Note
This documentation is for a prior release of Kinetica. For the latest documentation, click here.
Overview
Kinetica provides a Vector Tile Service (VTS) to generate Vector Tiles and support client-side visualization of the geospatial data contained within the tiles. The Vector Tile format generated follows the open standard Mapbox Vector Tile specification. The Kinetica VTS feeds a client-side Vector Tile renderer, such as Mapbox GL, by adding the VTS URL to the renderer's style configuration as a map layer source. Any Kinetica table that is defined with at least one WKT-type (geometry) column can be used as the data source for the layer parameter. Input geometries are pre-processed upon ingestion for faster vector tile generation. The data source, geographical position, and zoom level of each Vector Tile are specified in a VTS request. The requested Vector Tile is then returned in the response.
The VTS offers a couple advantages over server-side WMS calls:
- VTS supports client-side control of styling like image fill
- When using vector tiles, the browser only requests new information as needed and caches data along the way; WMS output must be re-rendered on every pan/zoom
Configuration
Before using the VTS, the service must be enabled and configured via the
gpudb.conf configuration file.
Settings:
| Name | Default | Description | Allowable Values |
|---|---|---|---|
| enable_vectortile_service | false | Enables the database VTS to support client-side visualization of geospatial data. | true or false |
| min_vectortile_zoomlevel | 1 | Determines the minimum zoom level for vector tile pre-processing. As the value gets lower, more geographical area is rendered. Note A vector tile request for a lesser zoom level than this value will take additional time to process as the vector tile is generated on the fly. | Minimum is 0, maximum is 20. |
| max_vectortile_zoomlevel | 8 | Determines the maximum zoom level for vector tile pre-processing. As the value gets higher, less geographical area is rendered but details more apparent (islands, rivers, roads, buildings). Note A vector tile request for a greater zoom level than this value will take additional time to process as the vector tile is generated on the fly. | Minimum is 0, maximum is 20. |
| vectortile_map_tiler | The name of the map tiler used for VTS. The configuration for the VTS must match the configuration for the client-side renderer. |
|
Usage
Base VTS URI:
http://<kinetica-host>:<port>/vts/<layer>/<z>/<x>/<y>?attributes=<columns>
Important
The VTS URL needs to be specified in the client-side visualizer's configuration.
URI parameters:
| Name | Description | Allowable Values |
|---|---|---|
| layer | Name of data source table. | A valid table name, in [schema_name.]table_name format, using standard name resolution rules |
| attributes | List of geometry column names. | A comma separated list of column names of the data source table. |
| z | Zoom level of the requested tile. | Non-negative integer. The maximum value is 30. Provide the parameter as {z} to have the client-side renderer dynamically set the value. |
| x | Horizontal index of the requested tile. | Non-negative integer. Provide the parameter as {x} to have the client-side renderer dynamically set the value. |
| y | Vertical index of the requested tile. | Non-negative integer. Provide the parameter as {y} to have the client-side renderer dynamically set the value. |
Example
Below is a snippet of a Javascript Mapbox style specification using Kinetica's VTS URL as a source:
// Config
var tableName = "nyc_neighborhood";
var wktColumn = "geom";
var kineticaUrl = "http://172.123.45.67:9191/vts/";
// Mapbox GL
map.on('load', function () {
map.addLayer({
"id": tableName + "_layer",
"version": 8,
"type" : "fill",
"source": {
"type": "vector",
"tiles": [kineticaUrl + tableName + "/{z}/{x}/{y}?attributes=" + wktColumn], // Note Mapbox uses the params in curly braces as dynamic values. Don't change those.
"maxzoom": 20
},
"source-layer": tableName,
"paint": {
"fill-color": "#EDF00F",
"fill-outline-color": "#000000"
}
});
});
Limitations and Cautions
- Vector tiles are kept in memory, so the zoom levels should be used to keep the memory usage of tiles at a reasonable level. A higher zoom level typically results in more tiles and more memory usage
- Since VTS sends feature information for each table row to the browser, the client can get overwhelmed with data; performance is dependent upon client hardware