Calculates a route matrix given the following required parameters:
DeparturePositions
andDestinationPositions
.CalculateRouteMatrix
calculates routes and returns the travel time and travel distance from each departure position to each destination position in the request. For example, given departure positions A and B, and destination positions X and Y,CalculateRouteMatrix
will return time and distance for routes from A to X, A to Y, B to X, and B to Y (in that order). The number of results returned (and routes calculated) will be the number ofDeparturePositions
times the number ofDestinationPositions
.
Note
Your account is charged for each route calculated, not the number of requests.
Requires that you first create a route calculator resource .
By default, a request that doesn’t specify a departure time uses the best time of day to travel with the best traffic conditions when calculating routes.
Additional options include:
Specifying a departure time using either DepartureTime
or DepartNow
. This calculates routes based on predictive traffic data at the given time.
Note
You can’t specify both DepartureTime
and DepartNow
in a single request. Specifying both parameters returns a validation error.
Specifying a travel mode using TravelMode sets the transportation mode used to calculate the routes. This also lets you specify additional route preferences in CarModeOptions
if traveling by Car
, or TruckModeOptions
if traveling by Truck
.
See also: AWS API Documentation
See ‘aws help’ for descriptions of global parameters.
calculate-route-matrix
--calculator-name <value>
[--car-mode-options <value>]
[--depart-now | --no-depart-now]
--departure-positions <value>
[--departure-time <value>]
--destination-positions <value>
[--distance-unit <value>]
[--travel-mode <value>]
[--truck-mode-options <value>]
[--cli-input-json | --cli-input-yaml]
[--generate-cli-skeleton <value>]
--calculator-name
(string)
The name of the route calculator resource that you want to use to calculate the route matrix.
--car-mode-options
(structure)
Specifies route preferences when traveling by
Car
, such as avoiding routes that use ferries or tolls.Requirements:
TravelMode
must be specified asCar
.AvoidFerries -> (boolean)
Avoids ferries when calculating routes.
Default Value:
false
Valid Values:
false
|true
AvoidTolls -> (boolean)
Avoids tolls when calculating routes.
Default Value:
false
Valid Values:
false
|true
Shorthand Syntax:
AvoidFerries=boolean,AvoidTolls=boolean
JSON Syntax:
{
"AvoidFerries": true|false,
"AvoidTolls": true|false
}
--depart-now
| --no-depart-now
(boolean)
Sets the time of departure as the current time. Uses the current time to calculate the route matrix. You can’t set both
DepartureTime
andDepartNow
. If neither is set, the best time of day to travel with the best traffic conditions is used to calculate the route matrix.Default Value:
false
Valid Values:
false
|true
--departure-positions
(list)
The list of departure (origin) positions for the route matrix. An array of points, each of which is itself a 2-value array defined in WGS 84 format:
[longitude, latitude]
. For example,[-123.115, 49.285]
.Warning
Depending on the data provider selected in the route calculator resource there may be additional restrictions on the inputs you can choose. See Position restrictions in the Amazon Location Service Developer Guide .
Note
For route calculators that use Esri as the data provider, if you specify a departure that’s not located on a road, Amazon Location moves the position to the nearest road . The snapped value is available in the result in
SnappedDeparturePositions
.Valid Values:
[-180 to 180,-90 to 90]
(list)
(double)
Shorthand Syntax:
double,double ...
JSON Syntax:
[
[double, ...]
...
]
--departure-time
(timestamp)
Specifies the desired time of departure. Uses the given time to calculate the route matrix. You can’t set both
DepartureTime
andDepartNow
. If neither is set, the best time of day to travel with the best traffic conditions is used to calculate the route matrix.Note
Setting a departure time in the past returns a
400 ValidationException
error.
In ISO 8601 format:
YYYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ss.sssZ
. For example,2020–07-2T12:15:20.000Z+01:00
--destination-positions
(list)
The list of destination positions for the route matrix. An array of points, each of which is itself a 2-value array defined in WGS 84 format:
[longitude, latitude]
. For example,[-122.339, 47.615]
Warning
Depending on the data provider selected in the route calculator resource there may be additional restrictions on the inputs you can choose. See Position restrictions in the Amazon Location Service Developer Guide .
Note
For route calculators that use Esri as the data provider, if you specify a destination that’s not located on a road, Amazon Location moves the position to the nearest road . The snapped value is available in the result in
SnappedDestinationPositions
.Valid Values:
[-180 to 180,-90 to 90]
(list)
(double)
Shorthand Syntax:
double,double ...
JSON Syntax:
[
[double, ...]
...
]
--distance-unit
(string)
Set the unit system to specify the distance.
