You can use GeoPackage for multi-editing but not directly. GeoDiff ( https://github.com/MerginMaps/geodiff) is a low level library to handle the changes. Mergin Maps is a platform built around that. You can install the QGIS plugin and then users can make changes to the files and sync the data. The added benefit is that you can version your data and see the full change history.
Kind regards Saber On Thu, 20 Mar 2025 at 01:01, Emma Hain via QGIS-User < qgis-user@lists.osgeo.org> wrote: > In a previous job, when we didn't use postgres, I would create the > template QGS (with all the styles, print layouts & etc ) and generally have > the data as ArcGIS Rest Servers, WFS OR a discipline specific gpkg that was > only read that once they copied, they could edit. I had this set up for > each discipline (geology, water, environment & etc). > It meant they were starting with the base project and data and they could > do with it as they wanted. > > But if you want to build onto the data, I would probably look at Kart > <https://kartproject.org/>possibly along with postGIS. > > Kind regards > Em > > Emma Hain — Product Manager/Senior GIS Analyst > e...@north-road.com > [image: https://north-road.com] > *North Road* > Cartography • Development • Spatial Analysis > ------------------------------ > *north-road.com* <http://north-road.com> > <https://twitter.com/northroadgeo> > <https://www.linkedin.com/company/north-road-studios> > <https://www.facebook.com/North-Road-997236690392419/home> > QGIS User Conference 2025 <https://uc2025.qgis.org/> > 2-3 June, Norrköping, Sweden > FOSS4G 2025 <https://2025.foss4g.org/> > 17-23 November, Auckland, New Zealand > > > On Thu, 20 Mar 2025 at 08:25, Tobias Schula via QGIS-User < > qgis-user@lists.osgeo.org> wrote: > >> On Wednesday, 19 March 2025, 23:05:47 CET Greg Troxel via QGIS-User wrote: >> > It sounds like >> > >> > When multiple people are using the same project file, whether via >> > pgsql or a shared filesystem, they need to have a plan for performing >> > writes to that project file, because there is no mechanism for merges >> > or handling conflicts. >> > >> > is the general statement then. >> >> This worked for me in the past: >> Create a _template_ project with all your styles, database connections, >> links, >> color ramps, scripts, etc. and hand it out to the users or install it for >> them. Then they can all access the same data, have the same styles and so >> on, >> but their project gets saved on their local machine. This is also a great >> fallback, if somebody messes up their project beyond repair. >> >> Still, it's a bit messy, because file paths might get broken and everyone >> has >> to re-authenticate with the database. You will also get a lot of warnings >> about missing fonts, because until recently, QGIS would default to >> different >> fonts on windows macos and linux. >> >> As far as I know, there is no solution for seamless access by everyone, >> it's >> all quirky. >> -- >> Tobias A Schula >> Forestry Expert >> >> geospatial@schula.org_______________________________________________ >> QGIS-User mailing list >> QGIS-User@lists.osgeo.org >> List info: https://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/qgis-user >> Unsubscribe: https://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/qgis-user >> > _______________________________________________ > QGIS-User mailing list > QGIS-User@lists.osgeo.org > List info: https://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/qgis-user > Unsubscribe: https://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/qgis-user > -- Saber Razmjooei CO-Founder lutraconsulting.co.uk [image: https://www.linkedin.com/in/saber-razmjooei/] <https://www.linkedin.com/in/saber-razmjooei/> <https://www.youtube.com/@LutraConsulting> <https://github.com/lutraconsulting> <https://www.lutraconsulting.co.uk/>
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