“-T”, this small appendix can be found after many popular GIS-related acronym. But of course, it always means something different. Take for example GIS-T (GIS for Transportation), WFS-T (Transactional WFS) and WMS-T (WMS with time support). The world of acronyms is a fun place!
Let’s see what a WMS-T can do for us. From the WMS standard:
Some geographic information may be available at multiple times (for example, an hourly weather map). A WMS
may announce available times in its service metadata, and the GetMap operation includes a parameter for
requesting a particular time. [...] Depending on the context, time
values may appear as a single value, a list of values, or an interval, …
Currently, only Mapserver supports WMS-T but the Geoserver team is working on it.
Mapserver
MapServer 4.4 and above provides support to interpret the TIME parameter and transform the resulting values into appropriate requests.
Time attributes are specified within the metadata section:
METADATA
"wms_title" "Earthquakes"
"wms_timeextent" "2011-06-01/2011-07-01"
"wms_timeitem" "TIME"
"wms_timedefault" "2011-06-10 12:10:00"
END
Mapserver supports temporal queries for single values, multiple values, single range values or even multiple range values:
...&TIME=2011-06-10&...
...&TIME=2011-06-10, 2004-10-13, 2011-06-19&...
...&TIME=2011-06-10/2011-06-13&...
...&TIME=2011-06-10/2011-06-15, 2011-06-20/2011-06-25&...
Geoserver
GeoSolutions has developed support for TIME and ELEVATION dimensions in WMS.
There are plans to backport this feature to the stable 2.1.x series after the 2.1.1 release.
Configuration of time-enabled layers can be done via the normal user interface:
The following video by GeoSolutions demonstrates the use of Geoserver’s WMS-T:
Both server solutions seem to support only one time attribute per layer. An optional second time attribute would be nice to support datasets with start and end time like Time Manager for QGIS does.