I see. We sometimes apply compression to some large data sets to avoid
excessive disk I/O (which was the main bottleneck in some cases). Of
course, the decision depends on the data and geoserver's hardware.
Cheers,
Matthias
Am 15.11.2011 08:33, schrieb Andrea Aime:
2011/11/14 Matthias Müller
Hi there,
the pyramid tutorial:
http://docs.geoserver.org/stable/en/user/tutorials/imagepyramid/imagepyramid.html
relies on a tiff was that used to be located at
http://gridlock.opengeo.org/data/bmreduced.tiff
but it seems the file is gone in the meantime.
I do have the file, do we have a safe
Go to whatismyip.com from your desktop and try the IP it shows. But you may
have windows firewall blocking port 8080 or an upstream router needing
configuration to forward this port to your machine. None of this is geoserver
related though.
hth
charles
On Nov 17, 2011, at 6:50 AM, steff
In my limited experience, even with a not-so-exciting storage solution, file
I/O has not been a limiting factor in rendering raster in GeoServer. So we
store everything-- overviews too-- uncompressed. I know others apply jpg
compression to their overviews, but leave the raw stuff uncompressed.
On 17/11/11 14:49, Stephen V. Mather wrote:
In my limited experience, even with a not-so-exciting storage solution, file
I/O has not been a limiting factor in rendering raster in GeoServer. So we
store everything-- overviews too-- uncompressed. I know others apply jpg
compression to their
Can't help with SLDs, but I would load your GeoServer into a Tomcat
container (not jetty), if this is for production use. You shouldn't need to
build that-- just download and install. BTW, the geowebcache.org project
has nice step-by-steps for this in their documentation section. Then you
just
Hey Andrea,
Not sure what happened with that file but yeah, a safter place to host it
would be data.opengeo.org, which is our main file server, it's all backed
up and nothing should get deleted.
How big is the file? If you can post it somewhere for me to get at I will
put it up and update the
I still cant, I have geoserver windows installer, installed everything
correctly.
Changed Router to forward to 8080.
Tried both whatismyip ip and ipconfig ip, still no connection to Geoserver
interface from outside localhost :\
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View this message in context:
On Thu, Nov 17, 2011 at 4:59 PM, Justin Deoliveira jdeol...@opengeo.org wrote:
Hey Andrea,
Not sure what happened with that file but yeah, a safter place to host it
would be data.opengeo.org, which is our main file server, it's all backed up
and nothing should get deleted.
How big is the
Hold your horses guys, I fixed it :) Charles-Galpin was correct, it was my
router that was causing the issue.
I just want to Tell everyone how I solved it.
I have a Dlink-di 524 Router.
To fix this I logged in to the router interface.
Clicked Tab Advanced Then Virtual Server.
Enable
Wrote
Cool, thanks Andrea. File downloaded and is now available at
data.opengeo.org/bmreduced.tiff. I have updated the tutorial to reflect the
new location.
On Thu, Nov 17, 2011 at 9:20 AM, Andrea Aime
andrea.a...@geo-solutions.itwrote:
On Thu, Nov 17, 2011 at 4:59 PM, Justin Deoliveira
On Thu, Nov 17, 2011 at 6:24 PM, Justin Deoliveira jdeol...@opengeo.org wrote:
Cool, thanks Andrea. File downloaded and is now available at
data.opengeo.org/bmreduced.tiff. I have updated the tutorial to reflect the
new location.
Hey, thanks a lot :-)
Cheers
Andrea
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I would like to be able to post questions or responses please.
Regards,
Pete
--
All the data continuously generated in your IT infrastructure
contains a definitive record of customers, application performance,
Hi All,
I have GeoWebCache (V 1.2.6) that comes built-in with Geoserver and I am
attempting to add the file geowebcache.xml to the gwc directory so that I
can cache tiles in a projection other than 4326 or 900913.
That is the only step I have taken so far. I have added that file then I
restarted
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