The Connect Origins to Destinations task measures the travel time or distance between pairs of points.
Using this tool, you can:
- Calculate the total distance or time commuters travel on their home-to-work trips.
- Measure how far customers are traveling to shop at your stores. Use this information to define your market reach, especially when targeting advertising campaigns or choosing new store locations.
- Calculate the expected trip mileage for your fleet of vehicles. Afterward, run the Summarize Within tool to report mileage by state or other region.
You provide starting and ending points, and the tool returns a layer containing route lines, including measurements, between the paired origins and destinations.
Request URL
http://<analysis url>/connectOriginsToDestinations/submitJob
Limits
There are limits to the number of features that can be processed.
origins
—Maximum 5,000 features.Layer destinations
—Maximum 5,000 features.Layer -
point
—Maximum 250 features.Barrier Layer -
line
—An error will occur if the number of street features intersected by all the line barriers exceeds 500.Barrier Layer -
polygon
—An error will occur if the number of street features intersected by all the polygon barriers exceeds 2000.Barrier Layer -
An error will occur if the tool takes more than 60 minutes to run when using travel modes. If this error occurs, rerun the analysis with fewer input features.
Request Parameters
Parameter | Details |
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(Required) | The starting point or points of the routes to be generated. Syntax: As described in detail in the Feature input topic, this parameter can be one of the following:
Examples:
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(Required) |
Syntax: As described in detail in the Feature input topic, this parameter can be one of the following:
Examples:
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(Required) | The origins and destinations can be connected by measuring straight-line distance, or by measuring travel time or travel distance along a street network using various modes of transportation known as travel modes. Valid values are a string, Travel modes are managed in ArcGIS Online and can be configured by the administrator of your organization to better reflect your organization's workflows. You must specify the JSON object containing the settings for a travel mode supported by your organization. To get a list of supported travel modes, run the When using a travel mode for the For example, the following is a string representing the Walking Time travel mode as returned by the
Convert the value above to a valid JSON object and pass it as the value for the
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| Specify the field in the origins layer containing the IDs that pair origins with destinations.
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| Specify the field in the destinations layer containing the IDs that pair origins with destinations.
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| Specify whether travel times should consider traffic conditions. To use traffic in the analysis, set The service supports two kinds of traffic: typical and live. Typical traffic references travel speeds that are made up of historical averages for each five-minute interval spanning a week. Live traffic retrieves speeds from a traffic feed that processes phone probe records, sensors, and other data sources to record actual travel speeds and predict speeds for the near future. The data coverage page shows the countries Esri currently provides traffic data for. Typical Traffic: To ensure the task uses typical traffic in locations where it is available, choose a time and day of the week, and then convert the day of the week to one of the following dates from 1990:
Set the time and date as Unix time in milliseconds. For example, to solve for 1:03 p.m. on Thursdays, set the time and date to 1:03 p.m., 4 January 1990; and convert to milliseconds (631458180000). Live Traffic: To use live traffic when and where it is available, choose a time and date and convert to Unix time. Esri saves live traffic data for 4 hours and references predictive data extending 4 hours into the future. If the time and date you specify for this parameter is outside the 8-hour time window, or the travel time in the analysis continues past the predictive data window, the task falls back to typical traffic speeds. Syntax: The number of milliseconds since the Unix epoch (January 1, 1970). Examples:
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| Specify the time zone or zones of the
The GeoLocal Illustration: Setting
The UTC Illustration: Setting Values: |
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When |
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Specify one or more point features that act as temporary restrictions (barriers) when traveling on the underlying streets. A point barrier can model a fallen tree, an accident, a downed electrical line, or anything that completely blocks traffic at a specific position along the street. Travel is permitted on the street but not through the barrier. Syntax: As described in detail in the Feature input topic, this parameter can be one of the following:
Examples:
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Specify one or more line features that prohibit travel anywhere the lines intersect the streets. A line barrier prohibits travel anywhere the barrier intersects the streets. For example, a parade or protest that blocks traffic across several street segments can be modeled with a line barrier. Syntax: As described in detail in the Feature input topic, this parameter can be one of the following:
Examples:
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Specify one or more polygon features that completely restrict travel on the streets intersected by the polygons. One use of this type of barrier is to model floods covering areas of the street network and making road travel there impossible. Syntax: As described in detail in the Feature input topic, this parameter can be one of the following:
Examples:
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| Specify the shape of the route that connects each origin to it's destination when using a travel mode. Values: Default:
The best route between an origin and it's matched destination is always calculated based on the travel mode, regardless of which route shape is chosen. |
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If provided, the task will create a feature service of the results. You define the name of the service. If an Syntax:
In ArcGIS Online or ArcGIS Enterprise 10.9.1 and later, you can overwrite an existing feature service by providing the Syntax:
or
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| Context contains additional settings that affect task execution. For Connect Origins to Destinations, there are two settings.
Syntax:
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| The response format. The default response format is Values: |
Response
When you submit a request, the service assigns a unique job ID for the transaction.
Syntax:
{
"jobId": "<unique job identifier>",
"jobStatus": "<job status>"
}
After the initial request is submitted, you can use the job
to periodically check the status of the job and messages as described in the topic Check job status. Once the job has successfully completed, you use the job
to retrieve the results. To track the status, you can make a request of the following form:
http://<analysis url>/ConnectOriginsToDestinations/jobs/<jobId>
Accessing results
When the status of the job request is esri
, you can access the results of the analysis by making a request of the following form.
http://<analysis url>/ConnectOriginsToDestinations/jobs/<jobId>/results/routesLayer?token=<your token>&f=json
Parameter | Description |
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| The output layer containing the routes that connect origins to destinations. Example:
The result has properties for parameter name, data type, and value. The contents of value depends on the
See Feature Output for more information about how the result layer or collection is accessed. Fields in the output: The result layer has the following attributes:
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| The input origins that couldn't be included in the solution. Example:
The result has properties for parameter name, data type, and value. The contents of value depends on the
Fields in the output:
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| The input destinations that couldn't be included in the solution. Example:
The result has properties for parameter name, data type, and value. The contents of value depends on the
Fields in the output:
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