Hosted version here: https://qwat.github.io/docs/
The documentation has its own repository at https://github.com/qwat/docs
Server side software components are:
- PostgreSQL (> 9.6)
- PostGIS, the spatial extension (> 2.3)
- Python, for installation and update (> 3.5)
- PUM for upgrade
Supported and tested versions are PostgreSQL 9.6 and Postgis 2.3.
The exact required hardware configuration is very dependant on the data sizes. However, water network data tend not to be huge volumes, and the minimal required configuration is very low.
A comfortable configuration would be the following:
- 4x Core Intel
- >= 8GB RAM
- SSD Storage (40GB+) with Raid capabilities for data redundancy
We recommend using Linux as Operating System when running PostgreSQL, for performance and stability.
Assuming you have installed a postgresql server, there are two ways to set up the QWAT database:
- The first way is to create an empty database with init_qwat.sh
.
- The second way is to create a database from the sample dump using pg_restore
.
Get the repositories. In a shell:
git clone https://github.com/qwat/qwat cd qwat
Update data-model submodule:
git submodule update --init --recursive
In order to create the database model you need to create a postgresql database. Do to this you may execute for example:
psql -U postgres -c 'create database qwat'
You can choose whatever name for the database and whatever user as its owner. The script that is used to create the database model looks for the .pg_service.conf file in the users home directory or in the directory specified by the PGSYSCONFDIR or PGSERVICEFILE variables.
Assuming you named your database qwat
, edit the .pg_service.conf
file and make it look like:
[qwat] #enter your database ip host=127.0.0.1 #database name dbname=qwat port=5432 user=postgres #you can also add your password if you like password=YourPassword
Now go to the data-model
directory and run the ./init_qwat.sh
script:
cd data-model ./init_qwat.sh -p qwat -s 21781 -d -r
The script has the following options:
-p
PG service to connect to the database.-s
or--srid
PostGIS SRID. Default to 21781 (ch1903)-d
or--drop-schema
drop schemas (cascaded) if they exist-r
or--create-roles
create roles in the database
Optionally, you can restore a sample dataset. For that you need to download the data sample dump and restore it into the QWAT database:
QWAT_VERSION=`cat system/CURRENT_VERSION.txt` wget -q -O qwat_dump.backup "https://github.com/qwat/qwat-data-model/releases/download/$QWAT_VERSION/qwat_v"$QWAT_VERSION"_data_only_sample.backup" pg_restore -U postgres --dbname qwat -e --no-owner --verbose --jobs=3 --disable-triggers --port 5432 qwat_dump.backup
QWAT can be tested by downloading the QGS project repository here and restoring the latest data_and_structure_sample.backup in PostgreSQL.
In your shell:
# Create the database and the extensions psql -U postgres -c 'create database qwat;' psql -U postgres -d qwat -c 'create extension postgis;' psql -U postgres -d qwat -c 'create extension hstore;' # Create the roles for QWAT psql -c 'CREATE ROLE qwat_viewer NOSUPERUSER INHERIT NOCREATEDB NOCREATEROLE NOREPLICATION;' -U postgres psql -c 'CREATE ROLE qwat_user NOSUPERUSER INHERIT NOCREATEDB NOCREATEROLE NOREPLICATION;' -U postgres psql -c 'CREATE ROLE qwat_manager NOSUPERUSER INHERIT NOCREATEDB NOCREATEROLE NOREPLICATION;' -U postgres psql -c 'CREATE ROLE qwat_sysadmin NOSUPERUSER INHERIT NOCREATEDB NOCREATEROLE NOREPLICATION;' -U postgres # And restore it into your QWAT database pg_restore -U postgres --dbname qwat -e --no-owner --verbose --jobs=3 --disable-triggers --port 5432 qwat_dump.backup
After your model gets created, in QGIS you should be able now to connect to the
database by creating a new connection with Name=qwat
, Service=qwat
, SSL mode=prefer
.
If that works then open the qgis-projetct/qwat.qgs
project in QGIS.
see CREDITS
This work is free software and licenced under the GNU GPL version 2 or any later version.
You can get the LICENSE here .