Is there a web page where I can test a WMS URL?Somebody knows a test to my application using WMS 1.1 (as a client) with OGC Standard?is there any online WFS gazeteer client which runs on my web browser or exposes http requests?WMS with Access Control (ACL) for different users? Or solution for thousands of points on web map?WMS + Google Earth + tilted view = alignment failure?Is there a Python Lib for requesting WMS/WFS and saving as image/PDF?How to style a WMS layer?OpenLayers alternatives supporting more client-side featuresOpenlayers map WMS stretched by latitudeGetting a WMS-like bounding box from WMTS servicesWhere does ArcGIS Desktop get image data from?How to pre-render map tilesCannot seem connect to WMS server

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Is there a web page where I can test a WMS URL?


Somebody knows a test to my application using WMS 1.1 (as a client) with OGC Standard?is there any online WFS gazeteer client which runs on my web browser or exposes http requests?WMS with Access Control (ACL) for different users? Or solution for thousands of points on web map?WMS + Google Earth + tilted view = alignment failure?Is there a Python Lib for requesting WMS/WFS and saving as image/PDF?How to style a WMS layer?OpenLayers alternatives supporting more client-side featuresOpenlayers map WMS stretched by latitudeGetting a WMS-like bounding box from WMTS servicesWhere does ArcGIS Desktop get image data from?How to pre-render map tilesCannot seem connect to WMS server






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








7















I am using JMP 9, which supports WMS maps (as a client), but it doesn't seem to be working now.



Is there a web based, or small install GIS client on which I can test a WMS URL?



[To clarify, I was looking for something that would help me find out the correct querystring parameters to send, as the service I was hoping to use did not specify them]



Thanks










share|improve this question
























  • you can test your wms url in the portal of bhuvan bhuvan.nrsc.gov.in/map/bhuvan/bhuvan2d.php# in that goto the Tools tab then select AddLayer then go to WMS Layer in that give your wms url and layer name it will overlay your wms layer on the base map

    – user28536
    Jul 4 '16 at 11:19











  • example url bhuvan5.nrsc.gov.in/bhuvan/gwc/service/wms and layer name as vector:MH_LULC50K_0506

    – user28536
    Jul 4 '16 at 11:23


















7















I am using JMP 9, which supports WMS maps (as a client), but it doesn't seem to be working now.



Is there a web based, or small install GIS client on which I can test a WMS URL?



[To clarify, I was looking for something that would help me find out the correct querystring parameters to send, as the service I was hoping to use did not specify them]



Thanks










share|improve this question
























  • you can test your wms url in the portal of bhuvan bhuvan.nrsc.gov.in/map/bhuvan/bhuvan2d.php# in that goto the Tools tab then select AddLayer then go to WMS Layer in that give your wms url and layer name it will overlay your wms layer on the base map

    – user28536
    Jul 4 '16 at 11:19











  • example url bhuvan5.nrsc.gov.in/bhuvan/gwc/service/wms and layer name as vector:MH_LULC50K_0506

    – user28536
    Jul 4 '16 at 11:23














7












7








7


2






I am using JMP 9, which supports WMS maps (as a client), but it doesn't seem to be working now.



Is there a web based, or small install GIS client on which I can test a WMS URL?



[To clarify, I was looking for something that would help me find out the correct querystring parameters to send, as the service I was hoping to use did not specify them]



Thanks










share|improve this question
















I am using JMP 9, which supports WMS maps (as a client), but it doesn't seem to be working now.



Is there a web based, or small install GIS client on which I can test a WMS URL?



