Hi Dheeraj, GRASS uses a special topological vector format, that – as Micha pointed out – requires for most operations that data are stored in native GRASS format and not PostGIS. However, for points for example external vector data (e.g. in PostGIS) can be used in GRASS in those modules directly that support topology level 1. Here one would use v.external to link PostGIS data to GRASS.
g.search.modules keyword=level1 gives you a list of those modules. A typical use case for such a setup (vector in PostGIS, raster in GRASS) I am familiar with are GPS tracking data in PostGIS that are matched with GRASS GIS raster data… If you use PostGIS as the database backend in GRASS (instead of default sqlite), then you would have almost the setup you are looking for, just that GRASS does not add geometry columns but stores the geometry in the GRASS DB (and attributes in PG). Cheers Stefan From: grass-user <grass-user-boun...@lists.osgeo.org> On Behalf Of Dheeraj Chand Sent: søndag 16. august 2020 05:03 To: Micha Silver <tsvi...@gmail.com> Cc: grass-user@lists.osgeo.org Subject: Re: [GRASS-user] Clarifying use of postgres/postgis I think that maybe my request was unclear, sorry. I am okay and comfortable with GRASS on how to use it, but not on the man pages about how to edit the source code to patch/change it. What I was really hoping for was to avoid having two spatial databases, one PostGIS and one GRASS, with the idea that GRASS would store everything in PostGIS with perhaps its only specific column for its own geometries. I guess not! On Aug 15, 2020, at 9:10 AM, Micha Silver <tsvi...@gmail.com<mailto:tsvi...@gmail.com>> wrote: On 15/08/2020 16:22, Dheeraj Chand wrote: ‘’’ When importing a shapefile or other vector data, only the attrib tables get saved to some database: sqlite by default, or PostgrSQL if you have configured for that backend. But the geometry is still kept in the GRASS vector format. ‘’’ 1. How would one configure that? Please assume that I am unfamiliar and uncomfortable with GRASS when explaining, but able to read Java and Python man pages with ease, also comfortable with PSQL and PostGIS. In that case you might want to first go thru some tutorials on using GRASS. We're here to help if encounter anything that is unclear, or not working as you expected. All GRASS commands can be called thru the GRASS-python bindings, so that might be easiest for you. But do go into the beginning tutorials first. The GRASS module that sets the backend database connection is `db.connect`. Have a look at the man page: https://grass.osgeo.org/grass78/manuals/db.connect.html You would choose the driver parameter as "pg", then set the database and schema as required. This comes after running `db.login` one time to save your DB auth credentials. 2. Would we get all the speed benefits of PSQL, would it be used for computations whenever possible? Not sure how to answer here. GRASS in general sends SQL commands back to the DB backend for any undates. If, for example, you had a point vector of cities, with two columns "population" and "number_hospitals" in the attribute table, and you wanted to calculate number of hospitals per 1000 people, then you would construct a regular SQL query that would be sent to the backend. So I guess that the speed would be determined by PostgreSQL. 3. Is there a way to easily move from GRASS and PSQL geometry and topology models when doing this? Sorry to repeat again: GRASS maintains all geometry (and topology) within its own internal vector data structure. NO PostGIS involved here. But You could easily export GRASS vectors to a PostGIS database using the `v.out.postgis` module. https://grass.osgeo.org/grass78/manuals/v.out.postgis.html To pull a PostGIS vector table into GRASS would require either `v.in.ogr` or `v.import` Sent from my iPhone On Aug 15, 2020, at 7:50 AM, Rich Shepard <rshep...@appl-ecosys.com><mailto:rshep...@appl-ecosys.com> wrote: On Sat, 15 Aug 2020, Micha Silver wrote: But again, don't confuse - this is NOT PostGIS, and GRASS does not need/use PostGIS for geometry. GRASS geometry is always independent of any external geospatial format. Micha, Thanks for clarifying; I must have mis-understood what I read. I assumed the geometry was kept by GRASS and didn't know why PostGIS was mentioned ... and I don't recall just where I read all this. It's the other way around: When you export GRASS map layers, you can, as you know, choose to save out to several formats: shp, Geopackage (the current default) or to PostGIS. PostGIS is the best choice when you need multiuser access to the geospatial data. But you point out that you're the only user, so why would you need the overhead of PostGIS? Ah, so. I don't. To repeat, you can set the default for saving attribute tables to PostgreSQL, but do not try to save a GRASS layer to PostGIS in the same database! That will definitely lead to trouble. If you want/need a PostGIS instance for some reason independent of GRASS, then keep it totally separated from GRASS. i.e. at least in a separate schema or even separate database. No, I want the attribute data in postgres so I need to learn to make that the default. The main reasons for choosing PostgreSQL as your database backend would be 1. to allow fancy SQL queries on the database tables 2. huge, complex data tables or triggers 3. multiuser access to the attribute tables My reason is keeping these data in the same format as other project data. But keep in mind that the default sqlite database is quite powerful, and you would have to look very deeply to find a PostgreSQL feature that is missing in sqlite. Yes, I've been using SQlite as long as I have PostgreSQL. Thanks, Rich _______________________________________________ grass-user mailing list grass-user@lists.osgeo.org<mailto:grass-user@lists.osgeo.org> https://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/grass-user _______________________________________________ grass-user mailing list grass-user@lists.osgeo.org<mailto:grass-user@lists.osgeo.org> https://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/grass-user -- Micha Silver Ben Gurion Univ. Sde Boker, Remote Sensing Lab cell: +972-523-665918 https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1128-1325
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