News
Free & Open Source Software for Geospatial Conference 2009
October 20-23, 2009
The international open source GIS conference. The call for papers is now open!
July 24, 2009
The 1.4.0 release of PostGIS is now available. This is a significant release including many performance enhancements, bug fixes, improved internal testing system, more detailed documentation.
- API Stability - new policies surrounding minor releases
- Support for PostgreSQL 8.4
- New methods - ST_GeoHash, ST_LineCrossingDirection, ST_AsGeoJSON, ST_MinimumBoundingCircle to name a few
- Significant performance improvements for many spatial operations, including ST_Union, ST_Intersects, ST_Contains, and ST_Within
- Vastly improved documentation and reference manual
- Improved build system, library structure, debugging framework, unit testing
- More stable support for CIRCULARSTRING, COMPOUNDCURVE and CURVEPOLYGON
What is PostGIS?
PostGIS adds support for geographic objects to the PostgreSQL object-relational database. In effect, PostGIS "spatially enables" the PostgreSQL server, allowing it to be used as a backend spatial database for geographic information systems (GIS),
much like ESRI's SDE or Oracle's Spatial extension.
PostGIS follows the OpenGIS "Simple Features Specification for SQL" and has been certified as compliant with the "Types and Functions" profile.
PostGIS has been developed by Refractions Research as a project in open source spatial database technology.
PostGIS is released under the GNU General Public License. We continue to develop PostGIS, and have added user interface tools, basic topology support, data validation, coordinate transformation, programming APIs and much more.
Our list of future projects includes full topology support, raster support, networks and routing, three dimensional surfaces,
curves and splines and other features. Ask us about consulting services and implementing new features.
Case Studies
Learn how PostGIS is being used around the world.
Sistema de Información Territorial Estatal en Línea, México
SITEL, a project hosting a spatial data infrastructure, allows various government agencies to share data to be included in their own projects as health, security, urban furniture or mobility. Today, they've integrated over 1,910 vectorial layers plus another 70+ raster files, provided through PostGIS and WMS/WFS/WCS services with Mapserver.
Building on the local and scientific knowledge of the Pacific Rim Bio-Region, Ecotrust is attempting to increase ecological awareness through the use of GIS and spatially enabled technologies.
MADEIRA GPS, a company that started in 2005, with a simple project in mind: Deliver PDA-based navigation, with autorouting, for Madeira Island's tourism.