This project contains samples of GeoJSON specific features of Spring Data (MongoDB).
Using GeoJSON types in domain classes is straight forward. The org.springframework.data.mongodb.core.geo package contains types like GeoJsonPoint or GeoJsonPolygon which are extensions to the existing org.springframework.data.geo types.
Find more information in the MongoDB manual on GeoJSON support to learn about requirements and restrictions.
public class Store {
String id;
/**
* location is stored in GeoJSON format.
* {
* "type" : "Point",
* "coordinates" : [ x, y ]
* }
*/
GeoJsonPoint location;
}Using GeoJson types as repository query parameters forces usage of the $geometry operator when creating the query.
public interface StoreRepository extends CrudRepository<Store, String> {
List<Store> findByLocationWithin(Polygon polygon);
}/* {
* "location": {
* "$geoWithin": {
* "$geometry": {
* "type": "Polygon",
* "coordinates": [
* [
* [-73.992514,40.758934],
* [-73.961138,40.760348],
* [-73.991658,40.730006],
* [-73.992514,40.758934]
* ]
* ]
* }
* }
* }
* }
*/
repo.findByLocationWithin(
new GeoJsonPolygon(
new Point(-73.992514, 40.758934),
new Point(-73.961138, 40.760348),
new Point(-73.991658, 40.730006),
new Point(-73.992514, 40.758934)));
/* {
* "location" : {
* "$geoWithin" : {
* "$polygon" : [ [ -73.992514, 40.758934 ] , [ -73.961138, 40.760348 ] , [ -73.991658, 40.730006 ] ]
* }
* }
* }
*/
repo.findByLocationWithin(
new Polygon(
new Point(-73.992514, 40.758934),
new Point(-73.961138, 40.760348),
new Point(-73.991658, 40.730006));