view doku/source/functionality.txt @ 214:0770d8c9999b

* website/download-de.htm4, website/index.htm4: repaired broken links found by Hans
author Stephan Holl <stephan.holl@intevation.de>
date Fri, 22 Jul 2011 14:11:06 +0200
parents 1d7fc059e538
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.. index:: features, functionality, configuration, runtime-parameter, commandline

-------------
Functionality
-------------

The MXD2map converter works as a commandline tool to transform maps from the
proprietary ArcGIS file format "MXD" to a MapServer configuration file.

To transform an ArcGIS mxd file to a MapServer configuration file the mxd file
must have a valid and available data source and must not fit the
:ref:`restriction-label` described in the appropriate section.

.. image:: ../funktionsweise/funktionsweise-MXD-konverter.png
    :align: center
    :alt: MXD2map-Schema
    :width: 500px

.. _howtouse-label:

How to use
----------

The converter is started via the commandline running the command::

  $java -jar mxd2map.jar

The converter can be configured in two ways:

1. The converter.properties file (see converter.properties.sample)
2. via commandline arguments

The converter.properties.sample file::


  # Java properties file for the MXD Converter Tool.
  mxd = \\full\\path\\to\\mxd-file
  map = \\full\\path\\to\\map-file
  map-template = \\full\\path\\to\\mapfile-template

Make sure  you mask backslahes with an additional backslash.

Both take a parameter for the path to the mxd file, the outputfile and a mapfile
template for initial mapfile config. Commandline parameters have a higher
priority than the properties file.

The available parameters on the commandline are::

  -m or --mxd		The mxd file to convert.

  -a or --map		The path to the output file. Should end with ".map".

  -t or --template	The template to use for an initial mapfile
			configuration.

To have the full functionality for ArcGIS map conversion it is necessary to have
the ESRI fonts available. ArcGIS products install these fonts to the default
windows font folder ``c:\\windows\\fonts``. To make them available for the converter
there has to be a MapServer font set (see
http://mapserver.org/mapfile/fontset.html). The MXD2map converter comes with an
initial fontset containing all relevant ESRI fonts and the free font FreeSans.
The font set file named fonts.txt can be edited and further fonts can be added.
To use a font set, the file needs to be referenced in the MapServer template
otherwise the converter can not create character symbols and will show up errors
in the conversion process.

The converter uses a separate symbol file to provide symbol sets to the

template to have initial symbols available. If no symbol file is referenced a
new one is created by the converter if necessary. The resulting symbol set is
written to the same directory as the output mapfile named
[mapfile-name]-symbols.sym.


Features
--------

MXD2map currently supportes the following features:

 * Datasources
   * ArcSDE database connections (requires MapServer built against ArcSDE, Client-dlls needed)
   * ESRI-Shapefiles

 * Symbols:

   * Simple marker symbols
   * Character marker symbols
   * Arrow marker symbols
   * Symbols based on TTF-characters of special cartographic fonts
   * Any combination of character marker symbols
   * Linesymbols with pattern and cartographic attributes
   * Polygons filled with solid color and outline
   * Polygons filled with a hatch and hatched outline

 * Layer types:

   * Featurelayer (vectors) as POINT, LINESTRING and POLYGON
   * Classifications with unique values
   * Classifications with class breaks
   * Grouplayers with one grouplevel (as MapServer does not support more than one nested level)

 * Further map attributes:

   * Projections and units based on the EPSG-table
   * Min/max scale denominations at layer and label-level
   * Map extents
   * Simple labeling
   * Filter and expressions
   * ArcSDE Jointables
   * Mapfile-Templating for OGC-related stuff

 * Other features

   * Umlauts are translated into its equivalents within LAYERnames,
   CLASSnames and also mapfile-names. Though it is good standard not to
   use them since they mostly cause problems when using them within
   OWS-related services.
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