[To clarify, I was looking for something that would help me find out the correct querystring parameters to send, as the service I was hoping to use did not specify them]



Thanks







wms software-recommendations






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Sep 28 '10 at 1:03







Neil McGuigan

















asked Sep 27 '10 at 2:59









Neil McGuiganNeil McGuigan

2931313




2931313












  • you can test your wms url in the portal of bhuvan bhuvan.nrsc.gov.in/map/bhuvan/bhuvan2d.php# in that goto the Tools tab then select AddLayer then go to WMS Layer in that give your wms url and layer name it will overlay your wms layer on the base map

    – user28536
    Jul 4 '16 at 11:19











  • example url bhuvan5.nrsc.gov.in/bhuvan/gwc/service/wms and layer name as vector:MH_LULC50K_0506

    – user28536
    Jul 4 '16 at 11:23


















  • you can test your wms url in the portal of bhuvan bhuvan.nrsc.gov.in/map/bhuvan/bhuvan2d.php# in that goto the Tools tab then select AddLayer then go to WMS Layer in that give your wms url and layer name it will overlay your wms layer on the base map

    – user28536
    Jul 4 '16 at 11:19











  • example url bhuvan5.nrsc.gov.in/bhuvan/gwc/service/wms and layer name as vector:MH_LULC50K_0506

    – user28536
    Jul 4 '16 at 11:23

















you can test your wms url in the portal of bhuvan bhuvan.nrsc.gov.in/map/bhuvan/bhuvan2d.php# in that goto the Tools tab then select AddLayer then go to WMS Layer in that give your wms url and layer name it will overlay your wms layer on the base map

– user28536
Jul 4 '16 at 11:19





you can test your wms url in the portal of bhuvan bhuvan.nrsc.gov.in/map/bhuvan/bhuvan2d.php# in that goto the Tools tab then select AddLayer then go to WMS Layer in that give your wms url and layer name it will overlay your wms layer on the base map

– user28536
Jul 4 '16 at 11:19













example url bhuvan5.nrsc.gov.in/bhuvan/gwc/service/wms and layer name as vector:MH_LULC50K_0506

– user28536
Jul 4 '16 at 11:23






example url bhuvan5.nrsc.gov.in/bhuvan/gwc/service/wms and layer name as vector:MH_LULC50K_0506

– user28536
Jul 4 '16 at 11:23











6 Answers
6






active

oldest

votes


















8














Try to check your WMS with the firefox plug-in - "WMS Inspector" - https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/91406/ (Not working anymore)



Edit: check github page https://github.com/amercader/WMS-Inspector/wiki






share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    This addon does not seem to work with recent versions of Firefox

    – tofarr
    Feb 5 '15 at 17:33











  • Sorry, I'm not the author. It's what I used 4 yrs ago.

    – Vadim
    Feb 6 '15 at 17:45


















3














You can use WMS Viewer On Line



It does exactly what you talk about. You enter URL and layer name and you see the map, its legend and the GetCapabilities command.






share|improve this answer























  • The site wmsviewer-rodis.rhcloud.com seems to be out of service now.

    – jonasfh
    Nov 27 '18 at 10:55


















2














A quick and easy way to do this would be using jsfiddle. You can just load the javascript mapping library of your choice and do a let more than just test the WMS URL.



This is using Leaflet. Just replace the WMS url with your own and click 'Run'
http://jsfiddle.net/tmoy0f0g/1/






share|improve this answer























  • can you share the code with me

    – user28536
    Jul 4 '16 at 11:16











  • You have to update both the URL and the layer name, otherwise it makes arbitrary getMap WMS requests.

    – Josip Rodin
    Oct 12 '16 at 8:19


















0














I use Gaia:




Gaia is a platform designed for advanced geospatial network and SDI
needs. Based on the CarbonTools PRO open-geospatial development
toolkit, this viewer can access an array of geospatial sources such as
the Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC) Web Mapping Service (WMS), Web
Map Tile Service (WMTS), Web Coverage Service (WCS), Web Feature
Service (WFS), and Filter Encoding (FE), services such as Microsoft
Bing Maps, Yahoo! Maps and OpenStreetMap (OSM), as well as file
formats such as ESRI Shapefiles, Google Earth KML/KMZ, DXF, MIF,
Geography Markup Language (GML) and GML Simple Features (GMLsf).







share|improve this answer

























  • I use Gaia as well can be found via searching the Carbon Project thecarbonproject.com

    – CDBrown
    Sep 27 '10 at 23:54











  • That URL is dead now.

