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GeoNode is an open source platform that facilitates the creation, sharing, and collaborative use of geospatial data.

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GeoNode Support

To get support, give feedback and suggestions please use the GeoNode official channels, the users mailing list: http://lists.osgeo.org/pipermail/geonode-users/ and the developers mailing list: http://lists.osgeo.org/pipermail/geonode-devel/.

This repository is used to track code changes and GeoNode issues, please DON'T open new issues to ask for support.

GeoNode Installation

If you just want to try GeoNode, it is recommended to use Ubuntu 14.04 and install the latest stable release of GeoNode.:

sudo add-apt-repository ppa:geonode/release
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install geonode

If instead, you are interested in doing development on the source code, here are the instructions: http://docs.geonode.org/en/master/tutorials/devel/devel_env/index.html

Development Installations

Docker Usage

If you want to use Docker you can now:

# build the docker container
docker-compose build

# run the docker container
docker-compose up

# turn it off
docker-compose down

Or if you want to use the provided Makefile:

# build the container
make build

# run the container
make up

# create database
make sync

# pull latest images
make pull

Note: For deveployment you need to add geonode alias into /ect/hosts/ file as following:

` $ sudo vim /etc/hosts ## # Host Database # # localhost is used to configure the loopback interface # when the system is booting. Do not change this entry. ## 127.0.0.1 localhost geonode 255.255.255.255 broadcasthost ::1 localhost ` To access GeoNode just enter the following url: http://geonode/ on your web browser. For GeoServer: http://geonode/geoserver/web/

Ubuntu

Ubuntu development build instructions using an isolated virtual environment (tested on Ubuntu 14.04 LTS):

# Install Ubuntu dependencies
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install python-virtualenv python-dev libxml2 libxml2-dev libxslt1-dev zlib1g-dev libjpeg-dev libpq-dev libgdal-dev git default-jdk

# Install Java 8 (needed by latest GeoServer 2.9)
sudo apt-add-repository ppa:webupd8team/java
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install oracle-java8-installer

# Create and activate the virtualenv
virtualenv --no-site-packages venv
source venv/bin/activate

# git clone geonode
git clone https://github.com/GeoNode/geonode
cd geonode

# Install pip dependencies
pip install -r requirements.txt
pip install -e .
pip install pygdal==1.10.1

For Ubuntu 16.04 you should create your virtual-env like this instead (so with site packages):

virtualenv venv

Instead of installing pygdal, you should do the following:

# Install the system python-gdal
sudo apt-get install python-gdal
# Create a symbolic link in your virtualenv
ln -s /usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/osgeo venv/lib/python2.7/site-packages/osgeo

You can now setup and start GeoNode:

# Paver setup
paver setup
paver sync
paver start

In case you want to be involved in static files development:

sudo apt-get install npm
sudo npm install -g bower
sudo npm install -g grunt-cli

openSUSE

openSUSE Development Build Instructions:

# Add Application:Geo and Python repositories
zypper -ar http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/Application:/Geo/openSUSE_12.2/ GEO
zypper -ar http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/devel:/languages:/python/openSUSE_12.1/ python
zypper refresh

# Basic build packages
zypper install gcc gcc-c++ python-devel libgeos-devel libproj-devel

# Python native dependencies
zypper install python-pip python-virtualenv python-imaging python-lxml python-gdal

# Java dependencies
zypper install java-1_7_0_openjdk-devel ant maven

# Supporting tools
zypper install git gettext-runtime

# Create virtualenv and activate it
virtualenv venv --system-site-packages
source venv/bin/activate
cd venv

# Clone GeoNode
git clone https://github.com/GeoNode/geonode.git

# Install GeoNode in the local virtualenv
pip install -e geonode --use-mirrors

cd geonode

# Compile GeoServer
paver setup

# Initialize database
paver sync

# Start the servers
paver start

Windows

Windows Development Build Instructions:

Prerequisites:
# Java JDK
# Python 2.7 (32 bit)
# ant (bin directory must be on system PATH)
# maven2 (bin directory must be on system PATH)
# Python distutils (easy_install)
# GDAL Core Libraries
# git

# Install and configure from the windows command prompt
If you don't already have python virtualenv installed, then do it now:
easy_install virtualenv

# Download and install http://download.gisinternals.com/sdk/downloads/release-1800-gdal-1-11-4-mapserver-6-4-3/gdal-111-1800-core.msi
# Download and install http://download.gisinternals.com/sdk/downloads/release-1800-gdal-1-11-4-mapserver-6-4-3/GDAL-1.11.4.win32-py2.7.msi
# Choose your 32 bit python as your install target
# If you create your virtualenv before doing this, you can copy the <python>\lib\site-packages\osgeo and GDAL-* directory over to your <virtual env>\lib\site-packages directory

