Title: CEOS WGISS Test Facility WTF
1CEOS WGISS Test Facility (WTF)
- Yonsook Enloe
- NASA/SGT
- February 22, 2001
- Tokyo, Japan
2CEOS Objectives
- To optimize the benefits of spaceborne Earth
observations through cooperation of its Members
in mission planning and in the development of
compatible data products, formats, services,
applications and policies - To serve as a focal point for international
coordination of space-related Earth observation
activities - To exchange policy and technical information to
encourage complementarity and compatibility among
spaceborne Earth observation systems and the data
received from them.
3WGISS in CEOS
WGISS is one of the CEOS working groups, which
deals with Global Earth Observation
data, Information Systems and Services
WGISS Working Group on Information
Systems and Services WGCV Working Group on
Calibration and Validation SIT Strategic
Implementation Team for IGOS
4WGISS Goals
- Enable Earth observation data and information
services to be more accessible and usable to data
providers and data users world-wide through
international co-ordination - Enhance the complementarity, interoperability,
and standardization of Earth observation data and
information management and services - Foster easier exchange of Earth observation data
and information through networks and other means,
to meet the requirements of users and data
providers.
5Who are involved?
- Governmental organizations that are international
or national in nature and are responsible for a
civil spaceborne Earth observation programs or
are responsible for a significant ground segment
activities -
- Other satellite coordination groups, scientific
or governmental bodies that are international in
nature and currently have a significant
programmatic activity that supports CEOS
objectives
6Selected WGISS Activities/Outputs
- International Directory Network
- CEOSNet
- Reference/Guidelines documents, Browse, Format,
Catalog systems, Archive management, Auxiliary
data reference, etc. - Network performance measurements
- International Directory Network
- CINTEX - International Catalog System
- CEOS Information Infrastructure
- EO/GEO Workshops
- CEOS Information Locator System
- CD-ROM Resources in Earth Observation
- WGISS Test Facility
7CEOS/WGISS Components("WGISS Menu")
Directory (via IDN), Inventory, Ordering, Direct
access Directory, Inventory, Ordering,
Subscription Directory, Inventory, Ordering,
Direct access Directory, Direct access Directory,
Inventory, Ordering, Direct access, Format
Conversion, Subsetting, Overlaying, Animation,
Portrayal Portrayal, Overlaying Combination,
Algorithmic Transform, Mosaicking Reprojection
Coordinate Transformation Infrastructure
Services Infrastructure Services
8WTF Background
- Stimulated by consideration of the USA / Japan
initiative, the Global Observation Information
Network (GOIN) and the subsequent Nakodo
process with WGISS - Initially developed at the WGISS Sub Group
Meeting in London in April 2000 - Further developed at the WGISS meeting in
Canberra in May 2000 where the proposal for a
WGISS Test Environment was accepted in principle
9WTF Objectives
- Provide an application-enabling capability to
support science and operational projects.
Provide access to not only data, but also
information. - Provide feedback to science data product
designers - Prototype future WGISS/Application systems
- Periodically spin off WTF prototypes to
sustainable operational environments
10WTF Characteristics
- An enabling infrastructure of interoperable EO
and related services, tools and data system - Driven by project scenarios
- Software component pieces (multiple clients,
servers, middleware) - Metadata and data for current and future demos
- Persistence 3-5 years
- Evolution over time
- Platform to support demos at key milestones
11WTF Evolution
- Three to five year activity
- Initial focus on
- development of target vision/architecture for WTF
- pilot project to support GOFC/DMSG
- Use spiral development process to continue WTF
evolution - common services developed from pilot projects
feed next generation WTF - increasing level of service functionality and
operational capability over time - increasing level of service interoperability over
time
12A Proposed WGISS Test EnvironmentVersion Sept
12, 2000
13Candidate Core Data Services
14Current
Order load
Large amounts of data from International Data
Centers
15Soon
16WGISS Test FacilityTechnical Vision
Using the WGISS Products and Services,
new applications can be built while preserving a
project or community feel.
17WTF-GOFC Status
- April 2000 Concept of WTF-GOFC discussed in
London WGISS Subgroup meeting - April thru August ad-hoc WTF-GOFC team telecons
to formulate WTF-GOFC concepts, iterative
prototyping methodology, and plans for the Sept
Bangkok EOS workshop - August 2000 mini team met in Maryland and
crafted a technical architectural vision - September 2000 Bangkok EOS workshop had
multiple GOFC prototype demos. WTF-GOFC approved
as formal WGISS Subgroup task team. - November 2000 Technical team meeting in
Maryland. Identified interfaces in multiple GOFC
prototypes. Agreements to open access through
common interfaces to GOFC data - February 2001 IWS 2001 meetings (GOFC Fire
Workshop, Natural Resources Session, and WTF-GOFC
meeting)
18WTF-GOFC Status ( cont)
- March 2001 Technical Team meeting in Frascati,
Italy to perform technology integration across
prototypes interfaces. - May 2001 WGISS Subgroup meeting at EDC. Will
show some demos and craft demo for the November
2001 Kyoto CEOS Plenary - November 2001 CEOS Plenary WTF-GOFC demo
- Working with OGC Vendor community
- Within the Interoperability Testbed
- Will provide GOFC requirements for future OGC
specs through the EO SIG - Vendor products are successfully being used by
ESA, USGS, CCRS, MODLAND, TRFIC - Will also have a small set of freeware software
components for some interfaces for use by the
WTF-GOFC participants - Space Time Toolkit for WWW Map Server client
- DIAL for WWW Map Server
- SGT Catalog Server for both OGC data catalog and
service catalog
19WTF-GOFC Interfaces
- All adopted interface specifications are open and
published. Many of the interfaces have vendor
components and some have freeware components - CEOS CIP for metadata catalog searching
- ESA MUIS Catalog plus other CEOS catalogs
- GEO for data metadata catalog searching
- Landsat7 at EDC
- CCRS holdings
- OpenGIS Consortium WWW Map Server for overlaying
multiple maps (images) from multiple sources - JRC World Fire Web AVHRR global map (3-4 days
old) and the regional maps (1 day old) - ESA ATSR Fire Atlas
- Landsat7 from EDC
- CCRS data
- TRFIC
- OpenGIS Consortium WWW Feature Server for
identifying geographic points of features (fires,
burned areas, etc.) - ESA ATSR Fire Atlas
- MODIS Fires points
- CCRS data
20Summary/Observations
- Partnership of WGISS Information Technologists
with GOFC scientists and operational groups,
forming an integrated team, is a great way to
develop science driven information systems. - Iterative prototyping, developing capabilities in
a spiral development, can provide systems that
scientists and GOFC operational groups want. - Use of open, published interfaces is preferable
to using private, internal interfaces and is more
conducive to interoperability. - Use of standards can lead to use of commercial
off the shelf vendor products. - Working with standards groups to facilitate
insertion of GOFC requirements can facilitate
more vendor products being usable by the GOFC
community. - International cooperation in WTF-GOFC is
resulting in better/faster results than
independent development.