    – Steve Bennett
    Apr 10 '15 at 3:12


















0














uDig has worked for me in the past:




uDig is an open source (EPL and BSD) desktop application framework,
built with Eclipse Rich Client (RCP) technology.







share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    That's not a web site.

    – Steve Bennett
    Apr 10 '15 at 3:13


















0














It is unclear whether you are interested in testing whether JMP9 can consume a WMS properly, or whether it can act as a WMS server.



If you want to test if your software can act as a WMS client, you can point it to a service like one of the services at MassGIS: https://wiki.state.ma.us/confluence/display/massgis/Home



If you want to test if your software can act as a WMS Server, you can simply make a WMS request to your software from a Web Browser. Using a desktop client like QGIS would even be easier.






share|improve this answer

























  • Hi David. I am hoping to see that it works properly as a client. It takes 2 inputs, the URL and the Layers list, and I think it sends the BBOX and size parameters automatically. Getting a hang of the proper querystring parameters now. Will check out the massgis site. Thx

    – Neil McGuigan
    Sep 28 '10 at 1:00











  • Take a look at this page: lyceum.massgis.state.ma.us/wiki/… It gives you a pretty good primer on how to start with one of their WMS services.

    – DavidF
    Sep 28 '10 at 16:13











  • I don't know how JMP implements it's WMS client, but for an application like QGIS or ArcGIS, you specify the WMS base URL, like giswebservices.massgis.state.ma.us/geoserver/wms? The software then sends a getCapabilities request to determine available layers, available protocol versions, what spatial reference system the layers are available in, etc. The software then allows you to select one of the advertised layers and add it to your map. The software then handles all of the getMap requests for the images.

    – DavidF
    Sep 28 '10 at 16:17






  • 1





    That URL is dead now.

    – Steve Bennett
    Apr 10 '15 at 3:12











  • @SteveBennett It looks like they changed websites in 2011. I have updated the link.

    – Kelly Thomas
    Apr 10 '15 at 5:42












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6 Answers
6






active

oldest

votes








6 Answers
6






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









8














Try to check your WMS with the firefox plug-in - "WMS Inspector" - https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/91406/ (Not working anymore)



Edit: check github page https://github.com/amercader/WMS-Inspector/wiki






share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    This addon does not seem to work with recent versions of Firefox

    – tofarr
    Feb 5 '15 at 17:33











  • Sorry, I'm not the author. It's what I used 4 yrs ago.

    – Vadim
    Feb 6 '15 at 17:45















8














Try to check your WMS with the firefox plug-in - "WMS Inspector" - https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/91406/ (Not working anymore)



Edit: check github page https://github.com/amercader/WMS-Inspector/wiki






share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    This addon does not seem to work with recent versions of Firefox

    – tofarr
    Feb 5 '15 at 17:33











  • Sorry, I'm not the author. It's what I used 4 yrs ago.

    – Vadim
    Feb 6 '15 at 17:45













8












8








8







Try to check your WMS with the firefox plug-in - "WMS Inspector" - https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/91406/ (Not working anymore)



Edit: check github page https://github.com/amercader/WMS-Inspector/wiki






share|improve this answer















Try to check your WMS with the firefox plug-in - "WMS Inspector" - https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/91406/ (Not working anymore)



Edit: check github page https://github.com/amercader/WMS-Inspector/wiki







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Apr 4 at 7:12









mrvinent

155




155










answered Sep 27 '10 at 3:28









VadimVadim

3,55022040




3,55022040







  • 1





    This addon does not seem to work with recent versions of Firefox

    – tofarr
    Feb 5 '15 at 17:33











  • Sorry, I'm not the author. It's what I used 4 yrs ago.

