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initialization-files.md

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A catalog in TerriaJS is defined in one or more "initialization files" (or init files). In a default TerriaMap installation, the main init file is found in wwwroot/init/simple.json.

An init file is a JSON file with this basic structure:

{
    "catalog": [
        {
            "type": "group",
            "name": "My group",
            "members": [
            ...
            ]
        },
        ...
    ],
    "homeCamera": {
        "north": -8,
        "east": 158,
        "south": -45,
        "west": 109
    },
    "initialCamera": { ... },
    "corsDomains": [ "myserver.gov.au" ],
    "baseMaps": {
      "items": [
        {
          "item": {
            "id": "basemap-darkmatter",
            "name": "Dark Matter",
              ...
          },
          "image": "/images/dark-matter.png"
        }
      ],
    },
    ...
}

Key points:

  • catalog is an array.
  • Every element of that array must have a type (corresponding to a value recognised by TerriaJS) and a name.
  • The three major categories of catalog member types are:
    • Catalog Group: A group (folder) of items. Different group types allow the contents to be manually specified or to be automatically determined by querying various types of server.
    • Catalog Item: Actual geospatial or chart data from a file or service, in various formats.
    • (Docs not yet available) Catalog Function: A parameterized service, such as a Web Processing Service (WPS). The user supplies the parameters and gets back some result.

Most of the other properties of each layer depend on the specific type. See the links above for details of each type.

Using a catalog file

There are four ways to load a catalog file into a TerriaJS application:

  1. Store it in Terria Map's wwwroot/init directory, and refer to it in the initializationUrls section of the config.json file. It is loaded automatically when you visit the webpage. This is how wwwroot/init/terria.json is loaded in the default TerriaMap setup.
  2. Store it in Terria Maps's wwwroot/init directory, without adding it to config.json. Add the catalog file name (without .json) to the URL after #. For instance, example.com/terria#mycatalog. See Controlling with URL Parameters for more information. This method is useful when developing a catalog that is not quite ready for public access, but it is helpful to show it to interested stakeholders.
  3. Store it anywhere on the web (on a CORS-enabled server). Add the complete URL (including .json) to the URL, after #. For instance, http://nationalmap.gov.au/#http://example.com/mycatalog.json. This method is useful when developing services for a TerriaJS instance which you don't directly control, and for rapidly previewing changes which you can also share with people.
  4. Store it locally, then drag and drop it into the Terria Map window.

All catalog files, however loaded, are merged together in TerriaJS. Any two items with the same name and place in the tree are combined. This means that if two catalog files each define a group called "Water", there will be only one "Water" group in Terria, containing the two sets of group members merged together.

Editing catalog files

Catalog files can be edited two ways:

  1. Using a desktop text editor. Be very careful to ensure that your file is valid JSON. This is more restrictive format than simple JavaScript, for instance. You can use http://jsonlint.com/.
  2. Using a JSON-specific editor, such as http://www.jsoneditoronline.org/. This has the advantage that your file will be valid JSON.

Catalog file properties

Name Required Type Default Description
corsDomains no string[] By default, TerriaJS proxies all requests within the proxy whitelist specified in the Server-side Config, making the assumption that the servers do not support CORS. You can add hosts that are known to support CORS to this property to avoid proxying them.
catalog no CatalogItem[], CatalogGroup[], CatalogFunction[] An array of catalog items, groups and functions. Check example above.
initialCamera no CameraPosition The location when the map first displays.
stories no Story[] An array of stories to be loaded.
viewerMode no "3d" or "3dSmooth" or "2D" "3d" The id of the viewer mode to be shown initialy.
homeCamera yes CameraPosition Where the camera goes when you click the "home" button between the zoom-in and zoom-out buttons.
baseMaps no baseMaps The definition of the base maps to be shown to the user.
showSplitter no boolean false Show splitter initally.
splitPosition no number 0.5 The position of splitter.
workbench no string[] List of items ids to initially add to workbench.
previewedItemId no string ID of the catalog member that is currently being previewed.

CameraPosition

Option 1: north, south, east, west

The bounding box method uses north, east ,south, and west, in lat/lng decimal degrees. The camera will be positioned in the center point of those bounds, looking toward the Earth's center, zoomed back enough to see to the edges of the bounds.

This is the only mode supported in 2D mode (Leaflet). Therefore, you should always include a bounding box, even if you also use another mode.

Name Required Type Default Description
north yes number
east yes number
south yes number
west yes number

Example

"homeCamera": {
    "north": -8,
    "east": 158,
    "south": -45,
    "west": 109
}

Option 2: position, direction and up

This overrides Option 1.

You can specify position, direction, and up (as well as north, east ,south, and west). position, direction and up need x, y and z keys specifying locations in ECEF metre coordinates, which means the origin is the centre of the Earth, positive Z points to the north pole, positive X points toward "Null Island" where the equator intersects with 0 degrees longitude, and positive Y points at (0, 90E) -- which is in the Indian Ocean south of the Bay of Bengal.

