This is the command t.connectgrass that can be run in the OnWorks free hosting provider using one of our multiple free online workstations such as Ubuntu Online, Fedora Online, Windows online emulator or MAC OS online emulator
PROGRAM:
NAME
t.connect - Prints/sets general temporal GIS database connection for current mapset.
KEYWORDS
database, attribute table, connection settings
SYNOPSIS
t.connect
t.connect --help
t.connect [-pcdg] [driver=name] [database=name] [--help] [--verbose] [--quiet]
[--ui]
Flags:
-p
Print current connection parameters and exit
-c
Check connection parameters, set if uninitialized, and exit
-d
Set from default settings and exit
Overwrite current settings if initialized
-g
Print current connection parameter in shell style and exit
--help
Print usage summary
--verbose
Verbose module output
--quiet
Quiet module output
--ui
Force launching GUI dialog
Parameters:
driver=name
Name of database driver
Options: sqlite, pg
Default: sqlite
database=name
Name of database
Default: $GISDBASE/$LOCATION_NAME/$MAPSET/tgis/sqlite.db
DESCRIPTION
t.connect allows the user to set the temporal database connection. The default setting is
that the temporal database of type sqlite3 is located in the current mapset directory.
The -p flag will display the current temporal database connection parameters.
The -pg flag will display the current temporal database connection parameters using shell
style.
The -c flag will silently check if the temporal database connection parameters have been
set, and if not will set them to use GRASS’s default values.
NOTES
Setting the connection with t.connect will not test the connection for validity. Hence a
database connection will not be established.
The connection values are stored in the mapset’s VAR file. The -d flag will set the
default TGIS connection parameters. A SQLite database "tgis/sqlite.db" will be created in
the current mapset directory. It will be located in the "tgis" sub-directory to not
interfere with the sqlite3 database used for vector attribute storage.
In case you have tens of thousands of maps to register in the temporal database or you
need concurrent read and write access in the temporal database, consider to use a
PostgreSQL connection instead.
Be aware that you have to set the PostgreSQL connection explicitly in every mapset that
should store temporal information in the temporal database.
PostgreSQL and SQLite databases can not be mixed in a location.
EXAMPLES
SQLite
The SQLite database is created automatically when used the first time.
# use single quotes here
t.connect driver=sqlite database=’$GISDBASE/$LOCATION_NAME/PERMANENT/tgis/sqlite.db’
t.connect -p
t.info -s
PostgreSQL
When using a PostgreSQL database, the user will need to specify the TGIS database
connection for each mapset.
t.connect driver=pg database="dbname=grass_test user=soeren password=abcdefgh"
t.connect -p
t.info -s
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