    – Vadim
    Feb 6 '15 at 17:45












  • 1





    This addon does not seem to work with recent versions of Firefox

    – tofarr
    Feb 5 '15 at 17:33











  • Sorry, I'm not the author. It's what I used 4 yrs ago.

    – Vadim
    Feb 6 '15 at 17:45







1




1





This addon does not seem to work with recent versions of Firefox

– tofarr
Feb 5 '15 at 17:33





This addon does not seem to work with recent versions of Firefox

– tofarr
Feb 5 '15 at 17:33













Sorry, I'm not the author. It's what I used 4 yrs ago.

– Vadim
Feb 6 '15 at 17:45





Sorry, I'm not the author. It's what I used 4 yrs ago.

– Vadim
Feb 6 '15 at 17:45













3














You can use WMS Viewer On Line



It does exactly what you talk about. You enter URL and layer name and you see the map, its legend and the GetCapabilities command.






share|improve this answer























  • The site wmsviewer-rodis.rhcloud.com seems to be out of service now.

    – jonasfh
    Nov 27 '18 at 10:55















3














You can use WMS Viewer On Line



It does exactly what you talk about. You enter URL and layer name and you see the map, its legend and the GetCapabilities command.






share|improve this answer























  • The site wmsviewer-rodis.rhcloud.com seems to be out of service now.

    – jonasfh
    Nov 27 '18 at 10:55













3












3








3







You can use WMS Viewer On Line



It does exactly what you talk about. You enter URL and layer name and you see the map, its legend and the GetCapabilities command.






share|improve this answer













You can use WMS Viewer On Line



It does exactly what you talk about. You enter URL and layer name and you see the map, its legend and the GetCapabilities command.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Oct 15 '15 at 10:02









Pantelis RodisPantelis Rodis

311




311












  • The site wmsviewer-rodis.rhcloud.com seems to be out of service now.

    – jonasfh
    Nov 27 '18 at 10:55

















  • The site wmsviewer-rodis.rhcloud.com seems to be out of service now.

    – jonasfh
    Nov 27 '18 at 10:55
















The site wmsviewer-rodis.rhcloud.com seems to be out of service now.

– jonasfh
Nov 27 '18 at 10:55





The site wmsviewer-rodis.rhcloud.com seems to be out of service now.

– jonasfh
Nov 27 '18 at 10:55











2














A quick and easy way to do this would be using jsfiddle. You can just load the javascript mapping library of your choice and do a let more than just test the WMS URL.



This is using Leaflet. Just replace the WMS url with your own and click 'Run'
http://jsfiddle.net/tmoy0f0g/1/






share|improve this answer























  • can you share the code with me

    – user28536
    Jul 4 '16 at 11:16











  • You have to update both the URL and the layer name, otherwise it makes arbitrary getMap WMS requests.

    – Josip Rodin
    Oct 12 '16 at 8:19















2














A quick and easy way to do this would be using jsfiddle. You can just load the javascript mapping library of your choice and do a let more than just test the WMS URL.



This is using Leaflet. Just replace the WMS url with your own and click 'Run'
http://jsfiddle.net/tmoy0f0g/1/






share|improve this answer























  • can you share the code with me

    – user28536
    Jul 4 '16 at 11:16











  • You have to update both the URL and the layer name, otherwise it makes arbitrary getMap WMS requests.

    – Josip Rodin
    Oct 12 '16 at 8:19













2












2








2







A quick and easy way to do this would be using jsfiddle. You can just load the javascript mapping library of your choice and do a let more than just test the WMS URL.



This is using Leaflet. Just replace the WMS url with your own and click 'Run'
http://jsfiddle.net/tmoy0f0g/1/






share|improve this answer













A quick and easy way to do this would be using jsfiddle. You can just load the javascript mapping library of your choice and do a let more than just test the WMS URL.



