[Qgis-user] Lizmap Web Client

John Rose john.rose1 at free.fr
Fri May 15 22:42:17 PDT 2015


Thanks so much Michäel and Jim and the others who have offered help off 
list.

We will be trying out the different suggestions and will report back 
when we have conclusions.

	Best wishes,
	John

On 15/05/2015 14:05, kimaidou wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Indeed, Lizmap is a complete server side software wich dynamically
> create maps based on projects, and also acts as a proxy between the
> client (browser or another GIS) and QGIS Server. You have advanced
> features, such as edition, protection of projects with groups and users,
> automatic tile caching, etc.
>
> If you only need to publish one or 2 maps but cannot install anything on
> the server ( which means you cannot have QGIS Server or Lizmap installed
> server side), you could instead use the plugin Qgis2Web , which aims to
> create a web map and publish it without the need of a server (it exports
> vectors and raster as files and uses Openlayers or Leaflet as a map viewer).
>
> Regards
>
> Michaël Douchin
> 3liz (Lizmap editor)
>
> 2015-05-14 15:20 GMT+02:00 James Keener <jim at jimkeener.com
> <mailto:jim at jimkeener.com>>:
>
>     I've had luck using the QGIS server[1] on the back and
>     QGIS-Web-Client[2], MapBender[3], and generic OpenLayers[4] on the front
>     end.
>
>     QGIS server uses the qgs project files and the same rendering engine as
>     QGIS, so things will look as awesome as they do in QGIS.
>
>
>     I'm not sure if it's proper for this list, but if you decide to look for
>     someone to set the server and web client up on contract, feel free to
>     contact me directly.
>
>     Jim Keener
>     jim at jimkeener.com <mailto:jim at jimkeener.com>
>
>     [1] http://hub.qgis.org/projects/quantum-gis/wiki/qgis_server_tutorial
>     [2] https://github.com/qgis/QGIS-Web-Client
>     [3] http://mapbender3.org/
>     [4] http://dev.openlayers.org/examples/wms.html
>
>     On 05/13/2015 01:47 PM, John Rose wrote:
>     >  Hello,
>     >
>     >  I am working within a Franco-senegalese team to develop a GIS covering
>     >  the Niokolo-Koba National Park in Senegal. We have updated the OSM
>     data
>     >  for the Park and entered it into QGIS as the beginning of our GIS.
>     QGIS
>     >  works great for generating printable maps of the area.
>     >
>     >  Now we would like to find a way to make our maps available
>     interactively
>     >  on the web (initially pure OSM data, but we will be adding additional
>     >  data, for example of wildlife location). At first we thought of LizMap
>     >  Web Client, but it seems that this is not really a web user client but
>     >  rather a web server client which we could not readily install on our
>     >  commercial host.
>     >
>     >  At the moment we do not have a computer specialist on our team. Sorry
>     >  for our ignorance but could someone advise whether it would be
>     possible
>     >  with QGIS to generate files which could be readily used to provide
>     >  interactive map access on a basic web server (perhaps using a
>     plugin at
>     >  the navigator end)? We would really rather use the map presentation
>     >  parameters we have already developed for QGIS, than to start over with
>     >  another approach like Mapnik.
>     >
>     >      Thanks and best regards,
>     >
>     >          John
>     >
>     _______________________________________________
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>
>

-- 
                ************

                John B. Rose
                1 Bis rue des Châtre-Sacs
                92310 Sèvres, France

                Email: johnrose at alumni.caltech.edu
                Alternate email: john.rose1 at free.fr



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