geojson-pydantic
django-rest-framework-gis
geojson-pydantic | django-rest-framework-gis | |
---|---|---|
1 | 8 | |
205 | 1,065 | |
2.0% | 0.0% | |
8.0 | 4.9 | |
4 months ago | about 1 month ago | |
Python | Python | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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geojson-pydantic
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SQLModel: SQL DBs based on Python type hints. The biggest thing I've built since FastAPI and Typer. đŸ˜…
All I would want from SQLModel right now would be support for a geography column from GeoALchemy and then a validator which converts the EWB to GeoJSON (https://geojson.org/) (As GeoJSON is a standard for most map frameworks to consume and produce spatial data). There is a Pydantic library representing the GeoJSON spec (https://github.com/developmentseed/geojson-pydantic) - it currently doesn't work in FastAPI since it uses tuples for coordinate sequences and Tuples are not supported until OpenAPI schema v3.1 AFAIK.
django-rest-framework-gis
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OpenWrt 23.05.0-rc1 – First Release Candidate
Is this something similar to OpenWISP? It all sounds cool, but might be an overkill for small installations…
[0] https://openwisp.org/
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Console for managing multiple OpenWRT nodes?
Haven't tried it yet, but I think OpenWISP is what you want.
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OpenWRT for meshnet and 200 devices?
or https://openwisp.org/
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Any open source centrally managed access point system?
All my searches are pointing to OpenWISP
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open source software like omada
The only "single pane of glass" open source solution I've found like this is OpenWISP. It works along with OpenWR based devices.
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VPN noob questions
I guess if you want to see what is out there, take a look and openwrt and openwisp
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Ask HN: Who Wants to Collaborate?
OpenWRT is missing a big piece of the puzzle: configuration management and the ability to work with a "controller". OpenWRT is currently great at running stand-alone but has essentially zero support for being part of a "fleet" of devices managed centrally.
This means something as simple as changing the network name or password requires changing it on every single access point manually, and even worse if your mesh system relies on sharing frequently-changing state between devices.
OpenWISP tries to address this problem: https://openwisp.org - I suggest you check it out and solve the configuration management problem first.
The actual "mesh" part is actually relatively easy. Most commercial systems use basic Linux networking tools, HostAPd (sometimes with custom improvements, but this all ends up upstreamed or reimplemented upstream given enough time) and custom glue code to tie them together. A "mesh" system is typically a user-facing network being broadcast by all APs (with shared settings such as name and password) and an invisible, "backhaul" network each AP hosts (either on a separate interface or on the same interface as the AP - I believe some wireless cards can act both as AP and station as long as the channel is the same) and the other in the path connects to, and the glue code handles configuring all of that. 802.11s is also an option that can be used, and I'm pretty sure all of this is already possible to configure manually in Linux - what's lacking is the "glue code" to set up & manage all of this automatically.
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front end for displaying maps with django
In your project did you end up deploying something like django-rest-framework-gis? I have found great results with it. Mainly using PSQL as the backend. I found that the built in Django GeoJSON Serializer can become a little slow with polys like land parcels but it will get the job done and if you can get way without deploying DRF then it maybe worth the trade off.