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
specific instructions below. For Windows, you may
find binaries on Gaia-SINS home page. In any case, you should always
be able to install from source.
When you are done with the installation process, skip to Creating a spatial database for SpatiaLite.
GEOS and PROJ.4 should be installed prior to building SpatiaLite.
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 ..
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-2.3.1
$ ./configure # May need to be modified, see notes below.
$ make
$ sudo make install
$ cd ..
Finally, do the same for the SpatiaLite tools:
$ cd spatialite-tools-2.3.1
$ ./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
If you’ve decided to use a 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:
[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:
[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:
$ sudo python setup.py install
To install the SpatiaLite library and tools, Mac OS X users can choose between KyngChaos packages and Homebrew.
First, follow the instructions in the KyngChaos packages section.
When Creating a spatial database for SpatiaLite, 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'
Homebrew handles all the SpatiaLite related packages on your behalf, including SQLite3, SpatiaLite, PROJ, and GEOS. Install them like this:
$ brew update
$ brew install spatialite-tools
$ brew install gdal
Finally, for GeoDjango to be able to find the SpatiaLite library, add the
following to your settings.py
:
SPATIALITE_LIBRARY_PATH='/usr/local/lib/mod_spatialite.dylib'
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.
If you’re using SpatiaLite 2.4 or newer, 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. When you’ve done this, you can skip the rest of this section.
If you’re using SpatiaLite 2.3, you’ll need to download a database-initialization file and execute its SQL queries in your database.
First, get it from the SpatiaLite Resources page:
$ wget http://www.gaia-gis.it/spatialite-2.3.1/init_spatialite-2.3.sql.gz
$ gunzip init_spatialite-2.3.sql.gz
Then, use the spatialite
command to initialize a spatial database:
$ spatialite geodjango.db < init_spatialite-2.3.sql
Note
The parameter geodjango.db
is the filename of the SQLite database
you want to use. Use the same in the DATABASES
"name"
key
inside your settings.py
.
Note
When running manage.py migrate
with a SQLite (or SpatiaLite) database,
the database file will be automatically created if it doesn’t exist. In
this case, if your models contain any geometry columns, you’ll see this
error:
CreateSpatialIndex() error: "no such table: geometry_columns"
It’s because the table creation queries are executed without spatial
metadata tables. To avoid this, make the database file before executing
manage.py migrate
as described above.
Feb 24, 2017