summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/lib/python2.7/site-packages/django/contrib/gis/tests/distapp/tests.py
blob: 2ed17a03bd123c1316f53c40269c731e67b78785 (plain)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
from __future__ import absolute_import

from django.db import connection
from django.db.models import Q
from django.contrib.gis.geos import HAS_GEOS
from django.contrib.gis.measure import D # alias for Distance
from django.contrib.gis.tests.utils import (
    HAS_SPATIAL_DB, mysql, oracle, postgis, spatialite, no_oracle, no_spatialite
)
from django.test import TestCase
from django.utils.unittest import skipUnless

if HAS_GEOS and HAS_SPATIAL_DB:
    from django.contrib.gis.geos import GEOSGeometry, LineString

    from .models import (AustraliaCity, Interstate, SouthTexasInterstate,
        SouthTexasCity, SouthTexasCityFt, CensusZipcode, SouthTexasZipcode)


@skipUnless(HAS_GEOS and HAS_SPATIAL_DB and not mysql,
    "Geos and spatial db (not mysql) are required.")
class DistanceTest(TestCase):

    if HAS_GEOS and HAS_SPATIAL_DB:
        # A point we are testing distances with -- using a WGS84
        # coordinate that'll be implicitly transormed to that to
        # the coordinate system of the field, EPSG:32140 (Texas South Central
        # w/units in meters)
        stx_pnt = GEOSGeometry('POINT (-95.370401017314293 29.704867409475465)', 4326)
        # Another one for Australia
        au_pnt = GEOSGeometry('POINT (150.791 -34.4919)', 4326)

    def get_names(self, qs):
        cities = [c.name for c in qs]
        cities.sort()
        return cities

    def test01_init(self):
        "Test initialization of distance models."
        self.assertEqual(9, SouthTexasCity.objects.count())
        self.assertEqual(9, SouthTexasCityFt.objects.count())
        self.assertEqual(11, AustraliaCity.objects.count())
        self.assertEqual(4, SouthTexasZipcode.objects.count())
        self.assertEqual(4, CensusZipcode.objects.count())
        self.assertEqual(1, Interstate.objects.count())
        self.assertEqual(1, SouthTexasInterstate.objects.count())

    @no_spatialite
    def test02_dwithin(self):
        "Testing the `dwithin` lookup type."
        # Distances -- all should be equal (except for the
        # degree/meter pair in au_cities, that's somewhat
        # approximate).
        tx_dists = [(7000, 22965.83), D(km=7), D(mi=4.349)]
        au_dists = [(0.5, 32000), D(km=32), D(mi=19.884)]

        # Expected cities for Australia and Texas.
        tx_cities = ['Downtown Houston', 'Southside Place']
        au_cities = ['Mittagong', 'Shellharbour', 'Thirroul', 'Wollongong']

        # Performing distance queries on two projected coordinate systems one
        # with units in meters and the other in units of U.S. survey feet.
        for dist in tx_dists:
            if isinstance(dist, tuple): dist1, dist2 = dist
            else: dist1 = dist2 = dist
            qs1 = SouthTexasCity.objects.filter(point__dwithin=(self.stx_pnt, dist1))
            qs2 = SouthTexasCityFt.objects.filter(point__dwithin=(self.stx_pnt, dist2))
            for qs in qs1, qs2:
                self.assertEqual(tx_cities, self.get_names(qs))

        # Now performing the `dwithin` queries on a geodetic coordinate system.
        for dist in au_dists:
            if isinstance(dist, D) and not oracle: type_error = True
            else: type_error = False

            if isinstance(dist, tuple):
                if oracle: dist = dist[1]
                else: dist = dist[0]

