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"http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.3/docbookx.dtd" [
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<book>
  <title>PostGIS Manual</title>

  <bookinfo>
    <editor>
      <firstname>Paul</firstname>

      <surname>Ramsey</surname>

      <affiliation>
        <orgname><ulink url="http://www.refractions.net">Refractions Research
        Inc</ulink></orgname>

        <address>
     <street>Suite 300, 1207 Douglas Street</street>
     <city>Victoria</city>
     <state>British Columbia</state>
     <country>Canada</country>
     <email>pramsey@refractions.net</email>
    </address>
      </affiliation>
    </editor>

    <abstract>
      <para>PostGIS is an extension to the PostgreSQL object-relational
      database system which allows GIS (Geographic Information Systems)
      objects to be stored in the database. PostGIS includes support for
      GiST-based R-Tree spatial indexes, and functions for analysis and
      processing of GIS objects.</para>
      <para>This is the manual for version @@LAST_RELEASE_VERSION@@</para>
    </abstract>
  </bookinfo>

  <chapter>
    <title>Introduction</title>

    <para>PostGIS is developed by Refractions Research Inc, as a spatial
    database technology research project. Refractions is a GIS and database
    consulting company in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada, specializing in
    data integration and custom software development. We plan on supporting
    and developing PostGIS to support a range of important GIS functionality,
    including full OpenGIS support, advanced topological constructs
    (coverages, surfaces, networks), desktop user interface tools for viewing
    and editing GIS data, and web-based access tools.</para>

    <sect1 id="credits">
      <title>Credits</title>

      <variablelist>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>Sandro Santilli &lt;strk@refractions.net&gt;</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Coordinates all bug fixing and maintenance effort,
            integration of new GEOS functionality, and new function
            enhancements.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>Chris Hodgson &lt;chodgson@refractions.net&gt;</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Maintains new functions and the 7.2 index bindings.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>Paul Ramsey &lt;pramsey@refractions.net&gt;</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Keeps track of the
            documentation and packaging.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>Jeff Lounsbury &lt;jeffloun@refractions.net&gt;</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Original development of the Shape file loader/dumper.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>Dave Blasby &lt;dblasby@gmail.com&gt;</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>The original developer of PostGIS. Dave wrote the server
            side objects, index bindings, and many of the server side
            analytical functions.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>Other contributors</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>
		In alphabetical order: 
		Alex Bodnaru, Alex Mayrhofer, Bruce Rindahl,
		Bernhard Reiter, 
		Bruno Wolff III, Carl Anderson, Charlie Savage,
		David Skea, David Techer, 
		IIDA Tetsushi, Geographic Data BC, Gerald Fenoy,
		Gino Lucrezi, Klaus Foerster, Kris Jurka, Mark Cave-Ayland,
		Mark Sondheim, Markus Schaber, Michael Fuhr, Nikita Shulga,
		Norman Vine, Olivier Courtin, Ralph Mason, Steffen Macke.
            </para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>Important Support Libraries</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>The <ulink url="http://geos.refractions.net">GEOS</ulink>
            geometry operations library, and the algorithmic work of 
            Martin Davis &lt;mbdavis@vividsolutions.com&gt; of Vivid Solutions
            in making it all work.</para>
            <para>The <ulink url="http://proj4.maptools.org">Proj4</ulink>
            cartographic projection library, and the work of Gerald Evenden
            and Frank Warmerdam in creating and maintaining it.</para>
           </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

      </variablelist>
    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>More Information</title>

      <itemizedlist>
        <listitem>
          <para>The latest software, documentation and news items are
          available at the PostGIS web site, <ulink
          url="http://postgis.refractions.net">http://postgis.refractions.net</ulink>.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>More information about the GEOS geometry operations library is
          available at<ulink url="http://geos.refractions.net">
          http://geos.refractions.net</ulink>.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>More information about the Proj4 reprojection library is
          available at <ulink
          url="http://www.remotesensing.org/proj">http://www.remotesensing.org/proj</ulink>.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>More information about the PostgreSQL database server is
          available at the PostgreSQL main site <ulink
          url="http://www.postgresql.org">http://www.postgresql.org</ulink>.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>More information about GiST indexing is available at the
          PostgreSQL GiST development site, <ulink
          url="http://www.sai.msu.su/~megera/postgres/gist">http://www.sai.msu.su/~megera/postgres/gist</ulink>.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>More information about Mapserver internet map server is
          available at <ulink
          url="http://mapserver.gis.umn.edu/">http://mapserver.gis.umn.edu</ulink>.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>The "<ulink
          url="http://www.opengis.org/docs/99-049.pdf">Simple Features
          for Specification for SQL</ulink>" is available at the OpenGIS
          Consortium web site: <ulink
          url="http://www.opengis.org">http://www.opengis.org</ulink>.</para>
        </listitem>
      </itemizedlist>
    </sect1>
  </chapter>

  <chapter>
    <title>Installation</title>

    <sect1>
      <title>Requirements</title>

      <para>PostGIS has the following requirements for building and
      usage:</para>

      <itemizedlist>
        <listitem>
          <para>
	  A complete installation of PostgreSQL (including server headers).
          PostgreSQL is available from <ulink
          url="http://www.postgresql.org">http://www.postgresql.org</ulink>.
	  Version 7.2 or higher is required.
	  </para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>GNU C compiler (<filename>gcc</filename>). Some other ANSI C
          compilers can be used to compile PostGIS, but we find far fewer
          problems when compiling with <filename>gcc</filename>.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>GNU Make (<filename>gmake</filename> or
          <filename>make</filename>). For many systems, GNU
          <filename>make</filename> is the default version of make. Check the
          version by invoking <filename>make -v</filename>. Other versions of
          <filename>make</filename> may not process the PostGIS
          <filename>Makefile</filename> properly.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>(Recommended) Proj4 reprojection library. The Proj4 library is
          used to provide coordinate reprojection support within PostGIS.
          Proj4 is available for download from <ulink
          url="http://www.remotesensing.org/proj">http://www.remotesensing.org/proj</ulink>.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>(Recommended) GEOS geometry library. The GEOS library is used
          to provide geometry tests (Touches(), Contains(), Intersects()) and
          operations (Buffer(), GeomUnion(), Difference()) within PostGIS.
          GEOS is available for download from <ulink
          url="http://geos.refractions.net">http://geos.refractions.net</ulink>.</para>
        </listitem>
      </itemizedlist>
    </sect1>

    <sect1 id="PGInstall">
      <title>PostGIS</title>

      <para>The PostGIS module is a extension to the PostgreSQL backend
      server. As such, PostGIS @@LAST_RELEASE_VERSION@@
      <emphasis>requires</emphasis> full PostgreSQL server headers access
      in order to compile. The PostgreSQL source code is available at <ulink
      url="http://www.postgresql.org">http://www.postgresql.org</ulink>.</para>

      <para>PostGIS @@LAST_RELEASE_VERSION@@ can be built against PostgreSQL
      versions 7.2.0 or higher. Earlier versions of PostgreSQL are
      <emphasis>not</emphasis> supported.</para>

      <orderedlist>
        <listitem>
          <para>Before you can compile the PostGIS server modules, you must
          compile and install the PostgreSQL package.</para>

          <note>
            <para>If you plan to use GEOS functionality you might need to
            explicitly link PostgreSQL against the standard C++
            library:</para>

            <programlisting>LDFLAGS=-lstdc++ ./configure [YOUR OPTIONS HERE]</programlisting>

            <para>This is a workaround for bogus C++ exceptions interaction
            with older development tools. If you experience weird problems
            (backend unexpectedly closed or similar things) try this trick.
            This will require recompiling your PostgreSQL from scratch, of
            course.</para>
          </note>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>Retrieve the PostGIS source archive from <ulink
          url="http://postgis.refractions.net/postgis-@@LAST_RELEASE_VERSION@@.tar.gz">http://postgis.refractions.net/postgis-@@LAST_RELEASE_VERSION@@.tar.gz</ulink>.
          Uncompress and untar the archive.
	  </para>

          <programlisting># gzip -d -c postgis-@@LAST_RELEASE_VERSION@@.tar.gz | tar xvf -</programlisting>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>Enter the postgis-@@LAST_RELEASE_VERSION@@ directory, and run:
<programlisting># ./configure</programlisting>
	  </para>

          <itemizedlist>
            <listitem>
		<para>
		If you want support for coordinate reprojection, you must have
		the Proj4 library installed. If ./configure didn't find
		it, try using <code>--with-proj=PATH</code>
		switch specify a specific Proj4 installation directory.
		</para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
		<para>
		If you want to use GEOS functionality, you must have the GEOS
		library installed. If ./configure didn't find it, try
		using <code>--with-geos=PATH</code> to specify the full 
                path to the geos-config program full path.
		</para>
            </listitem>
          </itemizedlist>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>Run the compile and install commands.</para>

          <programlisting># make 
# make install</programlisting>

          <para>All files are installed using information provided
	  by <filename>pg_config</filename></para>

          <itemizedlist>
            <listitem>
              <para>Libraries are installed
              <filename>[pkglibdir]/lib/contrib</filename>.</para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para>Important support files such as
              <filename>lwpostgis.sql</filename> are installed in
              <filename>[prefix]/share/contrib</filename>.</para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para>Loader and dumper binaries are installed in
              <filename>[bindir]/</filename>.</para>
            </listitem>
          </itemizedlist>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>PostGIS requires the PL/pgSQL procedural language extension.
          Before loading the <filename>lwpostgis.sql</filename> file, you must
          first enable PL/pgSQL. You should use the
          <filename>createlang</filename> command. The PostgreSQL 
          Programmer's Guide has the details if you want to this manually for
          some reason.</para>

          <programlisting># createlang plpgsql [yourdatabase]</programlisting>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>Now load the PostGIS object and function definitions into your
          database by loading the <filename>lwpostgis.sql</filename> definitions
          file.</para>

          <programlisting># psql -d [yourdatabase] -f lwpostgis.sql</programlisting>

          <para>The PostGIS server extensions are now loaded and ready to
          use.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>For a complete set of EPSG coordinate system definition
          identifiers, you can also load the
          <filename>spatial_ref_sys.sql</filename> definitions file and
          populate the <varname>SPATIAL_REF_SYS</varname> table.</para>

          <programlisting># psql -d [yourdatabase] -f spatial_ref_sys.sql</programlisting>
        </listitem>
      </orderedlist>

      <sect2 id="upgrading">
        <title>Upgrading</title>

<para>
Upgrading existing spatial databases can be tricky as it requires
replacement or introduction of new PostGIS object definitions.
</para>

<para>
Unfortunately not all definitions can be easily replaced in 
a live database, so sometimes your best bet is a dump/reload
process. 
</para>

<para>
PostGIS provides a SOFT UPGRADE procedure for minor or bugfix
releases, and an HARD UPGRADE procedure for major releases.
</para>

	<para>
Before attempting to upgrade postgis, it is always worth to backup
your data. If you use the -Fc flag to pg_dump you will always be able
to restore the dump with an HARD UPGRADE.
	</para>

	<sect3 id="soft_upgrade">
		<title>Soft upgrade</title>

<para>
Soft upgrade consists of sourcing the lwpostgis_upgrade.sql
script in your spatial database:
</para>

<programlisting>psql -f lwpostgis_upgrade.sql -d your_spatial_database</programlisting>

<para>
If a soft upgrade is not possible the script will abort and 
you will be warned about HARD UPGRADE being required,
so do not hesitate to try a soft upgrade first.
</para>

<note>
<para>
If you can't find the <filename>lwpostgis_upgrade.sql</filename> file
you are probably using a version prior to 1.1 and must generate that
file by yourself. This is done with the following command:
</para>

<programlisting>utils/postgis_proc_upgrade.pl lwpostgis.sql > lwpostgis_upgrade.sql</programlisting>
</note>


	</sect3>


	<sect3 id="hard_upgrade">
		<title>Hard upgrade</title>

	<para>
By HARD UPGRADE we intend full dump/reload of postgis-enabled databases.
You need an HARD UPGRADE when postgis objects' internal storage
changes or when SOFT UPGRADE is not possible.
The <link linkend="release_notes">Release Notes</link> appendix reports for each version whether you need a
dump/reload (HARD UPGRADE) to upgrade.
	</para>

	<para>
PostGIS provides an utility script to restore a dump
produced with the pg_dump -Fc command. It is experimental so redirecting
its output to a file will help in case of problems. The procedure is
as follow:
	</para>

	<programlisting>
	# Create a "custom-format" dump of the database you want
	# to upgrade (let's call it "olddb")
	$ pg_dump -Fc olddb &gt; olddb.dump

	# Restore the dump contextually upgrading postgis into
	# a new database. The new database doesn't have to exist.
	# Let's call it "newdb"
	$ sh utils/postgis_restore.pl lwpostgis.sql newdb olddb.dump &gt; restore.log

	# Check that all restored dump objects really had to be restored from dump
	# and do not conflict with the ones defined in lwpostgis.sql
	$ grep ^KEEPING restore.log | less

	# If upgrading from PostgreSQL &lt; 8.0 to &gt;= 8.0 you might want to 
	# drop the attrelid, varattnum and stats columns in the geometry_columns
	# table, which are no-more needed. Keeping them won't hurt.
	# !!! DROPPING THEM WHEN REALLY NEEDED WILL DO HURT !!!!
	$ psql newdb -c "ALTER TABLE geometry_columns DROP attrelid"
	$ psql newdb -c "ALTER TABLE geometry_columns DROP varattnum"
	$ psql newdb -c "ALTER TABLE geometry_columns DROP stats"

	# spatial_ref_sys table is restore from the dump, to ensure your custom
	# additions are kept, but the distributed one might contain modification
	# so you should backup your entries, drop the table and source the new one.
	# If you did make additions we assume you know how to backup them before
	# upgrading the table. Replace of it with the new one is done like this:
	$ psql newdb
	newdb=&gt; delete from spatial_ref_sys; 
	DROP
	newdb=&gt; \i spatial_ref_sys.sql
	</programlisting>

	</sect3>

      </sect2>

      <sect2>
        <title>Common Problems</title>

        <para>There are several things to check when your installation or
        upgrade doesn't go as you expected.</para>

        <orderedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para>It is easiest if you untar the PostGIS distribution into the
            contrib directory under the PostgreSQL source tree. However, if
            this is not possible for some reason, you can set the
            <varname>PGSQL_SRC</varname> environment variable to the path to
            the PostgreSQL source directory. This will allow you to compile
            PostGIS, but the <command>make install</command> may not work, so
            be prepared to copy the PostGIS library and executable files to
            the appropriate locations yourself.</para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para>Check that you you have installed PostgreSQL 7.2 or newer,
            and that you are compiling against the same version of the
            PostgreSQL source as the version of PostgreSQL that is running.
            Mix-ups can occur when your (Linux) distribution has already
            installed PostgreSQL, or you have otherwise installed PostgreSQL
            before and forgotten about it. PostGIS will only work with
            PostgreSQL 7.2 or newer, and strange, unexpected error messages
            will result if you use an older version. To check the version of
            PostgreSQL which is running, connect to the database using psql
            and run this query:</para>

            <programlisting>SELECT version();</programlisting>

            <para>If you are running an RPM based distribution, you can check
            for the existence of pre-installed packages using the
            <command>rpm</command> command as follows: <command>rpm -qa | grep
            postgresql</command></para>
          </listitem>
        </orderedlist>

        <para>Also check that you have made any necessary changes to the top
        of the Makefile.config. This includes:</para>

        <orderedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para>If you want to be able to do coordinate reprojections, you
            must install the Proj4 library on your system, set the
            <varname>USE_PROJ</varname> variable to 1 and the
            <varname>PROJ_DIR</varname> to your installation prefix in the
            Makefile.config.</para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para>If you want to be able to use GEOS functions you must
            install the GEOS library on your system, and set the
            <varname>USE_GEOS</varname> to 1 and the
            <varname>GEOS_DIR</varname> to your installation prefix in the
            Makefile.config</para>
          </listitem>
        </orderedlist>
      </sect2>
    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>JDBC</title>

      <para>The JDBC extensions provide Java objects corresponding to the
      internal PostGIS types. These objects can be used to write Java clients
      which query the PostGIS database and draw or do calculations on the GIS
      data in PostGIS.</para>

      <orderedlist>
        <listitem>
          <para>Enter the <filename>jdbc</filename> sub-directory of the
          PostGIS distribution.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>Edit the <filename>Makefile</filename> to provide the correct
          paths of your java compiler (<varname>JAVAC</varname>) and
          interpreter (<varname>JAVA</varname>).</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>Run the <filename>make</filename> command. Copy the
          <filename>postgis.jar</filename> file to wherever you keep your java
          libraries.</para>
        </listitem>
      </orderedlist>
    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>Loader/Dumper</title>

      <para>The data loader and dumper are built and installed automatically
      as part of the PostGIS build. To build and install them manually:</para>

      <programlisting># cd postgis-@@LAST_RELEASE_VERSION@@/loader 
# make
# make install</programlisting>

      <para>The loader is called <filename>shp2pgsql</filename> and converts
      ESRI Shape files into SQL suitable for loading in PostGIS/PostgreSQL.
      The dumper is called <filename>pgsql2shp</filename> and converts PostGIS
      tables (or queries) into ESRI Shape files.</para>
    </sect1>
  </chapter>

  <chapter>
    <title>Frequently Asked Questions</title>

    <qandaset>
      <qandaentry>
        <question>
          <para>What kind of geometric objects can I store?</para>
        </question>

        <answer>
          <para>You can store point, line, polygon, multipoint, multiline,
          multipolygon, and geometrycollections. These are specified in the
          Open GIS Well Known Text Format (with XYZ,XYM,XYZM extentions).</para>
        </answer>
      </qandaentry>

      <qandaentry>
        <question>
          <para>How do I insert a GIS object into the database?</para>
        </question>

        <answer>
          <para>First, you need to create a table with a column of type
          "geometry" to hold your GIS data. Connect to your database with
          <filename>psql</filename> and try the following SQL:</para>

          <programlisting>CREATE TABLE gtest ( ID int4, NAME varchar(20) );
SELECT AddGeometryColumn('', 'gtest','geom',-1,'LINESTRING',2);</programlisting>

          <para>If the geometry column addition fails, you probably have not
          loaded the PostGIS functions and objects into this database. See the
          <link linkend="PGInstall">installation instructions</link>.</para>

          <para>Then, you can insert a geometry into the table using a SQL
          insert statement. The GIS object itself is formatted using the
          OpenGIS Consortium "well-known text" format:</para>

          <programlisting>INSERT INTO gtest (ID, NAME, GEOM) VALUES (1, 'First Geometry', GeomFromText('LINESTRING(2 3,4 5,6 5,7 8)', -1));</programlisting>

          <para>For more information about other GIS objects, see the <link
          linkend="RefObject">object reference</link>.</para>

          <para>To view your GIS data in the table:</para>

          <programlisting>SELECT id, name, AsText(geom) AS geom FROM gtest;</programlisting>

          <para>The return value should look something like this:</para>

          <programlisting> id | name           | geom
----+----------------+-----------------------------
  1 | First Geometry | LINESTRING(2 3,4 5,6 5,7 8) 
(1 row)</programlisting>
        </answer>
      </qandaentry>

      <qandaentry>
        <question>
          <para>How do I construct a spatial query?</para>
        </question>

        <answer>
          <para>The same way you construct any other database query, as an SQL
          combination of return values, functions, and boolean tests.</para>

          <para>For spatial queries, there are two issues that are important
          to keep in mind while constructing your query: is there a spatial
          index you can make use of; and, are you doing expensive calculations
          on a large number of geometries.</para>

          <para>In general, you will want to use the "intersects operator"
          (&amp;&amp;) which tests whether the bounding boxes of features
          intersect. The reason the &amp;&amp; operator is useful is because
          if a spatial index is available to speed up the test, the &amp;&amp;
          operator will make use of this. This can make queries much much
          faster.</para>

          <para>You will also make use of spatial functions, such as
          Distance(), Intersects(), Contains() and Within(), among others, to
          narrow down the results of your search. Most spatial queries include
          both an indexed test and a spatial function test. The index test
          serves to limit the number of return tuples to only tuples that
          <emphasis>might</emphasis> meet the condition of interest. The
          spatial functions are then use to test the condition exactly.</para>

          <programlisting>SELECT id, the_geom FROM thetable
WHERE
  the_geom &amp;&amp; 'POLYGON((0 0, 0 10, 10 10, 10 0, 0 0))'
AND
  Contains(the_geom,'POLYGON((0 0, 0 10, 10 10, 10 0, 0 0))';</programlisting>
        </answer>
      </qandaentry>

      <qandaentry>
        <question>
          <para>How do I speed up spatial queries on large tables?</para>
        </question>

        <answer>
          <para>Fast queries on large tables is the <emphasis>raison
          d'etre</emphasis> of spatial databases (along with transaction
          support) so having a good index is important.</para>

          <para>To build a spatial index on a table with a
          <varname>geometry</varname> column, use the "CREATE INDEX" function
          as follows:</para>

          <programlisting>CREATE INDEX [indexname] ON [tablename]  
  USING GIST ( [geometrycolumn] );</programlisting>

          <para>The "USING GIST" option tells the server to use a GiST
          (Generalized Search Tree) index.</para>

          <note>
            <para>
            GiST indexes are assumed to be lossy.
	    Lossy indexes uses a proxy object (in the spatial case,
	    a bounding box) for building the index.</para>
          </note>

          <para>You should also ensure that the PostgreSQL query planner has
          enough information about your index to make rational decisions about
          when to use it. To do this, you have to "gather statistics" on your
          geometry tables.</para>

          <para>For PostgreSQL 8.0.x and greater, just run the <command>VACUUM
          ANALYZE</command> command.</para>