This is using Leaflet. Just replace the WMS url with your own and click 'Run'
http://jsfiddle.net/tmoy0f0g/1/







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Apr 10 '15 at 5:15









spatialthoughtsspatialthoughts

3,5731523




3,5731523












  • can you share the code with me

    – user28536
    Jul 4 '16 at 11:16











  • You have to update both the URL and the layer name, otherwise it makes arbitrary getMap WMS requests.

    – Josip Rodin
    Oct 12 '16 at 8:19

















  • can you share the code with me

    – user28536
    Jul 4 '16 at 11:16











  • You have to update both the URL and the layer name, otherwise it makes arbitrary getMap WMS requests.

    – Josip Rodin
    Oct 12 '16 at 8:19
















can you share the code with me

– user28536
Jul 4 '16 at 11:16





can you share the code with me

– user28536
Jul 4 '16 at 11:16













You have to update both the URL and the layer name, otherwise it makes arbitrary getMap WMS requests.

– Josip Rodin
Oct 12 '16 at 8:19





You have to update both the URL and the layer name, otherwise it makes arbitrary getMap WMS requests.

– Josip Rodin
Oct 12 '16 at 8:19











0














I use Gaia:




Gaia is a platform designed for advanced geospatial network and SDI
needs. Based on the CarbonTools PRO open-geospatial development
toolkit, this viewer can access an array of geospatial sources such as
the Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC) Web Mapping Service (WMS), Web
Map Tile Service (WMTS), Web Coverage Service (WCS), Web Feature
Service (WFS), and Filter Encoding (FE), services such as Microsoft
Bing Maps, Yahoo! Maps and OpenStreetMap (OSM), as well as file
formats such as ESRI Shapefiles, Google Earth KML/KMZ, DXF, MIF,
Geography Markup Language (GML) and GML Simple Features (GMLsf).







share|improve this answer

























  • I use Gaia as well can be found via searching the Carbon Project thecarbonproject.com

    – CDBrown
    Sep 27 '10 at 23:54











  • That URL is dead now.

    – Steve Bennett
    Apr 10 '15 at 3:12















0














I use Gaia:




Gaia is a platform designed for advanced geospatial network and SDI
needs. Based on the CarbonTools PRO open-geospatial development
toolkit, this viewer can access an array of geospatial sources such as
the Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC) Web Mapping Service (WMS), Web
Map Tile Service (WMTS), Web Coverage Service (WCS), Web Feature
Service (WFS), and Filter Encoding (FE), services such as Microsoft
Bing Maps, Yahoo! Maps and OpenStreetMap (OSM), as well as file
formats such as ESRI Shapefiles, Google Earth KML/KMZ, DXF, MIF,
Geography Markup Language (GML) and GML Simple Features (GMLsf).







share|improve this answer

























  • I use Gaia as well can be found via searching the Carbon Project thecarbonproject.com

    – CDBrown
    Sep 27 '10 at 23:54











  • That URL is dead now.

    – Steve Bennett
    Apr 10 '15 at 3:12













0












0








0







I use Gaia:




Gaia is a platform designed for advanced geospatial network and SDI
needs. Based on the CarbonTools PRO open-geospatial development
toolkit, this viewer can access an array of geospatial sources such as
the Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC) Web Mapping Service (WMS), Web
Map Tile Service (WMTS), Web Coverage Service (WCS), Web Feature
Service (WFS), and Filter Encoding (FE), services such as Microsoft
Bing Maps, Yahoo! Maps and OpenStreetMap (OSM), as well as file
formats such as ESRI Shapefiles, Google Earth KML/KMZ, DXF, MIF,
Geography Markup Language (GML) and GML Simple Features (GMLsf).







share|improve this answer















I use Gaia:




Gaia is a platform designed for advanced geospatial network and SDI
needs. Based on the CarbonTools PRO open-geospatial development
toolkit, this viewer can access an array of geospatial sources such as
the Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC) Web Mapping Service (WMS), Web
Map Tile Service (WMTS), Web Coverage Service (WCS), Web Feature
Service (WFS), and Filter Encoding (FE), services such as Microsoft
Bing Maps, Yahoo! Maps and OpenStreetMap (OSM), as well as file
formats such as ESRI Shapefiles, Google Earth KML/KMZ, DXF, MIF,
Geography Markup Language (GML) and GML Simple Features (GMLsf).








share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Apr 10 '15 at 4:55









PolyGeo

53.9k1781245




53.9k1781245










answered Sep 27 '10 at 4:26









SimonSimon

7,95764288




7,95764288












  • I use Gaia as well can be found via searching the Carbon Project thecarbonproject.com

    – CDBrown
    Sep 27 '10 at 23:54











  • That URL is dead now.

