General questions
- Where can I get sample data to evaluate Roads and Highways?
- What are the minimum system requirements for Roads and Highways for Server?
- Can I cluster map services with the Roads and Highways for Server
- Is it possible to access the Roads and Highways
- Map services with external event tables are slow. Is there any way to boost performance?
Event Editor questions
Troubleshooting
- Why do I get errors when publishing my map service with linear referencing capability?
- What do I do if I accidentally edit my event feature class shapes directly and save the changes?
- My web map, a map service with linear referencing capability, will not load in Event Editor. What should I do?
- Why doesn't redlining work in Event Editor?
The system requirements for Roads and Highways for Server include the system requirements for ArcGIS Server; however, Roads and Highways for Server is only supported on Windows Server platforms (not Linux or UNIX).
The memory (RAM), disk space, and processor power need to be adjusted based on the data volumes being worked with. In addition, the number of machines in a cluster need to be scaled to handle the number of concurrent requests being requested from the deployment.
For working with linear referencing data in Roads and Highways, it is recommended to at least double the minimum RAM requirements specified by ArcGIS Server to allow for some of the memory requirements needed by the ArcGIS event feature layer, if you are publishing external event tables in your map services.
For more information, see the ArcGIS for Server system requirements.
External events in Roads and Highways use the ArcGIS event feature layer. This layer locates events and draws them on a map at map request time. Though this feature is powerful and spatially enables data that does not maintain a shape, it is not as fast as a feature class. You may need to set your map scale dependencies so these layers only draw at certain scales.
In addition, make sure these tables have the route ID columns indexed. The ArcGIS event feature layers query all events on all routes that intersect the viewed map extent. Indexing allows the queries to execute faster.
Not directly. Event Editor was developed to edit the event data modeled in the geodatabase registered with Roads and Highways. The only way external event tables that are not modeled in the geodatabase can be edited from the Event Editor is to create equivalent event feature classes in the geodatabase and register them with Roads and Highways. Event data could then be edited, but a process would need to be developed to move edited data from those event feature classes into the external event tables to provide the updates to the external system.
There could be a number of reasons:
- Ensure that Roads and Highways for Server is installed on all machines participating in the cluster hosting the map service with linear referencing capability.
- Ensure that any Roads and Highways for Server
- licenses haven’t expired and that the ArcGIS Server licenses haven’t expired.
- Ensure that Roads and Highways for Server
- is licensed on all machines participating in the cluster hosting the map service with linear referencing capability.
If you accidentally edit an event feature class shape and save the changes, Roads and Highways
has a command in the Catalog window in ArcMap on the geodatabase for the LRS event node that is registered with Roads and Highways
. Click Update Event Shapes to correct the shapes of the events.
For more information, see Updating event shapes.
My web map, a map service with linear referencing capability, will not load in Event Editor. What should I do?
There could be a number of causes:
- Ensure that the user has access to the webmap.
- Ensure the map service with linear referencing capability is running on ArcGIS Server.
- Ensure Roads and Highways for Server
- is installed on all machines in the ArcGIS Server cluster hosting the map services with linear referencing capability.
- Ensure Event Editor config.json file is properly formatted (compare it in a file compare tool with the original version to ensure the JSON syntax didn’t get corrected).
- Ensure the web map configuration in the config.json file points to the correct web map.