AutoCAD DXF

Driver short name

DXF

Driver built-in by default

This driver is built-in by default

DXF is an ASCII format used for interchanging AutoCAD drawings between different software packages. OGR supports reading DXF files generated by all recent versions of AutoCAD, and writing DXF files that are compatible with AutoCAD 2004 and later.

DXF files are considered to have no georeferencing information through OGR.

Driver capabilities

Supports Create()

This driver supports the GDALDriver::Create() operation

Supports VirtualIO

This driver supports virtual I/O operations (/vsimem/, etc.)

DXF Reader

By default, the entire contents of the file are represented as a single OGR layer named "entities". Features will all have the following generic fields:

  • Layer: The name of the DXF layer. The default layer is "0".

  • PaperSpace: 1 if the entity is located on a layout (paper space), NULL otherwise.

  • SubClasses: Where available, a list of classes to which an entity belongs.

  • RawCodeValues: A string list containing all group codes and values that are not handled by the DXF reader. Only available when the configuration option DXF_INCLUDE_RAW_CODE_VALUES=TRUE.

    DXF_INCLUDE_RAW_CODE_VALUES=[TRUE/FALSE]: Defaults to FALSE.

    • Linetype: Where available, the line type used for this entity.

  • EntityHandle: The hexadecimal entity handle. A sort of feature id.

  • Text: The text of labels.

Supported Entities

The following entity types are supported:

  • POINT: Produces a simple POINT geometry feature.

  • MTEXT, TEXT: Produces a POINT feature with LABEL style information. The style string may include the following parameters: f s t a c w p dx dy bo it. Text positioning might not precisely match CAD software (especially the vertical alignment of MTEXT), as calculation of the exact position would require GDAL to be aware of the font metrics. By default, character escapes such as %%p are honored where applicable, and MTEXT control sequences like \Wx.xx; are stripped. To disable this behavior and retrieve the raw text values, set the configuration option DXF_TRANSLATE_ESCAPE_SEQUENCES=FALSE.

    DXF_TRANSLATE_ESCAPE_SEQUENCES=[TRUE/FALSE]: Defaults to TRUE.

  • LINE, POLYLINE, LWPOLYLINE: Translated as a LINESTRING. Rounded polylines (those with their vertices' bulge attributes set) will be tessellated. Single-vertex polylines are translated to POINT. Polyface meshes are translated as POLYHEDRALSURFACE geometries.

    Starting with GDAL 3.10, the DXF_CLOSED_LINE_AS_POLYGON configuration option can be set to TRUE to ask for closed POLYLINE and LWPOLYLINE to be exposed as OGR polygons.

    DXF_CLOSED_LINE_AS_POLYGON=[TRUE/FALSE]: Defaults to FALSE.

  • MLINE: Translated as a MULTILINESTRING. Only the geometry is reconstructed; styling applied to individual line elements within the MLINE is ignored. Fill colors and start/end caps are also omitted.

  • CIRCLE, ELLIPSE, ARC, SPLINE,HELIX: Translated as a LINESTRING, tessellating the curve into line segments.

    CIRCLEs with nonzero "thickness" (cylinders) are approximated as a POLYHEDRALSURFACE.

  • INSERT: By default, the block definition referenced by the INSERT will be inserted as a compound geometry (for example, a MULTILINESTRING for a block containing many lines, or a GEOMETRYCOLLECTION for a block that contains points and lines). If the block contains TEXT or MTEXT entities, they are not merged into the compound geometry and are instead returned as separate features.

    Three configuration options are available to control the behavior of INSERT entities:

    • DXF_MERGE_BLOCK_GEOMETRIES=[TRUE/FALSE]: Defaults to FALSE. To avoid merging blocks into a compound geometry the DXF_MERGE_BLOCK_GEOMETRIES config option may be set to FALSE. Use this option if you need to preserve the styling (such as colors) of individual linework entities within the block.

    • DXF_INLINE_BLOCKS=value: See below.

    • DXF_FEATURE_LIMIT_PER_BLOCK=value: Defaults to 10000. Maximum number of features inserted from a single block. Set to -1 for no limit.

  • ATTDEF, ATTRIB: Attributes (ATTRIB) are treated as TEXT entities, and attribute definitions (ATTDEF) inside blocks are ignored. The behavior is different when DXF_INLINE_BLOCKS is false (see below).

  • HATCH: Line and arc boundaries are collected as a polygon geometry, but no effort is currently made to represent the fill style of HATCH entities. Behavior is affected by the following configuration option:

    • DXF_HATCH_TOLERANCE=value: Determines the tolerance used when looking for the next component to add to the hatch boundary.

  • 3DFACE, SOLID, (GDAL >= 2.3.0) TRACE: Translated as POLYGON, except for SOLID and TRACE entities with only one distinct vertex (translated as POINT) or two distinct vertices (translated as LINESTRING).

  • DIMENSION: The DXF format allows each DIMENSION entity to reference an "anonymous" block (a block whose name starts with *D) that contains the geometry of the DIMENSION. If present, this anonymous block will be inlined at the required position. Otherwise, fallback will occur to a simple DIMENSION renderer that explodes a linear dimension as a MULTILINESTRING feature. Arrowheads, if present, are translated as one or more additional features. The fallback renderer will render nonlinear dimensions as if they were linear.

  • LEADER, MULTILEADER: The leader line is translated as a LINESTRING (LEADER) or MULTILINESTRING (MULTILEADER). Arrowheads, if present, are translated as one or more additional features. Text for MULTILEADER entities is translated into a POINT feature with a label. Block content for MULTILEADERS is treated as for INSERT. Spline leaders are tessellated into line segments.

  • 3DSOLID, REGION, BODY, SURFACE: See below.

A reasonable attempt is made to preserve color, line width (lineweight), line type, text size and orientation via OGR feature styling information when translating entities. Currently no effort is made to preserve complex line types (those that include text or shapes) or HATCH fill styles.

The OGR_ARC_STEPSIZE and OGR_ARC_MAX_GAP configurations options control the approximation of arcs, ellipses, circles and rounded polylines as linestrings.

For splines, the interpolated polyline contains eight vertices for each control point.

Object coordinate systems (OCS), also known as "extrusions", are supported for all entities to which they apply as per the DXF specification, except DIMENSION, LEADER and MULTILEADER. These three entity types also currently lack support for elevations; the geometries will always be 2D.

DXF_INLINE_BLOCKS

The default behavior is for INSERT entities to be exploded with the geometry of the BLOCK they reference. However, if the DXF_INLINE_BLOCKS configuration option is set to the value FALSE, then the behavior is different as described here.

  • A new layer will be available called "blocks". It will contain one or more features for each BLOCK defined in the file. In addition to the usual fields, they will also have a Block field indicating what block they are part of. (Note, in GDAL 2.2.x and earlier this field was called BlockName.)

  • (GDAL >= 2.3.0) ATTDEF entities in the blocks layer will have an AttributeTag field, giving the tag of the ATTDEF entity.

  • The entities layer will have several new fields:

    • BlockName: The name of the referenced block.

    • BlockScale: The X, Y, and Z scale factors.

    • BlockAngle: The angle of the block in degrees.

    • BlockOCSNormal (GDAL >= 2.3.0): The unit normal vector of the object coordinate system (OCS) of the INSERT entity.

    • BlockOCSCoords (GDAL >= 2.3.0): The OCS coordinates of the insertion point.

    • BlockAttributes (GDAL >= 2.3.0): The text content of attributes associated with this block. Each entry in this string list contains an attribute tag, followed by a space, followed by the text for that attribute (which may be empty).

  • INSERT entities will populate these new fields with the corresponding information (they are null for all other entities).

  • INSERT entities will not have block geometry inlined - instead they will have a POINT geometry for the insertion point.

The intention is that with DXF_INLINE_BLOCKS disabled, the block references will remain as references and the original block definitions will be available via the blocks layer. On export this configuration will result in the creation of similar blocks.

3D Extensibility

DXF files may contain 3DSOLID, REGION, BODY and SURFACE entities, which contain 3D modelling data in the proprietary Autodesk ShapeManager (ASM) format, a broadly compatible fork of the ACIS format. GDAL cannot transform these entities into OGR geometries, so they are skipped by default.

This behavior can be controlled with the following configuration option:

  • DXF_3D_EXTENSIBLE_MODE=[TRUE/FALSE]: If TRUE, include ASM entities with the raw ASM data stored in a field, allowing for interoperability with commercial conversion tools. This option adds two new fields:

    • ASMData: A binary field that contains the ASM data.

    • ASMTransform: A column-major list of 12 real values indicating the affine transformation to be applied to the entity.

This feature only works for DXF files in AutoCAD 2013 (AC1027) format and later.

Character Encodings

Normally DXF files are in the ANSI_1252 / Win1252 encoding. GDAL/OGR attempts to translate this to UTF-8 when reading and back into ANSI_1252 when writing. DXF files can also have a header field ($DWGCODEPAGE) indicating the encoding of the file. An attempt is made to use this to recode other code pages to UTF-8. Whether this works will depend on the code page naming and whether GDAL/OGR is built against the iconv library for character recoding.

In some cases the $DWGCODEPAGE setting in a DXF file will be wrong, or unrecognised by OGR. In this case, DXF_ENCODING may be used to override what id will be used by OGR in transcoding:

  • DXF_ENCODING=value: An encoding name supported by CPLRecode() (i.e. an iconv name), not a DXF $DWGCODEPAGE name. Using a value "UTF-8" will avoid any attempt to recode the text as it is read.

Open options

Added in version 3.10.

Open options can be specified in command-line tools using the syntax -oo <NAME>=<VALUE> or by providing the appropriate arguments to GDALOpenEx() (C) or gdal.OpenEx (Python). The following open options are supported:

DXF Writer

DXF files are written in AutoCAD 2004 format. A standard header (everything up to the ENTITIES keyword) is written from the $GDAL_DATA/header.dxf file, and the $GDAL_DATA/trailer.dxf file is added after the entities. Only one OGR layer can be used to create the output file (but many DXF layers can be created - see below).

