GFT - Google Fusion Tables

(GDAL/OGR >= 1.9.0)

This driver can connect to the Google Fusion Tables service. GDAL/OGR must be built with Curl support in order to the GFT driver to be compiled.

The driver supports read and write operations.

Dataset name syntax

The minimal syntax to open a GFT datasource is :
GFT:

Additional optional parameters can be specified after the ':' sign such as :

If several parameters are specified, they must be separated by a space.

Authentication

Most operations, in particular write operations, require a valid Google account to provide authentication information to the driver. The only exception is read-only access to public tables.

In order to create an authorization key, it is necessary to login and authorize access to fusion tables for a Google (i.e. GMail) account. The resulting authorization key can be turned into a refresh token for use OGR using the gdal/swig/python/scripts/gdal_auth.py script distributed with GDAL (available in GDAL/OGR >= 1.10.0). Note that auth tokens can only be used once, while the resulting refresh token lasts indefinitely.

  gdal_auth.py auth2refresh auth_token
This refresh token can then be either set as a configuration option (GFT_REFRESH_TOKEN) or included in the connection string (i.e. GFT:refresh=refresh_token).

Generally OAuth2 credentials can be provided via these mechanisms:

Geometry

Geometries in GFT tables must be expressed in the geodetic WGS84 SRS. GFT allows them to be encoded in different forms : Only the first 3 types are supported by OGR, not the last one.

Fusion tables can have multiple geometry columns per table. By default, OGR will use the first geometry column it finds. It is possible to select another column as the geometry column by specifying table_name(geometry_column_name) as the layer name passed to GetLayerByName().

Filtering

The driver will forward any spatial filter set with SetSpatialFilter() to the server. It also makes the same for attribute filters set with SetAttributeFilter().

Paging

Features are retrieved from the server by chunks of 500 by default. This number can be altered with the GFT_PAGE_SIZE configuration option.

Write support

Table creation and deletion is possible. Note that fields can only be added to a table in which there are no features created yet.

Write support is only enabled when the datasource is opened in update mode.

The mapping between the operations of the GFT service and the OGR concepts is the following :

When inserting a new feature with CreateFeature(), and if the command is successful, OGR will fetch the returned rowid and use it as the OGR FID. OGR will also automatically reproject its geometry into the geodetic WGS84 SRS if needed (provided that the original SRS is attached to the geometry).

Write support and OGR transactions

The above operations are by default issued to the server synchronously with the OGR API call. This however can cause performance penalties when issuing a lot of commands due to many client/server exchanges.

It is possible to surround the CreateFeature() operation between OGRLayer::StartTransaction() and OGRLayer::CommitTransaction(). The operations will be stored into memory and only executed at the time CommitTransaction() is called. Note that the GFT service only supports up to 500 INSERTs and up to 1MB of content per transaction.

Note : only CreateFeature() makes use of OGR transaction mechanism. SetFeature() and DeleteFeature() will still be issued immediately.

SQL

SQL commands provided to the OGRDataSource::ExecuteSQL() call are executed on the server side, unless the OGRSQL dialect is specified. The subset of SQL supported by the GFT service is described in the links at the end of this page.

The SQL supported by the server understands only native table id, and not the table names returned by OGR. For convenience, OGR will "patch" your SQL command to replace the table name by the table id however.

Examples

  • Listing the tables and views owned by the authenticated user:
    ogrinfo -ro "GFT:email=john.doe@example.com password=secret_password"
    

  • Creating and populating a table from a shapefile:
    ogr2ogr -f GFT "GFT:email=john.doe@example.com password=secret_password" shapefile.shp
    

  • Displaying the content of a public table with a spatial and attribute filters:
    ogrinfo -ro "GFT:tables=224453" -al -spat 67 31.5 67.5 32 -where "'Attack on' = 'ENEMY'"
    

  • Getting the auth key:
    ogrinfo --config CPL_DEBUG ON "GFT:email=john.doe@example.com password=secret_password"
    
    returns:
    HTTP: Fetch(https://www.google.com/accounts/ClientLogin)
    HTTP: These HTTP headers were set: Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded
    GFT: Auth key : A_HUGE_STRING_WITH_ALPHANUMERIC_AND_SPECIAL_CHARACTERS
    
    Now, you can set the GFT_AUTH environment variable to that value and simply use "GFT:" as the DSN.

    See Also