MySQL 9.3 Reference Manual Including MySQL NDB Cluster 9.3
The ST_SPATIAL_REFERENCE_SYSTEMS
table provides information about available spatial reference
systems (SRSs) for spatial data. This table is based on the SQL/MM
(ISO/IEC 13249-3) standard.
Entries in the
ST_SPATIAL_REFERENCE_SYSTEMS
table
are based on the European Petroleum
Survey Group (EPSG) data set, except for SRID 0, which
corresponds to a special SRS used in MySQL that represents an
infinite flat Cartesian plane with no units assigned to its axes.
For additional information about SRSs, see
Section 13.4.5, “Spatial Reference System Support”.
The ST_SPATIAL_REFERENCE_SYSTEMS
table has these columns:
SRS_NAME
The spatial reference system name. This value is unique.
SRS_ID
The spatial reference system numeric ID. This value is unique.
SRS_ID
values represent the same kind of
values as the SRID of geometry values or passed as the SRID
argument to spatial functions. SRID 0 (the unitless Cartesian
plane) is special. It is always a legal spatial reference
system ID and can be used in any computations on spatial data
that depend on SRID values.
ORGANIZATION
The name of the organization that defined the coordinate system on which the spatial reference system is based.
ORGANIZATION_COORDSYS_ID
The numeric ID given to the spatial reference system by the organization that defined it.
DEFINITION
The spatial reference system definition.
DEFINITION
values are WKT values,
represented as specified in the
Open Geospatial
Consortium document
OGC
12-063r5.
SRS definition parsing occurs on demand when definitions are needed by GIS functions. Parsed definitions are stored in the data dictionary cache to enable reuse and avoid incurring parsing overhead for every statement that needs SRS information.
DESCRIPTION
The spatial reference system description.
The SRS_NAME
,
ORGANIZATION
,
ORGANIZATION_COORDSYS_ID
, and
DESCRIPTION
columns contain information
that may be of interest to users, but they are not used by
MySQL.
mysql>SELECT * FROM ST_SPATIAL_REFERENCE_SYSTEMS
WHERE SRS_ID = 4326\G
*************************** 1. row *************************** SRS_NAME: WGS 84 SRS_ID: 4326 ORGANIZATION: EPSG ORGANIZATION_COORDSYS_ID: 4326 DEFINITION: GEOGCS["WGS 84",DATUM["World Geodetic System 1984", SPHEROID["WGS 84",6378137,298.257223563, AUTHORITY["EPSG","7030"]],AUTHORITY["EPSG","6326"]], PRIMEM["Greenwich",0,AUTHORITY["EPSG","8901"]], UNIT["degree",0.017453292519943278, AUTHORITY["EPSG","9122"]], AXIS["Lat",NORTH],AXIS["Long",EAST], AUTHORITY["EPSG","4326"]] DESCRIPTION:
This entry describes the SRS used for GPS systems. It has a name
(SRS_NAME
) of WGS 84 and an ID
(SRS_ID
) of 4326, which is the ID used by the
European Petroleum Survey
Group (EPSG).
The DEFINITION
values for projected and
geographic SRSs begin with PROJCS
and
GEOGCS
, respectively. The definition for SRID 0
is special and has an empty DEFINITION
value.
The following query determines how many entries in the
ST_SPATIAL_REFERENCE_SYSTEMS
table
correspond to projected, geographic, and other SRSs, based on
DEFINITION
values:
mysql>SELECT
COUNT(*),
CASE LEFT(DEFINITION, 6)
WHEN 'PROJCS' THEN 'Projected'
WHEN 'GEOGCS' THEN 'Geographic'
ELSE 'Other'
END AS SRS_TYPE
FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.ST_SPATIAL_REFERENCE_SYSTEMS
GROUP BY SRS_TYPE;
+----------+------------+ | COUNT(*) | SRS_TYPE | +----------+------------+ | 1 | Other | | 4668 | Projected | | 483 | Geographic | +----------+------------+
To enable manipulation of SRS entries stored in the data dictionary, MySQL provides these SQL statements:
CREATE SPATIAL REFERENCE
SYSTEM
: See
Section 15.1.21, “CREATE SPATIAL REFERENCE SYSTEM Statement”. The
description for this statement includes additional information
about SRS components.
DROP SPATIAL REFERENCE SYSTEM
:
See Section 15.1.34, “DROP SPATIAL REFERENCE SYSTEM Statement”.