          <para>For PostgreSQL 7.4.x and below, run the <command>SELECT
          UPDATE_GEOMETRY_STATS()</command> command.</para>
        </answer>
      </qandaentry>

      <qandaentry>
        <question>
          <para>Why aren't PostgreSQL R-Tree indexes supported?</para>
        </question>

        <answer>
          <para>Early versions of PostGIS used the PostgreSQL R-Tree indexes.
          However, PostgreSQL R-Trees have been completely discarded since
          version 0.6, and spatial indexing is provided with an
          R-Tree-over-GiST scheme.</para>

          <para>Our tests have shown search speed for native R-Tree and GiST
          to be comparable. Native PostgreSQL R-Trees have two limitations
          which make them undesirable for use with GIS features (note that
          these limitations are due to the current PostgreSQL native R-Tree
          implementation, not the R-Tree concept in general):</para>

          <itemizedlist>
            <listitem>
              <para>R-Tree indexes in PostgreSQL cannot handle features which
              are larger than 8K in size. GiST indexes can, using the "lossy"
              trick of substituting the bounding box for the feature
              itself.</para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para>R-Tree indexes in PostgreSQL are not "null safe", so
              building an index on a geometry column which contains null
              geometries will fail.</para>
            </listitem>
          </itemizedlist>
        </answer>
      </qandaentry>

      <qandaentry>
        <question>
          <para>Why should I use the <varname>AddGeometryColumn()</varname>
          function and all the other OpenGIS stuff?</para>
        </question>

        <answer>
          <para>If you do not want to use the OpenGIS support functions, you
          do not have to. Simply create tables as in older versions, defining
          your geometry columns in the CREATE statement. All your geometries
          will have SRIDs of -1, and the OpenGIS meta-data tables will
          <emphasis>not</emphasis> be filled in properly. However, this will
          cause most applications based on PostGIS to fail, and it is
          generally suggested that you do use
          <varname>AddGeometryColumn()</varname> to create geometry
          tables.</para>

          <para>Mapserver is one application which makes use of the
          <varname>geometry_columns</varname> meta-data. Specifically,
          Mapserver can use the SRID of the geometry column to do on-the-fly
          reprojection of features into the correct map projection.</para>
        </answer>
      </qandaentry>

      <qandaentry>
        <question>
          <para>What is the best way to find all objects within a radius of
          another object?</para>
        </question>

        <answer>
          <para>To use the database most efficiently, it is best to do radius
          queries which combine the radius test with a bounding box test: the
          bounding box test uses the spatial index, giving fast access to a
          subset of data which the radius test is then applied to.</para>

          <para>The <varname>Expand()</varname> function is a handy way of
          enlarging a bounding box to allow an index search of a region of
          interest. The combination of a fast access index clause and a slower
          accurate distance test provides the best combination of speed and
          precision for this query.</para>

          <para>For example, to find all objects with 100 meters of POINT(1000
          1000) the following query would work well:</para>

          <programlisting>SELECT * 
FROM GEOTABLE 
WHERE 
  GEOCOLUMN &amp;&amp; Expand(GeomFromText('POINT(1000 1000)',-1),100)
AND
  Distance(GeomFromText('POINT(1000 1000)',-1),GEOCOLUMN) &lt; 100;</programlisting>
        </answer>
      </qandaentry>

      <qandaentry>
        <question>
          <para>How do I perform a coordinate reprojection as part of a
          query?</para>
        </question>

        <answer>
          <para>To perform a reprojection, both the source and destination
          coordinate systems must be defined in the SPATIAL_REF_SYS table, and
          the geometries being reprojected must already have an SRID set on
          them. Once that is done, a reprojection is as simple as referring to
          the desired destination SRID.</para>

          <programlisting>SELECT Transform(GEOM,4269) FROM GEOTABLE;</programlisting>
        </answer>
      </qandaentry>
    </qandaset>
  </chapter>

  <chapter>
    <title>Using PostGIS</title>

    <sect1 id="RefObject">
      <title>GIS Objects</title>

      <para>The GIS objects supported by PostGIS are a superset of
      the "Simple Features" defined by the OpenGIS Consortium (OGC).
      As of version 0.9, PostGIS supports all the objects and functions
      specified in the OGC "Simple Features for SQL" specification.</para>

      <para>PostGIS extends the standard with support for 3DZ,3DM and 4D
      coordinates.</para>

      <sect2>
        <title>OpenGIS WKB and WKT</title>

        <para>The OpenGIS specification defines two standard ways of
        expressing spatial objects: the Well-Known Text (WKT) form and
	the Well-Known Binary (WKB) form. Both WKT and WKB include
	information about the type of the object and the
        coordinates which form the object.</para>

      <para>Examples of the text representations (WKT) of the spatial
      objects of the features are as follows:</para>

      <itemizedlist>
        <listitem>
          <para>POINT(0 0)</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>LINESTRING(0 0,1 1,1 2)</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>POLYGON((0 0,4 0,4 4,0 4,0 0),(1 1, 2 1, 2 2, 1 2,1 1))</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>MULTIPOINT(0 0,1 2)</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>MULTILINESTRING((0 0,1 1,1 2),(2 3,3 2,5 4))</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>MULTIPOLYGON(((0 0,4 0,4 4,0 4,0 0),(1 1,2 1,2 2,1 2,1 1)),
	  ((-1 -1,-1 -2,-2 -2,-2 -1,-1 -1)))</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>GEOMETRYCOLLECTION(POINT(2 3),LINESTRING((2 3,3 4)))</para>
        </listitem>

      </itemizedlist>


        <para>The OpenGIS specification also requires that the
        internal storage format of spatial objects include a spatial
        referencing system identifier (SRID). The SRID is required when
        creating spatial objects for insertion into the database.</para>

<para>
Input/Output of these formats are available using the following
interfaces:
</para>

	<programlisting>
	bytea WKB = asBinary(geometry);
	text WKT = asText(geometry);
	geometry = GeomFromWKB(bytea WKB, SRID); 
	geometry = GeometryFromText(text WKT, SRID);
	</programlisting>

	<para> For example, a valid insert statement to create and insert an OGC spatial object would be:</para>

        <programlisting>
	INSERT INTO SPATIALTABLE ( 
		  THE_GEOM, 
		  THE_NAME 
	) 
	VALUES ( 
		  GeomFromText('POINT(-126.4 45.32)', 312), 
		  'A Place' 
	)</programlisting>


      </sect2>

	<sect2>
        <title>PostGIS EWKB, EWKT and Canonical Forms</title>


<para>
OGC formats only support 2d geometries, and the associated SRID
is *never* embedded in the input/output representations.
</para>

<para>
Postgis extended formats are currently superset of OGC one (every
valid WKB/WKT is a valid EWKB/EWKT) but this might vary in the
future, specifically if OGC comes out with a new format conflicting
with our extensions. Thus you SHOULD NOT rely on this feature!
</para>

<para>
Postgis EWKB/EWKT add 3dm,3dz,4d coordinates support and embedded
SRID information.
</para>

      <para>Examples of the text representations (EWKT) of the
      extended spatial objects of the features are as follows:</para>

      <itemizedlist>

        <listitem>
          <para>POINT(0 0 0) -- XYZ</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>SRID=32632;POINT(0 0) -- XY with SRID</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>POINTM(0 0 0) -- XYM</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>POINT(0 0 0 0) -- XYZM</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>SRID=4326;MULTIPOINTM(0 0 0,1 2 1) -- XYM with SRID</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>MULTILINESTRING((0 0 0,1 1 0,1 2 1),(2 3 1,3 2 1,5 4
          1))</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>POLYGON((0 0 0,4 0 0,4 4 0,0 4 0,0 0 0),(1 1 0,2 1 0,2 2 0,1 2
          0,1 1 0))</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>MULTIPOLYGON(((0 0 0,4 0 0,4 4 0,0 4 0,0 0 0),(1 1 0,2 1 0,2 2
          0,1 2 0,1 1 0)),((-1 -1 0,-1 -2 0,-2 -2 0,-2 -1 0,-1 -1 0)))</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>GEOMETRYCOLLECTIONM(POINTM(2 3 9),LINESTRINGM((2 3 4,3 4
          5)))</para>
        </listitem>

      </itemizedlist>


<para>
Input/Output of these formats are available using the following
interfaces:
</para>

	<programlisting>
	bytea EWKB = asEWKB(geometry);
	text EWKT = asEWKT(geometry);
	geometry = GeomFromEWKB(bytea EWKB);
	geometry = GeomFromEWKT(text EWKT);
	</programlisting>

<para>
For example, a valid insert statement to create and insert a PostGIS spatial object would be:
</para>

        <programlisting>
	INSERT INTO SPATIALTABLE ( 
		  THE_GEOM, 
		  THE_NAME 
	) 
	VALUES ( 
		  GeomFromEWKT('SRID=312;POINTM(-126.4 45.32 15)'), 
		  'A Place' 
	)</programlisting>

<para>
The "canonical forms" of a PostgreSQL type are the representations
you get with a simple query (without any function call) and the one
which is guaranteed to be accepted with a simple insert, update or
copy. For the postgis 'geometry' type these are:

	<programlisting>
	- Output -
	binary: EWKB
	 ascii: HEXEWKB (EWKB in hex form)

	- Input -
	binary: EWKB
	 ascii: HEXEWKB|EWKT
	</programlisting>
</para>

<para>
For example this statement reads EWKT and returns HEXEWKB in the
process of canonical ascii input/output:
</para>

        <programlisting>
	=# SELECT 'SRID=4;POINT(0 0)'::geometry;
			      geometry
	----------------------------------------------------
	 01010000200400000000000000000000000000000000000000
	(1 row)
	</programlisting>


      </sect2>
    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>Using OpenGIS Standards</title>

      <para>The OpenGIS "Simple Features Specification for SQL" defines
      standard GIS object types, the functions required to manipulate them,
      and a set of meta-data tables. In order to ensure that meta-data remain
      consistent, operations such as creating and removing a spatial column
      are carried out through special procedures defined by OpenGIS.</para>

      <para>There are two OpenGIS meta-data tables:
      <varname>SPATIAL_REF_SYS</varname> and
      <varname>GEOMETRY_COLUMNS</varname>. The
      <varname>SPATIAL_REF_SYS</varname> table holds the numeric IDs and
      textual descriptions of coordinate systems used in the spatial
      database.</para>

      <sect2>
        <title>The SPATIAL_REF_SYS Table</title>

        <para>The <varname>SPATIAL_REF_SYS</varname> table definition is as
        follows:</para>

        <programlisting>CREATE TABLE SPATIAL_REF_SYS ( 
  SRID INTEGER NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY, 
  AUTH_NAME VARCHAR(256), 
  AUTH_SRID INTEGER, 
  SRTEXT VARCHAR(2048), 
  PROJ4TEXT VARCHAR(2048)
)</programlisting>

        <para>The <varname>SPATIAL_REF_SYS</varname> columns are as
        follows:</para>

        <variablelist>
          <varlistentry>
            <term>SRID</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>An integer value that uniquely identifies the Spatial
              Referencing System (SRS) within the database.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>AUTH_NAME</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>The name of the standard or standards body that is being
              cited for this reference system. For example, "EPSG" would be a
              valid <varname>AUTH_NAME</varname>.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>AUTH_SRID</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>The ID of the Spatial Reference System as defined by the
              Authority cited in the <varname>AUTH_NAME</varname>. In the case
              of EPSG, this is where the EPSG projection code would go.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>SRTEXT</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>The Well-Known Text representation of the Spatial
              Reference System. An example of a WKT SRS representation
              is:</para>

              <programlisting>PROJCS["NAD83 / UTM Zone 10N", 
  GEOGCS["NAD83",
    DATUM["North_American_Datum_1983", 
      SPHEROID["GRS 1980",6378137,298.257222101]
    ], 
    PRIMEM["Greenwich",0], 
    UNIT["degree",0.0174532925199433] 
  ],
  PROJECTION["Transverse_Mercator"], 
  PARAMETER["latitude_of_origin",0],
  PARAMETER["central_meridian",-123], 
  PARAMETER["scale_factor",0.9996],
  PARAMETER["false_easting",500000], 
  PARAMETER["false_northing",0],
  UNIT["metre",1] 
]</programlisting>

              <para>For a listing of EPSG projection codes and their
              corresponding WKT representations, see <ulink
              url="http://www.opengis.org/techno/interop/EPSG2WKT.TXT">http://www.opengis.org/techno/interop/EPSG2WKT.TXT</ulink>.
              For a discussion of WKT in general, see the OpenGIS "Coordinate
              Transformation Services Implementation Specification" at <ulink
              url="http://www.opengis.org/techno/specs.htm">http://www.opengis.org/techno/specs.htm</ulink>.
              For information on the European Petroleum Survey Group (EPSG)
              and their database of spatial reference systems, see <ulink
              url="http://epsg.org">http://epsg.org</ulink>.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>PROJ4TEXT</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>PostGIS uses the Proj4 library to provide coordinate
              transformation capabilities. The <varname>PROJ4TEXT</varname>
              column contains the Proj4 coordinate definition string for a
              particular SRID. For example:</para>

              <programlisting>+proj=utm +zone=10 +ellps=clrk66 +datum=NAD27 +units=m</programlisting>

              <para>For more information about, see the Proj4 web site at
              <ulink
              url="http://www.remotesensing.org/proj">http://www.remotesensing.org/proj</ulink>.
              The <filename>spatial_ref_sys.sql</filename> file contains both
              <varname>SRTEXT</varname> and <varname>PROJ4TEXT</varname>
              definitions for all EPSG projections.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>
        </variablelist>
      </sect2>

      <sect2>
        <title>The GEOMETRY_COLUMNS Table</title>

        <para>The <varname>GEOMETRY_COLUMNS</varname> table definition is as
        follows:</para>

        <programlisting>CREATE TABLE GEOMETRY_COLUMNS ( 
  F_TABLE_CATALOG VARCHAR(256) NOT NULL, 
  F_TABLE_SCHEMA VARCHAR(256) NOT NULL, 
  F_TABLE_NAME VARCHAR(256) NOT NULL, 
  F_GEOMETRY_COLUMN VARCHAR(256) NOT NULL,
  COORD_DIMENSION INTEGER NOT NULL, 
  SRID INTEGER NOT NULL, 
  TYPE VARCHAR(30) NOT NULL 
)</programlisting>

        <para>The columns are as follows:</para>

        <variablelist>
          <varlistentry>
            <term>F_TABLE_CATALOG, F_TABLE_SCHEMA, F_TABLE_NAME</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>The fully qualified name of the feature table containing
              the geometry column. Note that the terms "catalog" and "schema"
              are Oracle-ish. There is not PostgreSQL analogue of "catalog" so
              that column is left blank -- for "schema" the PostgreSQL schema
              name is used (<varname>public</varname> is the default).</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>F_GEOMETRY_COLUMN</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>The name of the geometry column in the feature
              table.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>COORD_DIMENSION</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>The spatial dimension (2, 3 or 4 dimensional) of the
              column.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>SRID</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>The ID of the spatial reference system used for the
              coordinate geometry in this table. It is a foreign key reference
              to the <varname>SPATIAL_REF_SYS</varname>.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>TYPE</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>The type of the spatial object. To restrict the spatial
              column to a single type, use one of: POINT, LINESTRING, POLYGON,
              MULTIPOINT, MULTILINESTRING, MULTIPOLYGON, GEOMETRYCOLLECTION or
	      corresponding XYM versions POINTM, LINESTRINGM, POLYGONM,
	      MULTIPOINTM, MULTILINESTRINGM, MULTIPOLYGONM, GEOMETRYCOLLECTIONM.
              For heterogeneous (mixed-type) collections, you can use
              "GEOMETRY" as the type.</para>

              <note>
                <para>This attribute is (probably) not part of the OpenGIS
                specification, but is required for ensuring type
                homogeneity.</para>
              </note>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>
        </variablelist>
      </sect2>

      <sect2>
        <title>Creating a Spatial Table</title>

        <para>Creating a table with spatial data is done in two stages:</para>

        <itemizedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para>Create a normal non-spatial table.</para>

            <para>For example: <command>CREATE TABLE ROADS_GEOM ( ID int4,
            NAME varchar(25) )</command></para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para>Add a spatial column to the table using the OpenGIS
            "AddGeometryColumn" function.</para>
	    
	    <para>The syntax is:
            <programlisting>AddGeometryColumn(&lt;schema_name&gt;, &lt;table_name&gt;,
            &lt;column_name&gt;, &lt;srid&gt;, &lt;type&gt;,
            &lt;dimension&gt;)</programlisting>

	    Or, using current schema:
            <programlisting>AddGeometryColumn(&lt;table_name&gt;,
            &lt;column_name&gt;, &lt;srid&gt;, &lt;type&gt;,
            &lt;dimension&gt;)</programlisting>
	    </para>

            <para>Example1: <command>SELECT AddGeometryColumn('public',
            'roads_geom', 'geom', 423, 'LINESTRING', 2)</command></para>
            <para>Example2: <command>SELECT AddGeometryColumn(
            'roads_geom', 'geom', 423, 'LINESTRING', 2)</command></para>
          </listitem>
        </itemizedlist>

        <para>Here is an example of SQL used to create a table and add a
        spatial column (assuming that an SRID of 128
        exists already):</para>

        <programlisting>CREATE TABLE parks ( PARK_ID int4, PARK_NAME varchar(128), PARK_DATE date, PARK_TYPE varchar(2) );
SELECT AddGeometryColumn('parks', 'park_geom', 128, 'MULTIPOLYGON', 2 );</programlisting>

        <para>Here is another example, using the generic "geometry" type and
        the undefined SRID value of -1:</para>

        <programlisting>CREATE TABLE roads ( ROAD_ID int4, ROAD_NAME varchar(128) ); 
SELECT AddGeometryColumn( 'roads', 'roads_geom', -1, 'GEOMETRY', 3 );</programlisting>
      </sect2>

      <sect2>
        <title>Ensuring OpenGIS compliancy of geometries</title>

        <para>Most of the functions implemented by the GEOS library
	rely on the assumption that your geometries are valid
        as specified by the OpenGIS Simple Feature Specification.
	To check validity of geometries you can use the
	<link linkend="IsValid">IsValid()</link> function:</para>

        <programlisting>gisdb=# select isvalid('LINESTRING(0 0, 1 1)'), isvalid('LINESTRING(0 0,0 0)');
 isvalid | isvalid
---------+---------
 t       | f</programlisting>
        
        
        <para>By default, PostGIS does not apply this validity check on geometry input, because
        testing for validity needs lots of CPU time for complex geometries, especially polygons.
        If you do not trust your data sources, you can manually enforce such a check to your tables
        by adding a check constraint:</para>

        <programlisting>ALTER TABLE mytable ADD CONSTRAINT geometry_valid_check CHECK (isvalid(the_geom));</programlisting>

        <para>If you encounter any strange error messages such as "GEOS Intersection() threw an 
        error!" or "JTS Intersection() threw an error!" when calling PostGIS functions with valid
        input geometries, you likely found an error in either PostGIS or one of the libraries it
        uses, and you should contact the PostGIS developers. The same is true if a PostGIS function returns
        an invalid geometry for valid input.</para>

	<note>
	<para>
	Strictly compliant OGC geometries cannot have Z or M values.
	The <link linkend="IsValid">IsValid()</link> function won't
	consider higher dimensioned geometries invalid! Invocations
	of <link linkend="AddGeometryColumn">AddGeometryColumn()</link>
        will add a constraint checking geometry dimensions, so it is
        enough to specify 2 there.
	</para>
	</note>

      </sect2>    
    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>Loading GIS Data</title>

      <para>Once you have created a spatial table, you are ready to upload GIS
      data to the database. Currently, there are two ways to get data into a
      PostGIS/PostgreSQL database: using formatted SQL statements or using the
      Shape file loader/dumper.</para>

      <sect2>
        <title>Using SQL</title>

        <para>If you can convert your data to a text representation, then
        using formatted SQL might be the easiest way to get your data into
        PostGIS. As with Oracle and other SQL databases, data can be bulk
        loaded by piping a large text file full of SQL "INSERT" statements
        into the SQL terminal monitor.</para>

        <para>A data upload file (<filename>roads.sql</filename> for example)
        might look like this:</para>

        <programlisting>BEGIN;
INSERT INTO ROADS_GEOM (ID,GEOM,NAME ) VALUES (1,GeomFromText('LINESTRING(191232 243118,191108 243242)',-1),'Jeff Rd'); 
INSERT INTO ROADS_GEOM (ID,GEOM,NAME ) VALUES (2,GeomFromText('LINESTRING(189141 244158,189265 244817)',-1),'Geordie Rd'); 
INSERT INTO ROADS_GEOM (ID,GEOM,NAME ) VALUES (3,GeomFromText('LINESTRING(192783 228138,192612 229814)',-1),'Paul St'); 
INSERT INTO ROADS_GEOM (ID,GEOM,NAME ) VALUES (4,GeomFromText('LINESTRING(189412 252431,189631 259122)',-1),'Graeme Ave'); 
INSERT INTO ROADS_GEOM (ID,GEOM,NAME ) VALUES (5,GeomFromText('LINESTRING(190131 224148,190871 228134)',-1),'Phil Tce'); 
INSERT INTO ROADS_GEOM (ID,GEOM,NAME ) VALUES (6,GeomFromText('LINESTRING(198231 263418,198213 268322)',-1),'Dave Cres');
COMMIT;</programlisting>

        <para>The data file can be piped into PostgreSQL very easily using the
        "psql" SQL terminal monitor:</para>

        <programlisting>psql -d [database] -f roads.sql</programlisting>
      </sect2>

      <sect2>
        <title>Using the Loader</title>

        <para>The <filename>shp2pgsql</filename> data loader converts ESRI
        Shape files into SQL suitable for insertion into a PostGIS/PostgreSQL
        database. The loader has several operating modes distinguished by
        command line flags:</para>

        <variablelist>
          <varlistentry>
            <term>-d</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Drops the database table before creating a new table with
              the data in the Shape file.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>-a</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Appends data from the Shape file into the database table.
              Note that to use this option to load multiple files, the files
              must have the same attributes and same data types.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>-c</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Creates a new table and populates it from the Shape file.
              <emphasis>This is the default mode.</emphasis></para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>-p</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Only produces the table creation SQL code, without adding 
              any actual data. This can be used if you need to completely
              separate the table creation and data loading steps.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>-D</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Use the PostgreSQL "dump" format for the output data. This 
              can be combined with -a, -c and -d. It is much faster to load
              than the default "insert" SQL format. Use this for very large data
              sets.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>-s &lt;SRID&gt;</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Creates and populates the geometry tables with the
              specified SRID.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>-k</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Keep identifiers' case (column, schema and attributes). Note that attributes in Shapefile are all UPPERCASE.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>-i</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Coerce all integers to standard 32-bit integers, do not
              create 64-bit bigints, even if the DBF header signature appears
              to warrant it.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>-I</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Create a GiST index on the geometry column.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>-w</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>
       	      Output WKT format, for use with older (0.x) versions of PostGIS.
              Note  that this will introduce coordinate drifts and will drop M
              values from shapefiles.
              </para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>-W &lt;encoding&gt;</term>

            <listitem>
		<para>
Specify encoding of the input data (dbf file).
When used, all attributes of the dbf are converted from the specified
encoding to UTF8. The resulting SQL output will contain a <code>SET
CLIENT_ENCODING to UTF8</code> command, so that the backend will be able
to reconvert from UTF8 to whatever encoding the database is configured
to use internally.
		</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

        </variablelist>

        <para>Note that -a, -c, -d and -p are mutually exclusive.</para>

        <para>An example session using the loader to create an input file and
        uploading it might look like this:</para>

        <programlisting># shp2pgsql shaperoads myschema.roadstable &gt; roads.sql 
# psql -d roadsdb -f roads.sql</programlisting>

        <para>A conversion and upload can be done all in one step using UNIX
        pipes:</para>

        <programlisting># shp2pgsql shaperoads myschema.roadstable | psql -d roadsdb</programlisting>
      </sect2>
    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>Retrieving GIS Data</title>

      <para>Data can be extracted from the database using either SQL or the
      Shape file loader/dumper. In the section on SQL we will discuss some of
      the operators available to do comparisons and queries on spatial
      tables.</para>

      <sect2>
        <title>Using SQL</title>

        <para>The most straightforward means of pulling data out of the
        database is to use a SQL select query and dump the resulting columns
        into a parsable text file:</para>

        <programlisting>db=# SELECT id, AsText(geom) AS geom, name FROM ROADS_GEOM; 
id | geom                                    | name 
---+-----------------------------------------+-----------
 1 | LINESTRING(191232 243118,191108 243242) | Jeff Rd  
 2 | LINESTRING(189141 244158,189265 244817) | Geordie Rd 
 3 | LINESTRING(192783 228138,192612 229814) | Paul St 
 4 | LINESTRING(189412 252431,189631 259122) | Graeme Ave 
 5 | LINESTRING(190131 224148,190871 228134) | Phil Tce 
 6 | LINESTRING(198231 263418,198213 268322) | Dave Cres 
 7 | LINESTRING(218421 284121,224123 241231) | Chris Way 
(6 rows)</programlisting>

        <para>However, there will be times when some kind of restriction is
        necessary to cut down the number of fields returned. In the case of
        attribute-based restrictions, just use the same SQL syntax as normal
        with a non-spatial table. In the case of spatial restrictions, the
        following operators are available/useful:</para>

        <variablelist>
          <varlistentry>
            <term>&amp;&amp;</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>This operator tells whether the bounding box of one
              geometry intersects the bounding box of another.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>~=</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>This operators tests whether two geometries are
              geometrically identical. For example, if 'POLYGON((0 0,1 1,1 0,0
              0))' is the same as 'POLYGON((0 0,1 1,1 0,0 0))' (it is).</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>=</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>This operator is a little more naive, it only tests
              whether the bounding boxes of to geometries are the same.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>
        </variablelist>

        <para>Next, you can use these operators in queries. Note that when
        specifying geometries and boxes on the SQL command line, you must
        explicitly turn the string representations into geometries by using
        the "GeomFromText()" function. So, for example:</para>

        <programlisting>SELECT 
  ID, NAME 
FROM ROADS_GEOM 
WHERE 
  GEOM ~= GeomFromText('LINESTRING(191232 243118,191108 243242)',-1);</programlisting>

        <para>The above query would return the single record from the
        "ROADS_GEOM" table in which the geometry was equal to that
        value.</para>

        <para>When using the "&amp;&amp;" operator, you can specify either a
        BOX3D as the comparison feature or a GEOMETRY. When you specify a
        GEOMETRY, however, its bounding box will be used for the
        comparison.</para>

        <programlisting>SELECT 
  ID, NAME 
FROM ROADS_GEOM 
WHERE 
  GEOM &amp;&amp; GeomFromText('POLYGON((191232 243117,191232 243119,191234 243117,191232 243117))',-1);</programlisting>

        <para>The above query will use the bounding box of the polygon for
        comparison purposes.</para>

        <para>The most common spatial query will probably be a "frame-based"
        query, used by client software, like data browsers and web mappers, to
        grab a "map frame" worth of data for display. Using a "BOX3D" object
        for the frame, such a query looks like this:</para>

        <programlisting>SELECT 
  AsText(GEOM) AS GEOM 
FROM ROADS_GEOM 
WHERE 
  GEOM &amp;&amp; SetSRID('BOX3D(191232 243117,191232 243119)'::box3d,-1);</programlisting>

        <para>Note the use of the SRID, to specify the projection of the
        BOX3D. The value -1 is used to indicate no specified SRID.</para>
      </sect2>

      <sect2>
        <title>Using the Dumper</title>

        <para>The <filename>pgsql2shp</filename> table dumper connects
        directly to the database and converts a table (possibly defined by
	a query) into a shape file. The
        basic syntax is:</para>

        <programlisting>pgsql2shp [&lt;options&gt;] &lt;database&gt; [&lt;schema&gt;.]&lt;table&gt;</programlisting>
        <programlisting>pgsql2shp [&lt;options&gt;] &lt;database&gt; &lt;query&gt;</programlisting>

        <para>The commandline options are:</para>

        <variablelist>
          <varlistentry>
            <term>-f &lt;filename&gt;</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Write the output to a particular filename.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>-h &lt;host&gt;</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>The database host to connect to.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>-p &lt;port&gt;</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>The port to connect to on the database host.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>-P &lt;password&gt;</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>The password to use when connecting to the
              database.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>-u &lt;user&gt;</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>The username to use when connecting to the
              database.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>-g &lt;geometry column&gt;</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>In the case of tables with multiple geometry columns, the
              geometry column to use when writing the shape file.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>-b</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Use a binary cursor. This will make the operation faster,
	      but will not work if any NON-geometry attribute in the table
	      lacks a cast to text.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>-r</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Raw mode. Do not drop the <varname>gid</varname> field, or
              escape column names.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>-d</term>

            <listitem>
	      <para>For backward compatibility: write a 3-dimensional shape
	      file when dumping from old (pre-1.0.0) postgis databases (the
	      default is to write a 2-dimensional shape file in that case).
	      Starting from postgis-1.0.0+, dimensions are fully encoded.
	      </para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

        </variablelist>
      </sect2>
    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>Building Indexes</title>

      <para>Indexes are what make using a spatial database for large data sets
      possible. Without indexing, any search for a feature would require a
      "sequential scan" of every record in the database. Indexing speeds up
      searching by organizing the data into a search tree which can be quickly
      traversed to find a particular record. PostgreSQL supports three kinds
      of indexes by default: B-Tree indexes, R-Tree indexes, and GiST
      indexes.</para>

      <itemizedlist>
        <listitem>
          <para>B-Trees are used for data which can be sorted along one axis;
          for example, numbers, letters, dates. GIS data cannot be rationally
          sorted along one axis (which is greater, (0,0) or (0,1) or (1,0)?)
          so B-Tree indexing is of no use for us.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>R-Trees break up data into rectangles, and sub-rectangles, and
          sub-sub rectangles, etc. R-Trees are used by some spatial databases
          to index GIS data, but the PostgreSQL R-Tree implementation is not
          as robust as the GiST implementation.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>GiST (Generalized Search Trees) indexes break up data into
          "things to one side", "things which overlap", "things which are
          inside" and can be used on a wide range of data-types, including GIS
          data. PostGIS uses an R-Tree index implemented on top of GiST to
          index GIS data.</para>
        </listitem>
      </itemizedlist>

      <sect2>
        <title>GiST Indexes</title>

        <para>GiST stands for "Generalized Search Tree" and is a generic form
        of indexing. In addition to GIS indexing, GiST is used to speed up
        searches on all kinds of irregular data structures (integer arrays,
        spectral data, etc) which are not amenable to normal B-Tree
        indexing.</para>

        <para>Once a GIS data table exceeds a few thousand rows, you will want
        to build an index to speed up spatial searches of the data (unless all
        your searches are based on attributes, in which case you'll want to
        build a normal index on the attribute fields).</para>

        <para>The syntax for building a GiST index on a "geometry" column is
        as follows:</para>

        <para><programlisting>CREATE INDEX [indexname] ON [tablename] 
  USING GIST ( [geometryfield] GIST_GEOMETRY_OPS ); </programlisting></para>

        <para>Building a spatial index is a computationally intensive
        exercise: on tables of around 1 million rows, on a 300MHz Solaris
        machine, we have found building a GiST index takes about 1 hour. After
        building an index, it is important to force PostgreSQL to collect
        table statistics, which are used to optimize query plans:</para>

        <para><programlisting>VACUUM ANALYZE [table_name] [column_name];

-- This is only needed for PostgreSQL 7.4 installations and below
SELECT UPDATE_GEOMETRY_STATS([table_name], [column_name]);</programlisting></para>

        <para>GiST indexes have two advantages over R-Tree indexes in
        PostgreSQL. Firstly, GiST indexes are "null safe", meaning they can
        index columns which include null values. Secondly, GiST indexes
        support the concept of "lossiness" which is important when dealing
        with GIS objects larger than the PostgreSQL 8K page size. Lossiness
        allows PostgreSQL to store only the "important" part of an object in
        an index -- in the case of GIS objects, just the bounding box. GIS
        objects larger than 8K will cause R-Tree indexes to fail in the
        process of being built.</para>
      </sect2>

      <sect2>
        <title>Using Indexes</title>

        <para>Ordinarily, indexes invisibly speed up data access: once the
        index is built, the query planner transparently decides when to use
        index information to speed up a query plan. Unfortunately, the
        PostgreSQL query planner does not optimize the use of GiST indexes
        well, so sometimes searches which should use a spatial index instead
        default to a sequence scan of the whole table.</para>

        <para>If you find your spatial indexes are not being used (or your
        attribute indexes, for that matter) there are a couple things you can
        do:</para>

        <itemizedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para>Firstly, make sure statistics are gathered about the number
            and distributions of values in a table, to provide the query
            planner with better information to make decisions around index
            usage. For PostgreSQL 7.4 installations and below this is done by
            running <command>update_geometry_stats([table_name,
            column_name])</command> (compute distribution) and <command>VACUUM
            ANALYZE [table_name] [column_name]</command> (compute number of
            values). Starting with PostgreSQL 8.0 running <command>VACUUM
            ANALYZE</command> will do both operations. You should regularly
            vacuum your databases anyways -- many PostgreSQL DBAs have
            <command>VACUUM</command> run as an off-peak cron job on a regular
            basis.</para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para>If vacuuming does not work, you can force the planner to use
            the index information by using the <command>SET
            ENABLE_SEQSCAN=OFF</command> command. You should only use this
            command sparingly, and only on spatially indexed queries:
            generally speaking, the planner knows better than you do about
            when to use normal B-Tree indexes. Once you have run your query,
            you should consider setting <varname>ENABLE_SEQSCAN</varname> back
            on, so that other queries will utilize the planner as
            normal.</para>

            <note>
              <para>As of version 0.6, it should not be necessary to force the
              planner to use the index with
              <varname>ENABLE_SEQSCAN</varname>.</para>
            </note>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para>If you find the planner wrong about the cost of sequential
            vs index scans try reducing the value of random_page_cost in
            postgresql.conf or using SET random_page_cost=#. Default value for
            the parameter is 4, try setting it to 1 or 2. Decrementing the
            value makes the planner more inclined of using Index scans.</para>
          </listitem>
        </itemizedlist>
      </sect2>
    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>Complex Queries</title>

      <para>The <emphasis>raison d'etre</emphasis> of spatial database
      functionality is performing queries inside the database which would
      ordinarily require desktop GIS functionality. Using PostGIS effectively
      requires knowing what spatial functions are available, and ensuring that
      appropriate indexes are in place to provide good performance.</para>

      <sect2>
        <title>Taking Advantage of Indexes</title>

        <para>When constructing a query it is important to remember that only
        the bounding-box-based operators such as &amp;&amp; can take advantage
        of the GiST spatial index. Functions such as
        <varname>distance()</varname> cannot use the index to optimize their
        operation. For example, the following query would be quite slow on a
        large table:</para>

        <programlisting>SELECT the_geom FROM geom_table
WHERE distance( the_geom, GeomFromText( 'POINT(100000 200000)', -1 ) ) &lt; 100</programlisting>

        <para>This query is selecting all the geometries in geom_table which
        are within 100 units of the point (100000, 200000). It will be slow
        because it is calculating the distance between each point in the table
        and our specified point, ie. one <varname>distance()</varname>
        calculation for each row in the table. We can avoid this by using the
        &amp;&amp; operator to reduce the number of distance calculations
        required:</para>

        <programlisting>SELECT the_geom FROM geom_table
WHERE the_geom &amp;&amp; 'BOX3D(90900 190900, 100100 200100)'::box3d
  AND distance( the_geom, GeomFromText( 'POINT(100000 200000)', -1 ) ) &lt; 100</programlisting>

        <para>This query selects the same geometries, but it does it in a more
        efficient way. Assuming there is a GiST index on the_geom, the query
        planner will recognize that it can use the index to reduce the number
        of rows before calculating the result of the
        <varname>distance()</varname> function. Notice that the
        <varname>BOX3D</varname> geometry which is used in the &amp;&amp;
        operation is a 200 unit square box centered on the original point -
        this is our "query box". The &amp;&amp; operator uses the index to
        quickly reduce the result set down to only those geometries which have
        bounding boxes that overlap the "query box". Assuming that our query
        box is much smaller than the extents of the entire geometry table,
        this will drastically reduce the number of distance calculations that
        need to be done.</para>
      </sect2>

      <sect2>
        <title>Examples of Spatial SQL</title>

        <para>The examples in this section will make use of two tables, a
        table of linear roads, and a table of polygonal municipality
        boundaries. The table definitions for the <varname>bc_roads</varname>
        table is:</para>

        <programlisting>  Column    |       Type        |   Description
------------+-------------------+-------------------
 gid        | integer           | Unique ID
 name       | character varying | Road Name
 the_geom   | geometry          | Location Geometry (Linestring)</programlisting>

        <para>The table definition for the <varname>bc_municipality</varname>
        table is:</para>

        <programlisting>  Column   |       Type        |   Description
-----------+-------------------+-------------------
 gid       | integer           | Unique ID
 code      | integer           | Unique ID
 name      | character varying | City / Town Name
 the_geom  | geometry          | Location Geometry (Polygon)</programlisting>

        <qandaset>
            <qandaentry>
              <question>
                <para>What is the total length of all roads, expressed in
                kilometers?</para>
              </question>

              <answer>
                <para>You can answer this question with a very simple piece of
                SQL:</para>

                <programlisting>postgis=# SELECT sum(length(the_geom))/1000 AS km_roads FROM bc_roads;
     km_roads
------------------
 70842.1243039643
(1 row)</programlisting>
              </answer>
            </qandaentry>

            <qandaentry>
              <question>
                <para>How large is the city of Prince George, in
                hectares?</para>
              </question>

              <answer>
                <para>This query combines an attribute condition (on the
                municipality name) with a spatial calculation (of the
                area):</para>

                <programlisting>postgis=# SELECT area(the_geom)/10000 AS hectares FROM bc_municipality 
          WHERE name = 'PRINCE GEORGE';
     hectares
------------------
 32657.9103824927
(1 row) </programlisting>
              </answer>
            </qandaentry>

            <qandaentry>
              <question>
                <para>What is the largest municipality in the province, by
                area?</para>
              </question>

              <answer>
                <para>This query brings a spatial measurement into the query
                condition. There are several ways of approaching this problem,
                but the most efficient is below:</para>

                <programlisting>postgis=# SELECT name, area(the_geom)/10000 AS hectares 
          FROM bc_municipality 
          ORDER BY hectares DESC 
          LIMIT 1;
     name      |    hectares
---------------+-----------------
 TUMBLER RIDGE | 155020.02556131
(1 row)</programlisting>

                <para>Note that in order to answer this query we have to
                calculate the area of every polygon. If we were doing this a
                lot it would make sense to add an area column to the table
                that we could separately index for performance. By ordering
                the results in a descending direction, and them using the
                PostgreSQL "LIMIT" command we can easily pick off the largest
                value without using an aggregate function like max().</para>
              </answer>
            </qandaentry>

            <qandaentry>
              <question>
                <para>What is the length of roads fully contained within each
                municipality?</para>
              </question>

              <answer>
                <para>This is an example of a "spatial join", because we are
                bringing together data from two tables (doing a join) but
                using a spatial interaction condition ("contained") as the
                join condition rather than the usual relational approach of
                joining on a common key:</para>

                <programlisting>postgis=# SELECT m.name, sum(length(r.the_geom))/1000 as roads_km 
          FROM bc_roads AS r,bc_municipality AS m 
          WHERE r.the_geom &amp;&amp; m.the_geom 
          AND contains(m.the_geom,r.the_geom) 
          GROUP BY m.name 
          ORDER BY roads_km;

            name            |     roads_km
----------------------------+------------------
 SURREY                     | 1539.47553551242
 VANCOUVER                  | 1450.33093486576
 LANGLEY DISTRICT           | 833.793392535662
 BURNABY                    | 773.769091404338
 PRINCE GEORGE              |  694.37554369147
 ...</programlisting>

                <para>This query takes a while, because every road in the
                table is summarized into the final result (about 250K roads
                for our particular example table). For smaller overlays
                (several thousand records on several hundred) the response can
                be very fast.</para>
              </answer>
            </qandaentry>

            <qandaentry>
              <question>
                <para>Create a new table with all the roads within the city of
                Prince George.</para>
              </question>

              <answer>
                <para>This is an example of an "overlay", which takes in two
                tables and outputs a new table that consists of spatially
                clipped or cut resultants. Unlike the "spatial join"
                demonstrated above, this query actually creates new
                geometries. An overlay is like a turbo-charged spatial join,
                and is useful for more exact analysis work:</para>

                <programlisting>postgis=# CREATE TABLE pg_roads as
          SELECT intersection(r.the_geom, m.the_geom) AS intersection_geom, 
                 length(r.the_geom) AS rd_orig_length, 
                 r.* 
          FROM bc_roads AS r, bc_municipality AS m 
          WHERE r.the_geom &amp;&amp; m.the_geom 
          AND intersects(r.the_geom, m.the_geom) 
          AND m.name = 'PRINCE GEORGE';</programlisting>
              </answer>
            </qandaentry>

            <qandaentry>
              <question>
                <para>What is the length in kilometers of "Douglas St" in
                Victoria?</para>
              </question>

              <answer>
                <programlisting>postgis=# SELECT sum(length(r.the_geom))/1000 AS kilometers 
          FROM bc_roads r, bc_municipality m 
          WHERE r.the_geom &amp;&amp; m.the_geom 
          AND r.name = 'Douglas St' 
          AND m.name = 'VICTORIA';
    kilometers
------------------
 4.89151904172838
(1 row)</programlisting>
              </answer>
            </qandaentry>

            <qandaentry>
              <question>
                <para>What is the largest municipality polygon that has a
                hole?</para>
              </question>

              <answer>
                <programlisting>postgis=# SELECT gid, name, area(the_geom) AS area 
          FROM bc_municipality 
          WHERE nrings(the_geom) &gt; 1 
          ORDER BY area DESC LIMIT 1;
 gid |     name     |       area
-----+--------------+------------------
  12 | SPALLUMCHEEN | 257374619.430216
(1 row)</programlisting>
              </answer>
            </qandaentry>
        </qandaset>
      </sect2>
    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>Using Mapserver</title>

      <para>The Minnesota Mapserver is an internet web-mapping server which
      conforms to the OpenGIS Web Mapping Server specification.</para>

      <itemizedlist>
        <listitem>
          <para>The Mapserver homepage is at <ulink
          url="http://mapserver.gis.umn.edu">http://mapserver.gis.umn.edu</ulink>.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>The OpenGIS Web Map Specification is at <ulink
          url="http://www.opengis.org/techno/specs/01-047r2.pdf">http://www.opengis.org/techno/specs/01-047r2.pdf</ulink>.</para>
        </listitem>
      </itemizedlist>

      <sect2>
        <title>Basic Usage</title>

        <para>To use PostGIS with Mapserver, you will need to know about how
        to configure Mapserver, which is beyond the scope of this
        documentation. This section will cover specific PostGIS issues and
        configuration details.</para>

        <para>To use PostGIS with Mapserver, you will need:</para>

        <itemizedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para>Version 0.6 or newer of PostGIS.</para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para>Version 3.5 or newer of Mapserver.</para>
          </listitem>
        </itemizedlist>

        <para>Mapserver accesses PostGIS/PostgreSQL data like any other
        PostgreSQL client -- using <filename>libpq</filename>. This means that
        Mapserver can be installed on any machine with network access to the
        PostGIS server, as long as the system has the
        <filename>libpq</filename> PostgreSQL client libraries.</para>

        <orderedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para>Compile and install Mapserver, with whatever options you
            desire, including the "--with-postgis" configuration
            option.</para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para>In your Mapserver map file, add a PostGIS layer. For
            example:</para>

            <programlisting>LAYER
  CONNECTIONTYPE postgis
  NAME "widehighways"
  # Connect to a remote spatial database
  CONNECTION "user=dbuser dbname=gisdatabase host=bigserver"
  # Get the lines from the 'geom' column of the 'roads' table
  DATA "geom from roads"
  STATUS ON
  TYPE LINE
  # Of the lines in the extents, only render the wide highways
  FILTER "type = 'highway' and numlanes &gt;= 4"
  CLASS
    # Make the superhighways brighter and 2 pixels wide
    EXPRESSION ([numlanes] &gt;= 6)
    COLOR 255 22 22      
    SYMBOL "solid"
    SIZE 2
  END
  CLASS
    # All the rest are darker and only 1 pixel wide
    EXPRESSION ([numlanes] &lt; 6)
    COLOR 205 92 82      
  END
END</programlisting>

            <para>In the example above, the PostGIS-specific directives are as
            follows:</para>

            <variablelist>
              <varlistentry>
                <term>CONNECTIONTYPE</term>

                <listitem>
                  <para>For PostGIS layers, this is always "postgis".</para>
                </listitem>
              </varlistentry>

              <varlistentry>
                <term>CONNECTION</term>

                <listitem>
                  <para>The database connection is governed by the a
                  'connection string' which is a standard set of keys and
                  values like this (with the default values in
                  &lt;&gt;):</para>

                  <para>user=&lt;username&gt; password=&lt;password&gt;
                  dbname=&lt;username&gt; hostname=&lt;server&gt;
                  port=&lt;5432&gt;</para>

                  <para>An empty connection string is still valid, and any of
                  the key/value pairs can be omitted. At a minimum you will
                  generally supply the database name and username to connect
                  with.</para>
                </listitem>
              </varlistentry>

              <varlistentry>
                <term>DATA</term>

                <listitem>
                  <para>The form of this parameter is "&lt;column&gt; from
                  &lt;tablename&gt;" where the column is the spatial column to
                  be rendered to the map.</para>
                </listitem>
              </varlistentry>

              <varlistentry>
                <term>FILTER</term>

                <listitem>
                  <para>The filter must be a valid SQL string corresponding to
                  the logic normally following the "WHERE" keyword in a SQL
                  query. So, for example, to render only roads with 6 or more
                  lanes, use a filter of "num_lanes &gt;= 6".</para>
                </listitem>
              </varlistentry>
            </variablelist>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para>In your spatial database, ensure you have spatial (GiST)
            indexes built for any the layers you will be drawing.</para>

            <programlisting>CREATE INDEX [indexname]
  ON [tablename] 
  USING GIST ( [geometrycolumn] GIST_GEOMETRY_OPS );</programlisting>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para>If you will be querying your layers using Mapserver you will
            also need an "oid index".</para>

            <para>Mapserver requires unique identifiers for each spatial
            record when doing queries, and the PostGIS module of Mapserver
            uses the PostgreSQL <varname>oid</varname> value to provide these
            unique identifiers. A side-effect of this is that in order to do
            fast random access of records during queries, an index on the
            <varname>oid</varname> is needed.</para>

            <para>To build an "oid index", use the following SQL:</para>

            <programlisting>CREATE INDEX [indexname] ON [tablename] ( oid );</programlisting>
          </listitem>
        </orderedlist>
      </sect2>

      <sect2>
        <title>Frequently Asked Questions</title>

        <qandaset>
            <qandaentry>
              <question>
                <para>When I use an <varname>EXPRESSION</varname> in my map
                file, the condition never returns as true, even though I know
                the values exist in my table.</para>
              </question>

              <answer>
                <para>Unlike shape files, PostGIS field names have to be
                referenced in EXPRESSIONS using <emphasis>lower
                case</emphasis>.</para>

                <programlisting>EXPRESSION ([numlanes] &gt;= 6)</programlisting>
              </answer>
            </qandaentry>

            <qandaentry>
              <question>
                <para>The FILTER I use for my Shape files is not working for
                my PostGIS table of the same data.</para>
              </question>

              <answer>
                <para>Unlike shape files, filters for PostGIS layers use SQL
                syntax (they are appended to the SQL statement the PostGIS
                connector generates for drawing layers in Mapserver).</para>

                <programlisting>FILTER "type = 'highway' and numlanes &gt;= 4"</programlisting>
              </answer>
            </qandaentry>

            <qandaentry>
              <question>
                <para>My PostGIS layer draws much slower than my Shape file
                layer, is this normal?</para>
              </question>

              <answer>
                <para>In general, expect PostGIS layers to be 10% slower than
                equivalent Shape files layers, due to the extra overhead
                involved in database connections, data transformations and
                data transit between the database and Mapserver.</para>

                <para>If you are finding substantial draw performance
                problems, it is likely that you have not build a spatial index
                on your table.</para>

                <programlisting>postgis# CREATE INDEX geotable_gix ON geotable USING GIST ( geocolumn );
postgis# SELECT update_geometry_stats();  -- For PGSQL &lt; 8.0
postgis# VACUUM ANALYZE;                  -- For PGSQL &gt;= 8.0</programlisting>
              </answer>
            </qandaentry>

            <qandaentry>
              <question>
                <para>My PostGIS layer draws fine, but queries are really
                slow. What is wrong?</para>
              </question>

              <answer>
                <para>For queries to be fast, you must have a unique key for
                your spatial table and you must have an index on that unique
                key.</para>

                <para>You can specify what unique key for mapserver to use
                with the <varname>USING UNIQUE</varname> clause in your
                <varname>DATA</varname> line:</para>

                <programlisting>DATA "the_geom FROM geotable USING UNIQUE gid"</programlisting>

                <para>If your table does not have an explicit unique column,
                you can "fake" a unique column by using the PostgreSQL row
                "oid" for your unique column. "oid" is the default unique
                column if you do not declare one, so enhancing your query
                speed is a matter of building an index on your spatial table
                oid value.</para>

                <programlisting>postgis# CREATE INDEX geotable_oid_idx ON geotable (oid);</programlisting>
              </answer>
            </qandaentry>
        </qandaset>
      </sect2>

      <sect2>
        <title>Advanced Usage</title>

        <para>The <varname>USING</varname> pseudo-SQL clause is used to add
        some information to help mapserver understand the results of more
        complex queries. More specifically, when either a view or a subselect
        is used as the source table (the thing to the right of "FROM" in a
        <varname>DATA</varname> definition) it is more difficult for mapserver
        to automatically determine a unique identifier for each row and also
        the SRID for the table. The <varname>USING</varname> clause can
        provide mapserver with these two pieces of information as
        follows:</para>

        <programlisting>DATA "the_geom FROM (SELECT table1.the_geom AS the_geom, table1.oid AS oid, table2.data AS data
 FROM table1 LEFT JOIN table2 ON table1.id = table2.id) AS new_table USING UNIQUE oid USING SRID=-1"</programlisting>

        <variablelist>
          <varlistentry>
            <term>USING UNIQUE &lt;uniqueid&gt;</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Mapserver requires a unique id for each row in order to
              identify the row when doing map queries. Normally, it would use
              the oid as the unique identifier, but views and subselects don't
              automatically have an oid column. If you want to use Mapserver's
              query functionality, you need to add a unique column to your
              view or subselect, and declare it with <varname>USING
              UNIQUE</varname>. For example, you could explicitly select one
              of the table's oid values for this purpose, or any other column
              which is guaranteed to be unique for the result set.</para>

              <para>The <varname>USING</varname> statement can also be useful
              even for simple <varname>DATA</varname> statements, if you are
              doing map queries. It was previously recommended to add an index
              on the oid column of tables used in query-able layers, in order
              to speed up the performance of map queries. However, with the
              <varname>USING</varname> clause, it is possible to tell
              mapserver to use your table's primary key as the identifier for
              map queries, and then it is no longer necessary to have an
              additional index.</para>

              <note>
                <para>"Querying a Map" is the action of clicking on a map to
                ask for information about the map features in that location.
                Don't confuse "map queries" with the SQL query in a
                <varname>DATA</varname> definition.</para>
              </note>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>USING SRID=&lt;srid&gt;</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>PostGIS needs to know which spatial referencing system is
              being used by the geometries in order to return the correct data
              back to mapserver. Normally it is possible to find this
              information in the "geometry_columns" table in the PostGIS
              database, however, this is not possible for tables which are
              created on the fly such as subselects and views. So the
              <varname>USING SRID=</varname> option allows the correct SRID to
              be specified in the <varname>DATA</varname> definition.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>
        </variablelist>

        <warning>
          <para>The parser for Mapserver PostGIS layers is fairly primitive,
          and is case sensitive in a few areas. Be careful to ensure that all
          SQL keywords and all your <varname>USING</varname> clauses are in
          upper case, and that your <varname>USING UNIQUE</varname> clause
          precedes your <varname>USING SRID</varname> clause.</para>
        </warning>
      </sect2>

      <sect2>
        <title>Examples</title>

        <para>Lets start with a simple example and work our way up. Consider
        the following Mapserver layer definition:</para>

        <programlisting>LAYER
 CONNECTIONTYPE postgis
 NAME "roads"
 CONNECTION "user=theuser password=thepass dbname=thedb host=theserver"
 DATA "the_geom FROM roads"
 STATUS ON
 TYPE LINE
 CLASS
  COLOR 0 0 0
 END
END</programlisting>

        <para>This layer will display all the road geometries in the roads
        table as black lines.</para>

        <para>Now lets say we want to show only the highways until we get
        zoomed in to at least a 1:100000 scale - the next two layers will
        achieve this effect:</para>

        <programlisting>LAYER
 CONNECTION "user=theuser password=thepass dbname=thedb host=theserver"
 DATA "the_geom FROM roads"
 MINSCALE 100000
 STATUS ON
 TYPE LINE
 FILTER "road_type = 'highway'"
 CLASS
  COLOR 0 0 0
 END
END

LAYER
 CONNECTION "user=theuser password=thepass dbname=thedb host=theserver"
 DATA "the_geom FROM roads"
 MAXSCALE 100000
 STATUS ON
 TYPE LINE
 CLASSITEM road_type
 CLASS
  EXPRESSION "highway"
  SIZE 2
  COLOR 255 0 0
 END
 CLASS
  COLOR 0 0 0
 END
END</programlisting>

        <para>The first layer is used when the scale is greater than 1:100000,
        and displays only the roads of type "highway" as black lines. The
        <varname>FILTER</varname> option causes only roads of type "highway"
        to be displayed.</para>

        <para>The second layer is used when the scale is less than 1:100000,
        and will display highways as double-thick red lines, and other roads
        as regular black lines.</para>

        <para>So, we have done a couple of interesting things using only
        mapserver functionality, but our <varname>DATA</varname> SQL statement
        has remained simple. Suppose that the name of the road is stored in
        another table (for whatever reason) and we need to do a join to get it
        and label our roads.</para>

        <programlisting>LAYER
 CONNECTION "user=theuser password=thepass dbname=thedb host=theserver"
 DATA "the_geom FROM (SELECT roads.oid AS oid, roads.the_geom AS the_geom, road_names.name as name
   FROM roads LEFT JOIN road_names ON roads.road_name_id = road_names.road_name_id) AS named_roads
   USING UNIQUE oid USING SRID=-1"
 MAXSCALE 20000
 STATUS ON
 TYPE ANNOTATION
 LABELITEM name
 CLASS
  LABEL
   ANGLE auto
   SIZE 8
   COLOR 0 192 0
   TYPE truetype
   FONT arial
  END
 END
END</programlisting>

        <para>This annotation layer adds green labels to all the roads when
        the scale gets down to 1:20000 or less. It also demonstrates how to
        use an SQL join in a <varname>DATA</varname> definition.</para>
      </sect2>
    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>Java Clients (JDBC)</title>

      <para>Java clients can access PostGIS "geometry" objects in the
      PostgreSQL database either directly as text representations or using the
      JDBC extension objects bundled with PostGIS. In order to use the
      extension objects, the "postgis.jar" file must be in your CLASSPATH
      along with the "postgresql.jar" JDBC driver package.</para>

      <programlisting>import java.sql.*; 
import java.util.*; 
import java.lang.*; 
import org.postgis.*; 

public class JavaGIS { 
  public static void main(String[] args) 
  { 
    java.sql.Connection conn; 
    try 
    { 
      /* 
      * Load the JDBC driver and establish a connection. 
      */  
      Class.forName("org.postgresql.Driver"); 
      String url = "jdbc:postgresql://localhost:5432/database"; 
      conn = DriverManager.getConnection(url, "postgres", ""); 
    
      /* 
      * Add the geometry types to the connection. Note that you 
      * must cast the connection to the pgsql-specific connection * implementation before calling the addDataType() method. 
      */
      ((org.postgresql.Connection)conn).addDataType("geometry","org.postgis.PGgeometry");
      ((org.postgresql.Connection)conn).addDataType("box3d","org.postgis.PGbox3d");

      /* 
      * Create a statement and execute a select query. 
      */ 
      Statement s = conn.createStatement(); 
      ResultSet r = s.executeQuery("select AsText(geom) as geom,id from geomtable"); 
      while( r.next() ) 
      { 
        /* 
        * Retrieve the geometry as an object then cast it to the geometry type. 
        * Print things out. 
        */ 
        PGgeometry geom = (PGgeometry)r.getObject(1); 
        int id = r.getInt(2);
        System.out.println("Row " + id + ":"); 
        System.out.println(geom.toString()); 
      }
      s.close(); 
      conn.close(); 
    } 
    catch( Exception e ) 
    { 
      e.printStackTrace(); 
    }  
  }
}</programlisting>

      <para>The "PGgeometry" object is a wrapper object which contains a
      specific topological geometry object (subclasses of the abstract class
      "Geometry") depending on the type: Point, LineString, Polygon,
      MultiPoint, MultiLineString, MultiPolygon.</para>

      <programlisting>PGgeometry geom = (PGgeometry)r.getObject(1); 
if( geom.getType() = Geometry.POLYGON ) 
{ 
  Polygon pl = (Polygon)geom.getGeometry();
  for( int r = 0; r &lt; pl.numRings(); r++ ) 
  { 
    LinearRing rng = pl.getRing(r);
    System.out.println("Ring: " + r); 
    for( int p = 0; p &lt; rng.numPoints(); p++ ) 
    { 
      Point pt = rng.getPoint(p); 
      System.out.println("Point: " + p);
      System.out.println(pt.toString()); 
    } 
  } 
}</programlisting>

      <para>The JavaDoc for the extension objects provides a reference for the
      various data accessor functions in the geometric objects.</para>
    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>C Clients (libpq)</title>

      <para>...</para>

      <sect2>
        <title>Text Cursors</title>

        <para>...</para>
      </sect2>

      <sect2>
        <title>Binary Cursors</title>

        <para>...</para>
      </sect2>
    </sect1>
  </chapter>

<chapter> <title>Performance tips</title>

<sect1> <title>Small tables of large geometries</title>

<sect2><title>Problem description</title>

<para>
Current PostgreSQL versions (including 8.0) suffer from a query
optimizer weakness regarding TOAST tables. TOAST tables are a kind of
"extension room" used to store large (in the sense of data size) values
that do not fit into normal data pages (like long texts, images or
complex geometries with lots of vertices), see
http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.0/static/storage-toast.html for more
information).
</para>

<para>
The problem appears if you happen to have a table with rather large
geometries, but not too much rows of them (like a table containing the
boundaries of all European countries in high resolution). Then the table
itself is small, but it uses lots of TOAST space. In our example case,
the table itself had about 80 rows and used only 3 data pages, but the
TOAST table used 8225 pages.
</para>

<para>
Now issue a query where you use the geometry operator &amp;&amp; to search for a
bounding box that matches only very few of those rows. Now the query
optimizer sees that the table has only 3 pages and 80 rows. He estimates
that a sequential scan on such a small table is much faster than using
an index. And so he decides to ignore the GIST index. Usually, this
estimation is correct. But in our case, the &amp;&amp; operator has to fetch
every geometry from disk to compare the bounding boxes, thus reading all
TOAST pages, too.
</para>

<para>
To see whether your suffer from this bug, use the "EXPLAIN ANALYZE"
postgresql command. For more information and the technical details, you
can read the thread on the postgres performance mailing list:
http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-performance/2005-02/msg00030.php
</para>

</sect2>

<sect2><title>Workarounds</title>

<para>
The PostgreSQL people are trying to solve this issue by making the query
estimation TOAST-aware. For now, here are two workarounds:
</para>

<para>
The first workaround is to force the query planner to use the index.
Send "SET enable_seqscan TO off;" to the server before issuing the
query. This basically forces the query planner to avoid sequential scans
whenever possible. So it uses the GIST index as usual. But this flag has
to be set on every connection, and it causes the query planner to make
misestimations in other cases, so you should "SET enable_seqscan TO on;"
after the query.
</para>

<para>
The second workaround is to make the sequential scan as fast as the
query planner thinks. This can be achieved by creating an additional
column that "caches" the bbox, and matching against this. In our
example, the commands are like:
</para>

<programlisting>
SELECT addGeometryColumn('myschema','mytable','bbox','4326','GEOMETRY','2');

UPDATE mytable set bbox = Envelope(Force_2d(the_geom));
</programlisting>

<para>
Now change your query to use the &amp;&amp; operator against bbox instead of
geom_column, like:
</para>

<programlisting>
SELECT geom_column FROM mytable WHERE bbox &amp;&amp; SetSrid('BOX3D(0 0,1 1)'::box3d,4326);
</programlisting>

<para>
Of course, if you change or add rows to mytable, you have to keep the
bbox "in sync". The most transparent way to do this would be triggers,
but you also can modify your application to keep the bbox column current
or run the UPDATE query above after every modification.
</para>

</sect2>

</sect1>


<sect1> <title>CLUSTERing on geometry indices</title>

<para>
For tables that are mostly read-only, and where a single index is used for the
majority of queries, PostgreSQL offers the CLUSTER command. This command 
physically reorders all the data rows in the same order as the index criteria,
yielding two performance advantages: First, for index range scans, the number of 
seeks on the data table is drastically reduced. Second, if your working set
concentrates to some small intervals on the indices, you have a more efficient
caching because the data rows are spread along fewer data pages. (Feel invited
to read the CLUSTER command documentation from the PostgreSQL manual at this
point.)
</para>

<para>
However, currently PostgreSQL does not allow clustering on PostGIS GIST indices
because GIST indices simply ignores NULL values, you get an error message like:
</para>

<programlisting>
lwgeom=# CLUSTER my_geom_index ON my_table;
ERROR:  cannot cluster when index access method does not handle null values
HINT:  You may be able to work around this by marking column "the_geom" NOT NULL.
</programlisting>

<para>
As the HINT message tells you, one can work around this deficiency by adding a
"not null" constraint to the table:
</para>

<programlisting>
lwgeom=# ALTER TABLE my_table ALTER COLUMN the_geom SET not null;
ALTER TABLE
</programlisting>

<para>
Of course, this will not work if you in fact need NULL values in your geometry
column. Additionally, you must use the above method to add the constraint, using
a CHECK constraint like "ALTER TABLE blubb ADD CHECK (geometry is not null);" will
not work.
</para>

</sect1>

<sect1><title>Avoiding dimension conversion</title>

<para>
Sometimes, you happen to have 3D or 4D data in your table, but always access
it using OpenGIS compliant asText() or asBinary() functions that only output
2D geometries. They do this by internally calling the force_2d() function,
which introduces a significant overhead for large geometries. To avoid this
overhead, it may be feasible to pre-drop those additional dimensions once and
forever:
</para>

<programlisting>
UPDATE mytable SET the_geom = force_2d(the_geom);
VACUUM FULL ANALYZE mytable;
</programlisting>

<para>
Note that if you added your geometry column using AddGeometryColumn()
there'll be a constraint on geometry dimension.
To bypass it you will need to drop the constraint.
Remember to update the entry in the geometry_columns table and
recreate the constraint afterwards.
</para>

<para>
In case of large tables, it may be wise to divide this UPDATE into smaller portions
by constraining the UPDATE to a part of the table via a WHERE clause and your
primary key or another feasible criteria, and running a simple "VACUUM;" between
your UPDATEs. This drastically reduces the need for temporary disk space.
Additionally, if you have mixed dimension geometries, restricting the UPDATE by "WHERE 
dimension(the_geom)>2" skips re-writing of geometries that already are in 2D. 
</para>

</sect1>

</chapter>

  <chapter>
    <title>PostGIS Reference</title>

    <para>The functions given below are the ones which a user of PostGIS is
    likely to need. There are other functions which are required support
    functions to the PostGIS objects which are not of use to a general
    user.</para>

    <sect1>
      <title>OpenGIS Functions</title>

      <sect2>
        <title>Management Functions</title>

        <variablelist>
          <varlistentry id="AddGeometryColumn">
            <term>AddGeometryColumn(varchar, varchar, varchar, integer,
            varchar, integer)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Syntax: AddGeometryColumn(&lt;schema_name&gt;,
              &lt;table_name&gt;, &lt;column_name&gt;, &lt;srid&gt;,
              &lt;type&gt;, &lt;dimension&gt;). Adds a geometry column to an
              existing table of attributes. The <varname>schema_name</varname>
              is the name of the table schema (unused for pre-schema
              PostgreSQL installations). The <varname>srid</varname> must be
              an integer value reference to an entry in the SPATIAL_REF_SYS
              table. The <varname>type</varname> must be an uppercase string
              corresponding to the geometry type, eg, 'POLYGON' or
              'MULTILINESTRING'.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>DropGeometryColumn(varchar, varchar, varchar)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Syntax: DropGeometryColumn(&lt;schema_name&gt;,
              &lt;table_name&gt;, &lt;column_name&gt;). Remove a geometry
              column from a spatial table. Note that schema_name will need to
              match the f_schema_name field of the table's row in the
              geometry_columns table.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>SetSRID(geometry, integer)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Set the SRID on a geometry to a particular integer value.
              Useful in constructing bounding boxes for queries.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>
        </variablelist>
      </sect2>

      <sect2>
        <title>Geometry Relationship Functions</title>

        <variablelist>
          <varlistentry>
            <term>Distance(geometry, geometry)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Return the cartesian distance between two geometries in
              projected units.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>Equals(geometry, geometry)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Returns 1 (TRUE) if the given Geometries are
	      "spatially equal". Use this for a 'better' answer than '='.
	      equals('LINESTRING(0 0, 10 10)','LINESTRING(0 0, 5 5, 10 10)')
	      is true.</para>

              <para>Performed by the GEOS module</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC s2.1.1.2</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>Disjoint(geometry, geometry)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Returns 1 (TRUE) if the Geometries are "spatially disjoint".
	      </para>

              <para>Performed by the GEOS module</para>

              <para>Do not call with a GeometryCollection as an
              argument</para>

              <para>NOTE: this is the "allowable" version that returns a
              boolean, not an integer.</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC s2.1.1.2 //s2.1.13.3 - a.Relate(b,
              'FF*FF****')</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>Intersects(geometry, geometry)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Returns 1 (TRUE) if the Geometries "spatially intersect".
              </para>

              <para>Performed by the GEOS module</para>

              <para>Do not call with a GeometryCollection as an
              argument</para>

              <para>NOTE: this is the "allowable" version that returns a
              boolean, not an integer.</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC s2.1.1.2 //s2.1.13.3 - Intersects(g1, g2 ) --&gt;
              Not (Disjoint(g1, g2 ))</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>Touches(geometry, geometry)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Returns 1 (TRUE) if the Geometries "spatially touch".
              </para>

              <para>Performed by the GEOS module</para>

              <para>Do not call with a GeometryCollection as an
              argument</para>

              <para>NOTE: this is the "allowable" version that returns a
              boolean, not an integer.</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC s2.1.1.2 // s2.1.13.3- a.Touches(b) -&gt; (I(a)
              intersection I(b) = {empty set} ) and (a intersection b) not
              empty</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>Crosses(geometry, geometry)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Returns 1 (TRUE) if the Geometries "spatially cross".
              </para>

              <para>Performed by the GEOS module</para>

              <para>Do not call with a GeometryCollection as an
              argument</para>

              <para>NOTE: this is the "allowable" version that returns a
              boolean, not an integer.</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC s2.1.1.2 // s2.1.13.3 - a.Relate(b,
              'T*T******')</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>Within(geometry A, geometry B)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Returns 1 (TRUE) if Geometry A is "spatially within"
              Geometry B.</para>

              <para>Performed by the GEOS module</para>

              <para>Do not call with a GeometryCollection as an
              argument</para>

              <para>NOTE: this is the "allowable" version that returns a
              boolean, not an integer.</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC s2.1.1.2 // s2.1.13.3 - a.Relate(b,
              'T*F**F***')</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>Overlaps(geometry, geometry)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Returns 1 (TRUE) if the Geometries "spatially
              overlap".</para>

              <para>Performed by the GEOS module</para>

              <para>Do not call with a GeometryCollection as an
              argument</para>

              <para>NOTE: this is the "allowable" version that returns a
              boolean, not an integer.</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC s2.1.1.2 // s2.1.13.3</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>Contains(geometry A, geometry B)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Returns 1 (TRUE) if Geometry A "spatially contains"
              Geometry B.</para>

              <para>Performed by the GEOS module</para>

              <para>Do not call with a GeometryCollection as an
              argument</para>

              <para>NOTE: this is the "allowable" version that returns a
              boolean, not an integer.</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC s2.1.1.2 // s2.1.13.3 - same as
              within(geometry B, geometry A)</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>Intersects(geometry, geometry)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Returns 1 (TRUE) if the Geometries "spatially
              intersect".</para>

              <para>Performed by the GEOS module</para>

              <para>Do not call with a GeometryCollection as an
              argument</para>

              <para>NOTE: this is the "allowable" version that returns a
              boolean, not an integer.</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC s2.1.1.2 // s2.1.13.3 - NOT
              disjoint(geometry, geometry)</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>Relate(geometry, geometry, intersectionPatternMatrix)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Returns 1 (TRUE) if this Geometry is spatially related to
              anotherGeometry, by testing for intersections between the
              Interior, Boundary and Exterior of the two geometries as
              specified by the values in the intersectionPatternMatrix.</para>

              <para>Performed by the GEOS module</para>

              <para>Do not call with a GeometryCollection as an
              argument</para>

              <para>NOTE: this is the "allowable" version that returns a
              boolean, not an integer.</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC s2.1.1.2 // s2.1.13.3</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>Relate(geometry, geometry)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>returns the DE-9IM (dimensionally extended
              nine-intersection matrix)</para>

              <para>Performed by the GEOS module</para>

              <para>Do not call with a GeometryCollection as an
              argument</para>

              <para>not in OGC spec, but implied. see s2.1.13.2</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>
        </variablelist>
      </sect2>

      <sect2>
        <title>Geometry Processing Functions</title>

        <variablelist>
          <varlistentry>
            <term>Centroid(geometry)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Returns the centroid of the geometry as a point.</para>

              <para>Computation will be more accurate if performed by the GEOS
              module (enabled at compile time).</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>Area(geometry)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Returns the area of the geometry if it is a polygon or
              multi-polygon. </para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>Length(geometry)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>The length of this Curve in its associated spatial
              reference.</para>

              <para>synonym for length2d()</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC 2.1.5.1</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>PointOnSurface(geometry)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Return a Point guaranteed to lie on the surface</para>

              <para>Implemented using GEOS</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC 3.2.14.2 and 3.2.18.2 -</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>Boundary(geometry)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Returns the closure of the combinatorial boundary of this
              Geometry. The combinatorial boundary is defined as described in
              section 3.12.3.2 of the OGC SPEC. Because the result of this
              function is a closure, and hence topologically closed, the
              resulting boundary can be represented using representational
              geometry primitives as discussed in the OGC SPEC, section
              3.12.2.</para>

              <para>Performed by the GEOS module</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC s2.1.1.1</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>Buffer(geometry, double, [integer])</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Returns a geometry that represents all points whose
              distance from this Geometry is less than or equal to distance.
              Calculations are in the Spatial Reference System of this
              Geometry. The optional third parameter sets the
	      number of segment used to approximate a quarter circle
	      (defaults to 8).</para>

              <para>Performed by the GEOS module</para>

              <para>Do not call with a GeometryCollection as an
              argument</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC s2.1.1.3</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>ConvexHull(geometry)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Returns a geometry that represents the convex hull of this
              Geometry.</para>

              <para>Performed by the GEOS module</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC s2.1.1.3</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>Intersection(geometry, geometry)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Returns a geometry that represents the point set
              intersection of the Geometies.</para>

              <para>Performed by the GEOS module</para>

              <para>Do not call with a GeometryCollection as an
              argument</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC s2.1.1.3</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>SymDifference(geometry A, geometry B)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Returns a geometry that represents the point set symmetric
              difference of Geometry A with Geometry B.</para>

              <para>Performed by the GEOS module</para>

              <para>Do not call with a GeometryCollection as an
              argument</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC s2.1.1.3</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>Difference(geometry A, geometry B)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Returns a geometry that represents the point set difference
              of Geometry A with Geometry B.</para>

              <para>Performed by the GEOS module</para>

              <para>Do not call with a GeometryCollection as an
              argument</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC s2.1.1.3</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>GeomUnion(geometry, geometry)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Returns a geometry that represents the point set union of
              the Geometries.</para>

              <para>Performed by the GEOS module</para>

              <para>Do not call with a GeometryCollection as an
              argument</para>

              <para>NOTE: this is renamed from "union" because union is an SQL
              reserved word</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC s2.1.1.3</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>GeomUnion(geometry set)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Returns a geometry that represents the point set union of
              this all Geometries in given set.</para>

              <para>Performed by the GEOS module</para>

              <para>Do not call with a GeometryCollection in the argument
              set</para>

              <para>Not explicitly defined in OGC SPEC</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>MemGeomUnion(geometry set)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Same as the above, only memory-friendly (uses less memory
              and more processor time).</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>
        </variablelist>
      </sect2>

      <sect2>
        <title>Geometry Accessors</title>

        <variablelist>
          <varlistentry>
            <term>AsText(geometry)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Return the Well-Known Text representation of the geometry.
              For example: POLYGON(0 0,0 1,1 1,1 0,0 0)</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC s2.1.1.1</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>AsBinary(geometry)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Returns the geometry in the OGC "well-known-binary"
              format, using the endian encoding of the server on which the
              database is running. This is useful in binary cursors to pull
              data out of the database without converting it to a string
              representation.</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC s2.1.1.1 - also see
              asBinary(&lt;geometry&gt;,'XDR') and
              asBinary(&lt;geometry&gt;,'NDR')</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>SRID(geometry)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Returns the integer SRID number of the spatial reference
              system of the geometry.</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC s2.1.1.1</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>Dimension(geometry)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>The inherent dimension of this Geometry object, which must
              be less than or equal to the coordinate dimension. OGC SPEC
              s2.1.1.1 - returns 0 for points, 1 for lines, 2 for polygons,
              and the largest dimension of the components of a
              GEOMETRYCOLLECTION.</para>

              <programlisting>select dimension('GEOMETRYCOLLECTION(LINESTRING(1 1,0 0),POINT(0 0)'); 
dimension 
-----------
1</programlisting>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>Envelope(geometry)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Returns a POLYGON representing the bounding box of the
              geometry.</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC s2.1.1.1 - The minimum bounding box for this
              Geometry, returned as a Geometry. The polygon is defined by the
              corner points of the bounding box ((MINX, MINY), (MAXX, MINY),
              (MAXX, MAXY), (MINX, MAXY), (MINX, MINY)).</para>

              <para>NOTE:PostGIS will add a Zmin/Zmax coordinate as
              well.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>IsEmpty(geometry)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Returns 1 (TRUE) if this Geometry is the empty geometry .
              If true, then this Geometry represents the empty point set -
              i.e. GEOMETRYCOLLECTION(EMPTY).</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC s2.1.1.1</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry id="IsSimple">
            <term>IsSimple(geometry)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Returns 1 (TRUE) if this Geometry has no anomalous
              geometric points, such as self intersection or self
              tangency.</para>

              <para>Performed by the GEOS module</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC s2.1.1.1</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry id="IsClosed">
            <term>IsClosed(geometry)</term>
            <listitem>
              <para>Returns true of the geometry start and end points are
              coincident.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>IsRing(geometry)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Returns 1 (TRUE) if this Curve is closed (StartPoint ( ) =
              EndPoint ( )) and this Curve is simple (does not pass through
              the same point more than once).</para>

              <para>performed by GEOS</para>

              <para>OGC spec 2.1.5.1</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>NumGeometries(geometry)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>If geometry is a GEOMETRYCOLLECTION (or MULTI*) return the
              number of geometries, otherwise return NULL.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>GeometryN(geometry,int)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Return the N'th geometry if the geometry is a
              GEOMETRYCOLLECTION, MULTIPOINT, MULTILINESTRING or MULTIPOLYGON.
              Otherwise, return NULL.</para>

		<note> <para>
		Index is 1-based as for OGC specs since version 0.8.0.
		Previous versions implemented this as 0-based instead.
		</para></note>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>NumPoints(geometry)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Find and return the number of points in the first
              linestring in the geometry. Return NULL if there is no
              linestring in the geometry.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>PointN(geometry,integer)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Return the N'th point in the first linestring in the
              geometry. Return NULL if there is no linestring in the
              geometry.</para>
		<note> <para>
		Index is 1-based as for OGC specs since version 0.8.0.
		Previous versions implemented this as 0-based instead.
		</para></note>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>ExteriorRing(geometry)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Return the exterior ring of the polygon geometry.
	      Return NULL if the geometry is not a polygon.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>NumInteriorRings(geometry)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Return the number of interior rings of the first polygon
              in the geometry. Return NULL if there is no polygon in the
              geometry.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>NumInteriorRing(geometry)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Synonym to NumInteriorRings(geometry). The OpenGIS specs
	      are ambiguous about the exact function naming, so we provide
	      both spellings.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>InteriorRingN(geometry,integer)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Return the N'th interior ring of the polygon geometry.
	      Return NULL if the geometry is not a polygon or the given
	      N is out of range.</para>
		<note> <para>
		Index is 1-based as for OGC specs since version 0.8.0.
		Previous versions implemented this as 0-based instead.
		</para></note>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>EndPoint(geometry)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Returns the last point of the LineString geometry as a point.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry id="StartPoint">
            <term>StartPoint(geometry)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Returns the first point of the LineString geometry as a point.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry id="GeometryType">
            <term>GeometryType(geometry)</term>
            <listitem>
              <para>Returns the type of the geometry as a string. Eg:
              'LINESTRING', 'POLYGON', 'MULTIPOINT', etc.</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC s2.1.1.1 - Returns the name of the instantiable
              subtype of Geometry of which this Geometry instance is a member.
              The name of the instantiable subtype of Geometry is returned as
              a string.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>X(geometry)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Return the X coordinate of the point.
	      Input must be a point.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>Y(geometry)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Return the Y coordinate of the point.
	      Input must be a point.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>Z(geometry)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Return the Z coordinate of the point,
	      or NULL if not available.
	      Input must be a point.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>M(geometry)</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Return the M coordinate of the point, 
	      or NULL if not available.
	      Input must be a point.</para>

		<note><para>This is not (yet) part of the OGC spec,
		but is listed here to complete the point coordinate
	        extractor function list.</para></note>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

        </variablelist>
      </sect2>

      <sect2>
        <title>Geometry Constructors</title>

        <variablelist>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>GeomFromText(text,[&lt;srid&gt;])</term>
            <listitem>
              <para>Makes a Geometry from WKT with the given SRID.</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC 3.2.6.2 - option SRID is from the conformance
              suite</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>PointFromText(text,[&lt;srid&gt;])</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Makes a Geometry from WKT with the given SRID. If SRID is
              not give, it defaults to -1.</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC 3.2.6.2 - option SRID is from the conformance
              suite</para>

              <para>Throws an error if the WKT is not a Point</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>LineFromText(text,[&lt;srid&gt;])</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Makes a Geometry from WKT with the given SRID. If SRID is
              not give, it defaults to -1.</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC 3.2.6.2 - option SRID is from the conformance
              suite</para>

              <para>Throws an error if the WKT is not a Line</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>LinestringFromText(text,[&lt;srid&gt;])</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Makes a Geometry from WKT with the given SRID. If SRID is
              not give, it defaults to -1.</para>

              <para>from the conformance suite</para>

              <para>Throws an error if the WKT is not a Line</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>PolyFromText(text,[&lt;srid&gt;])</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Makes a Geometry from WKT with the given SRID. If SRID is
              not give, it defaults to -1.</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC 3.2.6.2 - option SRID is from the conformance
              suite</para>

              <para>Throws an error if the WKT is not a Polygon</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>PolygonFromText(text,[&lt;srid&gt;])</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Makes a Geometry from WKT with the given SRID. If SRID is
              not give, it defaults to -1.</para>

              <para>from the conformance suite</para>

              <para>Throws an error if the WKT is not a Polygon</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>MPointFromText(text,[&lt;srid&gt;])</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Makes a Geometry from WKT with the given SRID. If SRID is
              not give, it defaults to -1.</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC 3.2.6.2 - option SRID is from the conformance
              suite</para>

              <para>Throws an error if the WKT is not a MULTIPOINT</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>MLineFromText(text,[&lt;srid&gt;])</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Makes a Geometry from WKT with the given SRID. If SRID is
              not give, it defaults to -1.</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC 3.2.6.2 - option SRID is from the conformance
              suite</para>

              <para>Throws an error if the WKT is not a MULTILINESTRING</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>MPolyFromText(text,[&lt;srid&gt;])</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Makes a Geometry from WKT with the given SRID. If SRID is
              not give, it defaults to -1.</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC 3.2.6.2 - option SRID is from the conformance
              suite</para>

              <para>Throws an error if the WKT is not a MULTIPOLYGON</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>GeomCollFromText(text,[&lt;srid&gt;])</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Makes a Geometry from WKT with the given SRID. If SRID is
              not give, it defaults to -1.</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC 3.2.6.2 - option SRID is from the conformance
              suite</para>

              <para>Throws an error if the WKT is not a
              GEOMETRYCOLLECTION</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>GeomFromWKB(bytea,[&lt;srid&gt;])</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Makes a Geometry from WKB with the given SRID. If SRID is
              not give, it defaults to -1.</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC 3.2.6.2 - option SRID is from the conformance
              suite</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>GeomFromWKB(bytea,[&lt;srid&gt;])</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Makes a Geometry from WKB with the given SRID. If SRID is
              not give, it defaults to -1.</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC 3.2.7.2 - option SRID is from the conformance
              suite</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>PointFromWKB(bytea,[&lt;srid&gt;])</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Makes a Geometry from WKB with the given SRID. If SRID is
              not give, it defaults to -1.</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC 3.2.7.2 - option SRID is from the conformance
              suite</para>

              <para>throws an error if WKB is not a POINT</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>LineFromWKB(bytea,[&lt;srid&gt;])</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Makes a Geometry from WKB with the given SRID. If SRID is
              not give, it defaults to -1.</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC 3.2.7.2 - option SRID is from the conformance
              suite</para>

              <para>throws an error if WKB is not a LINESTRING</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>LinestringFromWKB(bytea,[&lt;srid&gt;])</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Makes a Geometry from WKB with the given SRID. If SRID is
              not give, it defaults to -1.</para>

              <para>from the conformance suite</para>

              <para>throws an error if WKB is not a LINESTRING</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>PolyFromWKB(bytea,[&lt;srid&gt;])</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Makes a Geometry from WKB with the given SRID. If SRID is
              not give, it defaults to -1.</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC 3.2.7.2 - option SRID is from the conformance
              suite</para>

              <para>throws an error if WKB is not a POLYGON</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>PolygonFromWKB(bytea,[&lt;srid&gt;])</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Makes a Geometry from WKB with the given SRID. If SRID is
              not give, it defaults to -1.</para>

              <para>from the conformance suite</para>

              <para>throws an error if WKB is not a POLYGON</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>MPointFromWKB(bytea,[&lt;srid&gt;])</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Makes a Geometry from WKB with the given SRID. If SRID is
              not give, it defaults to -1.</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC 3.2.7.2 - option SRID is from the conformance
              suite</para>

              <para>throws an error if WKB is not a MULTIPOINT</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>MLineFromWKB(bytea,[&lt;srid&gt;])</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Makes a Geometry from WKB with the given SRID. If SRID is
              not give, it defaults to -1.</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC 3.2.7.2 - option SRID is from the conformance
              suite</para>

              <para>throws an error if WKB is not a MULTILINESTRING</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>MPolyFromWKB(bytea,[&lt;srid&gt;])</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Makes a Geometry from WKB with the given SRID. If SRID is
              not give, it defaults to -1.</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC 3.2.7.2 - option SRID is from the conformance
              suite</para>

              <para>throws an error if WKB is not a MULTIPOLYGON</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry>
            <term>GeomCollFromWKB(bytea,[&lt;srid&gt;])</term>

            <listitem>
              <para>Makes a Geometry from WKB with the given SRID. If SRID is
              not give, it defaults to -1.</para>

              <para>OGC SPEC 3.2.7.2 - option SRID is from the conformance
              suite</para>

              <para>throws an error if WKB is not a GEOMETRYCOLLECTION</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry id="BdPolyFromText">
            <term>BdPolyFromText(text WKT, integer SRID)</term>

            <listitem>
		<para>
		Construct a Polygon given an arbitrary
		collection of closed linestrings as a
		MultiLineString text representation.
		</para>

		<para>
	      Throws an error if WKT is not a MULTILINESTRING.
	      Throws an error if output is a MULTIPOLYGON; use <link
	      linkend="BdMPolyFromText">BdMPolyFromText</link> in
	      that case, or see 
		<link linkend="BuildArea">BuildArea()</link>
		for a postgis-specific approach.
		</para>

              <para>OGC SFSQL 1.1 - 3.2.6.2</para>

		<para>
		    Availability: 1.1.0 - requires GEOS >= 2.1.0.
		</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

          <varlistentry id="BdMPolyFromText">
            <term>BdMPolyFromText(text WKT, integer SRID)</term>

            <listitem>
		<para>
		Construct a MultiPolygon given an arbitrary
		collection of closed linestrings as a
		MultiLineString text representation.
		</para>
		<para>
                Throws an error if WKT is not a MULTILINESTRING.
		Forces MULTIPOLYGON output even when result is really
		only composed by a single POLYGON; use <link
		linkend="BdPolyFromText">BdPolyFromText</link> if you're sure
		a single POLYGON will result from
		operation, or see
		<link linkend="BuildArea">BuildArea()</link>
		for a postgis-specific approach.
		</para>

              <para>OGC SFSQL 1.1 - 3.2.6.2</para>

		<para>
		    Availability: 1.1.0 - requires GEOS >= 2.1.0.
		</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>

        </variablelist>
      </sect2>
    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>Postgis Extensions</title>

      <sect2>
      	<title>Management Functions</title>
	  <variablelist>
		<varlistentry>
		  <term>DropGeometryTable([&lt;schema_name&gt;],
		  &lt;table_name&gt;)</term>

		  <listitem>
		    <para>Drops a table and all its references in geometry_columns.
		    Note: uses current_schema() on schema-aware pgsql installations if
		    schema is not provided.</para>
		  </listitem>
		</varlistentry>

		<varlistentry>
		  <term>UpdateGeometrySRID([&lt;schema_name&gt;],
		  &lt;table_name&gt;, &lt;column_name&gt;, &lt;srid&gt;)</term>
		  <listitem>
		    <para>Update the SRID of all features in a geometry column updating constraints and reference in geometry_columns.
		    Note: uses current_schema() on schema-aware pgsql installations if schema is not provided.</para>
		  </listitem>
		</varlistentry>

		<varlistentry>
		  <term>update_geometry_stats([&lt;table_name&gt;,
		  &lt;column_name&gt;])</term>

		  <listitem>
		    <para>Update statistics about spatial tables for use by the query
		    planner. You will also need to run "VACUUM ANALYZE [table_name]
		    [column_name]" for the statistics gathering process to be
		    complete. NOTE: starting with PostgreSQL 8.0 statistics gathering
		    is automatically performed running "VACUUM ANALYZE".</para>
		  </listitem>
		</varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>postgis_version()</term>

          <listitem>
		<para>Returns PostGIS version number and compile-time options</para>

		<note><para>
		Prior to version 1.1.0 this was a procedural function, thus possibly
		returning inaccurate information (in case of incomplete database upgrades).
		</para></note>

          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry id="postgis_lib_version">
          <term>postgis_lib_version()</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>Returns the version number of the PostGIS library.</para>
		<para>
	Availability: 0.9.0
		</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>postgis_lib_build_date()</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>Returns build date of the PostGIS library.</para>
		<para>
	Availability: 1.0.0RC1
		</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>postgis_script_build_date()</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>Returns build date of the PostGIS scripts.</para>
		<para>
	Availability: 1.0.0RC1
		</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>postgis_scripts_installed()</term>

          <listitem>
		<para>
		Returns version of the postgis scripts
		installed in this database.
		</para>

		<note> <para>
		If the output of this function doesn't match the output of
		<link linkend="postgis_scripts_released">postgis_scripts_released()</link>
		you probably missed to properly upgrade an existing database.
		See the <link linkend="upgrading">Upgrading</link> section for more info.
		</para></note>

		<para>
	Availability: 0.9.0
		</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry id="postgis_scripts_released">
          <term>postgis_scripts_released()</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Returns the version number of the lwpostgis.sql script
            released with the installed postgis lib.</para>

		<note> <para>
		Starting with version 1.1.0 this function returns the same
		value of <link linkend="postgis_lib_version">postgis_lib_version()</link>.
		Kept for backward compatibility.
		</para></note>

		<para>
	Availability: 0.9.0 
		</para>


          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>postgis_geos_version()</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Returns the version number of the GEOS library, or NULL if
            GEOS support is not enabled.</para>
		<para>
	Availability: 0.9.0
		</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>postgis_jts_version()</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Returns the version number of the JTS library, or NULL if
            JTS support is not enabled.</para>

		<para>
	Availability: 1.1.0
		</para>

          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>postgis_proj_version()</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Returns the version number of the PROJ4 library, or NULL if
            PROJ4 support is not enabled.</para>
		<para>
	Availability: 0.9.0
		</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>postgis_uses_stats()</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Returns true if STATS usage has been enabled, false
            otherwise.</para>
		<para>
	Availability: 0.9.0
		</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry id="postgis_full_version">
          <term>postgis_full_version()</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Reports full postgis version and build configuration
            infos.</para>

		<para>Availability: 0.9.0</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

	   </variablelist>

	</sect2>

	<sect2>
	  <title>Operators</title>
	    <variablelist>

		<varlistentry>
		  <term>A &amp;&lt; B</term>

		  <listitem>
		    <para>The "&amp;&lt;" operator returns true if A's bounding box
		    overlaps or is to the left of B's bounding box.</para>
		  </listitem>
		</varlistentry>

		<varlistentry>
		  <term>A &amp;&gt; B</term>

		  <listitem>
		    <para>The "&amp;&gt;" operator returns true if A's bounding box
		    overlaps or is to the right of B's bounding box.</para>
		  </listitem>
		</varlistentry>

		<varlistentry>
		  <term>A &lt;&lt; B</term>

		  <listitem>
		    <para>The "&lt;&lt;" operator returns true if A's bounding box is
		    strictly to the left of B's bounding box.</para>
		  </listitem>
		</varlistentry>

		<varlistentry>
		  <term>A &gt;&gt; B</term>

		  <listitem>
		    <para>The "&gt;&gt;" operator returns true if A's bounding box is
		    strictly to the right of B's bounding box.</para>
		  </listitem>
		</varlistentry>

		<varlistentry>
		  <term>A &amp;&lt;| B</term>

		  <listitem>
		    <para>The "&amp;&lt;|" operator returns true if A's bounding box
		    overlaps or is below B's bounding box.</para>
		  </listitem>
		</varlistentry>

		<varlistentry>
		  <term>A |&amp;&gt; B</term>

		  <listitem>
		    <para>The "|&amp;&gt;" operator returns true if A's bounding box
		    overlaps or is above B's bounding box.</para>
		  </listitem>
		</varlistentry>

		<varlistentry>
		  <term>A &lt;&lt;| B</term>

		  <listitem>
		    <para>The "&lt;&lt;|" operator returns true if A's bounding box is
		    strictly below B's bounding box.</para>
		  </listitem>
		</varlistentry>

		<varlistentry>
		  <term>A |&gt;&gt; B</term>

		  <listitem>
		    <para>The "|&gt;&gt;" operator returns true if A's bounding box is
		    strictly above B's bounding box.</para>
		  </listitem>
		</varlistentry>

		<varlistentry>
		  <term>A ~= B</term>

		  <listitem>
		    <para>The "~=" operator is the "same as" operator. It tests actual
		    geometric equality of two features. So if A and B are the same
		    feature, vertex-by-vertex, the operator returns true.</para>
		  </listitem>
		</varlistentry>

		<varlistentry>
		  <term>A @ B</term>

		  <listitem>
		    <para>The "@" operator returns true if A's bounding box is
		    completely contained by B's bounding box.</para>
		  </listitem>
		</varlistentry>

		<varlistentry>
		  <term>A ~ B</term>

		  <listitem>
		    <para>The "~" operator returns true if A's bounding box completely
		    contains B's bounding box.</para>
		  </listitem>
		</varlistentry>

		<varlistentry>
		  <term>A &amp;&amp; B</term>

		  <listitem>
		    <para>The "&amp;&amp;" operator is the "overlaps" operator. If A's
		    bounding box overlaps B's bounding box the operator returns
		    true.</para>
		  </listitem>
		</varlistentry>
	  </variablelist>
      </sect2>

      <sect2>
        <title>Measurement Functions</title>
	  <variablelist>

		<varlistentry>
		  <term>area2d(geometry)</term>

		  <listitem>
		    <para>Returns the area of the geometry if it is a polygon or
		    multi-polygon.</para>
		  </listitem>
		</varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>distance_sphere(point, point)</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Returns linear distance in meters between two lat/lon
            points. Uses a spherical earth and radius of 6370986 meters.
            Faster than <link linkend="distance_spheroid">distance_spheroid()</link>, but
            less accurate.
			Only implemented for points.</para>			
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry id="distance_spheroid">
          <term>distance_spheroid(point, point, spheroid)</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Returns linear distance between two lat/lon points given a
            particular spheroid. See the explanation of spheroids given for
            <link linkend="length_spheroid">length_spheroid()</link>.
            Currently only implemented for points.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry id="length2d">
          <term>length2d(geometry)</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Returns the 2-dimensional length of the geometry if it is a
            linestring or multi-linestring.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>length3d(geometry)</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Returns the 3-dimensional length of the geometry if it is a
            linestring or multi-linestring.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry id="length_spheroid">
          <term>length_spheroid(geometry,spheroid)</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Calculates the length of of a geometry on an ellipsoid. This
            is useful if the coordinates of the geometry are in
            latitude/longitude and a length is desired without reprojection.
            The ellipsoid is a separate database type and can be constructed as
            follows:</para>

            <literallayout>SPHEROID[&lt;NAME&gt;,&lt;SEMI-MAJOR AXIS&gt;,&lt;INVERSE FLATTENING&gt;]</literallayout>

            <para>Eg:</para>

            <literallayout>SPHEROID["GRS_1980",6378137,298.257222101]</literallayout>

            <para>An example calculation might look like this:</para>

            <literallayout>SELECT
 length_spheroid(
  geometry_column,
  'SPHEROID["GRS_1980",6378137,298.257222101]'
 )
FROM geometry_table;</literallayout>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>length3d_spheroid(geometry,spheroid)</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Calculates the length of of a geometry on an ellipsoid,
            taking the elevation into account. This is just like
            length_spheroid except vertical coordinates (expressed in the same
            units as the spheroid axes) are used to calculate the extra
            distance vertical displacement adds.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>distance(geometry, geometry)</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Returns the smaller distance between two geometries.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>max_distance(linestring,linestring)</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Returns the largest distance between two line
            strings.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>perimeter(geometry)</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Returns the 2-dimensional perimeter of the geometry, if it
            is a polygon or multi-polygon.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>perimeter2d(geometry)</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Returns the 2-dimensional perimeter of the geometry, if it
            is a polygon or multi-polygon.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>perimeter3d(geometry)</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Returns the 3-dimensional perimeter of the geometry, if it
            is a polygon or multi-polygon.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>azimuth(geometry, geometry)</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>
	Returns the azimuth of the segment defined by the given Point
	geometries, or NULL if the two points are coincident.
	Return value is in radians.
            </para>
		<para>
			Availability: 1.1.0
		</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>


	  </variablelist>

      </sect2>

	<sect2>
		<title>Geometry Outputs</title>
		<variablelist>

			<varlistentry>
				<term>AsBinary(geometry,{'NDR'|'XDR'})</term>

				<listitem>
					<para>Returns the geometry in the OGC "well-known-binary" format as a bytea, using little-endian (NDR) or big-endian (XDR) encoding. This is useful in binary cursors to pull data out of the database without converting it to a string representation.</para>
				</listitem>
			</varlistentry>

			<varlistentry>
				<term>AsEWKT(geometry)</term>
				<listitem>
					<para>Returns a Geometry in EWKT format (as text).</para>
				</listitem>
			</varlistentry>

			<varlistentry>
				<term>AsEWKB(geometry, {'NDR'|'XDR'})</term>
				<listitem>
					<para>Returns a Geometry in EWKB format (as bytea) using either little-endian (NDR) or big-endian (XDR) encoding.</para>
				</listitem>
			</varlistentry>

			<varlistentry>
				<term>AsHEXEWKB(geometry, {'NDR'|'XDR'})</term>
				<listitem>
					<para>Returns a Geometry in HEXEWKB format (as text) using either little-endian (NDR) or big-endian (XDR) encoding.</para>
				</listitem>
			</varlistentry>

			<varlistentry>
				<term>AsSVG(geometry, [rel], [precision])</term>
				<listitem>
					<para>Return the geometry as an SVG path data. Use 1 as second argument to have the path data implemented in terms of relative moves, the default (or 0) uses absolute moves. Third argument may be used to reduce the maximum number of decimal digits used in output (defaults to 15). Point geometries will be rendered as cx/cy when 'rel' arg is 0, x/y when 'rel' is 1.</para>
				</listitem>
			</varlistentry>

			<varlistentry>
				<term>AsGML(geometry, [precision])</term>
				<listitem>
					<para>Return the geometry as a GML element.  Second argument may be used to reduce the maximum number of significant digits used in output (defaults to 15).</para>
				</listitem>
			</varlistentry>

		</variablelist>
	</sect2>


      <sect2>
      	<title>Geometry Constructors</title>

	  <variablelist>

		<varlistentry>
			<term>GeomFromEWKT(text)</term>
			<listitem>
				<para>Makes a Geometry from EWKT.</para>
			</listitem>
		</varlistentry>

		<varlistentry>
			<term>GeomFromEWKB(bytea)</term>
			<listitem>
				<para>Makes a Geometry from EWKB.</para>
			</listitem>
		</varlistentry>

		<varlistentry>
		  <term>MakePoint(&lt;x&gt;, &lt;y&gt;, [&lt;z&gt;], [&lt;m&gt;])</term>
		  <listitem>
		    <para>Creates a 2d,3dz or 4d point geometry.</para>
		  </listitem>
		</varlistentry>

		<varlistentry>
		  <term>MakePointM(&lt;x&gt;, &lt;y&gt;, &lt;m&gt;)</term>

		  <listitem>
		    <para>Creates a 3dm point geometry.</para>
		  </listitem>
		</varlistentry>


		<varlistentry>
		  <term>MakeBox2D(&lt;LL&gt;, &lt;UR&gt;)</term>

		  <listitem>
		    <para>Creates a BOX2D defined by the given point geometries.</para>
		  </listitem>
		</varlistentry>

		<varlistentry>
		  <term>MakeBox3D(&lt;LLB&gt;, &lt;URT&gt;)</term>

		  <listitem>
		    <para>Creates a BOX3D defined by the given point geometries.</para>
		  </listitem>
		</varlistentry>

		<varlistentry>
		  <term>MakeLine(geometry set)</term>

		  <listitem>
		    <para>Creates a Linestring from a set of point geometries.
		    You might want to use a subselect to order points before
		    feeding them to this aggregate.</para>
		  </listitem>
		</varlistentry>

		<varlistentry>
		  <term>MakeLine(geometry, geometry)</term>
		  <listitem>
		    <para>Creates a Linestring from the two given point
		    geometries.</para>
		  </listitem>
		</varlistentry>

		<varlistentry>
		  <term>LineFromMultiPoint(multipoint)</term>

		  <listitem>
		    <para>Creates a LineString from a MultiPoint geometry.</para>
		  </listitem>
		</varlistentry>



		<varlistentry>
		  <term>MakePolygon(linestring, [linestring[]])</term>
		  <listitem>
		    <para>Creates a Polygon formed by the given 
		    shell and array of holes. You can construct
		    a geometry array using <link linkend="Accum">Accum</link>.
		    Input geometries must be closed LINESTRINGS (see <link linkend="IsClosed">IsClosed</link> and <link linkend="GeometryType">GeometryType</link>).
		    </para>
		  </listitem>
		</varlistentry>

		<varlistentry id="BuildArea">
		  <term>BuildArea(geometry)</term>
		  <listitem>
		    <para>Creates an areal geometry formed by the constituent
		    linework of given geometry. The return type can
		    be a Polygon or MultiPolygon, depending on input.
		    If the input lineworks do not form polygons NULL is
		    returned.
		    </para>

		    <para>
		    See also <link linkend="BdPolyFromText">BdPolyFromText</link> and <link linkend="BdMPolyFromText">BdMPolyFromText</link> - wrappers to this function with standard OGC interface.
		    </para>

		<para>
		    Availability: 1.1.0 - requires GEOS >= 2.1.0.
		</para>
		  </listitem>
		</varlistentry>

		<varlistentry>
		  <term>Polygonize(geometry set)</term>

		  <listitem>

		<para>
			Aggregate. Creates a GeometryCollection containing
			possible polygons formed from the constituent linework
			of a set of geometries.
		</para>

		<para>
		    Availability: 1.0.0RC1 - requires GEOS >= 2.1.0.
		</para>

		  </listitem>
		</varlistentry>

		<varlistentry>
		  <term>Collect(geometry set)</term>

		  <listitem>
		    <para>This function returns a GEOMETRYCOLLECTION or a MULTI object from a set
		    of geometries. The collect() function is an "aggregate" function
		    in the terminology of PostgreSQL. That means that it operators on
		    lists of data, in the same way the sum() and mean() functions do.
		    For example, "SELECT COLLECT(GEOM) FROM GEOMTABLE GROUP BY
		    ATTRCOLUMN" will return a separate GEOMETRYCOLLECTION for each
		    distinct value of ATTRCOLUMN.</para>
		  </listitem>
		</varlistentry>

		<varlistentry>
		  <term>Collect(geometry, geometry)</term>

		  <listitem>
		    <para>This function returns a geometry being a collection
		    of two input geometries. Output type can be a MULTI* or 
		    a GEOMETRYCOLLECTION.</para>
		  </listitem>
		</varlistentry>

		<varlistentry>
		  <term>Dump(geometry)</term>

		  <listitem>
		    <para>This is a set-returning function (SRF).
		    It returns a set of geometry_dump rows, formed
		    by a geometry (geom) and an array of integers (path).
		    When the input geometry is a simple type
		    (POINT,LINESTRING,POLYGON)
		    a single record will be returned with an empty
		    path array and the input geometry as geom.
		    When the input geometry is a collection or multi
		    it will return a record for each of the collection
		    components, and the path will express the position
		    of the component inside the collection.
		    </para>

		<para>
		    Availability: PostGIS 1.0.0RC1.
		    Requires PostgreSQL 7.3 or higher.
		</para>

		  </listitem>
		</varlistentry>

		<varlistentry>
		  <term>DumpRings(geometry)</term>

		  <listitem>
		    <para>This is a set-returning function (SRF).
		    It returns a set of geometry_dump rows, formed
		    by a geometry (geom) and an array of integers (path).
		    The 'path' field holds the polygon ring index, contains
		    a single element: 0 for the shell, hole number for holes.
		    The 'geom' field contains the corresponding ring
		    as a polygon.
		    </para>

		<para>
		    Availability: PostGIS 1.1.3.
		    Requires PostgreSQL 7.3 or higher.
		</para>

		  </listitem>
		</varlistentry>

	  </variablelist>
      </sect2>

      <sect2>
      	<title>Geometry Editors</title>
	  <variablelist>

        <varlistentry id="addbbox">
          <term>AddBBOX(geometry)</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>Add bounding box to the geometry. This would make bounding
	    box based queries faster, but will increase the size of the
	    geometry.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry id="dropbbox">
          <term>DropBBOX(geometry)</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>Drop the bounding box cache from the geometry.
	    This reduces geometry size, but makes bounding-box based
	    queries slower.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

	<varlistentry>
	  <term>AddPoint(linestring, point, [&lt;position&gt;])</term>

	  <listitem>
	    <para>Adds a point to a LineString before point &lt;pos&gt;
	    (0-based index).
	    Third parameter can be omitted or set to -1 for appending.
	    </para>
	  </listitem>
	</varlistentry>

	<varlistentry>
	  <term>RemovePoint(linestring, offset)</term>
	  <listitem>
		<para>
			Removes point from a linestring. Offset is 0-based.
		</para>
		<para>
			Availability: 1.1.0
		</para>
	  </listitem>
	</varlistentry>

	<varlistentry>
	  <term>SetPoint(linestring, N, point)</term>
	  <listitem>
		<para>
			Replace point N of linestring with given point.
			Index is 0-based.
		</para>
		<para>
			Availability: 1.1.0
		</para>
	  </listitem>
	</varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>Force_collection(geometry)</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Converts the geometry into a GEOMETRYCOLLECTION. This is
            useful for simplifying the WKB representation.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry id="force_2d">
          <term>Force_2d(geometry)</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Forces the geometries into a "2-dimensional mode" so that
            all output representations will only have the X and Y coordinates.
            This is useful for force OGC-compliant output (since OGC only
            specifies 2-D geometries).</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry id="force_3dz">
          <term>Force_3dz(geometry)</term>
          <term>Force_3d(geometry)</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Forces the geometries into XYZ mode.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry id="force_3dm">
          <term>Force_3dm(geometry)</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Forces the geometries into XYM mode.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry id="force_4d">
          <term>Force_4d(geometry)</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Forces the geometries into XYZM mode.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>Multi(geometry)</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Returns the geometry as a MULTI* geometry. If the geometry
            is already a MULTI*, it is returned unchanged.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>Transform(geometry,integer)</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Returns a new geometry with its coordinates transformed to
            the SRID referenced by the integer parameter. The destination SRID
            must exist in the <varname>SPATIAL_REF_SYS</varname> table.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>Affine(geometry,float8,float8,float8,float8,float8,float8,float8,float8,float8,float8,float8,float8)</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Applies an 3d affine transformation to the geometry. The call 
                <programlisting>
                    Affine(geom, a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h, i, xoff, yoff, zoff)
                </programlisting>
                represents the transformation matrix
                <programlisting>
                    /  a  b  c  xoff  \
                    |  d  e  f  yoff  |
                    |  g  h  i  zoff  |
                    \  0  0  0  1     /
                </programlisting>
                and the vertices are transformed as follows:
                <programlisting>
                    x' = a*x + b*y + c*z + xoff
                    y' = d*x + e*y + f*z + yoff
                    z' = g*x + h*y + i*z + zoff   
                </programlisting>
                All of the translate / scale functions below are expressed via such an affine transformation.
            </para>
            <para>
                Availability: 1.1.2.
            </para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
	
        <varlistentry>
          <term>Affine(geometry,float8,float8,float8,float8,float8,float8)</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Applies an 2d affine transformation to the geometry. The call 
                <programlisting>
                    Affine(geom, a, b, d, e, xoff, yoff)
                </programlisting>
                represents the transformation matrix
                <programlisting>
                    /  a  b  0  xoff  \        /  a  b  xoff  \
                    |  d  e  0  yoff  |  rsp.  |  d  e  yoff  |
                    |  0  0  1  0     |        \  0  0  1     /
                    \  0  0  0  1     /
                </programlisting>
                and the vertices are transformed as follows:
                <programlisting>
                    x' = a*x + b*y + xoff
                    y' = d*x + e*y + yoff
                    z' = z   
                </programlisting>
                This method is a subcase of the 3D method above.
            </para>
            <para>
		Availability: 1.1.2.
            </para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
	