    – Steve Bennett
    Apr 10 '15 at 3:12

















  • I use Gaia as well can be found via searching the Carbon Project thecarbonproject.com

    – CDBrown
    Sep 27 '10 at 23:54











  • That URL is dead now.

    – Steve Bennett
    Apr 10 '15 at 3:12
















I use Gaia as well can be found via searching the Carbon Project thecarbonproject.com

– CDBrown
Sep 27 '10 at 23:54





I use Gaia as well can be found via searching the Carbon Project thecarbonproject.com

– CDBrown
Sep 27 '10 at 23:54













That URL is dead now.

– Steve Bennett
Apr 10 '15 at 3:12





That URL is dead now.

– Steve Bennett
Apr 10 '15 at 3:12











0














uDig has worked for me in the past:




uDig is an open source (EPL and BSD) desktop application framework,
built with Eclipse Rich Client (RCP) technology.







share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    That's not a web site.

    – Steve Bennett
    Apr 10 '15 at 3:13















0














uDig has worked for me in the past:




uDig is an open source (EPL and BSD) desktop application framework,
built with Eclipse Rich Client (RCP) technology.







share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    That's not a web site.

    – Steve Bennett
    Apr 10 '15 at 3:13













0












0








0







uDig has worked for me in the past:




uDig is an open source (EPL and BSD) desktop application framework,
built with Eclipse Rich Client (RCP) technology.







share|improve this answer















uDig has worked for me in the past:




uDig is an open source (EPL and BSD) desktop application framework,
built with Eclipse Rich Client (RCP) technology.








share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Apr 10 '15 at 4:59









PolyGeo

53.9k1781245




53.9k1781245










answered Sep 27 '10 at 13:39









user890user890

3,62313061




3,62313061







  • 1





    That's not a web site.

    – Steve Bennett
    Apr 10 '15 at 3:13












  • 1





    That's not a web site.

    – Steve Bennett
    Apr 10 '15 at 3:13







1




1





That's not a web site.

– Steve Bennett
Apr 10 '15 at 3:13





That's not a web site.

– Steve Bennett
Apr 10 '15 at 3:13











0














It is unclear whether you are interested in testing whether JMP9 can consume a WMS properly, or whether it can act as a WMS server.



If you want to test if your software can act as a WMS client, you can point it to a service like one of the services at MassGIS: https://wiki.state.ma.us/confluence/display/massgis/Home



If you want to test if your software can act as a WMS Server, you can simply make a WMS request to your software from a Web Browser. Using a desktop client like QGIS would even be easier.






share|improve this answer

























  • Hi David. I am hoping to see that it works properly as a client. It takes 2 inputs, the URL and the Layers list, and I think it sends the BBOX and size parameters automatically. Getting a hang of the proper querystring parameters now. Will check out the massgis site. Thx

    – Neil McGuigan
    Sep 28 '10 at 1:00











  • Take a look at this page: lyceum.massgis.state.ma.us/wiki/… It gives you a pretty good primer on how to start with one of their WMS services.

    – DavidF
    Sep 28 '10 at 16:13











  • I don't know how JMP implements it's WMS client, but for an application like QGIS or ArcGIS, you specify the WMS base URL, like giswebservices.massgis.state.ma.us/geoserver/wms? The software then sends a getCapabilities request to determine available layers, available protocol versions, what spatial reference system the layers are available in, etc. The software then allows you to select one of the advertised layers and add it to your map. The software then handles all of the getMap requests for the images.

