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STAC Examples

This directory contains various examples for all parts of the STAC specification. It is structured to be two valid STACs, meaning both catalog.json and collection.json should successfully load in various tools. They do not follow all the best practices for STAC, mostly due to the fact that they contrive examples to show the spec and we are hosting in GitHub. But we note below where they differ from an ideal catalog.

The various fields are mostly fictional, to be able to demonstrate the various aspects of the spec as tersely as possible. To get a sense of real world STAC implementations we recommend exploring the stac-examples repo, which gathers in one place copies of STAC Items and Collection from a number of different production catalogs that all follow good STAC practices. And you should also explore the various catalogs listed on STAC Index, to see full catalogs in production.

Organization

This directory contains two STAC implementations, both valid, but simplified a bit to be illustrative of the key concepts, so they do not quite follow all the best practices.

Simple Collection

This STAC implementation consists of three files, all contained at the root of the examples directory

collection.json is a minimal 'simple collection', that links to three items.

simple-item.json is the most minimal possible compliant Item record. Most all data will include additional fields, as STAC is designed to be a minimal common subset. But it is useful for showing exactly what is required.

core-item.json is a more realistic example, for a hypothetical analytic image acquisition from a satellite company called 'Remote Data'. It includes additional fields covering the common metadata. It also links to a variety of assets that is typical for satellite imagery, as most providers include a number of complementary files.

extended-item.json is arguably an even more realistic example, as it includes a number of the extensions that are commonly used, to demonstrate how implementations tend to start with the core, and add in a number of the core extensions.

collectionless-item.json demonstrates the common metadata that is only used when an Item does not have a collection. It is recommended to organize items in collections, but we wanted to show how this works. This is not technically in the 'simple collection' of this section, but it follows the same pattern, so is included here.

Nested Catalog

This STAC implementation shows a common pattern, starting with a catalog that links to a number of distinct collections, which may link down to a number of items.

catalog.json is a minimal catalog implementation, linking to two other collections.

collection-only/collection.json is a collection that does not link to any items. This demonstrates how is is possible to make use of STAC Collections without needing items, to serve as nice summarizing metadata for tools that work with full layers / collections. This example collection is based on real Sentinel-2 values, so is not quite fictional, but should be taken as just an example.

extensions-collection/collection.json contains a small number of items, that demonstrate more functionality available in STAC extensions. These are linked to directly from the individual extensions. These items follow the recommendations for Catalog Layout Best Practices.

In Depth

As mentioned above, the files in this examples directory form valid STAC implementations. They are all based on a fictional remote sensing company called 'Remote Data', with a URL at remotedata.io. This domain has not been set up, so those links will not work, but any valid data provider should provide valid links to their homepage.

The examples use the rd: prefix to show how providers can use custom fields when there are not set fields. In the examples these do not link to a schema which is completely valid, but it is recommended that providers do write a JSON schema that can validate their custom fields (we will work to add an example schema for the rd: fields in the future).

Catalog Type

One of the most important STAC Best Practices is to use links consistently, following one of the described 'catalog types'. The catalogs described here are Relative Published Catalogs, that use absolute URL's to refer to their assets (so would be an example of a Self-contained Metadata Only catalog that is published).

Differences with STAC Best Practices

One of the most important documents in this repository is the one about best practices. It describes a number of practical recommendations gained by people actually implementing STAC. The core spec is designed to be as flexible as possible, so that it is not too rigid and unable to handle unanticipated needs. But we recommend following as many of the best practices as is feasible, as it will help ensure various STAC tools work much better. The examples in this folder don't align with all the best practices, mostly because they are meant to demonstrate things as tersely as possible, and also because they live directly inside a github repository. As many people will look at these examples and take them as 'how things should be' we felt its important to highlight where things here differ from the actual best practices.

Catalog Layout

Another important recommendations concerns the layout of STAC catalogs. This is important for tools to be able to expect a certain layout, and most tools will follow the described layout. The simple collection that consists of the collection.json and its 3 linked items violates this. This is done to be able to show item examples directly in the root of the 'examples' folder, so people don't have to dig deep into folders to get a quick example. But a proper catalog layout would put the items in sub-directories, along with their assets.