Default Value:
Kilometers
Possible values:
Kilometers
Miles
--travel-mode
(string)
Specifies the mode of transport when calculating a route. Used in estimating the speed of travel and road compatibility.
The
TravelMode
you specify also determines how you specify route preferences:
If traveling by
Car
use theCarModeOptions
parameter.If traveling by
Truck
use theTruckModeOptions
parameter.Default Value:
Car
Possible values:
Car
Truck
Walking
--truck-mode-options
(structure)
Specifies route preferences when traveling by
Truck
, such as avoiding routes that use ferries or tolls, and truck specifications to consider when choosing an optimal road.Requirements:
TravelMode
must be specified asTruck
.AvoidFerries -> (boolean)
Avoids ferries when calculating routes.
Default Value:
false
Valid Values:
false
|true
AvoidTolls -> (boolean)
Avoids ferries when calculating routes.
Default Value:
false
Valid Values:
false
|true
Dimensions -> (structure)
Specifies the truck’s dimension specifications including length, height, width, and unit of measurement. Used to avoid roads that can’t support the truck’s dimensions.
Height -> (double)
The height of the truck.
For example,
4.5
.Length -> (double)
The length of the truck.
For example,
15.5
.Unit -> (string)
Specifies the unit of measurement for the truck dimensions.
Default Value:
Meters
Width -> (double)
The width of the truck.
For example,
4.5
.Weight -> (structure)
Specifies the truck’s weight specifications including total weight and unit of measurement. Used to avoid roads that can’t support the truck’s weight.
Total -> (double)
The total weight of the truck.
For example,
3500
.Unit -> (string)
The unit of measurement to use for the truck weight.
Default Value:
Kilograms
Shorthand Syntax:
AvoidFerries=boolean,AvoidTolls=boolean,Dimensions={Height=double,Length=double,Unit=string,Width=double},Weight={Total=double,Unit=string}
JSON Syntax:
{
"AvoidFerries": true|false,
"AvoidTolls": true|false,
"Dimensions": {
"Height": double,
"Length": double,
"Unit": "Meters"|"Feet",
"Width": double
},
"Weight": {
"Total": double,
"Unit": "Kilograms"|"Pounds"
}
}
--cli-input-json
| --cli-input-yaml
(string)
Reads arguments from the JSON string provided. The JSON string follows the format provided by --generate-cli-skeleton
. If other arguments are provided on the command line, those values will override the JSON-provided values. It is not possible to pass arbitrary binary values using a JSON-provided value as the string will be taken literally. This may not be specified along with --cli-input-yaml
.
--generate-cli-skeleton
(string)
Prints a JSON skeleton to standard output without sending an API request. If provided with no value or the value input
, prints a sample input JSON that can be used as an argument for --cli-input-json
. Similarly, if provided yaml-input
it will print a sample input YAML that can be used with --cli-input-yaml
. If provided with the value output
, it validates the command inputs and returns a sample output JSON for that command.
See ‘aws help’ for descriptions of global parameters.
RouteMatrix -> (list)
The calculated route matrix containing the results for all pairs of
DeparturePositions
toDestinationPositions
. Each row corresponds to one entry inDeparturePositions
. Each entry in the row corresponds to the route from that entry inDeparturePositions
to an entry inDestinationPositions
.(list)
(structure)
The result for one
SnappedDeparturePosition
SnappedDestinationPosition
pair.Distance -> (double)
The total distance of travel for the route.
DurationSeconds -> (double)
The expected duration of travel for the route.
Error -> (structure)
An error corresponding to the calculation of a route between the
DeparturePosition
andDestinationPosition
.Code -> (string)
The type of error which occurred for the route calculation.
Message -> (string)
A message about the error that occurred for the route calculation.
SnappedDeparturePositions -> (list)
For routes calculated using an Esri route calculator resource, departure positions are snapped to the closest road. For Esri route calculator resources, this returns the list of departure/origin positions used for calculation of the
RouteMatrix
.(list)
(double)
SnappedDestinationPositions -> (list)
The list of destination positions for the route matrix used for calculation of the
RouteMatrix
.(list)
(double)
Summary -> (structure)
Contains information about the route matrix,
DataSource
,DistanceUnit
,RouteCount
andErrorCount
.DataSource -> (string)
The data provider of traffic and road network data used to calculate the routes. Indicates one of the available providers:
Esri
Here
For more information about data providers, see Amazon Location Service data providers .
DistanceUnit -> (string)
The unit of measurement for route distances.
ErrorCount -> (integer)
The count of error results in the route matrix. If this number is 0, all routes were calculated successfully.
RouteCount -> (integer)
The count of cells in the route matrix. Equal to the number of
DeparturePositions
multiplied by the number ofDestinationPositions
.