A shapefile is an Esri vector data storage format for storing the location, shape, and attributes of geographic features. It is stored as a set of related files and contains one feature class. Shapefiles often contain large features with a lot of associated data and historically have been used in GIS desktop applications.
The primary way to make shapefile data available for others to view through a web browser is to add it to a .zip file, upload it, and publish a hosted feature layer. The .zip file must contain at least the .shp, .shx, .dbf, and .prj files components of the shapefile.
The following list summarizes how you can use shapefiles in an ArcGIS Enterprise portal and provides links to instructions:
- Publish a hosted feature layer from a shapefile (.zip).
- For hosted feature layers that have export enabled, the people who have access to the hosted feature layer can export the layer data to a shapefile.
- Add shapefiles (in a .zip file) to My Content, and share the file with others so they can download it.
- Add a shapefile (.zip) as a layer to Map Viewer Classic.
Considerations for adding and publishing shapefiles
Keep the following information in mind when working with shapefiles in an ArcGIS Enterprise portal:
- The portal must have a hosting server for you to add a shapefile to a map viewer or publish a shapefile as a feature layer.
- Compression formats other than a .zip archive are not supported.
- When you create a .zip file that contains the .shp, .shx, .dbf, and .prj files that comprise the shapefile, store your shapefile directly in the root (the central directory) of the .zip archive, not in directories within the archive. If your .zip file viewer shows path information, the path should be blank.
- The shapefile must contain valid geometries. If you have ArcGIS Pro, you can use the Repair Geometry geoprocessing tool to correct invalid geometries in shapefiles. Invalid geometries cannot be published or drawn in a map.
- The following features are not supported: multipatch or multipoint geometries, geometries that cross the dateline, and self-intersections in polygons. Shapefiles with these features cannot be added to a map.
- You cannot drag shapefiles directly onto a map; you must add it as a layer.