    – DavidF
    Sep 28 '10 at 16:17






  • 1





    That URL is dead now.

    – Steve Bennett
    Apr 10 '15 at 3:12











  • @SteveBennett It looks like they changed websites in 2011. I have updated the link.

    – Kelly Thomas
    Apr 10 '15 at 5:42
















0














It is unclear whether you are interested in testing whether JMP9 can consume a WMS properly, or whether it can act as a WMS server.



If you want to test if your software can act as a WMS client, you can point it to a service like one of the services at MassGIS: https://wiki.state.ma.us/confluence/display/massgis/Home



If you want to test if your software can act as a WMS Server, you can simply make a WMS request to your software from a Web Browser. Using a desktop client like QGIS would even be easier.






share|improve this answer

























  • Hi David. I am hoping to see that it works properly as a client. It takes 2 inputs, the URL and the Layers list, and I think it sends the BBOX and size parameters automatically. Getting a hang of the proper querystring parameters now. Will check out the massgis site. Thx

    – Neil McGuigan
    Sep 28 '10 at 1:00











  • Take a look at this page: lyceum.massgis.state.ma.us/wiki/… It gives you a pretty good primer on how to start with one of their WMS services.

    – DavidF
    Sep 28 '10 at 16:13











  • I don't know how JMP implements it's WMS client, but for an application like QGIS or ArcGIS, you specify the WMS base URL, like giswebservices.massgis.state.ma.us/geoserver/wms? The software then sends a getCapabilities request to determine available layers, available protocol versions, what spatial reference system the layers are available in, etc. The software then allows you to select one of the advertised layers and add it to your map. The software then handles all of the getMap requests for the images.

    – DavidF
    Sep 28 '10 at 16:17






  • 1





    That URL is dead now.

    – Steve Bennett
    Apr 10 '15 at 3:12











  • @SteveBennett It looks like they changed websites in 2011. I have updated the link.

    – Kelly Thomas
    Apr 10 '15 at 5:42














0












0








0







It is unclear whether you are interested in testing whether JMP9 can consume a WMS properly, or whether it can act as a WMS server.



If you want to test if your software can act as a WMS client, you can point it to a service like one of the services at MassGIS: https://wiki.state.ma.us/confluence/display/massgis/Home



If you want to test if your software can act as a WMS Server, you can simply make a WMS request to your software from a Web Browser. Using a desktop client like QGIS would even be easier.






share|improve this answer















It is unclear whether you are interested in testing whether JMP9 can consume a WMS properly, or whether it can act as a WMS server.



If you want to test if your software can act as a WMS client, you can point it to a service like one of the services at MassGIS: https://wiki.state.ma.us/confluence/display/massgis/Home



If you want to test if your software can act as a WMS Server, you can simply make a WMS request to your software from a Web Browser. Using a desktop client like QGIS would even be easier.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Apr 10 '15 at 6:03









Kelly Thomas

1,0821920




1,0821920










answered Sep 27 '10 at 21:32









DavidFDavidF

4,44212131




4,44212131












  • Hi David. I am hoping to see that it works properly as a client. It takes 2 inputs, the URL and the Layers list, and I think it sends the BBOX and size parameters automatically. Getting a hang of the proper querystring parameters now. Will check out the massgis site. Thx

    – Neil McGuigan
    Sep 28 '10 at 1:00











  • Take a look at this page: lyceum.massgis.state.ma.us/wiki/… It gives you a pretty good primer on how to start with one of their WMS services.

    – DavidF
    Sep 28 '10 at 16:13











  • I don't know how JMP implements it's WMS client, but for an application like QGIS or ArcGIS, you specify the WMS base URL, like giswebservices.massgis.state.ma.us/geoserver/wms? The software then sends a getCapabilities request to determine available layers, available protocol versions, what spatial reference system the layers are available in, etc. The software then allows you to select one of the advertised layers and add it to your map. The software then handles all of the getMap requests for the images.

