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Feature layers

This ArcGIS 10.9 documentation has been archived and is no longer updated. Content and links may be outdated. See the latest documentation.

A feature layer is a grouping of similar geographic features, for example, buildings, parcels, cities, roads, and earthquake epicenters. Features can be points, lines, or polygons (areas). Feature layers are most appropriate for visualizing data on top of your basemaps. You can set properties for feature layers—such as style, transparency, visible range, refresh interval, and labels—that control how the layer appears in the map. Using a feature layer, you can view, edit, analyze, and execute queries against features and their attributes.

Each type of feature layer meets a different need and, therefore, has slightly different functionality. For a comparison of functionality available with each type of feature layer, see Feature layer functionality.

Hosted feature layers

Hosted feature layers are feature services whose feature data is hosted by, or stored in, one of two different data stores that the administrator has configured with your portal's hosting server.

You can think of the layer, service, and its data as a single entity. When you create a hosted feature layer, the data is copied into one of the data stores. When the owner of the hosted feature layer or an administrator deletes a hosted feature layer, the service and data are also deleted.

The functionality available varies slightly depending on the data store the hosted feature layer accesses. You can identify the two types of layers based on the layer icon.

Hosted feature layer

Feature layers Hosted feature layers are created when you publish a feature layer to ArcGIS Enterprise from ArcGIS Pro, ArcMap, or from files in the portal.

Hosted spatiotemporal feature layer

Spatiotemporal feature layers Hosted spatiotemporal feature layers are created when the app or tool you're using requires both geographic and time data. In most cases, editors do not directly edit these layers; rather, the apps that require them create and update hosted spatiotemporal feature layers.

ArcGIS Server feature layers

If you have access to feature services running on a stand-alone or federated ArcGIS Server site, you can still use these ArcGIS Server feature services as layers in your portal. These layers are similar to hosted feature layers with the following differences:

  • The data is not copied into the hosting server's relational data store; it stays in the data source you registered with the ArcGIS Server site.
  • When you delete the ArcGIS Server feature layer, the data is not deleted.
  • Much of the configuration for ArcGIS Server feature layers is performed in ArcGIS Server Manager, not the portal.
  • Functionality available in the portal is different for ArcGIS Server feature layers than for hosted feature layers.

Many of these differences guard against unwanted changes being made to the data stored in the folders and databases you registered with your ArcGIS Server site, as this data is often your system of record and is likely accessed directly by other applications. However, the hosted feature layer data is managed through the portal and not directly accessed by other applications.

When you publish a feature layer (feature service) to a federated ArcGIS Server site, it is automatically added as a feature layer to your portal. If you want to work with a feature service from a stand-alone ArcGIS Server site, you can add it to your portal from My Content. This allows you to reference the REST endpoint (URL) of the service and use the layer in your maps and apps while leaving the data stored in the data sources you registered with your ArcGIS Server site. You can also add ArcGIS Server feature layers to Map Viewer.

Feature collections

Items such as CSV files, shapefiles, and map notes can be added to a map as feature collections. A feature collection is a type of feature layer. Any feature collection you add can be saved as part of the map. Doing so saves the feature collection data as part of the map. Any changes you make to the feature collection—for example, by editing data—are only reflected in the map. The changes are not applied to the original CSV file, shapefile, or map note from which the feature collection was derived.

You can also save a feature collection as its own item by clicking Save Layer in the layer properties menu. The item will appear as a new feature collection item in My Content and can be shared with others and added to multiple maps. When you save a feature collection as its own item, the data is retained with the feature collection item and not stored as part of the map. Any changes you make to the feature collection item, such as modifying its data, are saved once you click Save Layer. If the feature collection item is used in other maps, the changes will be reflected there as well. If the feature collection item is deleted from My Content, it will no longer be available to others.

