PiwigoImagesAndGPX/iFrameGPX/leaflet-gpx
Léo Serre 8ed2ab1f1f Add support for nights in GPX tracks 2017-12-29 15:39:27 +01:00
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LICENSE First version 2015-01-27 18:00:59 +01:00
README.md First version 2015-01-27 18:00:59 +01:00
finish.png First version 2015-01-27 18:00:59 +01:00
gpx.js Add support for nights in GPX tracks 2017-12-29 15:39:27 +01:00
night.png Add support for nights in GPX tracks 2017-12-29 15:39:27 +01:00
pin-icon-end.png First version 2015-01-27 18:00:59 +01:00
pin-icon-start.png First version 2015-01-27 18:00:59 +01:00
pin-shadow.png First version 2015-01-27 18:00:59 +01:00
start.png First version 2015-01-27 18:00:59 +01:00

README.md

GPX plugin for Leaflet

Leaflet is a Javascript library for displaying interactive maps. This plugin, based on the work of Pavel Shramov and his leaflet-plugins, it allows for the analysis and parsing of a GPX track in order to display it as a Leaflet map layer. As it parses the GPX data, it will record information about the recorded track, including total time, moving time, total distance, elevation stats and heart-rate.

GPX parsing will automatically handle pauses in the track with a default tolerance interval of 15 seconds between points. You can configure this interval by setting max_point_interval, in milliseconds, in the options passed to the GPX constructor.

I've put together a complete example as a demo.

License

leaflet-gpx is under the BSD 2-clause license. Please refer to the attached LICENSE file and/or to the copyright header in gpx.js for more information.

Usage

Usage is very simple. Let's consider we have a Leaflet map:

var map = L.map('map');
L.tileLayer('http://{s}.tile.openstreetmap.org/{z}/{x}/{y}.png', {
  attribution: 'Map data &copy; <a href="http://www.osm.org">OpenStreetMap</a>'
}).addTo(map);

Displaying the GPX track is as easy as:

var gpx = '...'; // URL to your GPX file or the GPX itself
new L.GPX(gpx, {async: true}).on('loaded', function(e) {
  map.fitBounds(e.target.getBounds());
}).addTo(map);

If you want to display additional information about the GPX track, you can do so in the 'loaded' event handler, calling one of the following methods on the GPX object e.target:

  • get_name(): returns the name of the GPX track
  • get_distance(): returns the total track distance, in meters
  • get_start_time(): returns a Javascript Date object representing the starting time
  • get_end_time(): returns a Javascript Date object representing when the last point was recorded
  • get_moving_time(): returns the moving time, in milliseconds
  • get_total_time(): returns the total track time, in milliseconds
  • get_moving_pace(): returns the average moving pace in milliseconds per km
  • get_moving_speed(): returns the average moving speed in km per hour
  • get_elevation_gain(): returns the cumulative elevation gain, in meters
  • get_elevation_loss(): returns the cumulative elevation loss, in meters
  • get_average_hr(): returns the average heart rate (if available)

If you're not a fan of the metric system, you also have the following methods at your disposal:

  • get_distance_imp(): returns the total track distance in miles
  • get_moving_pace_imp(): returns the average moving pace in milliseconds per hour
  • get_moving_speed(): returns the average moving pace in miles per hour

The reason why these methods return milliseconds is that you have at your disposal a nice helper method to format a duration in milliseconds into a cool string like 3:07'48" or 59'32.431:

  • get_duration_string(duration, hidems), where duration is in milliseconds and hidems is an optional boolean you can use to request never to display millisecond precision.

You can also get full elevation and heartrate data with:

  • get_elevation_data() and get_elevation_data_imp()
  • get_heartrate_data() and get_heartrate_data_imp()

These methods all return an array of points [distance, value, tooltip] where the distance is either in kilometers or in miles and the elevation in meters of feet, depending on whether you use the _imp variant or not. Heart rate, obviously, doesn't change.

You can reload remote gpx file every 5 seconds with:

var gpxLayer = new L.GPX(gpxFile);

setInterval(function() {
	gpxLayer.reload();
},5000);

About marker icons

By default gpx.js will use pin-icon-start.png, pin-icon-end.png and pin-shadow.png as the marker icons URLs for, respectively, the start marker, the end marker and their drop shadow. Since it might not be convenient that these images have to reside under the same directory as your HTML page, it is possible to override the marker icon URLs and sizes by passing a marker_options object to the GPX options object.

The field names are the same as for custom Leaflet icons, as explained in the Markers with custom icons page in Leaflet's documentation. The only difference is that instead of iconUrl you should specify startIconUrl and endIconUrl for the start and end markers, respectively.

Note that you do not need to override all the marker icon options as gpx.js will use sensible defaults with sizes matching the provided icon images. Here is how you would override the URL of the provided icons if you decided to place them in an images/ directory:

var url = '...'; // URL to your GPX file
new L.GPX(url, {
  async: true,
  marker_options: {
    startIconUrl: 'images/pin-icon-start.png',
    endIconUrl: 'images/pin-icon-end.png',
    shadowUrl: 'images/pin-shadow.png'
  }
}).on('loaded', function(e) {
  map.fitBounds(e.target.getBounds());
}).addTo(map);

Caveats

  • Distance calculation is relatively accurate, but elevation change calculation is not topographically adjusted, so the total elevation gain/loss/change might appear inaccurate in some situations.
  • Currently doesn't seem to work in IE8/9. See #9 and #11 for discussion.