or how to use geoimage.at and others in josm
A few weeks ago a few austrian mappers contacted me because we are now allowed to us the WMS server at http://geoimage.at/ for mapping.
Unfortunately the data is currently only available in an austrian koordinate system (EPSG:31287). With EPSG:4326 beeing unavailable this is in fact a violation of the WMS spec 🙁
This could however be easily fixed using UMN-Mapserver as WMS-proxy, but unfortunately we are not allowed to do this at wms.openstreetmap.debecause we are not permitted to set up a cascading WMS based on their rules.
Anyway, with my wms.openstreetmap.de setup already using the python wsgi-interface (apache mod_wsgi) I thought that a standalone UMN-Mapserver based WMS-server should be very easy to hack, given the fact, that all the difficult stuff is already available in python and mapscript. Well, my presumption proved to be true 🙂
So here is my standalone WMS-server written in roughly 100 lines of python code.
As far as geoimage.at is concerned, there are already other solutions at the OSM-Wiki page, but this was fun to hack and might be useful for other purposes as well. An advantage of my solution is that it is possible to use the Austrian GIS-grid file for reprojection to achieve the highest possible accuracy. For this purpose the proj4-definition for EPSG:31287 (defined in /usr/share/proj/epsg on Linux) must look like this:
<31287> +proj=lcc +lat_1=49 +lat_2=46 +lat_0=47.5 +lon_0=13.33333333333333 +x_0=400000 +y_0=400000 +ellps=bessel +units=m +nadgrids=/path/to/GIS_GRID_austria.gsb +no_defs
I would be interested in feedback on how to get this to work on Windows as well. Talking about Linux this has only been a matter of typing apt-get install python-mapscript
and adjusting the proj4 definition file to use the GIS-grid.
Neueste Kommentare