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  1. /*! \mainpage GRASS 7 Programmer's Manual
  2. <!-- * doxygenized from "GRASS 5 Programmer's Manual"
  3. by M. Neteler 2/2004
  4. * updated 8/2005, 2006-2008, 2010-2011
  5. -->
  6. <a href="http://grass.osgeo.org">GRASS GIS</a> (<b>Geographic
  7. Resources Analysis Support System</b>) is an open source, free
  8. software <em>Geographical Information System</em> (GIS) with raster,
  9. topological %vector, image processing, and graphics production
  10. functionality that operates on various platforms through a graphical
  11. user interface (GUI) or command line interface (CLI). It is released
  12. under <a href="http://www.fsf.org/copyleft/gpl.html">GNU General
  13. Public License</a> (GPL).
  14. This manual introduces the reader to the <i>Geographic Resources
  15. Analysis Support System</i> from the programming perspective. Design
  16. theory, system support libraries, system maintenance, and system
  17. enhancement are all presented. This work is part of ongoing research
  18. being performed by the <a
  19. href="http://grasswiki.osgeo.org/wiki/Team">GRASS Development
  20. Team</a>, an international team of programmers, GRASS module authors
  21. are cited within their module's source code and the contributed manual
  22. pages.
  23. &copy; 2000-2014 by the GRASS Development Team
  24. This manual is published under <a
  25. href="http://www.fsf.org/copyleft/fdl.html">GNU Free Documentation
  26. License</a> (GFDL), and comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY. The
  27. development of GRASS software and this manual is kindly supported by
  28. the <a href="http://www.osgeo.org">Open Source Geospatial
  29. Foundation</a>, who provides the GRASS main infrastructure.
  30. Main web site: <a
  31. href="http://grass.osgeo.org">http://grass.osgeo.org</a>
  32. <i>Note: Missing entries below still need to be documented in Doxygen format.</i>
  33. <!-- original:
  34. http://trac.osgeo.org/grass/browser/grass-web/trunk/images/grass7_arch.odp
  35. -->
  36. \image html "grass7_arch.png" "GRASS 7 Architecture"
  37. \section libsOverview Libraries
  38. \section corelibs Core libraries
  39. (the name refers to the directory name in <tt>lib/</tt> in the source code)
  40. - gis: \ref gislib
  41. - raster: \ref rasterlib
  42. - vector: \ref vectorlib
  43. - Temporal GIS API: \ref pythontemporallib
  44. \section libs Further libraries
  45. (the name refers to the directory name in <tt>lib/</tt> in the source code)
  46. \subsection displaylibs Display Libraries and Drivers
  47. - cairodriver: \ref cairodriver
  48. - display: \ref displaylib
  49. - %driver: Graphics monitor driver
  50. - pngdriver: \ref pngdriverlib
  51. - psdriver: \ref psdriverlib
  52. \subsection statslibs Math and Statisctics Libraries
  53. - arraystats: \ref arraystatslib (library of statistics for arrays of doubles)
  54. - cdhc: \ref cdhclib (library for testing normality and exponentiality)
  55. - gmath: \ref gmathlib (generic mathematical functions and BLAS/LAPACK library wrapper)
  56. - gpde: \ref gpdelib (partial differential equations library)
  57. \subsection rasteribs Raster Libraries
  58. - edit: \ref editlib (raster edit library for cellhd, history, cats)
  59. - raster3d: \ref raster3dlib
  60. - raster: \ref rasterlib
  61. - rowio: \ref rowiolib
  62. - rst: \ref rstlib (library for interpolation with regularized splines with tension)
  63. - segment: \ref segmentlib (segment library for segmented raster reading)
  64. - stats: \ref statslib (raster stats library)
  65. \subsection imagerylibs Imagery Liraries (image processing)
  66. - cluster: \ref clusterlib (image processing)
  67. - imagery: \ref imagerylib
  68. \subsection vectoribs Vector Libraries
  69. - %vector: \ref vectorlib
  70. - dglib (internal library)
  71. - vedit: \ref veditlib - %vector editing
  72. - neta: \ref netalib
  73. - sites: Old Sites library, now interfaced to \ref vectorlib - \ref sites
  74. \subsection dblibs Database Management Libraries
  75. - db: \ref dbmilib
  76. \subsection ogsflibs OpenGL Libraries and friends
  77. - ogsf: \ref ogsflib (OpenGL (R) ported gsurf library (required for NVIZ))
  78. - nviz: \ref nvizlib (used by wxGUI Nviz extension and CLI-based Nviz module)
  79. \subsection projlibs Projection Libraries
  80. - proj: \ref projlib (wrapper to PROJ4 projection library)
  81. \subsection misclibs Misc Libraries
  82. - bitmap: \ref bitmap (Bitmap library for X Window Bitmaps)
  83. - btree: \ref btree (Binary tree library)
  84. - datetime: \ref datetime (DateTime library)
  85. - dspf: \ref dspf (obsolete, DSPF libary)
  86. - external: \ref external (External libraries from other projects such as shapelib)
  87. - fonts: \ref fonts (Hershey fonts library)
  88. - init: \ref init (GRASS initialization code + scripts)
  89. - linkm: Linked list memory manager - \ref linkm (obsolete?)