            # Creating the query set.
            qs = AustraliaCity.objects.order_by('name')
            if type_error:
                # A ValueError should be raised on PostGIS when trying to pass
                # Distance objects into a DWithin query using a geodetic field.
                self.assertRaises(ValueError, AustraliaCity.objects.filter(point__dwithin=(self.au_pnt, dist)).count)
            else:
                self.assertEqual(au_cities, self.get_names(qs.filter(point__dwithin=(self.au_pnt, dist))))

    def test03a_distance_method(self):
        "Testing the `distance` GeoQuerySet method on projected coordinate systems."
        # The point for La Grange, TX
        lagrange = GEOSGeometry('POINT(-96.876369 29.905320)', 4326)
        # Reference distances in feet and in meters. Got these values from
        # using the provided raw SQL statements.
        #  SELECT ST_Distance(point, ST_Transform(ST_GeomFromText('POINT(-96.876369 29.905320)', 4326), 32140)) FROM distapp_southtexascity;
        m_distances = [147075.069813, 139630.198056, 140888.552826,
                       138809.684197, 158309.246259, 212183.594374,
                       70870.188967, 165337.758878, 139196.085105]
        #  SELECT ST_Distance(point, ST_Transform(ST_GeomFromText('POINT(-96.876369 29.905320)', 4326), 2278)) FROM distapp_southtexascityft;
        # Oracle 11 thinks this is not a projected coordinate system, so it's s
        # not tested.
        ft_distances = [482528.79154625, 458103.408123001, 462231.860397575,
                        455411.438904354, 519386.252102563, 696139.009211594,
                        232513.278304279, 542445.630586414, 456679.155883207]

        # Testing using different variations of parameters and using models
        # with different projected coordinate systems.
        dist1 = SouthTexasCity.objects.distance(lagrange, field_name='point')
        dist2 = SouthTexasCity.objects.distance(lagrange)  # Using GEOSGeometry parameter
        if spatialite or oracle:
            dist_qs = [dist1, dist2]
        else:
            dist3 = SouthTexasCityFt.objects.distance(lagrange.ewkt) # Using EWKT string parameter.
            dist4 = SouthTexasCityFt.objects.distance(lagrange)
            dist_qs = [dist1, dist2, dist3, dist4]

        # Original query done on PostGIS, have to adjust AlmostEqual tolerance
        # for Oracle.
        if oracle: tol = 2
        else: tol = 5

        # Ensuring expected distances are returned for each distance queryset.
        for qs in dist_qs:
            for i, c in enumerate(qs):
                self.assertAlmostEqual(m_distances[i], c.distance.m, tol)
                self.assertAlmostEqual(ft_distances[i], c.distance.survey_ft, tol)

    @no_spatialite
    def test03b_distance_method(self):
        "Testing the `distance` GeoQuerySet method on geodetic coordnate systems."
        if oracle: tol = 2
        else: tol = 5

        # Testing geodetic distance calculation with a non-point geometry
        # (a LineString of Wollongong and Shellharbour coords).
        ls = LineString( ( (150.902, -34.4245), (150.87, -34.5789) ) )
        if oracle or connection.ops.geography:
            # Reference query:
            #  SELECT ST_distance_sphere(point, ST_GeomFromText('LINESTRING(150.9020 -34.4245,150.8700 -34.5789)', 4326)) FROM distapp_australiacity ORDER BY name;
            distances = [1120954.92533513, 140575.720018241, 640396.662906304,
                         60580.9693849269, 972807.955955075, 568451.8357838,
                         40435.4335201384, 0, 68272.3896586844, 12375.0643697706, 0]
            qs = AustraliaCity.objects.distance(ls).order_by('name')
            for city, distance in zip(qs, distances):
                # Testing equivalence to within a meter.
                self.assertAlmostEqual(distance, city.distance.m, 0)
        else:
            # PostGIS 1.4 and below is limited to disance queries only
            # to/from point geometries, check for raising of ValueError.
            self.assertRaises(ValueError, AustraliaCity.objects.distance, ls)
            self.assertRaises(ValueError, AustraliaCity.objects.distance, ls.wkt)