        <varlistentry>
          <term>Translate(geometry,float8,float8,float8)</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Translates the geometry to a new location using the numeric
            parameters as offsets. Ie: translate(geom, X, Y, Z).</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>Scale(geometry,float8,float8,float8)</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>scales the geometry to a new size by multiplying the
            ordinates with the parameters. Ie: scale(geom, Xfactor, Yfactor, Zfactor).</para>
		<para>
			Availability: 1.1.0
		</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry id="Rotate">
          <term>RotateZ(geometry,float8)</term>
          <term>RotateX(geometry,float8)</term>
          <term>RotateY(geometry,float8)</term>
          <listitem>
		<para>
			Rotate the geometry around the Z, X or Y axis by
			the given angle given in radians. Follows the
			right-hand rule. This is the same in
			PostScript but opposite of SVG.
		</para>
		<para>
			Availability: 1.1.2.
		</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>TransScale(geometry,float8,float8,float8,float8)</term>

          <listitem>
                <para>First, translates the geometry using the first two floats, then scales it
                    using the second two floats, working in 2D only. Using
                    <code>transscale(geom, X, Y, XFactor, YFactor)</code> internally calls
                    <code>affine(geom, XFactor, 0, 0,  0, YFactor, 0,  0, 0, 1,  X*XFactor, Y*YFactor, 0)</code>.                
                </para>
                <para>
                        Availability: 1.1.0.
                </para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>


        <varlistentry>
          <term>Reverse(geometry)</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>Returns the geometry with vertex order reversed.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>ForceRHR(geometry)</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>Force polygons of the collection to obey Right-Hand-Rule.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>Simplify(geometry, tolerance)</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Returns a "simplified" version of the given geometry using
            the Douglas-Peuker algorithm. Will actually do something only with
            (multi)lines and (multi)polygons but you can safely call it with
            any kind of geometry. Since simplification occurs on a
            object-by-object basis you can also feed a GeometryCollection to
            this function. Note that returned geometry might loose its
            simplicity (see <link linkend="IsSimple">IsSimple</link>)</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>SnapToGrid(geometry, originX, originY, sizeX, sizeY)</term>
          <term>SnapToGrid(geometry, sizeX, sizeY)</term>
          <term>SnapToGrid(geometry, size)</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Snap all points of the input geometry to the grid
	    defined by its origin and cell size.
            Remove consecutive points falling on the same cell,
	    eventually returning NULL if output points are not
	    enough to define a geometry of the given type.
	    Collapsed geometries in a collection are stripped
	    from it.</para>

	<note><para>
            The returned geometry might loose its
            simplicity (see <link linkend="IsSimple">IsSimple</link>).
	</para></note>

	<note><para>
            Before release 1.1.0 this function always returned
	    a 2d geometry. Starting at 1.1.0 the returned geometry
	    will have same dimensionality as the input one with higher
	    dimension values untouched. Use the version taking a second
	    geometry argument to define all grid dimensions.
	</para></note>

		<para>
			Availability: 1.0.0RC1
		</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>SnapToGrid(geometry, geometry, sizeX, sizeY, sizeZ, sizeM)</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>
	    Snap all points of the input geometry to the grid
	    defined by its origin (the second argument, must be a point)
	    and cell sizes. Specify 0 as size for any dimension you don't
	    want to snap to a grid.
	    </para>

		<para>
			Availability: 1.1.0
		</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>Segmentize(geometry, maxlength)</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Return a modified geometry having no segment
            longer then the given distance. Interpolated points will have Z
            and M values (if needed) set to 0. Distance computation is
            performed in 2d only.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

		<varlistentry>
		  <term>LineMerge(geometry)</term>

		  <listitem>

		<para>
			Returns a (set of) LineString(s) formed by sewing
			together constituent linework of input.
		</para>

		<para>
			Availability: 1.1.0 - requires GEOS >= 2.1.0
		</para>

		  </listitem>
		</varlistentry>

	  </variablelist>
      </sect2>

      <sect2>
	<title>Linear Referencing</title>

	<variablelist>

        <varlistentry id="line_interpolate_point">
          <term>line_interpolate_point(linestring, location)</term>

          <listitem>
		<para>
		Returns a point interpolated along a line.
		First argument must be a LINESTRING.
		Second argument is a float8 between 0 and 1
		representing fraction of total
		<link linkend="length2d">2d length</link> the point has
		to be located.
		</para>

		<para>
		See <link linkend="line_locate_point">line_locate_point()</link>
		for computing the line location nearest to a Point.
		</para>

	<note><para>
            Since release 1.1.1 this function also interpolates
	    M and Z values (when present), while prior releases
	    set them to 0.0.
	</para></note>

		<para>
			Availability: 0.8.2
		</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry id="line_substring">
          <term>line_substring(linestring, start, end)</term>

          <listitem>
            	<para>
		Return a linestring being a substring of the input one starting
		and ending at the given fractions of total 2d length. Second
		and third arguments are float8 values between 0 and 1.
		</para>

		<para>
		If 'start' and 'end' have the same value this is equivalent 
		to <link linkend="line_interpolate_point">line_interpolate_point()</link>.
		</para>

		<para>
		See <link linkend="line_locate_point">line_locate_point()</link>
		for computing the line location nearest to a Point.
		</para>

	<note><para>
            Since release 1.1.1 this function also interpolates
	    M and Z values (when present), while prior releases
	    set them to unspecified values.
	</para></note>

		<para>
			Availability: 1.1.0
		</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry id="line_locate_point">
          <term>line_locate_point(LineString, Point)</term>
          <listitem>
            	<para>
		Returns a float between 0 and 1 representing 
		the location of the closest point on LineString
		to the given Point, as a fraction of
		total <link linkend="length2d">2d line</link> length.
		</para>

		<para>
	You can use the returned location to extract a Point (<link linkend="line_interpolate_point">line_interpolate_point</link>) or a substring (<link linkend="line_substring">line_substring</link>).
		</para>

		<para>
			Availability: 1.1.0
		</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>


        <varlistentry>
          <term>locate_along_measure(geometry, float8)</term>

          <listitem>
            	<para>
		Return a derived geometry collection value with elements that
		match the specified measure.
		Polygonal elements are not supported.
		</para>

		<para>
		Semantic is specified by: ISO/IEC CD 13249-3:200x(E) -
		Text for Continuation CD Editing Meeting
		</para>

		<para>
			Availability: 1.1.0
		</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>locate_between_measures(geometry, float8, float8)</term>

          <listitem>
            	<para>
		Return a derived geometry collection value with elements that
		match the specified range of measures inclusively.
		Polygonal elements are not supported. 
		</para>

		<para>
		Semantic is specified by: ISO/IEC CD 13249-3:200x(E) -
		Text for Continuation CD Editing Meeting
		</para>

		<para>
			Availability: 1.1.0
		</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

	</variablelist>

	</sect2>

      <sect2>
	<title>Misc</title>
	  <variablelist>

			<varlistentry>
				<term>Summary(geometry)</term>
				<listitem>
					<para>Returns a text summary of the contents of the geometry.</para>
				</listitem>
			</varlistentry>

			<varlistentry>
				<term>box2d(geometry)</term>
				<listitem>
					<para>Returns a BOX2D representing the maximum extents of the geometry.</para>
				</listitem>
			</varlistentry>

			<varlistentry>
				<term>box3d(geometry)</term>
				<listitem>
					<para>Returns a BOX3D representing the maximum extents of the geometry.</para>
				</listitem>
			</varlistentry>

			<varlistentry>
				<term>extent(geometry set)</term>

				<listitem>
					<para>The extent() function is an "aggregate" function in the terminology of PostgreSQL. That means that it operators on lists of data, in the same way the sum() and mean() functions do. For example, "SELECT EXTENT(GEOM) FROM GEOMTABLE" will return a BOX3D giving the maximum extend of all features in the table. Similarly, "SELECT EXTENT(GEOM) FROM GEOMTABLE GROUP BY CATEGORY" will return one extent result for each category.</para>
				</listitem>
			</varlistentry>

			<varlistentry id="zmflag">
				<term>zmflag(geometry)</term>
				<listitem>
					<para>Returns ZM (dimension semantic) flag of the geometries as a small int. Values are: 0=2d, 1=3dm, 2=3dz, 3=4d.  </para>
				</listitem>
			</varlistentry>

			<varlistentry id="hasbbox">
				<term>HasBBOX(geometry)</term>
				<listitem>
					<para>Returns TRUE if the bbox of this geometry is cached, FALSE otherwise. Use <link linkend="addbbox">addBBOX()</link> and <link linkend="dropbbox">dropBBOX()</link> to control caching.</para>
				</listitem>
			</varlistentry>

			<varlistentry id="ndims">
				<term>ndims(geometry)</term>
				<listitem>
					<para>Returns number of dimensions of the geometry as a small int. Values are: 2,3 or 4.</para>
				</listitem>
			</varlistentry>

			<varlistentry>
				<term>nrings(geometry)</term>
				<listitem>
					<para>If the geometry is a polygon or multi-polygon returns the number of rings.</para>
				</listitem>
			</varlistentry>

			<varlistentry>
				<term>npoints(geometry)</term>
				<listitem>
					<para>Returns the number of points in the geometry.</para>
				</listitem>
			</varlistentry>

		<varlistentry id="IsValid">
		  <term>isvalid(geometry)</term>

		  <listitem>
		    <para>returns true if this geometry is valid.</para>
		  </listitem>
		</varlistentry>

		<varlistentry>
		  <term>expand(geometry, float)</term>

		  <listitem>
		    <para>This function returns a bounding box expanded in all
		    directions from the bounding box of the input geometry, by an
		    amount specified in the second argument. Very useful for
		    distance() queries, to add an index filter to the query.</para>
		  </listitem>
		</varlistentry>

		<varlistentry>
			<term>estimated_extent([schema], table, geocolumn)</term>
			<listitem>
				<para> Return the 'estimated' extent of the given spatial table.  The estimated is taken from the geometry column's statistics. The current schema will be used if not specified.</para>

				<para>For PostgreSQL&gt;=8.0.0 statistics are gathered by VACUUM ANALYZE and resulting extent will be about 95% of the real one.</para>
				<para>For PostgreSQL&lt;8.0.0 statistics are gathered by update_geometry_stats() and resulting extent will be exact.</para>
			</listitem>
		</varlistentry>

	<varlistentry>
          <term>find_srid(varchar,varchar,varchar)</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>The syntax is find_srid(&lt;db/schema&gt;, &lt;table&gt;,
            &lt;column&gt;) and the function returns the integer SRID of the
            specified column by searching through the GEOMETRY_COLUMNS table.
            If the geometry column has not been properly added with the
            AddGeometryColumns() function, this function will not work
            either.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>


        <varlistentry>
          <term>mem_size(geometry)</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Returns the amount of space (in bytes) the geometry
            takes.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>numb_sub_objects(geometry)</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Returns the number of objects stored in the geometry. This
            is useful for MULTI-geometries and GEOMETRYCOLLECTIONs.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>point_inside_circle(geometry,float,float,float)</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>The syntax for this functions is
            point_inside_circle(&lt;geometry&gt;,&lt;circle_center_x&gt;,&lt;circle_center_y&gt;,&lt;radius&gt;).
            Returns the true if the geometry is a point and is inside the
            circle. Returns false otherwise.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>xmin(box3d) ymin(box3d) zmin(box3d)</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Returns the requested minima of a bounding box.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry>
          <term>xmax(box3d) ymax(box3d) zmax(box3d)</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Returns the requested maxima of a bounding box.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        <varlistentry id="Accum">
          <term>Accum(geometry set)</term>

          <listitem>
            <para>Aggregate. Constructs an array of geometries.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>

        </variablelist>
      </sect2>

      &long_xact;

    </sect1>
  </chapter>

	<chapter>
		<title>Reporting Bugs</title>

		<para>
	Reporting bugs effectively is a fundamental way to help PostGIS
	development. The most effective bug report is that enabling 
	PostGIS developers to reproduce it, so it would ideally contain
	a script triggering it and every information regarding the
	environment in which it was detected. Good enough info can
	be extracted running <code>SELECT postgis_full_version()</code>
	[for postgis] and <code>SELECT version()</code> [for postgresql].
		</para>

		<para>
	If you aren't using latest release, it's worth taking a look
	at its <ulink
	url="http://postgis.refractions.net/CHANGES.txt">release
	changelog</ulink> first, to find out if your bug has already been
	fixed.
		</para>

		<para>
	Using the <ulink url="http://postgis.refractions.net/bugs/">PostGIS
	bug tracker</ulink> will ensure your reports are not discarded, and
	will keep you informed on it's handling process. Before reporting
	a new bug please query the database to see if it is a known one, and
	if it is please add any new information you have about it.
		</para>

		<para>
	You might want to read Simon Tatham's paper about <ulink
	url="http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/bugs.html">How
	to Report Bugs Effectively</ulink> before filing a new report.
		</para>

	</chapter>

	<appendix id="release_notes">
	<title>Appendix</title>

	<sect1>

		<title>Release Notes</title>

    		<sect2>
			<title>Release 1.1.4</title>
			<para>Release date: 2006/09/27</para>

			<para>
This is an bugfix release including some improvements in the Java interface.
Upgrade is <emphasis>encouraged</emphasis>.
			</para>

			<sect3>
				<title>Upgrading</title>

				<para>
If you are upgrading from release 1.0.3 or later follow the
<link linkend="soft_upgrade">soft upgrade</link> procedure.
				</para>

				<para>
If you are upgrading from a release <emphasis>between 1.0.0RC6 and
1.0.2</emphasis> (inclusive) and really want a live upgrade read the
<link linkend="rel_1.0.3_upgrading">upgrade section</link> of the 1.0.3
release notes chapter.
				</para>

				<para>
Upgrade from any release prior to 1.0.0RC6 requires an
<link linkend="hard_upgrade">hard upgrade</link>.
				</para>
			</sect3>


			<sect3>
				<title>Bug fixes</title>
		<para>
	Fixed support for PostgreSQL 8.2
		</para>
		<para>
	Fixed bug in collect() function discarding SRID of
	  input
		</para>
		<para>
	Added SRID match check in MakeBox2d and MakeBox3d
		</para>
		<para>
	Fixed regress tests to pass with GEOS-3.0.0
		</para>
		<para>
	Improved pgsql2shp run concurrency.
		</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Java changes</title>
		<para>
		reworked JTS support to reflect new upstream
		JTS developers' attitude to SRID handling.
		Simplifies code and drops build depend on GNU trove.
		</para>
		<para>
		Added EJB2 support generously donated by the
		"Geodetix s.r.l. Company" http://www.geodetix.it/
		</para>
		<para>
		Added EJB3 tutorial / examples donated by
		Norman Barker &lt;nbarker@ittvis.com&gt;
		</para>
        	<para>
		Reorganized java directory layout a little.
		</para>
			</sect3>

		</sect2>
    		<sect2>
			<title>Release 1.1.3</title>
			<para>Release date: 2006/06/30</para>

			<para>
This is an bugfix release including also some new functionalities (most notably long transaction support) and portability enhancements.
Upgrade is <emphasis>encouraged</emphasis>.
			</para>

			<sect3>
				<title>Upgrading</title>

				<para>
If you are upgrading from release 1.0.3 or later follow the
<link linkend="soft_upgrade">soft upgrade</link> procedure.
				</para>

				<para>
If you are upgrading from a release <emphasis>between 1.0.0RC6 and
1.0.2</emphasis> (inclusive) and really want a live upgrade read the
<link linkend="rel_1.0.3_upgrading">upgrade section</link> of the 1.0.3
release notes chapter.
				</para>

				<para>
Upgrade from any release prior to 1.0.0RC6 requires an
<link linkend="hard_upgrade">hard upgrade</link>.
				</para>
			</sect3>


			<sect3>
				<title>Bug fixes / correctness</title>
<para> BUGFIX in distance(poly,poly) giving wrong results. </para>
<para> BUGFIX in pgsql2shp successful return code. </para>
<para> BUGFIX in shp2pgsql handling of MultiLine WKT. </para>
<para> BUGFIX in affine() failing to update bounding box. </para>
<para> WKT parser: forbidden construction of multigeometries with 
	  EMPTY elements (still supported for GEOMETRYCOLLECTION). </para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>New functionalities</title>
<para> NEW Long Transactions support. </para>
<para> NEW DumpRings() function. </para>
<para> NEW AsHEXEWKB(geom, XDR|NDR) function. </para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>JDBC changes</title>
<para> Improved regression tests: MultiPoint and scientific ordinates </para>
<para> Fixed some minor bugs in jdbc code </para>
<para>
Added proper accessor functions for all fields in preparation of 
making those fields private later
</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Other changes</title>
<para> NEW regress test support for loader/dumper. </para>
<para> Added --with-proj-libdir and --with-geos-libdir configure switches. </para>
<para> Support for build Tru64 build. </para>
<para> Use Jade for generating documentation. </para>
<para> Don't link pgsql2shp to more libs then required. </para>
<para> Initial support for PostgreSQL 8.2. </para>
			</sect3>

		</sect2>

    		<sect2>
			<title>Release 1.1.2</title>
			<para>Release date: 2006/03/30</para>

			<para>
This is an bugfix release including some new functions and portability enhancements.
Upgrade is <emphasis>encouraged</emphasis>.
			</para>

			<sect3>
				<title>Upgrading</title>

				<para>
If you are upgrading from release 1.0.3 or later follow the
<link linkend="soft_upgrade">soft upgrade</link> procedure.
				</para>

				<para>
If you are upgrading from a release <emphasis>between 1.0.0RC6 and
1.0.2</emphasis> (inclusive) and really want a live upgrade read the
<link linkend="rel_1.0.3_upgrading">upgrade section</link> of the 1.0.3
release notes chapter.
				</para>

				<para>
Upgrade from any release prior to 1.0.0RC6 requires an
<link linkend="hard_upgrade">hard upgrade</link>.
				</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Bug fixes</title>
<para>BUGFIX in SnapToGrid() computation of output bounding box</para>
<para>BUGFIX in EnforceRHR() </para>
<para>jdbc2 SRID handling fixes in JTS code</para>
<para>Fixed support for 64bit archs</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>New functionalities</title>
<para>Regress tests can now be run *before* postgis installation</para>
<para>New affine() matrix transformation functions</para>
<para>New rotate{,X,Y,Z}() function </para>
<para>Old translating and scaling functions now use affine() internally</para>
<para>Embedded access control in estimated_extent() for builds against pgsql >= 8.0.0</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Other changes</title>
<para>More portable ./configure script</para>
<para>Changed ./run_test script to have more sane default behaviour</para>
			</sect3>

		</sect2>

    		<sect2>
			<title>Release 1.1.1</title>
			<para>Release date: 2006/01/23</para>

			<para>
This is an important Bugfix release, upgrade is <emphasis>highly
recommended</emphasis>.
Previous version contained a bug in postgis_restore.pl preventing
<link linkend="hard_upgrade">hard upgrade</link> procedure to complete
and a bug in GEOS-2.2+ connector preventing GeometryCollection objects
to be used in topological operations.
			</para>

			<sect3>
				<title>Upgrading</title>

				<para>
If you are upgrading from release 1.0.3 or later follow the
<link linkend="soft_upgrade">soft upgrade</link> procedure.
				</para>

				<para>
If you are upgrading from a release <emphasis>between 1.0.0RC6 and
1.0.2</emphasis> (inclusive) and really want a live upgrade read the
<link linkend="rel_1.0.3_upgrading">upgrade section</link> of the 1.0.3
release notes chapter.
				</para>

				<para>
Upgrade from any release prior to 1.0.0RC6 requires an
<link linkend="hard_upgrade">hard upgrade</link>.
				</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Bug fixes</title>
<para>Fixed a premature exit in postgis_restore.pl </para>
<para>BUGFIX in geometrycollection handling of GEOS-CAPI connector</para>
<para>Solaris 2.7 and MingW support improvements</para>
<para>BUGFIX in line_locate_point()</para>
<para>Fixed handling of postgresql paths</para>
<para>BUGFIX in line_substring()</para>
<para>Added support for localized cluster in regress tester</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>New functionalities</title>
<para>New Z and M interpolation in line_substring()</para>
<para>New Z and M interpolation in line_interpolate_point()</para>
<para>added NumInteriorRing() alias due to OpenGIS ambiguity</para>
			</sect3>

		</sect2>
    		<sect2>
			<title>Release 1.1.0</title>
			<para>Release date: 2005/12/21</para>

			<para>
This is a Minor release, containing many improvements and new things.
Most notably: build procedure greatly simplified; transform() performance
drastically improved; more stable GEOS connectivity (CAPI support);
lots of new functions; draft topology support.
			</para>

			<para>
It is <emphasis>highly recommended</emphasis> that you upgrade to GEOS-2.2.x
before installing PostGIS, this will ensure future GEOS upgrades won't
require a rebuild of the PostGIS library.
			</para>

			<sect3>
				<title>Credits</title>

				<para>
This release includes code from Mark Cave Ayland for caching of proj4
objects. Markus Schaber added many improvements in his JDBC2 code.
Alex Bodnaru helped with PostgreSQL source dependency relief and
provided Debian specfiles.  Michael Fuhr tested new things on Solaris arch.
David Techer and Gerald Fenoy helped testing GEOS C-API connector.
Hartmut Tschauner provided code for the azimuth() function. 
Devrim GUNDUZ provided RPM specfiles. Carl Anderson helped with
the new area building functions.
See the <link linkend="credits">credits</link> section for more names.
				</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Upgrading</title>

				<para>
If you are upgrading from release 1.0.3 or later you <emphasis>DO
NOT</emphasis> need a dump/reload.
Simply sourcing the new lwpostgis_upgrade.sql script in all your
existing databases will work.
See the <link linkend="soft_upgrade">soft upgrade</link> chapter
for more information.
				</para>