  90. - manage: \ref managelib
  91. - symbol: \ref symbol (Drawing symbols for %point %vector data library)
  92. \section location File structure of GRASS Location
  93. A GRASS <b>raster map</b> consists of several files in several subdirectories in a mapset,
  94. organized as follows:
  95. <dl>
  96. <dt><b>cellhd/</b></dt>
  97. <dd>map header including projection code, coordinates representing
  98. the spatial extent of the raster map, number of rows and columns, resolution,
  99. and information about map compression;</dd>
  100. <dt><b>cell/, fcell/ or grid3/</b></dt>
  101. <dd>generic matrix of values in a compressed, portable
  102. format which depends on the raster data type (integer, floating %point or 3D grid);</dd>
  103. <dt><b>hist/</b></dt>
  104. <dd>history file which contains metadata such as the data source,
  105. the command that was used to generate the raster map, or
  106. other information provided by the user;</dd>
  107. <dt><b>cats/</b></dt>
  108. <dd>optional category file which contains text or numeric labels assigned
  109. to the raster map categories;</dd>
  110. <dt><b>colr/</b></dt>
  111. <dd>optional color table;</dd>
  112. <dt><b>cell_misc/</b></dt>
  113. <dd>optional timestamp, range of values, quantization rules (for floating %point maps)
  114. and null (no-data) files;</dd>
  115. </dl>
  116. A GRASS <b>%vector maps</b> are stored in several separate files in a
  117. single directory (see \ref vectorlib). While the
  118. attributes are stored in either a DBF file, a SQLite file or in an
  119. external DBMS (PostgreSQL, MySQL, ODBC), the geometric data are saved
  120. as follows:
  121. <dl>
  122. <dt><b>head</b></dt>
  123. <dd>%vector map ASCII header with information about the map creation
  124. (date and name), its scale and threshold;</dd>
  125. <dt><b>coor</b></dt>
  126. <dd>binary geometry file which includes the coordinates of graphic
  127. elements (primitives) that define the %vector feature;</dd>
  128. <dt><b>topo</b></dt>
  129. <dd>binary topology file describes the spatial relationships between the
  130. map's graphic elements;</dd>
  131. <dt><b>hist</b></dt>
  132. <dd>history ASCII file with complete commands that were used to
  133. create the %vector map, as well as the name and date/time of the map
  134. creation;</dd>
  135. <dt><b>cidx</b></dt>
  136. <dd>binary category index file which is used to %link the %vector
  137. object IDs to the attribute table rows;</dd>
  138. <dt><b>dbln</b></dt>
  139. <dd>ASCII file which contains definition(s) of %link to attribute
  140. storage in database (DBMS).</dd>
  141. </dl>
  142. <!-- original:
  143. http://trac.osgeo.org/grass/browser/grass-web/trunk/images/loc_struct.odg
  144. -->
  145. \image html "loc_struct.png" "Diagram of GRASS file structure"
  146. \section Compiling_and_Installing_GRASS_Modules Compiling and Installing GRASS Modules
  147. GRASS modules are compiled and installed using the UNIX <tt>make</tt>
  148. command, which reads a file named <tt>Makefile</tt> (see \ref
  149. Multiple_Architecture_Conventions for more information) and then runs
  150. the compiler. The GRASS compilation process allows for
  151. multiple-architecture compilation from a single copy of the source
  152. code (for instance, if the source code is NFS mounted to various
  153. machines with differing architectures). This chapter assumes that the
  154. programmer is familiar with <tt>make</tt> and its accompanying
  155. Makefile.
  156. <!--
  157. \todo Explain ''auto-conf''
  158. \todo Include contents of SUBMITTING and INSTALL files from source code
  159. -->
  160. To compile enter following:
  161. \verbatim
  162. ./configure
  163. make
  164. make install
  165. \endverbatim
  166. Then the code will be compiled into "/usr/local/grass-7.x.y" directory. The start
  167. script "grass7x" will be placed into "/usr/local/bin/".
  168. Optionally other target directories can be specified while "configuring":
  169. \verbatim
  170. ./configure --prefix=/opt/grass-7.x.y --with-bindir=/usr/bin
  171. make
  172. make install
  173. \endverbatim
  174. This will store the GRASS binaries into the directory
  175. "/opt/grass-7.x.y" and the script mentioned above into "/usr/bin".
  176. The script "make" is required to compile single modules. The
  177. compilation process and requirements are discussed in more detail now.
  178. \subsection Makefile_Variables Makefile Variables
  179. \todo Update the list.
  180. <b>GRASS Libraries</b>. The following variables name the various GRASS
  181. libraries:
  182. - <i>GISLIB</i> - This names the <b>GIS Library</b>, which is the
  183. principal GRASS library. See \ref gislib for details about this
  184. library, and \ref Loading_the_GIS_Library for a sample Makefile which
  185. loads this library.
  186. - <i>SEGMENTLIB</i> - This names the <b>Segment Library</b>, which
  187. manages large matrix data. See \ref segmentlib for details about this
  188. library, and \ref Loading_the_Segment_Library for a sample
  189. <i>Makefile</i> which loads this library.