Map notes

You can create features on your map by adding a map notes layer. A map notes layer is a type of feature collection. With a map notes layer, you use features to symbolize something you want to show on your map, such as public access points, hiking trails, or fire perimeters. You can also add descriptive information that appears in pop-ups when the feature is clicked.

By default, the features in a map notes layer are saved with the map so that only you, the map author, can edit and save them. You can also choose to save the layer as a feature collection item in your content, which allows you to edit its item details and share it with others. Map notes layers are useful for displaying information such as events happening within a community or an inventory of oil production facilities. This is a good way to add a small number of features to a map, for example, the swimming pools managed by your city's parks and recreation department. It's also a way to create feature layers if you don't have portal publishing privileges.

Route layers

You can use Map Viewer to get directions and create a route layer in your map. Route layers are a type of feature collection that contain four sublayers—stops, direction events, directions, and route info—each with its own properties, such as pop-ups and labels, that you can configure as desired. From Map Viewer, you can save the route layer as an item in My Content and use it in other maps. Once the route layer is saved as an item, you can share it with others.

Streaming feature layers

Streaming feature layers are feature layers created from an ArcGIS GeoEvent Server stream service. They are useful for visualizing real-time data feeds that have high volumes of data or that have data that changes at unknown intervals. For example, a fleet of vehicles might be transmitting their location, and the current location of the vehicles needs to be continuously monitored. When you add a streaming feature layer to Map Viewer, you can use streaming controls to filter the data that the service sends to the layer. Streaming feature layers can be identified by their icon Streaming features in the content page.

Streaming feature layers connect to an ArcGIS Server stream service using HTML5 WebSockets. Most modern browsers support WebSockets. To get more information about WebSockets and to test if a browser supports WebSockets, visit WebSocket.org.

Feature layer functionality

The following sections list how to create each type of feature layer and compare functionality available with each type in Map Viewer, Scene Viewer, and item details.

Publishing methods

The following list describes how you create each type of feature layer in an ArcGIS Enterprise portal:

  • Hosted feature layer—Add an item to the portal and publish, publish from ArcMap or ArcGIS Pro, or create from a template. See Publish hosted feature layers for more information.
  • Hosted spatiotemporal feature layer—Run a GeoAnalytics tool or publish using ArcGIS GeoEvent Server. ArcGIS Tracker also creates a hosted spatiotemporal feature layer to track locations and ArcGIS Mission creates spatiotemporal hosted feature layers to track missions.
  • ArcGIS Server feature layer—Publish from ArcMap or ArcGIS Pro to a federated ArcGIS Server site, publish from ArcMap or ArcGIS Pro to a stand-alone ArcGIS Server site and add the service to your organization, or publish from data store items in the portal webite.
  • Streaming feature layer—Configure streaming layers in ArcGIS GeoEvent Server. If the ArcGIS GeoEvent Server is federated with the portal, the streaming layer is automatically added to your organization. If you configure streaming layers on a stand-alone ArcGIS GeoEvent Server site, you can add the streaming layer to the portal.
  • Feature collection—Add a CSV file, shapefile, or map notes to Map Viewer and save the layer.

Map Viewer

All feature layer items in your portal can be added to Map Viewer, but the available functionality may differ slightly. The following table compares feature layer functionality in Map Viewer:

FunctionalityHosted feature layerHosted spatiotemporal feature layerArcGIS Server feature layer Hosted spatiotemporal feature layer (created by ArcGIS GeoEvent Server)Streaming feature layerFeature collection

Edit (if editing is enabled on the layer)

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

No

Not applicable; editing cannot be enabled on feature collections

Add to Map Viewer with full editing control

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

No

Change style, set transparency, and set visible range

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Define labels

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes, but not supported for map notes

