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STAC+COG Map

codecov Docker CI/CD Pipeline

TLDR; click here to view an interactive map displaying a recent Sentinel-2 image over a random populated place*! Refresh for a new map.

* data source

Overview

The code contained here:

There is a CLI to generate a standalone HTML file and a FastAPI app for dynamically generating maps (docs).

The FastAPI app is deployed to an AWS Lambda function using GitHub Actions.

Setup

This repo uses PDM for dependency management. After cloning this repo, run pdm install --no-self from the root directory to create a virtual environment with the required dependencies. Run eval $(pdm venv activate) to activate the environment in your session.

Set $PYTHONPATH to the source path by changing directories into src/python and executing:

export PYTHONPATH=`pwd`

Change directories back to the root.

Running the Thing

Generating an HTML file

To generate an HTML file for local display, use the click CLI tool:

python src/python/stac_tiler_map/cli.py

Open the resulting map.html file with any web browser.

Running a local server

There are several ways to run the FastAPI app locally: Python, uvicorn, Docker, and PEX.

  • Python: python src/python/api/main.py (open localhost:8080/)
  • uvicorn: uvicorn src.python.api.main:app --reload --port 8080 (open localhost:8080/)
  • Docker: docker build -t stac-tiler-map . && docker run -p 8080:8080 stac-tiler-map

PEX is a little more involved. In short:

  • install Pants
  • bootstrap Pants by running pants -v
  • package the FastAPI app as a PEX with pants --tag="pex" package ::
  • run the app from the PEX with ./dist/src.python.api/stac-tiler-map-api.pex api.main:app --port 8080

Deploying to AWS

I use a GitHub Actions workflow (.github/workflows/ci-docker-lambda.yml) to deploy the FastAPI app as a Docker-based AWS Lambda function. The GHA workflow builds an image from Dockerfile.aws.lambda, pushes the image to Elastic Container Registry, and updates the Lambda function with the new image. The link at the top of this is served by the Lambda function. Serverless is neat!

Problems

It should be possible to deploy the FastAPI app to AWS Lambda as a PEX hosted in S3. The .github/workflows/ci-pants-lambda.yml file uses Pants to package the code in a Lambda-compliant PEX, uploads it to an S3 bucket, and updates the Lambda function. The app refuses to run, however, due to dependency issues (e.g., wheel tags don't match for cryptography library [cp36 vs cp39]). Not sure how to fix this at the moment...

Test Coverage

The inner-most circle is the entire project, moving away from the center are folders then, finally, a single file. The size and color of each slice is representing the number of statements and the coverage, respectively.

Acknowledgements

This repo began as a weekend project inspired by @scottyhq's share-a-map repository. The first iteration used GitHub Actions to periodically generate a new map file via the CLI tool and commit the result to the repo which was then deployed to GitHub Pages. In this iteration, I use GitHub Actions to deploy to an AWS Lambda function backed by a Docker container hosted on AWS Elastic Container Registry. This is totally overkill, but it was a fun way to practice and learn.