscapes packages via command line.
  • csViewer: View the images and overlay the annotations.
  • csLabelTool: Tool that we used for labeling.
  • csEvalPixelLevelSemanticLabeling: Evaluate pixel-level semantic labeling results on the validation set. This tool is also used to evaluate the results on the test set.
  • csEvalInstanceLevelSemanticLabeling: Evaluate instance-level semantic labeling results on the validation set. This tool is also used to evaluate the results on the test set.
  • csEvalPanopticSemanticLabeling: Evaluate panoptic segmentation results on the validation set. This tool is also used to evaluate the results on the test set.
  • csCreateTrainIdLabelImgs: Convert annotations in polygonal format to png images with label IDs, where pixels encode "train IDs" that you can define in labels.py.
  • csCreateTrainIdInstanceImgs: Convert annotations in polygonal format to png images with instance IDs, where pixels encode instance IDs composed of "train IDs".
  • csCreatePanopticImgs: Convert annotations in standard png format to COCO panoptic segmentation format.

Package Content

The package is structured as follows

  • helpers: helper files that are included by other scripts
  • viewer: view the images and the annotations
  • preparation: convert the ground truth annotations into a format suitable for your approach
  • evaluation: validate your approach
  • annotation: the annotation tool used for labeling the dataset
  • download: downloader for Cityscapes packages

Note that all files have a small documentation at the top. Most important files

  • helpers/labels.py: central file defining the IDs of all semantic classes and providing mapping between various class properties.
  • helpers/labels_cityPersons.py: file defining the IDs of all CityPersons pedestrian classes and providing mapping between various class properties.
  • setup.py: run CYTHONIZE_EVAL= python setup.py build_ext --inplace to enable cython plugin for faster evaluation. Only tested for Ubuntu.

Evaluation

Once you want to test your method on the test set, please run your approach on the provided test images and submit your results: www.cityscapes-dataset.net/submit/ For semantic labeling, we require the result format to match the format of our label images named labelIDs. Thus, your code should produce images where each pixel's value corresponds to a class ID as defined in labels.py. Note that our evaluation scripts are included in the scripts folder and can be used to test your approach on the validation set. For further details regarding the submission process, please consult our website.

Contact

Please feel free to contact us with any questions, suggestions or comments: