future-mvt
pygeoapi
future-mvt | pygeoapi | |
---|---|---|
1 | 9 | |
9 | 446 | |
- | 0.4% | |
10.0 | 9.3 | |
over 1 year ago | 3 days ago | |
Python | ||
- | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
future-mvt
-
How The Post is replacing Mapbox with open source solutions
> PMTiles aside, this is still Mapbox’s world.
Isn't this is a bit like saying we're still in Google's world because most maps still use Web Mercator? :)
Good tech builds on what came before. Mapbox did a lot of ground-breaking work in building tooling around OSM, but so have many others. The fact that they named it Mapbox Vector Tiles is be genius in hindsight, because even though we may use tons of tooling they didn't create to build and render them, their name is still there.
> The next challenge is to evolve the tech stack to something beyond what Mapbox worked up five/ten years ago.
Agreed, and I think we've seen a lot of iterative work in the open since then. The next challenge is likely building a OSS stack to do proper 3D: open data (including OSM) to pixels, and that work is already beginning across a lot of organizations: https://github.com/nyurik/future-mvt/discussions, Overture Maps, MapLibre, etc.
pygeoapi
- On the fly conversion of raster to vector spatial index (h3)
-
How The Post is replacing Mapbox with open source solutions
If you're just looking for a WFS (geojson/data) and not WMS/raster output, you might look at PyGeoAPI. (https://pygeoapi.io/) I haven't used it, but have looked at it a bit for a potential project to export geo data as an API.
Geoserver does fill a pretty big hole in the capabilities space -- it's pretty easy to get going with a bunch of layers and style them, but ultimately they're implementing a RDBMS in xml files, and it's a big, complicated, java system that's been one of the more troublesome portions of the stack (IME).
-
GeoServer is an open source server for sharing geospatial data
I would also like to share https://pygeoapi.io/ which relies on the new OGC API standard to share geospatial data.
-
Volunteering for FOSS4G
python: https://pygeoapi.io - the whole project is ogcapi stuff
-
My Raster and vectors to an API
This may be a good start, without having to write much code. https://pygeoapi.io/
-
Anyone know a good Python OGC client?
I believe pygeoapi https://pygeoapi.io/ is what you're looking for. It implements the OGC API suite of standards, and is in active development. I haven't used it yet, but hope to pretty soon within a Django project. If you do go with it I'd love to hear what you think.
-
How easy is it to set up a QGIS server on Ubuntu?
https://pygeoapi.io/ link to the project. The devs are really active and helpful in Gitter of you ever have any issues
- How-to share geospatial data on the web
-
Sharing Geospatial Data with OGC API, pygeoapi and MongoDB
In order to publish the dataset using the OGC API Features standard, we need a software which implements the standard. In this tutorial we will use pygeoapi, which is a python server implementation, released under a FOSS (MIT) license. pygeoapi needs a backend to store the data. For that we will use the MongoDB document oriented database. In order to make deployment easier, the complete stack was virtualised into a set of docker containers, and orchestrated using docker-compose.
What are some alternatives?
valhalla - Open Source Routing Engine for OpenStreetMap
qwc2 - QGIS Web Client 2 Components
go-pmtiles - Single-file executable tool for working with PMTiles archives
lizmap-web-client - Transfer a QGIS project on a server, Lizmap is providing the web interface to browse it
maputnik - An open source visual editor for the 'MapLibre Style Specification'
PMTiles - Cloud-optimized + compressed single-file tile archives for vector and raster maps
OpenLayers3 - OpenLayers
planetiler - Flexible tool to build planet-scale vector tilesets from OpenStreetMap data fast
Docker Compose - Define and run multi-container applications with Docker
react-leaflet - React components for Leaflet maps