Publish hosted feature layers

As a publisher in your organization, you can host feature data in ArcGIS Enterprise by publishing hosted feature layers. ArcGIS Enterprise supports multiple sources to allow you to accomplish this. Use any of the following to publish a hosted feature layer:

Feature layers are useful when you need to expose vector data for display, query, and editing to other members of your organization or when you want to share a table of nonspatial attributes. Hosting a feature layer on ArcGIS Enterprise is one way to share data with coworkers through maps, apps, and desktop map viewers.

Feature layers are most appropriate for operational layers that go on top of reference layers, such as a basemap. For example, a feature layer might contain information about the street signs in your neighborhood. Each feature (street sign) might include the sign name, date installed, and a website URL for reporting problems to your local street department.

To complete the steps in the following sections, you must have privileges to publish hosted feature layers and create content.

Publish a CSV file

If you have CSV files stored on your computer that contain addresses or coordinates, you can sign in to the portal and publish features or tables from the CSV files. This publishes a hosted feature layer to your organization.

The steps below outline how to publish features or tables from the portal using a CSV file. Features are published in the WGS 1984 Web Mercator (Auxiliary Sphere) coordinate system.

Note:

These files do not enforce unique field names, but field names in hosted feature layers must be unique. Therefore, ensure all field names in your file are unique before publishing.

The following steps explain how to add a CSV file from your local drive and publish.

  1. Verify that you are signed in and that you have privileges to create content and publish hosted feature layers.
  2. Open Content > My Content, click Add Item, and click From my computer.
  3. Click Choose File or Browse (the button name varies by web browser) and find the file on your computer.
  4. Select the file and click Open.
  5. CSV files must be formatted and saved as .csv.

  6. Type a title.
  7. If your organization administrator configured content categories, click Assign Category and select up to 20 categories to help people find your item. You can also use the Filter categories box to narrow the list of categories.
  8. Type tag terms separated by commas.

    Tags are words or short phrases that describe your item and help people find your item when searching. Federal land is considered one tag, while Federal,land is considered two tags.

  9. Leave the Publish this file as a hosted layer box checked.
    Note:

    If you uncheck this box, your data file is added to My Content, but no hosted feature layer is published. You can, however, publish the file later by clicking Publish on its item page.

  10. Choose which information in your file to use to locate features.
    • Choose Coordinates if your file contains latitude/longitude, Military Grid Reference System (MGRS), or United States National Grid (USNG) coordinates.
    • Choose Addresses or Places if your file contains place names—for example, Westminster Abbey or Panama Canal—or addresses.
    • To create a nonspatial table layer, choose None, add as table.
  11. If you are locating features based on Addresses or Places and your organization has multiple locators configured, choose the locator to use.
    Note:

    Your portal must be configured to use a locator (geocode utility service) that can do batch geocoding for you to publish a CSV file containing addresses. Contact your organization administrator if the option to publish is not available when you add your file.

  12. From the In drop-down list, choose the country where the addresses or places in your file are located. If your file contains addresses from multiple countries or from a country not in the list, select World.
  13. Review the field types and location fields (if any exist). If the portal can identify which fields contain location information, location fields are automatically set. Field types are also set automatically. However, you can change either of these if necessary by clicking inside the cell.
    1. Click a Field Type cell to choose a different type.

      Note:

      Date field types are not supported in ArcGIS Enterprise portals. Date fields are published as text fields.

    2. Click a Location Field cell to choose a different field.
  14. Choose a Time Zone for the date fields in your CSV file.

    By default, date fields are assumed to contain UTC date and time. If your date fields store values that use a different time zone, choose that time zone. Note that the time zone you select is applied to all date fields in the CSV file. If you later overwrite the hosted feature layer using updated data, the time zone specified when you initially published is used.

    See CSV, TXT, and GPX files for information on time zone considerations and supported date and time formats.

    Tip:

    You can configure pop-ups to display time.

  15. Click Add Item.

The data file and the feature layer are separately added to My Content. One way to test the new hosted feature layer once publishing completes is to view it in Map Viewer.

If you published a CSV file containing addresses or places, you can review and correct any records that were not placed on the map or were placed incorrectly. You can immediately review the locations in Map Viewer, or choose to review them at a later time. See Review locations for more information.

By default, only you and the administrator can access the hosted feature layer. To allow others to access it, share the layer and file with everyone (the public), your organization, or members of specific groups. You can edit item details and change feature layer settings.

If you want to share the hosted feature layer as a copy in a distributed collaboration, you must enable synchronization.

Be aware that only 2,000 records are returned at a time by default when drawing or querying a feature layer.

