This project uses a luigi
pipeline to generate the QGreenland package. This
project is currently in early development stages, so expect rapid change.
Nothing is written in stone! Releases can be found at
https://qgreenland.org/explore!
There are 3 configuration files; layers.yml
is the important one. It references
the others.
Each element represents a QGIS layer.
Each element represents a QGIS layer group. Keep in mind that the first layer's group will always be automatically selected and expanded.
A dataset isn't necessarily a dataproduct, but it might be. A dataset is any
collection of data representing some measurement, hosted anywhere. Current
access methods include cmr
(by granule_ur
s) and http
(by url
s).
As of v0.6.0
:
- Build layers:
- Coastlines
- Fetch
- Unzip
- Reproject (EPSG:3411)
- Subset (QGreenland project extent)
- Arctic DEM
- Fetch
- Reproject (EPSG:3411)
- Subset (QGreenland project extent)
- IceBridge BedMachine
- Fetch
- For each dataset (bed, thickness, surface):
- Extract dataset
- Reproject (EPSG:3411) and resample (1km)
- Coastlines
- Generate .qgs project file including all layers.
- Create zip file with version in filename, e.g.
QGreenland_v0.6.0.zip
.
NOTE: The full pipeline will not always be enumerated here; just a representative sample.
The project is run as a docker container stack. It runs Luigi (with visualizer at port 8082) as a service for running tasks, as well as NGINX for hosting outputs.
In order to download data behind Earthdata Login, you must provide the following environment variables on the docker host:
EARTHDATA_USERNAME
EARTHDATA_PASSWORD
Developers at NSIDC may use the values stored in Vault at the following path:
nsidc/apps/qgreenland
. Those outside of NSIDC must use their personal
Earthdata Login credentials. New users to Earthdata can register here:
https://urs.earthdata.nasa.gov/users/new
Populate the environment variables with the export
command, then bring up the
stack:
cd luigi
docker-compose up -d
cd scripts/
. run_task.sh
The run_task.sh
script is built to run the entire pipeline. From its example,
you can run individual layer pipelines, e.g.:
docker-compose exec luigi \
luigi --module qgreenland.tasks.layers \
BedMachineDataset --dataset-name=bed
See the Luigi documentation for more information on running Luigi from the CLI.
Simply put breakpoint()
anywhere in the pipeline code, then use scripts/run_task.sh
(ensure worker count is 1
).
You can contribute to this project even if you don't have write access by forking, making your change, making all tests pass, then opening a Pull Request.
Changes to layer styles can be done without editing Python code.
You can contribute style changes without editing any Python code using the following process:
- Download (or build) and open the most recent version of the project in QGIS.
- In the 'Layers' menu, double click on the layer you wish to edit.
- Open the 'symbology' tab.
- Make your desired style changes.
- In the lower-left corner, click the 'Style' dropdown.
- In this menu, select 'Save Style...'
- At this point, if you're uncomfortable with Git and GitHub, you can email us your style file at qgreenland.info@gmail.com. Otherwise, continue on...
- Save the style to
qgreenland/assets/styles/<name>.qml
directory of this repository. Keep in mind that styles can be shared between layers, so give the style a generic name instead of a layer-specific name where possible. - Edit the
qgreenland/layers.yml
file and find the layer(s) you wish to apply this style to. Populate thestyle
key for each layer with the name of the.qml
file you saved in the previous step, excluding the extension. For example, if you savedfoo.qml
, then populatestyle: 'foo'
.
Metadata for a layer can be set in the qgreenland/layers.yml
configuration
file, under the metadata
key for the layer in question. For example, metadata
for the coastlines
layer may look like the following:
coastlines:
metadata:
title: 'Natural Earth Coastlines'
abstract:
text: 'Natural Earth Coastlines (Public Domain)'
citation:
text: 'Made with Natural Earth'
url: 'https://github.com/nvkelso/natural-earth-vector/blob/master/LICENSE.md'
The metadata section defines the values that get used to create the on-hover popup text that is shown when a user hovers their cursor over a layer in the table of contents in QGIS. Additionally, these values are used to set the fields in the metadata section of the layer's properties` popup.
The final abstract text shown in QGIS is a combination of the values under the
abstract
key. In the above example, the abstract text would become:
Natural Earth Coastlines (Public Domain)
Citation:
Made with Natural Earth
Citation URL:
https://github.com/nvkelso/natural-earth-vector/blob/master/LICENSE.md
Note:
It is possible to export metadata from the QGIS GUI to an xml-formatted .qmd
file. If collaborators wish to define metadata through the QGIS GUI, support for
ingesting .qmd
files may be implemented in the future.
Add a new class to qgreenland/tasks/layers.py
for your new layer. Compose
Luigi tasks to build your final QGreenland layer following the example of other
layers.
TODO: Flesh this out more.
Currently there is no automated release process. The manual process is:
When developing, increment the proper version part (major
, minor
, dev
)
with the version.bump {part}
invoke task. For example, to bump the minor
version:
invoke version.bump minor
This will automatically add the dev
tag to the end of the version string if
one does not already exist. For example, if bumping the minor version from
v1.1.1
, the version will become v1.2.1dev
.
To release, invoke the version.bump
tag with the release
part:
invoke version.bump release
This will remove the dev
part from the version. For example, using the
release
part on v1.2.1dev
will change the version to v1.2.1
.
QGIS is currently not "notarized" for Mac OSX. If you receive The developer of this app needs to update it to work with this version of macOS. Contact the developer for more information.
, then, in your OSX menus, try:
- "Security and Privacy"
- "Allow apps downloaded from..."
- "App Store and identified developers"
- Locate QGIS here and select "Open anyway"