Awesome
GeoPostGIS
Postgrex extension for the PostGIS data types. Uses the geo library
Installation
The package can be installed by adding :geo_postgis
to your list of
dependencies in mix.exs
:
def deps do
[
{:geo_postgis, "~> 3.7"}
]
end
Make sure PostGIS extension to your database is installed. More information here
Optional Configuration
# When a binary is passed to `Geo.PostGIS.Geometry.cast/1` implementation of
# `Ecto.Type.cast/1`, it is assumed to be a GeoJSON string. When this happens,
# geo_postgis will use Poison, by default, to convert the binary to a map and
# then convert that map to one of the Geo structs. If in these cases you would
# like to use a different JSON parser, you can set the config below.
# config.exs
config :geo_postgis,
json_library: Jason # If you want to set your JSON module
Examples
Postgrex Extension for the PostGIS data types, Geometry and Geography:
Postgrex.Types.define(MyApp.PostgresTypes, [Geo.PostGIS.Extension], [])
opts = [hostname: "localhost", username: "postgres", database: "geo_postgrex_test", types: MyApp.PostgresTypes ]
[hostname: "localhost", username: "postgres", database: "geo_postgrex_test", types: MyApp.PostgresTypes]
{:ok, pid} = Postgrex.Connection.start_link(opts)
{:ok, #PID<0.115.0>}
geo = %Geo.Point{coordinates: {30, -90}, srid: 4326}
%Geo.Point{coordinates: {30, -90}, srid: 4326}
{:ok, _} = Postgrex.Connection.query(pid, "CREATE TABLE point_test (id int, geom geometry(Point, 4326))")
{:ok, %Postgrex.Result{columns: nil, command: :create_table, num_rows: 0, rows: nil}}
{:ok, _} = Postgrex.Connection.query(pid, "INSERT INTO point_test VALUES ($1, $2)", [42, geo])
{:ok, %Postgrex.Result{columns: nil, command: :insert, num_rows: 1, rows: nil}}
Postgrex.Connection.query(pid, "SELECT * FROM point_test")
{:ok, %Postgrex.Result{columns: ["id", "geom"], command: :select, num_rows: 1,
rows: [{42, %Geo.Point{coordinates: {30.0, -90.0}, srid: 4326 }}]}}
Use with Ecto:
# If using with Ecto, you may want something like this instead
Postgrex.Types.define(MyApp.PostgresTypes,
[Geo.PostGIS.Extension] ++ Ecto.Adapters.Postgres.extensions(),
json: Jason)
# Add extensions to your repo config
config :thanks, Repo,
database: "geo_postgrex_test",
username: "postgres",
password: "postgres",
hostname: "localhost",
adapter: Ecto.Adapters.Postgres,
types: MyApp.PostgresTypes
# Create a schema
defmodule Test do
use Ecto.Schema
schema "test" do
field :name, :string
field :geom, Geo.PostGIS.Geometry
end
end
# Geometry or Geography columns can also be created in migrations
defmodule Repo.Migrations.Init do
use Ecto.Migration
def up do
create table(:test) do
add :name, :string
add :geom, :geometry
end
end
def down do
drop table(:test)
end
end
Ecto migrations can also use more elaborate PostGIS GIS Objects. These types are useful for enforcing constraints on {Lng,Lat}
(order matters), or ensuring that a particular projection/coordinate system/format is used.
defmodule Repo.Migrations.AdvancedInit do
use Ecto.Migration
def up do
create table(:test) do
add :name, :string
end
# Add a field `lng_lat_point` with type `geometry(Point,4326)`.
# This can store a "standard GPS" (epsg4326) coordinate pair {longitude,latitude}.
execute("SELECT AddGeometryColumn ('test','lng_lat_point',4326,'POINT',2);")
# Once a GIS data table exceeds a few thousand rows, you will want to build an index to speed up spatial searches of the data
# Syntax - CREATE INDEX [indexname] ON [tablename] USING GIST ( [geometryfield] );
execute("CREATE INDEX test_geom_idx ON test USING GIST (lng_lat_point);")
end
def down do
drop table(:test)
end
end
Be sure to enable the PostGIS extension if you haven't already done so:
defmodule MyApp.Repo.Migrations.EnablePostgis do
use Ecto.Migration
def up do
execute "CREATE EXTENSION IF NOT EXISTS postgis"
end
def down do
execute "DROP EXTENSION IF EXISTS postgis"
end
end
PostGIS functions can also be used in Ecto queries. Currently only the OpenGIS functions are implemented. Have a look at lib/geo_postgis.ex for the implemented functions. You can use them like:
defmodule Example do
import Ecto.Query
import Geo.PostGIS
def example_query(geom) do
query = from location in Location, limit: 5, select: st_distance(location.geom, ^geom)
query
|> Repo.one
end
end
Development
After you got the dependencies via mix deps.get
make sure that:
postgis
is installed- your
postgres
user has the database"geo_postgrex_test"
- your
postgres
db user can login without a password or you set thePGPASSWORD
environment variable appropriately
Then you can run the tests as you are used to with mix test
.
Copyright and License
Copyright (c) 2017 Bryan Joseph
Released under the MIT License, which can be found in the repository in LICENSE
.