  • Point features with LABEL styling are written as MTEXT entities based on the styling information.

  • Point features without LABEL styling are written as POINT entities.

  • LineString and MultiLineString features are written as one or more LWPOLYLINE entities, closed in the case of polygon rings. If the geometry does not have a constant elevation, a POLYLINE entity is written. An effort is made to preserve line width and color.

  • Polygon, Triangle and MultiPolygon features are written as HATCH entities by default. To write these features as LWPOLYLINE/POLYLINE entities instead, set the configuration option DXF_WRITE_HATCH=FALSE:

    • DXF_WRITE_HATCH=[TRUE/FALSE]: Defaults to TRUE. If TRUE, write Polygon, Triangle, and MultiPolygon features as HATCH entities. If false, write them as LWPOLYLINE/POLYLINE.

    You may need to do this if your geometries do not have a constant elevation, as the DXF HATCH entity cannot represent such geometries.

Only the first tool (PEN, BRUSH, etc) in the style string is read. The following style string parameters are understood:

Tool

Available on geometry types

Supported parameters

PEN

Point, (Multi)LineString

color (c); width (w); dash pattern (p)

BRUSH

(Multi)Polygon, Triangle

foreground color (fc)

SYMBOL

Point

color (c)

LABEL

Point

GDAL >= 2.3.0: text (t); font name (f); font size (s), treated as cap
height; bold (bo); italic (it); text color (c); x and y offsets (dx,
dy); angle (a); anchor point (p); stretch (w)
GDAL <= 2.2.x: text (t); font size (s), treated as cap height; text
color (c); angle (a); anchor point (p)

Dataset creation options can be specified in command-line tools using the syntax -dsco <NAME>=<VALUE> or by providing the appropriate arguments to GDALCreate() (C) or Driver.Create (Python). The driver supports the following dataset creation options:

  • HEADER=<filename>: Override the header file used - in place of header.dxf located in the GDAL_DATA directory.

  • TRAILER=<filename>: Override the trailer file used - in place of trailer.dxf located in the GDAL_DATA directory.

The header and trailer templates can be complete DXF files. The driver will scan them and only extract the needed portions (portion before or after the ENTITIES section).

Block References

It is possible to export a "blocks" layer to DXF in addition to the "entities" layer in order to produce actual DXF BLOCKs definitions in the output file. It is also possible to write INSERT entities if a block name is provided for an entity. To make this work the following conditions apply:

  • A "blocks" layer may be created, and it must be created before the entities layer.

  • The entities in the blocks layer should have the Block field populated. (Note, in GDAL 2.2.x and earlier this attribute was called BlockName.)

  • Objects to be written as INSERTs in the entities layer should have a POINT geometry, and the BlockName field set. You may also set BlockAngle, BlockScale, BlockOCSNormal and BlockOCSCoords (see above under DXF_INLINE_BLOCKS for details). If BlockOCSCoords is set to a list of 3 real numbers, it is used as the location of the block; in this situation the position of the POINT geometry is ignored.

  • If a block (name) is already defined in the template header, that will be used regardless of whether a new definition was provided in the blocks layer.

The intention is that a simple translation from DXF to DXF with DXF_INLINE_BLOCKS set to FALSE will approximately reproduce the original blocks and keep INSERT entities as INSERT entities rather than exploding them.

Layer Definitions

When writing entities, if populated the Layer field is used to set the written entities layer. If the layer is not already defined in the template header then a new layer definition will be introduced, copied from the definition of the default layer ("0").

Linetype Definitions

When writing linestring geometries, the following rules apply with regard to linetype (dash pattern) definitions.

  • If the Linetype field is set on a written feature, and that linetype is already defined in the template header, then it will be referenced from the entity. If a style string is present with a "p" pattern proportional to the linetype defined in the header, a linetype scale value is written.

  • If the Linetype field is set, but the linetype is not defined in the header template, then a definition will be added if the feature has an OGR style string with a PEN tool and a "p" pattern setting.

  • If the feature has no Linetype field set, but it does have an OGR style string with a PEN tool with a "p" pattern set, then an automatically named linetype will be created in the output file. Or, if an appropriate linetype was previously created, that linetype will be referenced, with a linetype scale if required.

The intention is that "dot dash" style patterns will be preserved when written to DXF and that specific linetypes can be predefined in the header template, and referenced using the Linetype field if desired.

It is assumed that patterns are using "g" (georeferenced) units for defining the line pattern. If not, the scaling of the DXF patterns is likely to be wrong - potentially very wrong.

Units

GDAL writes DXF files with measurement units set to "Imperial - Inches". If you need to change the units, edit the $MEASUREMENT and $INSUNITS variables in the header template.


See also

List of known issues

AutoCAD 2000 DXF Reference

AutoCAD 2014 DXF Reference