    – DavidF
    Sep 28 '10 at 16:17






  • 1





    That URL is dead now.

    – Steve Bennett
    Apr 10 '15 at 3:12











  • @SteveBennett It looks like they changed websites in 2011. I have updated the link.

    – Kelly Thomas
    Apr 10 '15 at 5:42


















  • Hi David. I am hoping to see that it works properly as a client. It takes 2 inputs, the URL and the Layers list, and I think it sends the BBOX and size parameters automatically. Getting a hang of the proper querystring parameters now. Will check out the massgis site. Thx

    – Neil McGuigan
    Sep 28 '10 at 1:00











  • Take a look at this page: lyceum.massgis.state.ma.us/wiki/… It gives you a pretty good primer on how to start with one of their WMS services.

    – DavidF
    Sep 28 '10 at 16:13











  • I don't know how JMP implements it's WMS client, but for an application like QGIS or ArcGIS, you specify the WMS base URL, like giswebservices.massgis.state.ma.us/geoserver/wms? The software then sends a getCapabilities request to determine available layers, available protocol versions, what spatial reference system the layers are available in, etc. The software then allows you to select one of the advertised layers and add it to your map. The software then handles all of the getMap requests for the images.

    – DavidF
    Sep 28 '10 at 16:17






  • 1





    That URL is dead now.

    – Steve Bennett
    Apr 10 '15 at 3:12











  • @SteveBennett It looks like they changed websites in 2011. I have updated the link.

    – Kelly Thomas
    Apr 10 '15 at 5:42

















Hi David. I am hoping to see that it works properly as a client. It takes 2 inputs, the URL and the Layers list, and I think it sends the BBOX and size parameters automatically. Getting a hang of the proper querystring parameters now. Will check out the massgis site. Thx

– Neil McGuigan
Sep 28 '10 at 1:00





Hi David. I am hoping to see that it works properly as a client. It takes 2 inputs, the URL and the Layers list, and I think it sends the BBOX and size parameters automatically. Getting a hang of the proper querystring parameters now. Will check out the massgis site. Thx

– Neil McGuigan
Sep 28 '10 at 1:00













Take a look at this page: lyceum.massgis.state.ma.us/wiki/… It gives you a pretty good primer on how to start with one of their WMS services.

– DavidF
Sep 28 '10 at 16:13





Take a look at this page: lyceum.massgis.state.ma.us/wiki/… It gives you a pretty good primer on how to start with one of their WMS services.

– DavidF
Sep 28 '10 at 16:13













I don't know how JMP implements it's WMS client, but for an application like QGIS or ArcGIS, you specify the WMS base URL, like giswebservices.massgis.state.ma.us/geoserver/wms? The software then sends a getCapabilities request to determine available layers, available protocol versions, what spatial reference system the layers are available in, etc. The software then allows you to select one of the advertised layers and add it to your map. The software then handles all of the getMap requests for the images.

– DavidF
Sep 28 '10 at 16:17





I don't know how JMP implements it's WMS client, but for an application like QGIS or ArcGIS, you specify the WMS base URL, like giswebservices.massgis.state.ma.us/geoserver/wms? The software then sends a getCapabilities request to determine available layers, available protocol versions, what spatial reference system the layers are available in, etc. The software then allows you to select one of the advertised layers and add it to your map. The software then handles all of the getMap requests for the images.

– DavidF
Sep 28 '10 at 16:17




1




1





That URL is dead now.

– Steve Bennett
Apr 10 '15 at 3:12





That URL is dead now.

– Steve Bennett
Apr 10 '15 at 3:12













@SteveBennett It looks like they changed websites in 2011. I have updated the link.

– Kelly Thomas
Apr 10 '15 at 5:42






@SteveBennett It looks like they changed websites in 2011. I have updated the link.

– Kelly Thomas
Apr 10 '15 at 5:42


















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