InVEST (Integrated Valuation of Ecosystem Services and Tradeoffs) is a family of tools for quantifying the values of natural capital in clear, credible, and practical ways. In promising a return (of societal benefits) on investments in nature, the scientific community needs to deliver knowledge and tools to quantify and forecast this return. InVEST enables decision-makers to quantify the importance of natural capital, to assess the tradeoffs associated with alternative choices, and to integrate conservation and human development.
Older versions of InVEST ran as script tools in the ArcGIS ArcToolBox environment, but have almost all been ported over to a purely open-source python environment.
Note
This repository is for InVEST 3.2.1 and later
This replaces our Google Code project formerly located at http://code.google.com/p/invest-natcap. If you are looking to build InVEST <= 3.2.0, use the archived release-framework repository at https://bitbucket.org/natcap/invest-natcap.release-framework, and the InVEST repository at https://bitbucket.org/natcap/invest-natcap.invest-3.
- Website: https://naturalcapitalproject.stanford.edu/software/invest
- Source code: https://github.com/natcap/invest
- Issue tracker: https://github.com/natcap/invest/issues
- Users' guide: https://storage.googleapis.com/releases.naturalcapitalproject.org/invest-userguide/latest/index.html
- API documentation: http://invest.readthedocs.io/en/latest/
Run make check
to test if all required dependencies are installed on your system.
OS-specific installation instructions are found either online at
http://invest.readthedocs.io/en/latest/installing.html or locally at doc/api-docs/installing.rst
.
Note
The make
commands for InVEST require a BASH shell environment. Windows
users can use Git Bash within the Git for Windows suite. More information
can be found at https://gitforwindows.org
We recommend using a virtual environment to manage your python dependencies, and there is a Makefile target to assist with this:
$ make env $ source env/bin/activate
Or on Windows, use the following instead from a CMD prompt:
> make env > .\env\bin\activate
This makefile target is included for convenience ... you may of course choose to
manage your own virtual environment. requirements.txt
,
requirements-dev.txt
and requirements-docs.txt
list the python
dependencies needed.
If you prefer a different name for your environment, you may pass the environment name as a parameter to make:
$ make ENV=myEnv env
You could then activate the environment created at myEnv
.
The InVEST Makefile uses virtualenv
to set up an environment, but this is
not the only environment management tool out there.
You may elect to manage your virtual environment a different way, independent
of make env
. The only requirement for the build process is that the required
tools are available on your PATH and the required python packages can be imported.
Once the required tools and packages are available, we can build InVEST.
A Makefile target has been created for your convenience:
$ make python_packages
This will create a wheel for your platform and a zip source archive in dist/
.
Both of these files (dist/natcap.invest*.whl
and dist/natcap.invest*.zip
)
can be installed by pip.
Python distributions may be built with the standard distutils/setuptools commands:
$ python -m pip install build $ python -m build --wheel $ python -m build --sdist
Once the appropriate dependencies are available, InVEST can also be built as a standalone application:
$ make binaries
An important detail about building binaries is that natcap.invest
must be
installed as a wheel to ensure that the distribution information is in the
correct location.
This will create a directory at dist/invest
holding the application binaries
and relevant shared libraries.
Binaries cannot be cross-compiled for other operating systems.
See developer instructions at workbench/readme.md
.
To build the user's guide:
$ make userguide
This will build HTML and PDF documentation, writing them to dist/userguide
and dist/InVEST_*_Documentation.pdf
, respectively.
To build the natcap.invest
python API documentation and developer's guide:
$ make apidocs
This will build an HTML version of the API documentation, writing it to
dist/apidocs
.
InVEST is typically distributed with sample data, though, in the interest of disk space, these data are not included in any of the standard installers. To build zip archives of the sample data:
$ make sampledata
This will write the data zipfiles to dist/data
. git
command is needed.
For trainings, it is especially convenient to distribute all sample data as a
single zip archive. As an added bonus, this single zip archive can be provided
to the InVEST installer for Windows as either the 'Advanced' input on the front
page of the installer, or by a CLI flag, thus preventing the installer from
downloading datasets from the internet. See
installer/windows/invest_installer.nsi
for more details. To build a single
archive of all InVEST sample data:
$ make sampledata_single
This will write the single sampledata archive to
dist/InVEST_*_sample_data.zip
.
InVEST includes a battery of tests to ensure software quality.
To run tests on the suite of Ecosystem Service models in InVEST:
$ make test
The InVEST Makefile setup depends on pytest
and coverage
to display
line coverage and produce HTML and XML reports. You can force make
to use
coverage
with a different test runner by setting a parameter at the
command line. For example, to run the tests with nose
:
$ make TESTRUNNER=nose test
This repository includes a python script to automatically execute and check the exit status of all InVEST models, running on the installed InVEST sample data. Once all sample data have been fetched and binaries built on the target computer:
$ make invest_autotest
A file called LICENSE.txt
should have accompanied this distribution. If it
is missing, the license may be found on our project page,
https://github.com/natcap/invest