Hi,
Your mapfile should output image in epsg:32754. How do you know that output is
in epsg:20254? Without knowing how Chameleon's cursorpos works I would not
count on that, it may well calculate projected coordinates on the fly. Try for
example with cgi calls from your browser in &mode=map m
On 01/10/2010 09:39 PM, bascom49 wrote:
Andy Colson wrote:
On 01/10/2010 08:55 PM, bascom49 wrote:
Andy Colson wrote:
On 01/10/2010 04:11 PM, bascom49 wrote:
Ive installed mapserver on a vps server under centos 5 linux. I'm
having
problems with setting up mapscript.
My php setup is :
Andy Colson wrote:
>
> On 01/10/2010 08:55 PM, bascom49 wrote:
>>
>>
>> Andy Colson wrote:
>>>
>>> On 01/10/2010 04:11 PM, bascom49 wrote:
Ive installed mapserver on a vps server under centos 5 linux. I'm
having
problems with setting up mapscript.
My php setup is :
On 01/10/2010 08:55 PM, bascom49 wrote:
Andy Colson wrote:
On 01/10/2010 04:11 PM, bascom49 wrote:
Ive installed mapserver on a vps server under centos 5 linux. I'm having
problems with setting up mapscript.
My php setup is :
http://174.120.238.19/info.php
The output from mapserv -v is:
Andy Colson wrote:
>
> On 01/10/2010 04:11 PM, bascom49 wrote:
>>
>> Ive installed mapserver on a vps server under centos 5 linux. I'm having
>> problems with setting up mapscript.
>>
>> My php setup is :
>>
>> http://174.120.238.19/info.php
>>
>> The output from mapserv -v is:
>>
>> r...@inf [/
I have had similar errors in the past, and almost invariably it was a postgis
query error. Follow Jukka's advice - debug 5 for both the map and the layer,
and look in the log.
cheers
Ben
On 11/01/2010, at 1:00 , mapserver-users-requ...@lists.osgeo.org wrote:
> If I understood right "mol" i
Hi all,
I figured out what the issue was, but I'm not sure I understand why it
causes the transparent pixels.
Originally, when I created my mapObj in Python, I was initializing the map's
projection to a geographic projection with:
m.setProjection("init=epsg:4326")
The issue goes away if I initia
On 01/10/2010 04:11 PM, bascom49 wrote:
Ive installed mapserver on a vps server under centos 5 linux. I'm having
problems with setting up mapscript.
My php setup is :
http://174.120.238.19/info.php
The output from mapserv -v is:
r...@inf [/usr/local/apache/cgi-bin]# /usr/local/apache/cgi-bin
Hi All,
I'm a bit confused as to the way mapserver deals with projections. My
understanding is that if I place a 'PROJECTION' tag as a high level object
in the mapfile, then that is the projection I should expect when I read
coordinates from a tool such as Chameleon's cursorpos widget.
If I then
Ive installed mapserver on a vps server under centos 5 linux. I'm having
problems with setting up mapscript.
My php setup is :
http://174.120.238.19/info.php
The output from mapserv -v is:
r...@inf [/usr/local/apache/cgi-bin]# /usr/local/apache/cgi-bin/mapserv -v
MapServer version 5.4.2 OUTPUT
Hi,
I believe that displaying Chinese multi-byte characters is not a limitation
of MapServer. Assuming that you have already added the character set you
want to display to your FreeBSD system, you need to define the display
character set in the HTML header of your web page like this ...
Depe
* make sure your mapfile itself is encoded in utf8
* in your legend's label block, add ENCODING utf8. make sure your label are
of type truetype and not bitmap, as the included bitmap fonts definitely do
not contain more than ascii characters.
regards,
thomas
this should do the trick. I don't know
Rahkonen Jukka wrote:
Hi,
If I understood right "mol" is the name you have given at MAP level. I do not know if
using &layers=mol should really work or not, I have never tried it that way. I use
wms_titles advertised at layer lever, either comma separated list or &layers=all.
Try what happe
Hi,
If I understood right "mol" is the name you have given at MAP level. I do not
know if using &layers=mol should really work or not, I have never tried it that
way. I use wms_titles advertised at layer lever, either comma separated list
or &layers=all.
Try what happens when using &layers=a
14 matches
Mail list logo