earth_tools
is a wrapper around the wonderful earthtools.org webservices, which allows you to determine the sea level height, time zone, and surise/sunset times from a set of coordinates.
- Supports Ruby 1.9.3, 2.0.0, & 2.1.5
Will be testing on other versions in the future.
Add to your Gemfile:
gem 'earth_tools'
and then run bundle:
$ bundle install
and you are done!
The run down of the 3 major functions available
# API
result = EarthTools.time_zone(latitude, longitude)
# Example
result = EarthTools.time_zone(40.71417, -74.00639) # New York City
result.iso_time # => 2012-06-14 12:56:40 -0500
result.utc_offset # => -5
result.utc_time # => 2012-06-14 17:56:40 +0000
# API
result = EarthTools.height(latitude, longitude)
# Example
result = EarthTools.height(52.4822, -1.8946) # Birmingham, AL
result.meters # => 141
result.feet # => 462.6
result.height # => 462.6 (when EarthTools::Configuration.units is set to :english units)
# API
result = EarthTools.sunrise_sunset(latitude, longitude, month, day, timezone, dst)
# Example
result = EarthTools.sunrise_sunset(40.71417, -74.00639, 12, 4, -5, 0) # New York City, December 4th
result.sunrise # => 2012-12-04 07:05:50 -0500
result.sunset # => 2012-12-04 16:26:59 -0500
# Configure block (set to defaults)
EarthTools.configure do |config|
config.always_raise = [] # Add any errors that you would like to be custom handled, see "Error handling" section below
config.cache = nil # Cache object (see Caching section for what methods are required)
config.cache_prefix = "earth_tools:" # Prefix to use for cache keys
config.timeout = 3 # Timeout in seconds
config.units = :english # Also, can specify :metric
end
# Static call
EarthTools::Configuration.timeout = 5 # Set timeout to 5 seconds
Earth Tools imposes some usage restrictions that are duplicated below (these restrictions may not be kept up-to-date, so please check the website):
- You must not make more than 1 (one) request per second to these webservices.
- You must cache results if you believe that you will need to make another identical request within any 24-hour period.
- You must delete any cached data when you no longer need it and in any case after 14 days. You should then make a new request for the data in line with the previous two rules. If you wish to keep access to data I am able to license the data for use in this way.
It is recommended to cache retrieved data when relying on an external service. You can configure a cache store:
EarthTools::Configuration.cache = Redis.new
EarthTools::Configuration.cache_prefix = "..." # Provide a custom cache prefix, defaults to 'earth_tools:'
The cache store can be any object that supports the following methods:
Method | Description | Examples |
---|---|---|
#[](key) | Retrieves a value by with the key | |
#[]=(key, value) | Stores a value with the key | |
#keys | Retrieves all keys | |
#del or
#delete |
Deletes a key |
If you need to expire cached content:
EarthTools.cache.expire("http://...") # Expire cached result for a URL
EarthTools.cache.expire(:all) # Expire all cached results
There is no need to include the prefix when passing a URL to be expired. Expiring :all
will only expire keys with the configured prefix (won't kill every entry in your key/value store).
By default Earth Tools will rescue any exceptions raised by calls to the webservice and return an empty array (using warn() to inform you of the error). You can override this and implement custom error handling for certain exceptions by using the :always_raise
option:
EarthTools::Configuration.always_raise = [SocketError, TimeoutError]
Please post any issues to the issues queue on github.
This gem's structure and design borrows heavily from geocoder, so thanks to its author. This repository is released under the MIT license (see the LICENSE for full text).
Find me on twitter @maxckramer.