# Create virtualenv and activate it
cd <Directory to install the virtualenv & geonode into>
virtualenv venv
venv\scripts\activate

# Clone GeoNode
git clone https://github.com/GeoNode/geonode.git

# Install compiled packages for Python 2.7 Win32
cd geonode
pip install paver
pip install pyyaml
paver win_install_deps

# Install GeoNode in the local virtualenv, if you get an error about use-mirrors, just remove the argument
pip install -e . --use-mirrors

# Note, you may get errors due to certain dependencies not being installable on windows with pip, such as lxml and shapely.
# For these, you can download a whl file (use cp27 / win32 version) from http://www.lfd.uci.edu/~gohlke/pythonlibs and then install them via pip.
# Ex: pip install <Download Dir>\Shapely-1.5-16-cp27-cp27m-win32.whl
#
# Also note, you may have to adjust the dependencies in geonode\setup.py to say >= instead of ==,
# ie "Shapely>=1.5.13", instead of "Shapely==1.5.13",

# Compile GeoServer
paver setup

# Set GDAL environment info
SET GDAL_LIBRARY_PATH=<GdalPath>\gdal111.dll
SET GDAL_HOME=<GdalPath>
SET GEOS_LIBRARY_PATH=<GdalPath>\geos_c.dll
SET PATH=<GdalPath>;%PATH%

# Initialize database
paver sync

# Start the servers
paver start --java_path=C:/path/to/java/bin/java.exe

Mac OSX

Mac OSX Development Build Instructions:

# you may need brew install various dependencies

mkdir -p ~/pyenv
virtualenv ~/pyenv/geonode
source ~/pyenv/geonode/bin/activate
git clone https://github.com/GeoNode/geonode
cd geonode
pip install lxml
pip install pyproj
pip install nose
pip install httplib2
pip install shapely
pip install pillow
pip install paver

# Node and tools required for static development
brew install node
npm install -g bower
npm install -g grunt-cli

#Install pip dependencies
pip install -e .

#Paver handles dependencies for Geonode, first setup (this will download and update your python dependencies - ensure you're in a virtualenv)
paver setup
paver sync
paver start

# Optional: To generate document thumbnails for PDFs and other ghostscripts file types
# Then download ghostscript: https://www.macupdate.com/app/mac/9980/gpl-ghostscript
brew install imagemagick
pip install Wand==0.3.5

Once fully started, you should see a message indicating the address of your geonode. The default username and password are admin and admin:

Development Geonode is running at http://localhost:8000/
To stop the GeoNode machine run:
paver stop

Or quit the server by pressing
CTRL-C to shut down

Before starting GeoNode (paver start), you could test your installation by running tests:

paver test
paver test_integration

In case you want to build yourself the documentation, you need to install Sphinx and the run 'make html' from within the docs directory:

pip install Sphinx
pip install sphinx_rtd_theme
cd docs
make html

You can eventually generate a pdf containing the whole documentation set. For this purpose, if using Ubuntu you will need to install the texlive-full package:

sudo apt-get install texlive-full
make latexpdf

Note

When running virtualenv venv the --system-site-packages option is not required. If not enabled, the bootstrap script will sandbox your virtual environment from any packages that are installed in the system, useful if you have incompatible versions of libraries such as Django installed system-wide. On the other hand, most of the times it is useful to use a version of the Python Imaging Library provided by your operating system vendor, or packaged other than on PyPI. When in doubt, however, just leave this option out.

Development Roadmap

Geonode's development roadmap is documented in a series of Geonode Improvement Projects (GNIPS). They are documented here: https://github.com/GeoNode/geonode/wiki/GeoNode-Improvement-Proposals. GNIPS are considered to be large undertakings which will add a large amount of features to the project. As such they are the topic of community dicussion and guidance. The community discusses these on the developer mailing list: http://lists.osgeo.org/pipermail/geonode-devel/ Github issues tracks features and bugs, for new developers the tag 'easy-pick' indicates an issue that should be relatively easy for new developers to understand and complete. Once you have completed an issue a pull request should be submitted. This will then be reviewed by the community.

GPL License

GeoNode is Copyright 2016 Open Source Geospatial Foundation (OSGeo).

GeoNode is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.

GeoNode is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.

You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with GeoNode. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.

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