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tgext.geo TileCache Tutorial

Introduction

TileCache is a python WSGI (Web Services Gateway Interface) App that implements the WMS-C (Web Map Service - Cached) spec for generation and serving of WMS tiles. This improves the performance of a WMS service substantially by generating / querying tiles and locally caching them to serve subsequent tile requests. tgext.geo includes paster commands for creating controller code that mounts TileCache as a WSGI App.

About This Tutorial

In this tutorial we will create a TG2 app and use tgext.geo extension to mount the TileCache WSGI App. We will also modify the template code for index method to create an OpenLayers Map that will render the tiles.

Installation

It is assumed that a fresh virtualenv has been created and TG2 installed following the TurboGears 2.2.2 Standard Installation. Install tgext.geo using easy_install:

(tg2env)$ easy_install -i http://www.turbogears.org/2.0/downloads/current/index tgext.geo

Creating A New TG2 App

Create a new TG2 app using the paster command and change into the newly created project folder:

(tg2env)$ paster quickstart TilesApp
(tg2env)$ cd TilesApp

Add tgext.geo Paster Plugin

Open the paster plugins file viz. TilesApp.egg-info/paster_plugins.txt and add a line containing tgext.geo .

Create A TileCache Config

Create a TileCache config in the file tilecache.cfg in the project folder and add the necessary configuration. Details of this configuration can be found in the TileCache Documentation. A sample tilecache.cfg file can be downloaded from http://svn.tilecache.org/trunk/tilecache/tilecache.cfg . For example, a standard WMS tile service would have the following config:

[cache]
type=Disk
base=/tmp/tilecache

# Rendering VMAP0 data with WMS
[basic]
type=WMS
url=http://labs.metacarta.com/wms/vmap0
extension=png

Sections for all the required tilecache layers should be added to this file. For example, the following lines should be added in order to have a Mapnik Tiles layer using the OpenStreetMap (OSM) data:

# Rendering OpenStreetMap data with Mapnik
[osm]
type=Mapnik
mapfile=/home/user/osm-mapnik/osm.xml
spherical_mercator=true
bbox=-20037508.34,-20037508.34,20037508.34,20037508.34
resolutions=156543.0,78271.5,39135.75,19567.875,9783.9375,4891.96875,2445.984375,1222.9921875,611.49609375,305.748046875,152.874023438,76.4370117188,38.2185058594,19.1092529297,9.55462646484,4.77731323242,2.38865661621,1.19432830811,0.597164154053,0.298582077026
metaTile="yes"
metaBuffer=40

Creating The Tiles Controller

Once the tilecache.cfg file is ready, the new controller containing the TileCache WSGI App can be created using the following paster command:

(tg2env)$ paster geo-tilecache tiles

where tiles is the new controller. Now edit the root controller (package/controllers/root.py) to import and mount the controller:

from tilesapp.controllers.tiles import TilesController

class RootController(BaseController):
    tiles = TilesController()

The tiles controller should now be accessible at the url location http://<host>:<port>/tiles.

Start the server and point your browser to the above url. You should be able to see the TileCache Capabilities document, which an xml document describing the service.

Rendering The Tiles In An OpenLayers Map

Adding The Javascript Code

The tiles accessible through the TileCache definition above can be rendered in an OpenLayers Map as a WMS layer. Modify the index template to add the following javascript code in the head section:

<script src="/javascript/OpenLayers.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
    var map, layer;
    function init(){
        map = new OpenLayers.Map( $('map'), {'maxResolution': 360/512});
        layer = new OpenLayers.Layer.WMS( "VMap0",
                "http://localhost:8080/tiles", {layers: 'basic', format: 'image/png' } );
        map.addLayer(layer);
        if (!map.getCenter()) map.zoomToMaxExtent();
    }
</script>

When using the OSM Layer, use exactly the same projection, extents and resolution settings as defined in the tilecache config:

<script src="/javascript/OpenLayers.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
    var map, layer;
    function init(){
     options = {controls:[
            new OpenLayers.Control.LayerSwitcher(),
            new OpenLayers.Control.PanZoomBar()
            ]};

     options = OpenLayers.Util.extend({
        maxExtent: new OpenLayers.Bounds(-20037508.34,
            -20037508.34,20037508.34,20037508.34),
        maxResolution: 156543.0339,
        projection: new OpenLayers.Projection("EPSG:900913"),
        displayProjection: new OpenLayers.Projection("EPSG:4326"),
        transitionEffect: "resize"
    }, options);

    map = new OpenLayers.Map('map', options);

    layer = new OpenLayers.Layer.WMS("osm", "http://localhost:8080/tiles/",
            {layername: "osm", type: "png"});
    map.addLayer(layer);
    map.setCenter(new OpenLayers.LonLat(2.3, 48.86).transform(
            new OpenLayers.Projection("EPSG:4326"),
            new OpenLayers.Projection("EPSG:900913")), 15);
}
</script>

Download OpenLayers javascript mapping toolkit from the OpenLayers site and unzip / untar the archive. Copy the OpenLayers.js file and the img folder in the archive to project/public/javascript folder.

Adding The Style Code

The following stylesheet code may be added to suite the map display:

<style type="text/css">
    #map {
        width: 100%;
        height: 100%;
    }
</style>

Add The HTML Code

The following HTML code should be sufficient to show the map:

<body onload="init();">
  <div id="map"/>
  <div class="clearingdiv" />
  <div class="notice"> Thank you for choosing TurboGears.</div>
</body>

See TileCache In Action

Its time to see TileCache in action now. Run the paster command to start the local HTTP server:

(tg2env)$ paster serve --reload development.ini

Point your browser to http://localhost:8080 to view the map. The first time you see the map and zoom in the tile would be generated and rendered. In the subsequent requests the response is much faster as tiles cached earlier are served up.

Mapnik
Mapnik is a C++ toolkit with python bindings for rendering maps. OpenStreetMap is a free geographic data set containing street maps. A document describing the rendering of OSM maps using Mapnik can be found here <http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/index.php/Mapnik>_. The metaTile param causes mapnik to make use of PIL for rendering the maps.