The content is based largely on two GeoMesa tutorials: Geodocker: Bootstrapping GeoMesa Accumulo and Spark on AWS and Map-Reduce Ingest of GDELT, as well as Diethard Steiner’s post on Accumulo basics. The following sections show how to load data into GeoMesa, perform basic queries via command line, and finally publish data to GeoServer. GeoMesa is an open-source, distributed, spatio-temporal database built on a number of distributed cloud data storage systems … GeoMesa aims to provide as much of the spatial querying and data manipulation to Accumulo as PostGIS does to Postgres. If you are not familiar with GeoMesa yet: The Geodocker repository provides a setup containing Accumulo, GeoMesa, and GeoServer. More specifically, I’m using the images provided by Geodocker. Today’s post is about running a whole bunch of containers that interact with each other. In a previous post, I showed how to use docker to run a single application (GeoServer) in a container and connect to it from your local QGIS install.
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