1 / 35

MapServer Deployment in Environment Canada

MapServer Deployment in Environment Canada. Tom Kralidis Integrated Environmental Applications Branch Knowledge Integration Directorate Environment Canada. 09 June 2004. Environment Canada. Departmental Overview MapServer Implementations Benefits Questions. Environment Canada.

maleah
Download Presentation

MapServer Deployment in Environment Canada

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. MapServer DeploymentinEnvironment Canada Tom Kralidis Integrated Environmental Applications Branch Knowledge Integration Directorate Environment Canada 09 June 2004

  2. Environment Canada • Departmental Overview • MapServer Implementations • Benefits • Questions

  3. Environment Canada • Departmental Overview • MapServer Implementations • Benefits • Questions

  4. Environment Canada • Federal Government Department dealing with: • Reporting on Canada’s Environment • Collection and dissemination of Environmental Information • Clean Environment • Nature • Weather and Environmental Predictions • Management, Administration and Policy • Working with other environmental organizations

  5. Environment Canada • Importance of Decision Making • Reporting, Tracking, Forecasting • Analysis • Importance of Information • Timeliness • Informed • Reliable

  6. Environment Canada • Large • Department • Numerous • Regional • Offices/Facilities

  7. IM Perspectives in Environment Canada Integrated Data = Information Shareable Data Useable Data Identification of Data Knowledge EC Moving Towards Connectivity Integrated Discovery, Access, and Use of Environmental Data Develop an architecture that allows for any API 2005 Build capacity in ability for others to share Applied geospatial area environmental management projects 2004 2nd year – Focus on the architecture that allows any partners to connect EC commits to two years of levied monies for development of CISE projects/program 2003 1st year – Make environmental information available in four key theme areas 2002 Ask Canadians what they want for environmental decision-making 2001 CISE Task Force formed

  8. Environment Canada • Abundance of data • Legacy Databases (circa 1800s) • Location-based reports • XML • Spreadsheets • Data exists and maintained (“Good to go”) • Enablement of location-based environmental data

  9. EC Implementations • Graduating to Information as Web Services • Publishing • Consuming • Departmental Interoperability • Fusion of information across activities • Plug-and-play with complimenting infrastructures • National/Provincial: CGDI, NLWIS, NFIS, LIO, NSDI • International: NSDI, INSPIRE, AUSLIG

  10. Canadian Information System for the Environment (CISE) • Answer Canadians' need for integrated environmental information to assist in decision-making • Integrating information from across the country, across jurisdictions, and across issues

  11. Canadian Information System for the Environment (CISE) • Theme areas • Air, Water, Climate, Biodiversity • Architecture built upon OGC specifications • Data Visualization • Data Access • Data Discovery • Metadata

  12. RésEau • Focus on watershed-based pilot projects; • Informing Canadians for enhanced decision-making; • RésEau’s deliverables are aligned with five key areas as identified in the Treasury Board proposal; • Focus Areas • Mapping the sources – open data sources. • Mapping the services – open applications. • Dissemination strategy – information and tools. • Watershed management – Pockwock example of how interoperability leads the development of watershed management solutions. • Engaging youth – water from a youth perspective.

  13. Environment Canada • Departmental Overview • MapServer Implementations • Benefits • Questions

  14. EC MapServer Implementations • CISEViewer • Ecological Monitoring and Assessment Network (EMAN) • Ontario Regional Information System for the Environment (ORISE) • Bird Studies Canada • Ecostratification • Water Quality Web • Canada Newfoundland and Labrador Aqua Link (CANAL)

  15. CISEViewer • Web Mapping Application to showcase EC data through OGC / CGDI specifications • Uses Chameleon to connect to data via standards-based services • Integrated Environmental Information Holdings • Air • Water • Climate • Biodiversity • Currently internal application • Data QA tool

  16. CISEViewer • Integration of partner agency online services • NRCan NTDB OGC:WMS • Atlas of Canada OGC:WMS • Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada Ecostratification OGC:WMS, OGC:WFS) • Canadian Geographical Names Service (OGC:WMS, OGC:WFS) • NIMA World Placename Lookup Service (OGC:WFS) • NRCan Postal Code Lookup Service (OGC:GML) • FGDC ZIP Code Lookup Service (OGC:GML) • NRCan NTS Lookup Service (OGC:GML)

  17. CISEViewer

  18. CISEViewer • Uses Chameleon extensibility to add new widget functionality • Subject matter/ theme-based information • Air • Water • Climate • Biodiversity

  19. EMAN NatureWatchWeb Services Enablement • Ecological Monitoring and Assessment Network • http://www.eman-rese.ca/ • NatureWatch • http://www.naturewatch.ca/ • Community / Citizen based science monitoring programs • IceWatch • PlantWatch • WormWatch • FrogWatch • Input of Observations using accepted field data collection protocols

  20. EMAN NatureWatchWeb Services Enablement • Use of UMN MapServer • Publishing • OGC:WMS (Visualization) • OGC:WFS (Data Access) • Cron job to generate shapefiles of observations using Perl Mapscript

  21. EMAN NatureWatchWeb Services Enablement • Small level of effort • Afternoon implementation session • Next steps • Connect directly to database (Port to PostGIS ) • Seamless upgrade for MapServer • Need only to update data bindings

  22. EMAN NatureWatchWeb Services Enablement • New functionality launched January 2004 • “Map of the Week” on GeoConnections Discovery Portal (February 2004) • First EC publicly available OGC:WMS and OGC:WFS

  23. EMAN NatureWatchWeb Services Enablement Integration with partner agency data through interoperability • Placenames • (CGNS) • Observations • (NatureWatch) • Basemaps • (Atlas)

  24. PYR Water Quality WebWeb Services Enablement • Use of UMN MapServer • Publishing • OGC:WMS (Visualization) • OGC:WFS (Data Access) • Consuming • Use of MapSurfer to connect to MapServer based data • Export of OGC Web Map Context Documents

  25. PYR Water Quality WebWeb Services Enablement

  26. PYR Water Quality WebWeb Services Enablement • New functionality launched March 2004 • In alignment with departmental Water Quality Services Initiative

  27. ORISE • Ontario Regional Information System for the Environment • Decision Support for Ontario environmental information • Multi-jurisdictional • Federal • Provincial

  28. ORISE • Chameleon • Rapid Application Development • Extensibility for domain requirements

  29. ORISE • MapServer • Quick deployment of robust OGC services

  30. Canadian Bird Portal • Partnership • Bird Studies Canada • Miistakis Institute • Portal • Access survey data • Breeding bird surveys • Christmas bird counts • Bird banding recoveries • Important bird areas across Canada

  31. Canadian Bird Portal • Use of MapServer • (recent convert!) • Publish to WMS and WFS • Small level of effort • Data already in place • ~8-10 emails!

  32. Environment Canada • Departmental Overview • MapServer Implementations • Benefits • Questions

  33. Benefits • Supports Specifications • No charge to acquire (licensing, etc.) • Code Extensibility / Customization • Contribution to main dist • Quicker turnaround time for upgrades to serve direct needs and requirements • e.g. MapServer ODBC “Simple Points” support

  34. Benefits • Platform independence • Easier to use • Enables increased capacity within organization • Higher awareness among developers

  35. MapServer Deployment inEnvironment Canada • Questions Thanks! Tom Kralidis tom.kralidis at ec.gc.ca

More Related