Note: This project is deprecated and not maintained anymore. Please make use of shogun-core instead.
SHOGun, a Java based WebGIS framework.
SHOGun is based on several high-quality Open Source frameworks, such as
- Spring http://www.springsource.org/
- Hibernate http://hibernate.org
- OpenLayers http://openlayers.org
- GeoExt http://geoext.org
These first steps will get you up and running on a linux system. The notes described here were gathered and tested on an Ubuntu 12.04.
SHOGun is based upon Maven, so make sure it is installed on your system:
$ (sudo) apt-get install maven2
We also need a servlet container to deploy SHOGun in; Let's use Tomcat for this:
$ (sudo) apt-get install tomcat7
Currently SHOGun also needs a database to work with. The easiest setup is to use a file-based H2-database. You only need to configure
the path to store the database contents in the file src/main/webapp/WEB-INF/spring/db-config.xml
in a clone of the SHOGun repository:
<property name="url" value="jdbc:h2:file:/absolute/path/to/db-file" />
The file will be created for you on initialisation.
If instead you want to go with PostgreSQL, here is some advice:
$ (sudo) apt-get install postgresql
Also create a postgresql user and a database only for shogun. Execute the following SQLs inside of psql
:
CREATE USER shogun SUPERUSER PASSWORD 'shogun';
CREATE DATABASE shogun OWNER shogun;
Please make sure that the user shogun
can log in. See the PostgreSQL documentation for ways to achieve this.
Next, in a clone of the SHOGun repository, configure SHOGun to use the database we just created. Open the file src/main/webapp/WEB-INF/spring/db-config.xml
and find the <bean id="dataSource" class="org.springframework.jdbc.datasource.DriverManagerDataSource">
-tag. Change it to look like this:
<!-- database connection via JDBC driver -->
<bean id="dataSource" class="org.springframework.jdbc.datasource.DriverManagerDataSource">
<property name="driverClassName"><value>org.postgresql.Driver</value></property>
<property name="url"><value>jdbc:postgresql://localhost/shogun</value></property>
<property name="username"><value>shogun</value></property>
<property name="password"><value>shogun</value></property>
</bean>
In any case, make sure the hibernate.dialect
is configured accordingly (also in the file db-config.xml
).
Now, let's run the maven package
-phase. In the root of you clone (where the file pom.xml
is located) issue:
mvn package
This will download the dependencies of SHOGun and will eventually create a war
-file that we can deploy on our tomcat. So, when you see the lines
[INFO] ------------------------------------------------------------------------
[INFO] BUILD SUCCESSFUL
[INFO] ------------------------------------------------------------------------
[INFO] Total time: 4 seconds
[INFO] Finished at: Mon Oct 01 10:32:22 CEST 2012
[INFO] Final Memory: 17M/42M
[INFO] ------------------------------------------------------------------------
on your terminal, you are ready to copy the created war
-file to tomcats webapp
-folder:
$ (sudo) cp target/SHOGun.war /var/lib/tomcat7/webapps/
Now you can visit http://localhost:8080/SHOGun/ with you favorite web browser an you should be greeted with very basic login page.
Try to log in as user terrestris
with the password xxxx
. On the top of the page you should now see a notice, that you are logged
in with the role 'ROLE_SUPERADMIN'.