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Open Geospatial Consortium

 
Wikipedia: Open Geospatial Consortium

The Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC), an international voluntary consensus standards organization, originated in 1994. In the OGC, more than 370+ commercial, governmental, nonprofit and research organizations worldwide collaborate in an open consensus process encouraging development and implementation of standards for geospatial content and services, GIS data processing and data sharing.

Contents

History

A predecessor organization, OGF, the Open GRASS Foundation, started in 1992.

From 1994 to 2004 the organization also used the name Open GIS Consortium.

The OGC website gives a detailed history of the OGC.[1]

Standards

Most of the OGC standards depend on a generalized architecture captured in a set of documents collectively called the Abstract Specification, which describes a basic data model for representing geographic features. Atop the Abstract Specification members have developed and continue to develop a growing number of specifications, or standards to serve specific needs for interoperable location and geospatial technology, including GIS.

Relationship between clients/servers and some OGC protocols

As of 2009 the OGC standards baseline comprises 28 standards, including:

  • OGC Reference Model - a complete set of reference models
  • WMS - Web Map Service: provides map images
  • WFS - Web Feature Service: for retrieving or altering feature descriptions
  • WCS - Web Coverage Service: provides coverage objects from a specified region
  • WPS - Web Processing Service: remote processing service
  • CSW - Web Catalog Service: access to catalog information
  • SFS - Simple Features - SQL
  • GML - Geography Markup Language: XML-format for geographical information
  • KML - Keyhole Markup Language: XML-based language schema for expressing geographic annotation and visualization on existing (or future) Web-based, two-dimensional maps and three-dimensional Earth browsers
  • OWS - OGC Web Service Common
  • GeoXACML - Geospatial eXtensible Access Control Markup Language (as of 2009 in the process of standardization)

The design of standards originally built on the HTTP web services paradigm for message-based interactions in web-based systems. However, in the last year[vague] the members have started working on defining a common approach for SOAP protocol and WSDL bindings. Considerable progress has occurred in defining Representational State Transfer web services.

Organization structure

The OGC has three operational units:

  1. the Specification program
  2. the Interoperability Program
  3. Outreach and Community Adoption

Collaboration

The OGC has a close relationship with ISO/TC 211 (Geographic Information/Geomatics). Volumes from the ISO 19100 series under development by this committee progressively replace the OGC abstract specification. Further, the OGC standards Web Map Service, GML and Simple Features Access have become ISO standards.

The OGC works with other international standards-bodies including W3C, OASIS, WfMC, and the IETF.

See also

External links

References


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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Open Geospatial Consortium" Read more