The ArcGIS Server Image Server class.
This object is new at ArcGIS 9.3.
Use the ISupportErrorInfo method InterfaceSupportsErrorInfo to determine if the object supports extended error information. If the object supports extended error info, VC++ developers should use the OLE/COM IErrorInfo interface to access the ErrorInfo object. Visual Basic developers should use the global error object Err to retrieve this extended error information.
| Interfaces | Description |
|---|---|
| IImageServer | Provides access to members that control an image server. |
| IImageServerInit | Provides access to members that control image server initialization. |
| IImageTileServer | Provides access to members that control image tile server. |
| ILogSupport (esriSystem) | Provides access to methods for initializing an object for logging. |
| IObjectActivate (esriSystem) | Provides access to methods for activating and deactivating objects. |
| IObjectConstruct (esriSystem) | Provides access to methods for constructing an object. |
| IRequestHandler (esriSystem) | Provides access to members that control handing of request messages. |
| IRequestHandler2 (esriSystem) | Provides access to members that control handing of request messages. |
| IServerObject (esriServer) | Provides access to properties of a map or geocode server object. |
| IServerObjectExtensionManager (esriServer) | Provides access to members that help locate installed server object extensions. |
| ISupportErrorInfo | Indicates whether a specific interface can return Automation error objects. |
The ImageServer server object provides the implementation of the image service, and supports IImageServer interface. The IImageServer interface is used to query the service information, and fetch pixels. The pixels are returned in a byte array and arranged in a band interleaved by pixel format plus a NoData mask. The byte array can be optionally compressed using JPEG (plus transparency), and LZ77 compression.
This interface also supports exporting an image into a well-known format and returning it as MIME data, or a URL. The supported well-known image format includes JPEG (plus transparency mask), PNG, BMP, and TIFF.