        # Got the reference distances using the raw SQL statements:
        #  SELECT ST_distance_spheroid(point, ST_GeomFromText('POINT(151.231341 -33.952685)', 4326), 'SPHEROID["WGS 84",6378137.0,298.257223563]') FROM distapp_australiacity WHERE (NOT (id = 11));
        #  SELECT ST_distance_sphere(point, ST_GeomFromText('POINT(151.231341 -33.952685)', 4326)) FROM distapp_australiacity WHERE (NOT (id = 11));  st_distance_sphere
        if connection.ops.postgis and connection.ops.proj_version_tuple() >= (4, 7, 0):
            # PROJ.4 versions 4.7+ have updated datums, and thus different
            # distance values.
            spheroid_distances = [60504.0628957201, 77023.9489850262, 49154.8867574404,
                                  90847.4358768573, 217402.811919332, 709599.234564757,
                                  640011.483550888, 7772.00667991925, 1047861.78619339,
                                  1165126.55236034]
            sphere_distances = [60580.9693849267, 77144.0435286473, 49199.4415344719,
                                90804.7533823494, 217713.384600405, 709134.127242793,
                                639828.157159169, 7786.82949717788, 1049204.06569028,
                                1162623.7238134]

        else:
            spheroid_distances = [60504.0628825298, 77023.948962654, 49154.8867507115,
                                  90847.435881812, 217402.811862568, 709599.234619957,
                                  640011.483583758, 7772.00667666425, 1047861.7859506,
                                  1165126.55237647]
            sphere_distances = [60580.7612632291, 77143.7785056615, 49199.2725132184,
                                90804.4414289463, 217712.63666124, 709131.691061906,
                                639825.959074112, 7786.80274606706, 1049200.46122281,
                                1162619.7297006]

        # Testing with spheroid distances first.
        hillsdale = AustraliaCity.objects.get(name='Hillsdale')
        qs = AustraliaCity.objects.exclude(id=hillsdale.id).distance(hillsdale.point, spheroid=True)
        for i, c in enumerate(qs):
            self.assertAlmostEqual(spheroid_distances[i], c.distance.m, tol)
        if postgis:
            # PostGIS uses sphere-only distances by default, testing these as well.
            qs =  AustraliaCity.objects.exclude(id=hillsdale.id).distance(hillsdale.point)
            for i, c in enumerate(qs):
                self.assertAlmostEqual(sphere_distances[i], c.distance.m, tol)

    @no_oracle # Oracle already handles geographic distance calculation.
    def test03c_distance_method(self):
        "Testing the `distance` GeoQuerySet method used with `transform` on a geographic field."
        # Normally you can't compute distances from a geometry field
        # that is not a PointField (on PostGIS 1.4 and below).
        if not connection.ops.geography:
            self.assertRaises(ValueError, CensusZipcode.objects.distance, self.stx_pnt)

        # We'll be using a Polygon (created by buffering the centroid
        # of 77005 to 100m) -- which aren't allowed in geographic distance
        # queries normally, however our field has been transformed to
        # a non-geographic system.
        z = SouthTexasZipcode.objects.get(name='77005')

        # Reference query:
        # SELECT ST_Distance(ST_Transform("distapp_censuszipcode"."poly", 32140), ST_GeomFromText('<buffer_wkt>', 32140)) FROM "distapp_censuszipcode";
        dists_m = [3553.30384972258, 1243.18391525602, 2186.15439472242]

        # Having our buffer in the SRID of the transformation and of the field
        # -- should get the same results. The first buffer has no need for
        # transformation SQL because it is the same SRID as what was given
        # to `transform()`.  The second buffer will need to be transformed,
        # however.
        buf1 = z.poly.centroid.buffer(100)
        buf2 = buf1.transform(4269, clone=True)
        ref_zips = ['77002', '77025', '77401']

        for buf in [buf1, buf2]:
            qs = CensusZipcode.objects.exclude(name='77005').transform(32140).distance(buf)
            self.assertEqual(ref_zips, self.get_names(qs))
            for i, z in enumerate(qs):
                self.assertAlmostEqual(z.distance.m, dists_m[i], 5)

    def test04_distance_lookups(self):
        "Testing the `distance_lt`, `distance_gt`, `distance_lte`, and `distance_gte` lookup types."
        # Retrieving the cities within a 20km 'donut' w/a 7km radius 'hole'
        # (thus, Houston and Southside place will be excluded as tested in
        # the `test02_dwithin` above).
        qs1 = SouthTexasCity.objects.filter(point__distance_gte=(self.stx_pnt, D(km=7))).filter(point__distance_lte=(self.stx_pnt, D(km=20)))