Set refresh interval

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

No

No

Configure pop-ups

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Apply filters

Yes, in Map Viewer

Yes, in Map Viewer

Yes, in Map Viewer

Yes, in Map Viewer

Yes, using streaming controls in Map Viewer or in ArcGIS GeoEvent Server

No

Copy and save as a new layer

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

No

Use standard feature analysis tools and GeoAnalytics feature analysis tools

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

No

Yes

Calculate fields in the attribute table

Yes

Yes, but use the Calculate Field tool

No

No

No

No

Add fields to and delete fields from the attribute table

Yes

No

No

No

No

No

Display features aggregated in bins

No

Yes

No

Yes

No

No

Scene Viewer

You can add the following types of feature layers to Scene Viewer:

  • Hosted feature layer
  • Hosted spatiotemporal feature layer
  • ArcGIS Server feature layer

Each layer can contain an unlimited number of features.

Item details

Many of the settings and details you configure for feature layers are the same for all feature layers and for portal items in general, such as setting tags and categories, setting a summary and description, enabling delete protection, and setting an extent. Settings and details that are different across feature layers are listed in the following table:

FunctionalityHosted feature layerHosted spatiotemporal feature layerArcGIS Server feature layer Hosted spatiotemporal feature layer (created by ArcGIS GeoEvent Server)Streaming feature layerFeature collection

Publish other layers from

Yes, WFS and tile layers

No

No

No

No

Yes, a hosted feature layer

Create views from

Yes

Yes

You cannot create views from the feature layer in the portal, but the equivalent workflow is to publish multiple feature layers from the same data in an ArcGIS Desktop app or ArcGIS Pro.

No

No

No

Define view areas on the Visualization tab

Yes

Yes

Not applicable

Not applicable

Not applicable

Not applicable

Export data from

Yes

No

No

No

No

No

Add and view metadata

Yes

Yes

Yes

No

No

Yes

Enable attachments

Yes

No

You cannot enable attachments from the portal. However, you can enable attachments on the source data before publishing the feature layer.

No

No

No

Overwrite the layer

Yes

No

You cannot overwrite from the portal. However, you can overwrite from ArcMap or ArcGIS Pro.

No

Not applicable; streaming layer data is continually changing.

No

Append data

Yes

You can also use the Append geoprocessing tool in ArcGIS Pro.

Yes

You can also use the Append Data tool in Map Viewer or the Append geoprocessing tool in ArcGIS Pro.

You cannot append from the portal. However, since the data resides in your ArcGIS Server site's registered data store, append to the source data.

Append to source data using ArcGIS GeoEvent Server.

Not applicable; streaming layer data is continually changing.

No

Calculate field contents on the Data tab

Yes

No

No

No

No

No

Add fields and delete fields on the Data tab

Yes

You can add fields but not delete fields.

No

No

No

No

Define attribute lists and ranges

Yes

No

No; you can view existing lists and ranges but not add or delete them on the Data tab.

No

No

No

Add field descriptions and value types

Yes

No

No

No

No

No

Edit nonspatial field values on the Data tab

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

No

No

Alter field properties including display name (title), description, field value type, and whether edits are allowed for a field.

Yes

Yes

No

Can edit display name and description but not other properties.

No

Can edit display name, description, and field value type but cannot change edit setting for a field.

Apply filters on the Visualization tab

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

No

No

Modify settings for editing

Yes

Yes

You cannot enable editing or modify editing settings from the portal. Configure editing settings when you publish the feature layer or modify settings in ArcGIS Server Manager after publishing.

Editing is automatically enabled and cannot be modified in the portal.

No

No

Enable sync

Yes

No

You cannot enable sync from the portal. This is set when publishing, or you can modify the setting in ArcGIS Server Manager after publishing.

No

No

No

Track edits

Yes

No

You cannot enable editor tracking in the portal. However, you can enable editor tracking on the source data from an ArcGIS Desktop app or ArcGIS Pro.

No

No

No

Control whether editable layers can be shared with everyone (public)

Yes

Yes

No

Yes

No

No

Update details, data, and visualization configuration for individual sublayers

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

No

No