More reliable page loading and WebGIS geoprocessing
We have made opening the platform pages more reliable, so they no longer get stuck on a 'page not found' message after a temporary glitch, and we have made the WebGIS geoprocessing operations more solid, so they consistently update the existing layer.
Bug Fixes
2 updatesPages always reachable even after a temporary glitch
pagine-sempre-raggiungibiliWe fixed an issue that, in rare cases, could make a 'page not found' message appear on some platform pages even when the content was actually available. The flaw happened when, while a page was being prepared and refreshed behind the scenes, a momentary hiccup occurred: that temporary difficulty could stay recorded and keep showing the error for a while, forcing you to try again later. For anyone opening a direct link to a site or a section it was a frustrating experience, because the page seemed not to exist even though it was perfectly accessible. Now these temporary hiccups no longer get stuck: if the loading does not succeed on the first attempt, the platform automatically retries and shows the correct content instead of stopping on an error message. The result is that pages are always reachable again, reliably and without unexplained waits. The fix is already active automatically for all users and requires no action on your part. If in the past you happened to find a 'not found' page and had to reload it several times, you will notice the difference right away. To check it, just open a platform page, for example the page of one of your sites, from XNatura → Monitoring → Site: it will open correctly even right after a content update.
Improvements
2 updatesGeoprocessing edits update the existing layer
webgis-geoprocessing-modifica-in-locoWe have made the WebGIS geoprocessing operations more reliable, the tools that let you process and transform layers directly on the map. When an operation is meant to modify a layer in place, for example to refine its outlines or recalculate its areas, the result now correctly updates that same layer instead of creating a new one. In the past, in some situations, these edits could behave less predictably and leave duplicated or misaligned layers compared to what you expected. With this change the behavior goes back to being linear and consistent, because every edit stays where it should and keeps your workspace clean and tidy. This helps you work with greater peace of mind, without having to manually clean up any copies or look for which is the correct version of the layer. The improvement is already active automatically and requires no action on your part. To try it go to XNatura → Monitoring → Site → WebGIS and apply a geoprocessing operation to an existing layer. You will see the layer update directly on the map, with no unnecessary copies and a result that always stays faithful to your choices.