Boundless stack
Overview
Boundless Geospatial provides commercial support for open source geospatial software. In turn they provide direct support to open source, so everyone benefits from their work. By building a stack on this particular set of projects they do a great service to the community even if you can't afford to pay them for support.
Essentially they are an insurance company. ;-)
- QGIS on the desktop
- "Composer" is for authoring maps
- OpenLayers
- GeoServer http://geoserver.org/ Front end for geospatial repository https://github.com/Geo-CEG/docker-geoserver
- GeoGig http://geogig.org/ There is a GeoServer plugin for change management https://github.com/Geo-CEG/docker-geogig
- GeoWebCache http://geowebcache.org/ will cache pre-rendered tiles coming from Geoerver
- PostGIS Used as a data repository for GeoServer but capable of full SQL processing of spatial data.
See this page: Boundless commited to open source and their github page: https://github.com/boundlessgeo
Consider adding OpenDataKit to this stack.
My version on Bellman
Download and build
cd source/docker git clone [email protected]:boundlessgeo/geonode.git cd geonode docker-compose build
This build includes
- postgres
- elasticsearch (had to modify the compose file as there is no elasticsearch:latest tag, I used 6.6.0)
- rabbitmq
- django
- celery
- geoserver (built on tomcat 9)
- geonode (built on geonode/nginx)
- ArcREST
It keeps its data in a data container called geoserver_data_dir
docker-compose up . . . Creating geonode_rabbitmq_1 ... done Creating geonode_postgres_1 ... done Creating geonode_elasticsearch_1 ... done Creating geoserver_data_dir ... done Creating geonode_geoserver_1 ... done Creating geonode_celery_1 ... error Creating geonode_django_1 ... error
Who needs django and celery anyway? Oh right -- that's basically the underpinnings what I wanted to test today, geonode. That makes Boundless currently a non-starter. Trying GeoNode official version instead!