= Set up GPSphoto server on CentOS = * Install a bare web server * Add the Epel repository {{{ yum install epel-release }}} * install spatiallite if you chose SQLite as the backend DB: {{{ yum install libspatialite }}} * Install postgresql server and postgis if Postgres is the backend DB, see the PostgresQL / Postgis section below * In order for GPSphoto to work you also need the following packages: {{{ yum install mod_wsgi python-webob python-pillow python2-boto }}} * To make sure exif data is kept with the images install piexif (attached) {{{ yum install piexif-1.0.7-1.noarch.rpm }}} == PostgresQL / PostGIS == Get the latest postgres / postgis by install the Yum repo from https://yum.postgresql.org/repopackages.php and install the following packages: {{{ yum install postgresql95-server postgresql95 postgresql95-contrib postgis2_95 postgis2_95-utils\ postgis2_95-client python-psycopg2 python-psycopg2-doc ogr_fdw95 pgrouting_95 }}} Edit /etc/sysconfig/pgsql/postgresql-9.5 to contain the following content: {{{ PGPORT=5440 }}} Initialize the database and start and enable it: {{{ /usr/pgsql-9.5/bin/postgresql95-setup initdb systemctl enable postgresql-9.5.service systemctl start postgresql-9.5 }}} Create the DB schema: {{{ sudo -i postgres createdb mapserver psql mapserver > create user mapserver > alter user mapserver with password psql -f /usr/share/postgresql/9.1/contrib/postgis-1.5/postgis.sql -d mapserver psql -f /usr/share/postgresql/9.1/contrib/postgis-1.5/spatial_ref_sys.sql -d mapserver psql -f /usr/share/postgresql/9.1/contrib/postgis_comments.sql -d mapserver }}} == Useful tools == print detailed exif information of image: {{{ identify -verbose P1100818.JPG }}}