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@koopjs/koop-core
Advanced tools
Transform, query, & download geospatial data on the web. See koopjs.github.io for details.
This is the core dependency for setting up a Koop instance. By default it includes the Output-Geoservices plugin and an in-memory data cache.
# Install Koop npm and save to package.json
npm install --save @koopjs/koop-core
The Koop usage docs and quick start provide usage information, but we'll give a quick overview here.
// require koop-core
const Koop = require('@koopjs/koop-core')
// create a Koop instance
const koop = new Koop(options)
/* Register Koop data providers */
const provider = require('@koopjs/provider-github')
koop.register(provider)
// Start listening on port 8080
koop.server.listen(8080, () => console.log(`Koop listening on port 8080!`))
Every Koop instance includes the Geoservice output-plugin by default, so after startup noted above, you would have the following routes ready to receive requests: [GET, POST] /github/rest/info [GET, POST] /github/rest/services/:id/FeatureServer/:layer/:method [GET, POST] /github/rest/services/:id/FeatureServer/layers [GET, POST] /github/rest/services/:id/FeatureServer/:layer [GET, POST] /github/rest/services/:id/FeatureServer
You can pass an options
object when instantiating a Koop instance.
// create a Koop instance
const koop = new Koop(options)
Koop enables CORS by default. If you do not want CORS enabled, you can disable it by adding a disableCors
boolean to your Koop config file:
const options = {
disableCors: true
}
Koop adds Express compression by default. If you do not want Express compression (e.g., perhaps you are using Nginx for compression), you can disable it by adding a disableCompression
boolean to your Koop config file:
const options = {
disableCompression: true
}
Koop includes a Winston logger with a console transport by default. If you have a custom logger that you want to use, you can pass it as an option:
const logger = require('my-logger')
const options = {
logger
}
The default Koop logger uses a log-level of info
. If you want to change the log level, you can pass any of the standard Winston log-level values as an option:
const options = {
logLevel: 'debug'
}
The maximum number of items to store in the default memorey-cache. Defaults to 500:
const options = {
cacheSize: 1000
}
By default, Koop will register the GeoServices output-plugin (a.k.a. FeatureServer). If you do not want this plugin registered or want to register a specific version, you can skip the default registration by setting the option to true
:
const options = {
skipGeoservicesRegistration: true
}
Koop registers the Geoservices output plugin (FeatureServer) by default. This plugin takes its own options including those to set server and layer metadata (e.g., FeatureServer version, copyrightText, maxRecordCount, etc). These are useful for overriding defaults set in the FeatureServer codebase. You can have Koop set these options at start-up by passing the geoservicesDefaults
option. It should be a JSON object with the specification described in the FeatureServer documentation.
When registering a provider you can pass an options object that provides some useful functionality:
const Koop = require('@koopjs/koop-core')
const koop = new Koop()
const providerOptions = {
name: 'special-name',
cacheTtl: 600,
before: (req, callback) => {
req.query.myHardCodedParam = 'foo';
callback();
}
after: (req, geojson, callback) => {
geojson.crs = 'my coordinate system';
callback(null, geojson);
}
}
/* Register Koop data providers with options */
const provider = require('@koopjs/provider-github')
koop.register(provider, providerOptions)
Use this param to override the name of the provider. If you supply a value for name
it will be used in the path for routes registered to this provider.
Use this param to set the default caching time (in seconds) for any data acquired by this provider. It can be overridden on a request-by-request basis by adding a ttl
property to the root level of the geojson produced by the provider.
Supply a function that is executed before a provider's getData
method and has access to the Express request object. This is useful is you want to modify incoming request params before they arrive in a providers getData
method.
Supply a function that is executed after a provider's getData
method and has access to the Express request object. This is useful is you want to modify the GeoJSON produce by the provider before it is passed on to the cache or any output plugin. It's a way of modifying a provider's getData functionality without having to modify the code of the provider itself.
Find a bug or want to request a new feature? Please let us know by submitting an issue.
Esri welcomes contributions from anyone and everyone. Please see our guidelines for contributing.
FAQs
Serve, transform, and query geospatial data on the web
The npm package @koopjs/koop-core receives a total of 457 weekly downloads. As such, @koopjs/koop-core popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that @koopjs/koop-core demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 0 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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