        # Can't determine the units on SpatiaLite from PROJ.4 string, and
        # Oracle 11 incorrectly thinks it is not projected.
        if spatialite or oracle:
            dist_qs = (qs1,)
        else:
            qs2 = SouthTexasCityFt.objects.filter(point__distance_gte=(self.stx_pnt, D(km=7))).filter(point__distance_lte=(self.stx_pnt, D(km=20)))
            dist_qs = (qs1, qs2)

        for qs in dist_qs:
            cities = self.get_names(qs)
            self.assertEqual(cities, ['Bellaire', 'Pearland', 'West University Place'])

        # Doing a distance query using Polygons instead of a Point.
        z = SouthTexasZipcode.objects.get(name='77005')
        qs = SouthTexasZipcode.objects.exclude(name='77005').filter(poly__distance_lte=(z.poly, D(m=275)))
        self.assertEqual(['77025', '77401'], self.get_names(qs))
        # If we add a little more distance 77002 should be included.
        qs = SouthTexasZipcode.objects.exclude(name='77005').filter(poly__distance_lte=(z.poly, D(m=300)))
        self.assertEqual(['77002', '77025', '77401'], self.get_names(qs))

    def test05_geodetic_distance_lookups(self):
        "Testing distance lookups on geodetic coordinate systems."
        # Line is from Canberra to Sydney.  Query is for all other cities within
        # a 100km of that line (which should exclude only Hobart & Adelaide).
        line = GEOSGeometry('LINESTRING(144.9630 -37.8143,151.2607 -33.8870)', 4326)
        dist_qs = AustraliaCity.objects.filter(point__distance_lte=(line, D(km=100)))

        if oracle or connection.ops.geography:
            # Oracle and PostGIS 1.5 can do distance lookups on arbitrary geometries.
            self.assertEqual(9, dist_qs.count())
            self.assertEqual(['Batemans Bay', 'Canberra', 'Hillsdale',
                              'Melbourne', 'Mittagong', 'Shellharbour',
                              'Sydney', 'Thirroul', 'Wollongong'],
                             self.get_names(dist_qs))
        else:
            # PostGIS 1.4 and below only allows geodetic distance queries (utilizing
            # ST_Distance_Sphere/ST_Distance_Spheroid) from Points to PointFields
            # on geometry columns.
            self.assertRaises(ValueError, dist_qs.count)

            # Ensured that a ValueError was raised, none of the rest of the test is
            # support on this backend, so bail now.
            if spatialite: return

        # Too many params (4 in this case) should raise a ValueError.
        self.assertRaises(ValueError, len,
                          AustraliaCity.objects.filter(point__distance_lte=('POINT(5 23)', D(km=100), 'spheroid', '4')))

        # Not enough params should raise a ValueError.
        self.assertRaises(ValueError, len,
                          AustraliaCity.objects.filter(point__distance_lte=('POINT(5 23)',)))

        # Getting all cities w/in 550 miles of Hobart.
        hobart = AustraliaCity.objects.get(name='Hobart')
        qs = AustraliaCity.objects.exclude(name='Hobart').filter(point__distance_lte=(hobart.point, D(mi=550)))
        cities = self.get_names(qs)
        self.assertEqual(cities, ['Batemans Bay', 'Canberra', 'Melbourne'])

        # Cities that are either really close or really far from Wollongong --
        # and using different units of distance.
        wollongong = AustraliaCity.objects.get(name='Wollongong')
        d1, d2 = D(yd=19500), D(nm=400) # Yards (~17km) & Nautical miles.