Publish a shapefile or GeoJSON file

To web enable feature layers from shapefiles (packaged in a .zip file) or GeoJSON files (.geojson or .json), add the files to your portal and publish hosted feature layers.

To publish a GeoJSON file, the file must be smaller than 100 MB.

The following steps outline how to publish features from the portal using a shapefile or GeoJSON file. The features are published in the WGS 1984 Web Mercator (Auxiliary Sphere) coordinate system.

  1. Verify that you are signed in and that you have privileges to create content and publish hosted feature layers.
  2. Open Content > My Content, click Add Item, and click From my computer.
  3. Click Choose File or Browse (the button name varies by web browser) and find the file on your computer.
  4. Select the file and click Open.
  5. Shapefiles must be compressed as a .zip file containing .shp, .shx, .dbf, and .prj files.

    If there are multiple shapefiles in the .zip file, they are all included in the feature layer.

  6. When you add a .zip file, you must specify the type of content in the file. Choose the data format from the Contents drop-down menu.

    You cannot upload the file if the wrong content type is specified.

  7. Type a title.
  8. If your organization administrator configured content categories, click Assign Category and select up to 20 categories to help people find your item. You can also use the Filter categories box to narrow the list of categories.
  9. Type tag terms separated by commas.

    Tags are words or short phrases that describe your item and help people find your item when searching. Federal land is considered one tag, while Federal,land is considered two tags.

  10. Leave the Publish this file as a hosted layer box checked.
    Note:

    If you uncheck this box, your data file is added to My Content, but no hosted feature layer is published. You can, however, publish the file later by clicking Publish on its item page.

  11. Click Add Item.

The data file and the feature layer are separately added to My Content. One way to test the new hosted feature layer once publishing completes is to view it in Map Viewer.

If you publish a shapefile or shapefiles that contain metadata, that metadata is included in the layers in the hosted feature layer. When viewed from the hosted feature layer's item page, the metadata is displayed in the metadata style configured for the portal.

By default, only you and the administrator can access the hosted feature layer. To allow others to access it, share the layer and file with everyone (the public), your organization, or members of specific groups. You can edit item details and change feature layer settings.

If you want to share the hosted feature layer as a copy in a distributed collaboration, you must enable synchronization.

Be aware that, by default, only 2,000 records are returned at a time when drawing or querying a feature layer.

Publish a feature collection

If your data needs to be edited by multiple people, you can publish your feature collection as a hosted feature layer, share the layer, enable editing on it, and use the feature layer in your map.

Note:

If you alter symbology for individual points in the feature collection, that symbology change is not preserved when you publish the feature collection as a hosted feature layer.

  1. Open the item details of the feature collection you want to publish as a hosted feature layer.
  2. Click Publish.
  3. Use the default title for the hosted feature layer or type a new one.
  4. If your organization administrator configured content categories, click Assign Category and select up to 20 categories to help people find your item. You can also use the Filter categories box to narrow the list of categories.
  5. Type tag terms separated by commas.

    Tags are words or short phrases that describe your item and help people find your item when searching. public buildings is considered one tag, while public,buildings is considered two tags.

  6. Click Publish to create the hosted feature layer.

A hosted feature layer is created and added to your content.

Now you can share the hosted layer, enable editing, and add the feature layer to your map.

Publish the contents of a file geodatabase

You can sign in to the portal and publish a feature layer from a file geodatabase (packaged in a .zip file) that you stored on your computer.

Publishing file geodatabase contents is a useful workflow if the geodatabase contains only a few datasets.

You can publish the following data types from a file geodatabase to a hosted feature layer:

  • Feature classes (x- and y-coordinates; m- and z-coordinates are dropped)
  • Tables
  • Attachments
  • Relationship classes

The features are published in the WGS 1984 Web Mercator (Auxiliary Sphere) coordinate system.

Other data types—such as rasters, networks, and parcel fabrics—remain in the geodatabase but are not included in the published hosted feature layer.

Follow these steps to add a file geodatabase to your portal and publish its contents as a hosted feature layer.

  1. Verify that you are signed in and that you have privileges to create content and publish hosted feature layers.
  2. Open Content > My Content, click Add Item, and click From my computer.
  3. Click Choose File or Browse (the button name varies by web browser), and find the file on your computer.

    The file geodatabase must be in a .zip file.

  4. Select the file and click Open.
  5. When you add a .zip file, you must specify the type of content in the file. Choose the data format from the Contents drop-down menu.

    You cannot upload the file if the wrong content type is specified.

