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papyrus_mapnik

The overall goal of papyrus_mapnik is to ease creating Mapnik-based web services in Pyramid applications. Towards this goal papyrus_mapnik provides adapters, bridges, whatever between Pyramid and Mapnik.

More specifically, papyrus_mapnik can be used together with papyrus to easily build MapFish-compliant web services (see MapFish Protocol) that output Mapnik images.

Here is a request looks like:

GET /countries.png?queryable=cont&cont__eq=Africa&img_width=1400&img_height=600&img_bbox=-180,-90,180,90

The queryable and ${attr}__eq are parameters defined by the MapFish Protocol. papyrus_mapnik extends the MapFish Protocol with specific parameters, namely img_width, img_height, and img_bbox.

Why?

"MapServer, GeoServer, Mapnik OGCServer, and others are doing a great job at serving images with WMS, so why doing that?"

Beacause it provides simple and nice HTTP interfaces for requesting images with filters. And because it provides extreme flexibility and customizability. Think security!

Dependencies

papyrus_mapnik requires the Mapnik2 libs and Python bindings. papyrus_mapnik doesn't require papyrus, so to use papyrus_mapnik together with papyrus both packages must be dependencies of the Pyramid application.

Install

papyrus_mapnik can be installed with easy_install:

$ easy_install papyrus_mapnik

Often you'll want to set papyrus_mapnik as a dependency of your Pyramid app, which is done by adding papyrus_mapnik to the install_requires list defined in the Pyramid app's setup.py file.

Renderer

papyrus_mapnik provides a renderer that can convert objects returned by papyrus' MapFish implementation (papyrus.protocol) into Mapnik images wrapped in Pyramid Response objects. Conceptually the renderer is an adapter between objects of different types, and of different libraries.

Usage

Let's assume we have MyApp Pyramid application, structured in a conventional way. Let's also assume this application defines a MapFish web service, set up with a view function like this:

@view_config(route_name='countries_vector', renderer='geojson')
def countries(request)
    return proto.read(request)

With papyrus_mapnik this web service can be extended to output images. This is done by

  1. registering the renderer provided by papyrus_mapnik (myapp/__init__.py):

    from papyrus_mapnik.renderers import MapnikRendererFactory
    config.add_renderer('.xml', MapnikRendererFactory)
    
  2. adding a new configuration to the view function (myapp/views.py):

    @view_config(route_name='countries_raster', renderer='myapp:population.xml')
    @view_config(route_name='countries_vector', renderer='geojson')
    def countries(request)
        return proto.read(request)
    
  3. and adding a route to this view (myapp/__init__.py):

    config.add_route('countries_raster', '/countries.png')
    

In the above example it is assumed that a Mapnik configuration file named population.xml is located in the MyApp/myapp directory. The renderer parameter is an asset specification.

Run the tests

To run the tests install the nose, mock and coverage packages in the Python environment, and execute:

$ nosetests --with-coverage

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