  190. - <i>RASTERLIB</i> - This names the <b>Raster Library</b>, which is
  191. the principal GRASS library for raster data access. See \ref rasterlib
  192. for details about this library, and \ref Loading_the_Raster_Library
  193. for a sample <i>Makefile</i> which loads this library.
  194. - <i>VECTORLIB</i> - This names the <b>Vector Library</b>, which is
  195. the principal GRASS library for vector data access. See \ref vectorlib
  196. for details about this library, and \ref Loading_the_Vector_Library
  197. for a sample <i>Makefile</i> which loads this library.
  198. - <i>DISPLAYLIB</i> - This names the <b>Display Library</b>, which
  199. communicates with GRASS graphics drivers. See \ref displaylib for
  200. details about this library, and \ref
  201. Loading_the_Display_Library for a sample <i>Makefile</i>
  202. which loads this library.
  203. <b>UNIX Libraries:</b> The following variables name some useful UNIX
  204. system libraries:
  205. - <i>MATHLIB</i> - This names the math library. It should be used
  206. instead of the -lm loader option.
  207. <b>Compiler and loader variables.</b> The following variables are
  208. related to compiling and loading C programs:
  209. - <i>EXTRA\_CFLAGS</i> - This variable can be used to add additional
  210. options to <tt>$CFLAGS</tt>. It has no predefined values. It is
  211. usually used to specify additional -I include directories, or -D
  212. preprocessor defines.
  213. \subsection Constructing_a_Makefile Constructing a Makefile
  214. The complete syntax for a <i>Makefile</i> is discussed in the UNIX
  215. documentation for <tt>make</tt> and will not be repeated here. The
  216. essential idea is that a target (e.g. a GRASS module) is to be built
  217. from a list of dependencies (e.g. object files, libraries, etc.). The
  218. relationship between the target, its dependencies, and the rules for
  219. constructing the target is expressed according to the following
  220. syntax:
  221. \code
  222. target: dependencies
  223. actions
  224. more actions
  225. \endcode
  226. If the target does not exist, or if any of the dependencies have a
  227. newer date than the target (i.e., have changed), the actions will be
  228. executed to build the target. The actions must be indented using a
  229. TAB. <tt>make</tt> is picky about this. It does not like spaces in
  230. place of the TAB.
  231. \section Multiple_Architecture_Conventions Multiple-Architecture Conventions
  232. The following conventions allow for multiple architecture compilation
  233. on a machine that uses a common or networked GRASS source code
  234. directory tree.
  235. Object files and library archives are compiled into subdirectories
  236. that represent the architecture that they were compiled on. These
  237. subdirectories are created in the $SRC directory as OBJ.<tt>arch</tt>
  238. and LIB.<tt>arch</tt>, where <tt>arch</tt> represents the architecture
  239. of the compiling machine. Thus, for example, $SRC/OBJ.sun4 would
  240. contain the object files for Sun/4 and SPARC architectures, and
  241. <tt>$SRC/LIB.686-pc-linux-gnu</tt> would contain library archives for
  242. Linux architectures. Likewise, <tt>$SRC/OBJ.686-pc-linux-gnu</tt>
  243. would contain the object files for Linux architectures, and
  244. <tt>$SRC/LIB.686-pc-linux-gnu</tt> would contain library archives for
  245. Linux architectures.
  246. Note that 'arch' is defined for a specific architecture during setup
  247. and compilation of GRASS, it is not limited to sun4 or any specific
  248. string.
  249. \section vectmodules Vector modules and their parameters/flags
  250. A module is a GRASS command invoked by the user.
  251. \subsection vectmodules_oper Modules operation
  252. Each module which modifies and writes data must read from <b>input</b>
  253. and write to <b>output</b> so that data may not be lost. For example
  254. <tt>v.spag</tt> works on <b>map</b> at in GRASS GIS 5.0 but if program
  255. (system) crashes or threshold was specified incorrectly and vector was
  256. not backuped, data were lost. In this case <b>map</b> option should
  257. be replaced by <b>input</b> and <b>output</b>.
  258. Topology is always built by default if the coor file was modified.
  259. Dimensionality is generally kept. Input 2D vector is written as 2D, 3D
  260. as 3D. There are a few modules which change the dimension on purpose.
  261. \subsection vectmodulesopt Modules parameters/flags
  262. Flags:
  263. - <b>-b</b> do not build topo file; by default topo file is written
  264. - <b>-t</b> create new table, default
  265. - <b>-u</b> don't create new table
  266. - <b>-z</b> write 3D vector map (if input was 2D)
  267. Parameters:
  268. - <b>map</b> input vector map for modules without output
  269. - <b>input</b> input vector map
  270. - <b>output</b> output vector map
  271. - <b>type</b> type of elements: point,line,boundary,centroid,area
  272. - <b>cat</b> category or category list (example: 1,5,9-13,35)
  273. - <b>layer</b> layer number or name
  274. - <b>where</b> condition of SQL statement for selection of records
  275. - <b>column</b> column name (in external table)
  276. */