        # Normal geodetic distance lookup (uses `distance_sphere` on PostGIS.
        gq1 = Q(point__distance_lte=(wollongong.point, d1))
        gq2 = Q(point__distance_gte=(wollongong.point, d2))
        qs1 = AustraliaCity.objects.exclude(name='Wollongong').filter(gq1 | gq2)

        # Geodetic distance lookup but telling GeoDjango to use `distance_spheroid`
        # instead (we should get the same results b/c accuracy variance won't matter
        # in this test case).
        if postgis:
            gq3 = Q(point__distance_lte=(wollongong.point, d1, 'spheroid'))
            gq4 = Q(point__distance_gte=(wollongong.point, d2, 'spheroid'))
            qs2 = AustraliaCity.objects.exclude(name='Wollongong').filter(gq3 | gq4)
            querysets = [qs1, qs2]
        else:
            querysets = [qs1]

        for qs in querysets:
            cities = self.get_names(qs)
            self.assertEqual(cities, ['Adelaide', 'Hobart', 'Shellharbour', 'Thirroul'])

    def test06_area(self):
        "Testing the `area` GeoQuerySet method."
        # Reference queries:
        # SELECT ST_Area(poly) FROM distapp_southtexaszipcode;
        area_sq_m = [5437908.90234375, 10183031.4389648, 11254471.0073242, 9881708.91772461]
        # Tolerance has to be lower for Oracle and differences
        # with GEOS 3.0.0RC4
        tol = 2
        for i, z in enumerate(SouthTexasZipcode.objects.area()):
            self.assertAlmostEqual(area_sq_m[i], z.area.sq_m, tol)

    def test07_length(self):
        "Testing the `length` GeoQuerySet method."
        # Reference query (should use `length_spheroid`).
        # SELECT ST_length_spheroid(ST_GeomFromText('<wkt>', 4326) 'SPHEROID["WGS 84",6378137,298.257223563, AUTHORITY["EPSG","7030"]]');
        len_m1 = 473504.769553813
        len_m2 = 4617.668

        if spatialite:
            # Does not support geodetic coordinate systems.
            self.assertRaises(ValueError, Interstate.objects.length)
        else:
            qs = Interstate.objects.length()
            if oracle: tol = 2
            else: tol = 3
            self.assertAlmostEqual(len_m1, qs[0].length.m, tol)

        # Now doing length on a projected coordinate system.
        i10 = SouthTexasInterstate.objects.length().get(name='I-10')
        self.assertAlmostEqual(len_m2, i10.length.m, 2)

    @no_spatialite
    def test08_perimeter(self):
        "Testing the `perimeter` GeoQuerySet method."
        # Reference query:
        # SELECT ST_Perimeter(distapp_southtexaszipcode.poly) FROM distapp_southtexaszipcode;
        perim_m = [18404.3550889361, 15627.2108551001, 20632.5588368978, 17094.5996143697]
        if oracle: tol = 2
        else: tol = 7
        for i, z in enumerate(SouthTexasZipcode.objects.perimeter()):
            self.assertAlmostEqual(perim_m[i], z.perimeter.m, tol)

        # Running on points; should return 0.
        for i, c in enumerate(SouthTexasCity.objects.perimeter(model_att='perim')):
            self.assertEqual(0, c.perim.m)

    def test09_measurement_null_fields(self):
        "Testing the measurement GeoQuerySet methods on fields with NULL values."
        # Creating SouthTexasZipcode w/NULL value.
        SouthTexasZipcode.objects.create(name='78212')
        # Performing distance/area queries against the NULL PolygonField,
        # and ensuring the result of the operations is None.
        htown = SouthTexasCity.objects.get(name='Downtown Houston')
        z = SouthTexasZipcode.objects.distance(htown.point).area().get(name='78212')
        self.assertEqual(None, z.distance)
        self.assertEqual(None, z.area)