LocationService / Client / put_geofence

put_geofence#

LocationService.Client.put_geofence(**kwargs)#

Stores a geofence geometry in a given geofence collection, or updates the geometry of an existing geofence if a geofence ID is included in the request.

See also: AWS API Documentation

Request Syntax

response = client.put_geofence(
    CollectionName='string',
    GeofenceId='string',
    Geometry={
        'Polygon': [
            [
                [
                    123.0,
                ],
            ],
        ],
        'Circle': {
            'Center': [
                123.0,
            ],
            'Radius': 123.0
        },
        'Geobuf': b'bytes'
    },
    GeofenceProperties={
        'string': 'string'
    }
)
Parameters:
  • CollectionName (string) –

    [REQUIRED]

    The geofence collection to store the geofence in.

  • GeofenceId (string) –

    [REQUIRED]

    An identifier for the geofence. For example, ExampleGeofence-1.

  • Geometry (dict) –

    [REQUIRED]

    Contains the details to specify the position of the geofence. Can be a polygon, a circle or a polygon encoded in Geobuf format. Including multiple selections will return a validation error.

    Note

    The geofence polygon format supports a maximum of 1,000 vertices. The Geofence Geobuf format supports a maximum of 100,000 vertices.

    • Polygon (list) –

      A polygon is a list of linear rings which are each made up of a list of vertices.

      Each vertex is a 2-dimensional point of the form: [longitude, latitude]. This is represented as an array of doubles of length 2 (so [double, double]).

      An array of 4 or more vertices, where the first and last vertex are the same (to form a closed boundary), is called a linear ring. The linear ring vertices must be listed in counter-clockwise order around the ring’s interior. The linear ring is represented as an array of vertices, or an array of arrays of doubles ( [[double, double], ...]).

      A geofence consists of a single linear ring. To allow for future expansion, the Polygon parameter takes an array of linear rings, which is represented as an array of arrays of arrays of doubles ( [[[double, double], ...], ...]).

      A linear ring for use in geofences can consist of between 4 and 1,000 vertices.

      • (list) –

        • (list) –

          • (float) –

    • Circle (dict) –

      A circle on the earth, as defined by a center point and a radius.

      • Center (list) – [REQUIRED]

        A single point geometry, specifying the center of the circle, using WGS 84 coordinates, in the form [longitude, latitude].

        • (float) –

      • Radius (float) – [REQUIRED]

        The radius of the circle in meters. Must be greater than zero and no larger than 100,000 (100 kilometers).

    • Geobuf (bytes) –

      Geobuf is a compact binary encoding for geographic data that provides lossless compression of GeoJSON polygons. The Geobuf must be Base64-encoded.

      A polygon in Geobuf format can have up to 100,000 vertices.

  • GeofenceProperties (dict) –

    Associates one of more properties with the geofence. A property is a key-value pair stored with the geofence and added to any geofence event triggered with that geofence.

    Format: "key" : "value"

    • (string) –

      • (string) –

Return type:

dict

Returns:

Response Syntax

{
    'GeofenceId': 'string',
    'CreateTime': datetime(2015, 1, 1),
    'UpdateTime': datetime(2015, 1, 1)
}

Response Structure

  • (dict) –

    • GeofenceId (string) –

      The geofence identifier entered in the request.

    • CreateTime (datetime) –

      The timestamp for when the geofence was created in ISO 8601 format: YYYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ss.sssZ

    • UpdateTime (datetime) –

      The timestamp for when the geofence was last updated in ISO 8601 format: YYYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ss.sssZ

Exceptions