Name Required Type Default Description
position yes Cartesian 3 location of the camera.
direction yes Cartesian 3 The location camera is looking at.
up yes Cartesian 3 Which way is "up", which determines how the camera is rotated.

For most purposes positioning this way is difficult for normal humans. To see an example, move the camera to some location, click the "share" button (and choose to not use the URL shortner), then URL-decode the URL you get.

Example

"homeCamera": {
    "west": 105.51019777628066,
    "south": -39.61110094535454,
    "east": 161.48980219597954,
    "north": -9.09249015267353,
    "position": {
        "x": -6685409.955422118,
        "y": 7044952.140379313,
        "z": -4828130.30167422
    },
    "direction": {
        "x": 0.6155666547559182,
        "y": -0.6486719065674744,
        "z": 0.4475516184561574
    },
    "up": {
        "x": -0.30807420442344124,
        "y": 0.3246424737331665,
        "z": 0.8942580996654569
    }
}

Option 3: positionHeading (like an aircraft)

Setting positionHeading is useful for when you're showing a view from an aircraft or satellite, and overrides Options 1 and 2.

Name Required Type Default Description
cameraLongitude yes number Longitude of camera
cameraLatitude yes number Latitude of camera
cameraHeight yes number Height of camera above earth's surface, probably in metres
heading yes number In degrees clockwise from north (90 is east)
pitch yes number How much the camera is tilted, in degrees down from horizontal (-90 is straight down).
roll yes number How much the camera is rotated left or right, in degrees.

Example

"homeCamera": {
    "positionHeading": {
        "cameraLongitude": 145,
        "cameraLatitude": -37,
        "cameraHeight": 1000,
        "heading": 0,
        "pitch": -70,
        "roll": 0
    }
}

Option 4: lookAt (a feature)

lookAt is probably the most useful one for showing a feature on the map, and overrides Options 1, 2, and 3.

Name Required Type Default Description
targetLongitude yes number The longitude to look at.
targetLatitude yes number The latitude to look at.
targetHeight yes number In meters above the WGS84 ellipsoid (positive is up).
heading yes number In degrees clockwise from north.
pitch yes number How much the camera is tilted, in degrees down from horizontal (so negative values mean you're looking at the sky).
range yes number In meters from the thing you're looking at.

Example

"homeCamera": {
    "lookAt": {
        "targetLongitude": 145,
        "targetLatitude": 37,
        "targetHeight": 0,
        "heading": 0,
        "pitch": -90,
        "range": 1000
    }
}

Story

Definition of the story. This can be pretty complex to define for the standard user, the easiest way is to generate share url without url shortener.

Name Required Type Default Description
id yes string Id of the story.
title yes string Title of the story.
text yes string Text of the story.
shareData yes ShareData

ShareData

Name Required Type Default Description
version yes string "8.0.0" The version of share data.
initSources yes CatalogFileProperties

baseMaps

Definition of the base map model.

Name Required Type Default Description
items no basemapItem default list of basemaps The array of the base maps to be shown to the user. It will be combined with default list. To override the default basemap definition specify the id of the default basemap and parameter that need to be overriden.
defaultBaseMapId no string The id of the baseMap user will see on the first mapLoad. The value must be an id of the catalog item from the enabledBaseMaps array.
previewBaseMapId no string The id of the baseMap to be used as the base map in data preview. The value must be an id of the catalog item from the enabledBaseMaps array.
enabledBaseMaps no string[] all Array of base maps ids that is available to user. Use this do define order of the base maps in settings panel. Leave undefined to show all basemaps. The values must be an ids of the catalog item from the baseMaps items array.

Example

  "baseMaps": {
    "items": [
      {
        "item": {
          "id": "basemap-positron",
          "name": "Base map positron customized name",
        },
        "image": "build/TerriaJS/images/time-series-guide.jpg"
      },
      {
        "item": {
          "id": "test-basemap",
          "name": "Voyager with labels",
          "type": "open-street-map",
          "url": "https://basemaps.cartocdn.com/rastertiles/voyager_labels_under/",
          "attribution": "© <a href='https://www.openstreetmap.org/copyright'>OpenStreetMap</a>, © <a href='https://carto.com/about-carto/'>CARTO</a>",
          "subdomains": ["a", "b", "c", "d"],
          "opacity": 1.0
        },
        "image": "build/TerriaJS/images/Australia.png"
      },
      {
        "item": "//Surface Geology",
        "image": "build/TerriaJS/images/Australia.png"
      }
    ],
    "defaultBaseMapId": "basemap-positron",
    "previewBaseMapId": "basemap-natural-earth-II"
  }

baseMapItem

Definition of the baseMap model.

Name Required Type Default Description
item yes Catalog Item Catalog item defition to be used for the base map. It is also possible to reference an existing catalog item using its id (i.e. "//Surface Geology").
image yes string Path to an image file of the baseMap image to be shown in Map Settings

Cartesian 3

Name Required Type Default Description
x yes number The X component.
y yes number The Y component.
z yes number The Z component.