.. _spatialite: ===================== Installing Spatialite ===================== `SpatiaLite`__ adds spatial support to SQLite, turning it into a full-featured spatial database. Check first if you can install Spatialite from system packages or binaries. For example, on Debian-based distributions, try to install the ``spatialite-bin`` package. For Mac OS X, follow the :ref:`specific instructions below`. For Windows, you may find binaries on `Gaia-SINS`__ home page. In any case, you should always be able to :ref:`install from source`. When you are done with the installation process, skip to :ref:`create_spatialite_db`. __ https://www.gaia-gis.it/fossil/libspatialite __ http://www.gaia-gis.it/gaia-sins/ .. _spatialite_source: Installing from source ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ :ref:`GEOS and PROJ.4` should be installed prior to building SpatiaLite. SQLite ^^^^^^ Check first if SQLite is compiled with the `R*Tree module`__. Run the sqlite3 command line interface and enter the following query:: sqlite> CREATE VIRTUAL TABLE testrtree USING rtree(id,minX,maxX,minY,maxY); If you obtain an error, you will have to recompile SQLite from source. Otherwise, just skip this section. To install from sources, download the latest amalgamation source archive from the `SQLite download page`__, and extract:: $ wget http://sqlite.org/sqlite-amalgamation-3.6.23.1.tar.gz $ tar xzf sqlite-amalgamation-3.6.23.1.tar.gz $ cd sqlite-3.6.23.1 Next, run the ``configure`` script -- however the ``CFLAGS`` environment variable needs to be customized so that SQLite knows to build the R*Tree module:: $ CFLAGS="-DSQLITE_ENABLE_RTREE=1" ./configure $ make $ sudo make install $ cd .. __ http://www.sqlite.org/rtree.html __ http://www.sqlite.org/download.html .. _spatialitebuild: SpatiaLite library (``libspatialite``) and tools (``spatialite``) ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Get the latest SpatiaLite library source and tools bundle from the `download page`__:: $ wget http://www.gaia-gis.it/gaia-sins/libspatialite-sources/libspatialite-amalgamation-2.4.0-5.tar.gz $ wget http://www.gaia-gis.it/gaia-sins/spatialite-tools-sources/spatialite-tools-2.4.0-5.tar.gz $ tar xzf libspatialite-amalgamation-2.4.0-5.tar.gz $ tar xzf spatialite-tools-2.4.0-5.tar.gz Prior to attempting to build, please read the important notes below to see if customization of the ``configure`` command is necessary. If not, then run the ``configure`` script, make, and install for the SpatiaLite library:: $ cd libspatialite-amalgamation-2.4.0-5 $ ./configure # May need to be modified, see notes below. $ make $ sudo make install $ cd .. .. _spatialite_tools: Finally, do the same for the SpatiaLite tools:: $ cd spatialite-tools-2.4.0-5 $ ./configure # May need to be modified, see notes below. $ make $ sudo make install $ cd .. .. note:: If you've installed GEOS and PROJ.4 from binary packages, you will have to specify their paths when running the ``configure`` scripts for *both* the library and the tools (the configure scripts look, by default, in ``/usr/local``). For example, on Debian/Ubuntu distributions that have GEOS and PROJ.4 packages, the command would be:: $ ./configure --with-proj-include=/usr/include --with-proj-lib=/usr/lib --with-geos-include=/usr/include --with-geos-lib=/usr/lib .. note:: For Mac OS X users building from source, the SpatiaLite library *and* tools need to have their ``target`` configured:: $ ./configure --target=macosx __ http://www.gaia-gis.it/gaia-sins/libspatialite-sources/ .. _pysqlite2: pysqlite2 ^^^^^^^^^ If you've decided to use a :ref:`newer version of pysqlite2 ` instead of the ``sqlite3`` Python stdlib module, then you need to make sure it can load external extensions (i.e. the required ``enable_load_extension`` method is available so ``SpatiaLite`` can be loaded). This might involve building it yourself. For this, download pysqlite2 2.6, and untar:: $ wget https://pypi.python.org/packages/source/p/pysqlite/pysqlite-2.6.3.tar.gz $ tar xzf pysqlite-2.6.3.tar.gz $ cd pysqlite-2.6.3 Next, use a text editor to edit the ``setup.cfg`` file to look like the following: .. code-block:: ini [build_ext] #define= include_dirs=/usr/local/include library_dirs=/usr/local/lib libraries=sqlite3 #define=SQLITE_OMIT_LOAD_EXTENSION or if you are on Mac OS X: .. code-block:: ini [build_ext] #define= include_dirs=/Library/Frameworks/SQLite3.framework/unix/include library_dirs=/Library/Frameworks/SQLite3.framework/unix/lib libraries=sqlite3 #define=SQLITE_OMIT_LOAD_EXTENSION .. note:: The important thing here is to make sure you comment out the ``define=SQLITE_OMIT_LOAD_EXTENSION`` flag and that the ``include_dirs`` and ``library_dirs`` settings are uncommented and set to the appropriate path if the SQLite header files and libraries are not in ``/usr/include`` and ``/usr/lib``, respectively. After modifying ``setup.cfg`` appropriately, then run the ``setup.py`` script to build and install:: $ python setup.py install .. _spatialite_macosx: Mac OS X-specific instructions ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Mac OS X users should follow the instructions in the :ref:`kyngchaos` section, as it is much easier than building from source. When :ref:`create_spatialite_db`, the ``spatialite`` program is required. However, instead of attempting to compile the SpatiaLite tools from source, download the `SpatiaLite Binaries`__ for OS X, and install ``spatialite`` in a location available in your ``PATH``. For example:: $ curl -O http://www.gaia-gis.it/spatialite/spatialite-tools-osx-x86-2.3.1.tar.gz $ tar xzf spatialite-tools-osx-x86-2.3.1.tar.gz $ cd spatialite-tools-osx-x86-2.3.1/bin $ sudo cp spatialite /Library/Frameworks/SQLite3.framework/Programs Finally, for GeoDjango to be able to find the KyngChaos SpatiaLite library, add the following to your ``settings.py``:: SPATIALITE_LIBRARY_PATH='/Library/Frameworks/SQLite3.framework/SQLite3' __ http://www.gaia-gis.it/spatialite-2.3.1/binaries.html .. _create_spatialite_db: Creating a spatial database for SpatiaLite ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ After you've installed SpatiaLite, you'll need to create a number of spatial metadata tables in your database in order to perform spatial queries. Use the ``spatialite`` utility to call the ``InitSpatialMetaData()`` function, like this:: $ spatialite geodjango.db "SELECT InitSpatialMetaData();" the SPATIAL_REF_SYS table already contains some row(s) InitSpatiaMetaData ()error:"table spatial_ref_sys already exists" 0 You can safely ignore the error messages shown. .. note:: The parameter ``geodjango.db`` is the *filename* of the SQLite database you want to use. Use the same in the :setting:`DATABASES` ``"name"`` key inside your ``settings.py``.