				<para>
If you are upgrading from a release <emphasis>between 1.0.0RC6 and
1.0.2</emphasis> (inclusive) and really want a live upgrade read the
<link linkend="rel_1.0.3_upgrading">upgrade section</link> of the 1.0.3
release notes chapter.
				</para>

				<para>
Upgrade from any release prior to 1.0.0RC6 requires an
<link linkend="hard_upgrade">hard upgrade</link>.
				</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>New functions</title>
<para>scale() and transscale() companion methods to translate()</para>
<para>line_substring() </para>
<para>line_locate_point()</para>
<para>M(point) </para>
<para>LineMerge(geometry) </para>
<para>shift_longitude(geometry) </para>
<para>azimuth(geometry) </para>
<para>locate_along_measure(geometry, float8) </para>
<para>locate_between_measures(geometry, float8, float8) </para>
<para>SnapToGrid by point offset (up to 4d support)</para>
<para>BuildArea(any_geometry) </para>
<para>OGC BdPolyFromText(linestring_wkt, srid) </para>
<para>OGC BdMPolyFromText(linestring_wkt, srid)</para>
<para>RemovePoint(linestring, offset)</para>
<para>ReplacePoint(linestring, offset, point)</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Bug fixes</title>
<para>Fixed memory leak in polygonize()</para>
<para>Fixed bug in lwgeom_as_anytype cast functions</para>
<para>
Fixed USE_GEOS, USE_PROJ and USE_STATS elements of postgis_version()
output to always reflect library state.
</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Function semantic changes</title>
<para>SnapToGrid doesn't discard higher dimensions</para>
<para>Changed Z() function to return NULL if requested dimension is not available</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Performance improvements</title>
<para>
Much faster transform() function, caching proj4 objects
</para>
<para>
Removed automatic call to fix_geometry_columns() in
AddGeometryColumns() and update_geometry_stats()
</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>JDBC2 works</title>
<para>Makefile improvements</para>
<para>JTS support improvements</para>
<para>Improved regression test system</para>
<para>Basic consistency check method for geometry collections</para>
<para>Support for (Hex)(E)wkb</para>
<para>Autoprobing DriverWrapper for HexWKB / EWKT switching</para>
<para>fix compile problems in ValueSetter for ancient jdk releases.</para>
<para>fix EWKT constructors to accept SRID=4711; representation</para>
<para>added preliminary read-only support for java2d geometries</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Other new things</title>
<para>
Full autoconf-based configuration, with PostgreSQL source dependency relief
</para>
<para>GEOS C-API support (2.2.0 and higher)</para>
<para>Initial support for topology modelling</para>
<para>Debian and RPM specfiles</para>
<para>New lwpostgis_upgrade.sql script</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Other changes</title>
<para>JTS support improvements</para>
<para>Stricter mapping between DBF and SQL integer and string attributes</para>
<para>Wider and cleaner regression test suite</para>
<para>old jdbc code removed from release</para>
<para>obsoleted direct use of postgis_proc_upgrade.pl</para>
<para>scripts version unified with release version</para>
			</sect3>


		</sect2>
    		<sect2>
			<title>Release 1.0.6</title>
			<para>Release date: 2005/12/06</para>

			<para>
Contains a few bug fixes and improvements.
			</para>

			<sect3>
				<title>Upgrading</title>

				<para>If you are upgrading from
				release 1.0.3 or later you <emphasis>DO
				NOT</emphasis> need a dump/reload.
				</para>

				<para>If you are upgrading from
				a release <emphasis>between 1.0.0RC6 and
				1.0.2</emphasis> (inclusive) and really want
				a live upgrade read the <link
				linkend="rel_1.0.3_upgrading">upgrade
				section</link> of the 1.0.3 release notes
				chapter.
				</para>

				<para>
				Upgrade from any release prior to 1.0.0RC6
				requires an <link linkend="hard_upgrade">hard
				upgrade</link>.
				</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Bug fixes</title>
	<para>Fixed palloc(0) call in collection deserializer (only gives problem with --enable-cassert)</para>
	<para>Fixed bbox cache handling bugs</para>
	<para>Fixed geom_accum(NULL, NULL) segfault</para>
	<para>Fixed segfault in addPoint()</para>
	<para>Fixed short-allocation in lwcollection_clone()</para>
	<para>Fixed bug in segmentize()</para>
	<para>Fixed bbox computation of SnapToGrid output</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Improvements</title>
	<para>Initial support for postgresql 8.2</para>
	<para>Added missing SRID mismatch checks in GEOS ops</para>

			</sect3>


		</sect2>

    		<sect2>
			<title>Release 1.0.5</title>
			<para>Release date: 2005/11/25</para>

			<para>
Contains memory-alignment fixes in the library, a segfault fix in loader's
handling of UTF8 attributes and a few improvements and cleanups.
			</para>

			<note><para>
Return code of shp2pgsql changed from previous releases to conform to unix
standards (return 0 on success).
			</para></note>

			<sect3>
				<title>Upgrading</title>

				<para>If you are upgrading from
				release 1.0.3 or later you <emphasis>DO
				NOT</emphasis> need a dump/reload.
				</para>

				<para>If you are upgrading from
				a release <emphasis>between 1.0.0RC6 and
				1.0.2</emphasis> (inclusive) and really want
				a live upgrade read the <link
				linkend="rel_1.0.3_upgrading">upgrade
				section</link> of the 1.0.3 release notes
				chapter.
				</para>

				<para>
				Upgrade from any release prior to 1.0.0RC6
				requires an <link linkend="hard_upgrade">hard
				upgrade</link>.
				</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Library changes</title>
	<para>Fixed memory alignment problems</para>
	<para>Fixed computation of null values fraction in analyzer</para>
	<para>Fixed a small bug in the getPoint4d_p() low-level function</para>
	<para>Speedup of serializer functions</para>
	<para>Fixed a bug in force_3dm(), force_3dz() and force_4d()</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Loader changes</title>
	<para>Fixed return code of shp2pgsql</para>
	<para>Fixed back-compatibility issue in loader (load of null shapefiles)</para>
	<para>Fixed handling of trailing dots in dbf numerical attributes</para>
	<para>Segfault fix in shp2pgsql (utf8 encoding)</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Other changes</title>
	<para>Schema aware postgis_proc_upgrade.pl, support for pgsql 7.2+</para>
	<para>New "Reporting Bugs" chapter in manual</para>
			</sect3>


		</sect2>

    		<sect2>
			<title>Release 1.0.4</title>
			<para>Release date: 2005/09/09</para>

			<para>
Contains important bug fixes and a few improvements. In particular, it
fixes a memory leak preventing successful build of GiST indexes
for large spatial tables.
			</para>

			<sect3>
				<title>Upgrading</title>

				<para>If you are upgrading from
				release 1.0.3 you <emphasis>DO
				NOT</emphasis> need a dump/reload.
				</para>

				<para>If you are upgrading from
				a release <emphasis>between 1.0.0RC6 and
				1.0.2</emphasis> (inclusive) and really want
				a live upgrade read the <link
				linkend="rel_1.0.3_upgrading">upgrade
				section</link> of the 1.0.3 release notes
				chapter.
				</para>

				<para>
				Upgrade from any release prior to 1.0.0RC6
				requires an <link linkend="hard_upgrade">hard
				upgrade</link>.
				</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Bug fixes</title>
	<para>Memory leak plugged in GiST indexing</para>
	<para>Segfault fix in transform() handling of proj4 errors</para>
	<para>Fixed some proj4 texts in spatial_ref_sys (missing +proj)</para>
	<para>Loader: fixed string functions usage, reworked NULL objects check, fixed segfault on MULTILINESTRING input.</para>
	<para>Fixed bug in MakeLine dimension handling</para>
	<para>Fixed bug in translate() corrupting output bounding box</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Improvements</title>
	<para>Documentation improvements</para>
	<para>More robust selectivity estimator </para>
	<para>Minor speedup in distance()</para>
	<para>Minor cleanups </para>
	<para>GiST indexing cleanup</para>
	<para>Looser syntax acceptance in box3d parser</para>
			</sect3>

		</sect2>

    		<sect2 id="rel_1.0.3_upgrading">
			<title>Release 1.0.3</title>
			<para>Release date: 2005/08/08</para>

			<para>
Contains some bug fixes - <emphasis>including a severe one affecting
correctness of stored geometries</emphasis> - and a few improvements.
			</para>

			<sect3>
				<title>Upgrading</title>

				<para>
Due to a bug in a bounding box computation routine, the upgrade procedure
requires special attention, as bounding boxes cached in the database could
be incorrect.
				</para>

				<para>
An <link linkend="hard_upgrade">hard upgrade</link> procedure (dump/reload)
will force recomputation of all bounding boxes (not included in dumps).
This is <emphasis>required</emphasis> if upgrading from releases prior
to 1.0.0RC6.
				</para>

				<para>
If you are upgrading from versions 1.0.0RC6 or up, this release includes a
perl script (utils/rebuild_bbox_caches.pl) to force recomputation of
geometries' bounding boxes and invoke all operations required to propagate
eventual changes in them (geometry statistics update, reindexing).
Invoke the script after a make install (run with no args for syntax help).
Optionally run utils/postgis_proc_upgrade.pl to refresh postgis procedures
and functions signatures (see <link linkend="soft_upgrade">Soft upgrade</link>).
				</para>


			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Bug fixes</title>
	<para>Severe bugfix in lwgeom's 2d bounding box computation</para>
	<para>Bugfix in WKT (-w) POINT handling in loader</para>
	<para>Bugfix in dumper on 64bit machines</para>
	<para>Bugfix in dumper handling of user-defined queries </para>
	<para>Bugfix in create_undef.pl script</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Improvements</title>
	<para>Small performance improvement in canonical input function</para>
	<para>Minor cleanups in loader</para>
	<para>Support for multibyte field names in loader</para>
	<para>Improvement in the postgis_restore.pl script</para>
	<para>New rebuild_bbox_caches.pl util script</para>
			</sect3>

		</sect2>

    		<sect2>
			<title>Release 1.0.2</title>
			<para>Release date: 2005/07/04</para>

			<para>
			Contains a few bug fixes and improvements.
			</para>

			<sect3>
				<title>Upgrading</title>

				<para>If you are upgrading from
				release 1.0.0RC6 or up you <emphasis>DO
				NOT</emphasis> need a dump/reload.</para>

				<para>Upgrading from older releases
				requires a dump/reload. 
				See the <link
				linkend="upgrading">upgrading</link>
				chapter for more informations.</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Bug fixes</title>
	<para>Fault tolerant btree ops</para>
	<para>Memory leak plugged in pg_error</para>
	<para>Rtree index fix</para>
	<para>Cleaner build scripts (avoided mix of CFLAGS and CXXFLAGS)</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Improvements</title>
	<para>New index creation capabilities in loader (-I switch)</para>
	<para>Initial support for postgresql 8.1dev</para>
			</sect3>

		</sect2>

    		<sect2>
			<title>Release 1.0.1</title>
			<para>Release date: 2005/05/24</para>

			<para>
			Contains a few bug fixes and some improvements.
			</para>

			<sect3>
				<title>Upgrading</title>

				<para>If you are upgrading from
				release 1.0.0RC6 or up you <emphasis>DO
				NOT</emphasis> need a dump/reload.</para>

				<para>Upgrading from older releases
				requires a dump/reload. 
				See the <link
				linkend="upgrading">upgrading</link>
				chapter for more informations.</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Library changes</title>
	<para>BUGFIX in 3d computation of length_spheroid()</para>
	<para>BUGFIX in join selectivity estimator</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Other changes/additions</title>
	<para>BUGFIX in shp2pgsql escape functions</para>
	<para>better support for concurrent postgis in multiple schemas</para>
	<para>documentation fixes</para>
	<para>jdbc2: compile with "-target 1.2 -source 1.2" by default</para>
	<para>NEW -k switch for pgsql2shp</para>
	<para>NEW support for custom createdb options in postgis_restore.pl</para>
	<para>BUGFIX in pgsql2shp attribute names unicity enforcement</para>
	<para>BUGFIX in Paris projections definitions</para>
	<para>postgis_restore.pl cleanups</para>
			</sect3>

		</sect2>

    		<sect2>
			<title>Release 1.0.0</title>
			<para>Release date: 2005/04/19</para>

			<para>Final 1.0.0 release.
			Contains a few bug fixes, some improvements
			in the loader (most notably support for older
			postgis versions), and more docs.
			</para>

			<sect3>
				<title>Upgrading</title>

				<para>If you are upgrading from
				release 1.0.0RC6 you <emphasis>DO
				NOT</emphasis> need a dump/reload.</para>

				<para>Upgrading from any other precedent
				release requires a dump/reload. 
				See the <link
				linkend="upgrading">upgrading</link>
				chapter for more informations.</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Library changes</title>
	<para>BUGFIX in transform() releasing random memory address</para>
	<para>BUGFIX in force_3dm() allocating less memory then required</para>
	<para>BUGFIX in join selectivity estimator (defaults, leaks, tuplecount, sd)</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Other changes/additions</title>
	<para>BUGFIX in shp2pgsql escape of values starting with tab or single-quote</para>
	<para>NEW manual pages for loader/dumper</para>
	<para>NEW shp2pgsql support for old (HWGEOM) postgis versions</para>
	<para>NEW -p (prepare) flag for shp2pgsql</para>
	<para>NEW manual chapter about OGC compliancy enforcement</para>
	<para>NEW autoconf support for JTS lib</para>
	<para>BUGFIX in estimator testers (support for LWGEOM and schema parsing)</para>
			</sect3>

		</sect2>


    		<sect2>
			<title>Release 1.0.0RC6</title>
			<para>Release date: 2005/03/30</para>

			<para>Sixth release candidate for 1.0.0.
			Contains a few bug fixes and cleanups.</para>

			<sect3>
				<title>Upgrading</title>
				<para>You need a dump/reload to upgrade
				from precedent releases. See the <link
				linkend="upgrading">upgrading</link>
				chapter for more informations.</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Library changes</title>
	<para>BUGFIX in multi()</para>
	<para>early return [when noop] from multi()</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Scripts changes</title>
	<para>dropped {x,y}{min,max}(box2d) functions</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Other changes</title>
	<para>BUGFIX in postgis_restore.pl scrip</para>
	<para>BUGFIX in dumper's 64bit support</para>
			</sect3>

		</sect2>


    		<sect2>
			<title>Release 1.0.0RC5</title>
			<para>Release date: 2005/03/25</para>

			<para>Fifth release candidate for 1.0.0.
			Contains a few bug fixes and a improvements.</para>

			<sect3>
				<title>Upgrading</title>

				<para>If you are upgrading from
				release 1.0.0RC4 you <emphasis>DO
				NOT</emphasis> need a dump/reload.</para>

				<para>Upgrading from any other precedent
				release requires a dump/reload. 
				See the <link
				linkend="upgrading">upgrading</link>
				chapter for more informations.</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Library changes</title>
	<para>BUGFIX (segfaulting) in box3d computation (yes, another!).</para>
	<para>BUGFIX (segfaulting) in estimated_extent().</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Other changes</title>
	<para>Small build scripts and utilities refinements.</para>
        <para>Additional performance tips documented.</para>
			</sect3>

		</sect2>

    		<sect2>
			<title>Release 1.0.0RC4</title>
			<para>Release date: 2005/03/18</para>

			<para>Fourth release candidate for 1.0.0.
			Contains bug fixes and a few improvements.</para>

			<sect3>
				<title>Upgrading</title>
				<para>You need a dump/reload to upgrade
				from precedent releases. See the <link
				linkend="upgrading">upgrading</link>
				chapter for more informations.</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Library changes</title>
<para>BUGFIX (segfaulting) in geom_accum().</para>
<para>BUGFIX in 64bit architectures support.</para>
<para>BUGFIX in box3d computation function with collections.</para>
<para>NEW subselects support in selectivity estimator.</para>
<para>Early return from force_collection.</para>
<para>Consistency check fix in SnapToGrid().</para>
<para>Box2d output changed back to 15 significant digits.</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Scripts changes</title>
<para>NEW distance_sphere() function.</para>
<para>Changed get_proj4_from_srid implementation to use PL/PGSQL instead of SQL.</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Other changes</title>
<para>BUGFIX in loader and dumper handling of MultiLine shapes</para>
<para>BUGFIX in loader, skipping all but first hole of polygons.</para>
<para>jdbc2: code cleanups, Makefile improvements</para>
<para>FLEX and YACC variables set *after* pgsql Makefile.global is included and only if the pgsql *stripped* version evaluates to the empty string</para>
<para>Added already generated parser in release</para>
<para>Build scripts refinements</para>
<para>improved version handling, central Version.config</para>
<para>improvements in postgis_restore.pl</para>
			</sect3>

		</sect2>

    		<sect2>
			<title>Release 1.0.0RC3</title>
			<para>Release date: 2005/02/24</para>

			<para>Third release candidate for 1.0.0.
			Contains many bug fixes and improvements.</para>

			<sect3>
				<title>Upgrading</title>
				<para>You need a dump/reload to upgrade
				from precedent releases. See the <link
				linkend="upgrading">upgrading</link>
				chapter for more informations.</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Library changes</title>
	<para>BUGFIX in transform(): missing SRID, better error handling.</para>
	<para>BUGFIX in memory alignment handling</para>
	<para>BUGFIX in force_collection() causing mapserver connector failures on simple (single) geometry types.</para>
	<para>BUGFIX in GeometryFromText() missing to add a bbox cache.</para>
	<para>reduced precision of box2d output.</para>
	<para>prefixed DEBUG macros with PGIS_ to avoid clash with pgsql one</para>
	<para>plugged a leak in GEOS2POSTGIS converter</para>
	<para>Reduced memory usage by early releasing query-context palloced one.</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Scripts changes</title>
	<para>BUGFIX in 72 index bindings.</para>
	<para>BUGFIX in probe_geometry_columns() to work with PG72 and support multiple geometry columns in a single table</para>
	<para>NEW bool::text cast</para>
	<para>Some functions made IMMUTABLE from STABLE, for performance
	improvement.</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>JDBC changes</title>
	<para>jdbc2: small patches, box2d/3d tests, revised docs and license.</para>
	<para>jdbc2: bug fix and testcase in for pgjdbc 8.0 type autoregistration</para>
	<para>jdbc2: Removed use of jdk1.4 only features to enable build with older jdk releases.</para>
	<para>jdbc2: Added support for building against pg72jdbc2.jar</para>
	<para>jdbc2: updated and cleaned makefile</para>
	<para>jdbc2: added BETA support for jts geometry classes</para>
	<para>jdbc2: Skip known-to-fail tests against older PostGIS servers.</para>
	<para>jdbc2: Fixed handling of measured geometries in EWKT.</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Other changes</title>
	<para>new performance tips chapter in manual</para>
	<para>documentation updates: pgsql72 requirement, lwpostgis.sql</para>
	<para>few changes in autoconf </para>
	<para>BUILDDATE extraction made more portable</para>
	<para>fixed spatial_ref_sys.sql to avoid vacuuming the whole
	database.</para>
	<para>spatial_ref_sys: changed Paris entries to match the ones
	distributed with 0.x.</para>
			</sect3>

		</sect2>

    		<sect2>
			<title>Release 1.0.0RC2</title>
			<para>Release date: 2005/01/26</para>

			<para>Second release candidate for 1.0.0
			containing bug fixes and a few improvements.</para>

			<sect3>
				<title>Upgrading</title>
	
				<para>You need a dump/reload to upgrade
				from precedent releases. See the <link
				linkend="upgrading">upgrading</link>
				chapter for more informations.</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Library changes</title>

<para>BUGFIX in pointarray box3d computation</para>
<para>BUGFIX in distance_spheroid definition</para>
<para>BUGFIX in transform() missing to update bbox cache</para>
<para>NEW jdbc driver (jdbc2)</para>
<para>GEOMETRYCOLLECTION(EMPTY) syntax support for backward compatibility</para>
<para>Faster binary outputs</para>
<para>Stricter OGC WKB/WKT constructors</para>

			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Scripts changes</title>

<para>More correct STABLE, IMMUTABLE, STRICT uses in lwpostgis.sql</para>
<para>stricter OGC WKB/WKT constructors</para>

			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Other changes</title>

<para>Faster and more robust loader (both i18n and not)</para>
<para>Initial autoconf script</para>

			</sect3>

		</sect2>

    		<sect2>
			<title>Release 1.0.0RC1</title>
			<para>Release date: 2005/01/13</para>

			<para>This is the first candidate of a
			major postgis release, with internal
			storage of postgis types redesigned to be smaller
			and faster on indexed queries.</para>

			<sect3>
				<title>Upgrading</title>

				<para>You need a dump/reload to upgrade
				from precedent releases. See the <link
				linkend="upgrading">upgrading</link>
				chapter for more informations.</para>
			</sect3>

			<sect3>
				<title>Changes</title>

				<para>
				Faster canonical input parsing.
				</para>

				<para>
				Lossless canonical output.
				</para>

				<para>
				EWKB Canonical binary IO with PG>73.
				</para>

				<para>
				Support for up to 4d coordinates, providing
				lossless shapefile->postgis->shapefile
				conversion.
				</para>

				<para>
				New function: UpdateGeometrySRID(), AsGML(),
				SnapToGrid(), ForceRHR(), estimated_extent(),
				accum().
				</para>

				<para>
				Vertical positioning indexed operators.
				</para>

				<para>
				JOIN selectivity function.
				</para>

				<para>
				More geometry constructors / editors.
				</para>

				<para>
				Postgis extension API.
				</para>

				<para>
				UTF8 support in loader.
				</para>

			</sect3>
		</sect2>
	</sect1>
	</appendix>
</book>