  6. Type a title.
  7. If your organization administrator configured content categories, click Assign Category and select up to 20 categories to help people find your item. You can also use the Filter categories box to narrow the list of categories.
  8. Type tag terms separated by commas.

    Tags are words or short phrases that describe your item and help people find your item when searching. Federal land is considered one tag, while Federal,land is considered two tags.

  9. Leave the Publish this file as a hosted layer box checked.
    Note:

    If you uncheck this box, the file geodatabase is added to My Content, but no hosted feature layer is published. You can publish it later by clicking Publish on its item page.

  10. Click Add Item.

The supported data in your file geodatabase is published as a hosted feature layer. It may take some time to upload the file and publish. Once publishing completes, you can test the new feature layer by viewing it in Map Viewer. Views in the file geodatabase are not published but remain in the file geodatabase.

If the feature classes in the file geodatabase contain metadata, that metadata is included in the layers in the hosted feature layer. For each layer that has metadata, you can view the metadata from the hosted feature layer's item page, and the metadata is displayed in the metadata style configured for the portal.

By default, only you and the administrator can access the hosted feature layer. To allow others to access it, share the layer and file with everyone (the public), your organization, or members of specific groups. You can edit item details and change feature layer settings.

Be aware that, by default, only 2,000 records are returned at a time when drawing or querying a feature layer.

Publish from ArcGIS Pro

When you publish a feature layer to ArcGIS Enterprise from ArcGIS Pro with the option to copy data, a hosted feature layer is created, feature data is copied from your source to ArcGIS Enterprise, and the hosted feature layer references the data that was copied, not the data source.

Instructions for publishing a hosted feature layer from ArcGIS Pro are available in the ArcGIS Pro help.

Note:

If the layers in the ArcGIS Pro map have definition queries applied to them, ArcGIS applies the definition queries to the published hosted feature layer. However, all data is copied to ArcGIS Enterprise. If you want to publish a subset of the data, you must export the subset to another feature class and publish that.

Create from a template or existing feature layer

To duplicate layer properties while allowing members of your organization to populate the new layer with new features, create a hosted feature layer from an existing feature layer or template.

For example, you may have a feature layer displaying the perimeter of an existing wildfire. When a new wildfire occurs, you can create an empty feature layer from your existing one. You can then populate the new layer with the boundary and attributes of the new wildfire.

Alternatively, you can use a template in the Build a layer category to create an empty hosted feature layer without using the schema of an existing layer. In this scenario, you add fields, define attribute lists and ranges, define feature templates, and configure other settings that you require after you create the hosted feature layer.

Follow these steps to create a hosted feature layer from a template or another feature layer.

  1. Verify that you are signed in with an account that has privileges to create content and publish hosted feature layers, and click the My Content tab of the content page.
  2. Click Create and choose Feature Layer.
  3. Choose an existing feature layer that contains the layers and schema you want to apply to the new feature layer. This step doesn't add or copy any features to your new hosted feature layer; you're only defining the layers and schema of the new hosted feature layer.

    There are several approaches you can take:

    • Click the From Template tab, select one of the template feature layers provided by Esri, and click Create.
    • Click the Existing Layer tab to use a hosted feature layer from your organization. Search for or browse to the existing feature layer you want to use, select it, and click Create.
    • Click the From URL tab, type the URL of an existing feature layer, and click Next.

    No matter which approach you take, check the box next to each layer you want to include in your new feature layer. You must choose at least one layer. To rename a layer, click it and type a new name.

    Click Capture GPS receiver information to add GPS metadata fields to point layers and store GPS information such as receiver name, accuracy, and fix type. When you edit the layer in ArcGIS Collector, GPS metadata is recorded automatically. For more information about GPS metadata, see Prepare for high-accuracy data collection in the ArcGIS Collector help.

    When you finish choosing layers, click Next.

  4. Define the default extent you want for your new feature layer by panning and zooming on the map presented on the New Hosted Feature Layer dialog box, or type the latitude and longitude coordinates. When you finish, click Next.

    This step helps you narrow the scope of the layer when it is first edited.

  5. Type a title, tags, and summary for the new hosted feature layer.
  6. If your organization administrator configured content categories, click Assign Category and select up to 20 categories to help people find your item. You can also use the Filter categories box to narrow the list of categories.
  7. Choose the folder in which to store the new hosted feature layer. Click Done to publish the new layer.

    The item details page of your new hosted feature layer appears.

  8. Note:

    By default, editing, synchronization, and editor tracking are enabled on your new hosted feature layer, making it ready for data collection. If you don't want other people to edit it immediately, disable editing by unchecking the Enable editing check box on the Settings tab of the hosted feature layer's item page.