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Manual page: osm2pgsql(1)

Version 1.5.1

NAME

osm2pgsql - Openstreetmap data to PostgreSQL converter

SYNOPSIS

osm2pgsql [OPTIONS] OSM-FILE…

DESCRIPTION

osm2pgsql imports OpenStreetMap data into a PostgreSQL/PostGIS database. It is an essential part of many rendering toolchains, the Nominatim geocoder and other applications processing OSM data.

osm2pgsql can run in either “create” mode (the default) or in “append” mode (option -a, --append).

In “create” mode osm2pgsql will create the database tables required by the configuration and import the OSM file(s) specified on the command line into those tables. Note that you also have to use the -s, --slim option if you want your database to be updateable.

In “append” mode osm2pgsql will update the database tables with the data from OSM change files specified on the command line.

This man page can only cover some of the basics and describe the command line options. See the Osm2pgsql Manual for more information.

OPTIONS

This program follows the usual GNU command line syntax, with long options starting with two dashes (--). Mandatory arguments to long options are mandatory for short options too.

MAIN OPTIONS

-a, --append
Run in append mode. Adds the OSM change file into the database without removing existing data.
-c, --create
Run in create mode. This is the default if -a, --append is not specified. Removes existing data from the database tables!

HELP/VERSION OPTIONS

-h, --help
Print help. Add -v, --verbose to display more verbose help.
-V, --version
Print osm2pgsql version.

LOGGING OPTIONS

--log-level=LEVEL
Set log level (‘debug’, ‘info’ (default), ‘warn’, or ‘error’).
--log-progress=VALUE
Enable (true) or disable (false) progress logging. Setting this to auto will enable progress logging on the console and disable it if the output is redirected to a file. Default: true.
--log-sql
Enable logging of SQL commands for debugging.
--log-sql-data
Enable logging of all data added to the database. This will write out a huge amount of data! For debugging.
-v, --verbose
Same as --log-level=debug.

DATABASE OPTIONS

-d, --database=NAME
The name of the PostgreSQL database to connect to. If this parameter contains an = sign or starts with a valid URI prefix (postgresql:// or postgres://), it is treated as a conninfo string. See the PostgreSQL manual for details.
-U, --username=NAME
Postgresql user name.
-W, --password
Force password prompt.
-H, --host=HOSTNAME
Database server hostname or unix domain socket location.
-P, --port=PORT
Database server port.

INPUT OPTIONS

-r, --input-reader=FORMAT
Select format of the input file. Available choices are auto (default) for autodetecting the format, xml for OSM XML format files, o5m for o5m formatted files and pbf for OSM PBF binary format.
-b, --bbox=MINLON,MINLAT,MAXLON,MAXLAT
Apply a bounding box filter on the imported data. Example: --bbox -0.5,51.25,0.5,51.75

MIDDLE OPTIONS

-i, --tablespace-index=TABLESPC
Store all indexes in the PostgreSQL tablespace TABLESPC. This option also affects the tables created by the pgsql output.
--tablespace-slim-data=TABLESPC
Store the slim mode tables in the given tablespace.
--tablespace-slim-index=TABLESPC
Store the indexes of the slim mode tables in the given tablespace.
-p, --prefix=PREFIX
Prefix for table names (default: planet_osm).
-s, --slim
Store temporary data in the database. Without this mode, all temporary data is stored in RAM and if you do not have enough the import will not work successfully. With slim mode, you should be able to import the data even on a system with limited RAM, although if you do not have enough RAM to cache at least all of the nodes, the time to import the data will likely be greatly increased.
--drop
Drop the slim mode tables from the database and the flat node file once the import is complete. This can greatly reduce the size of the database, as the slim mode tables typically are the same size, if not slightly bigger than the main tables. It does not, however, reduce the maximum spike of disk usage during import. It can furthermore increase the import speed, as no indexes need to be created for the slim mode tables, which (depending on hardware) can nearly halve import time. Slim mode tables however have to be persistent if you want to be able to update your database, as these tables are needed for diff processing.
-C, --cache=NUM
Only for slim mode: Use up to NUM MB of RAM for caching nodes. Giving osm2pgsql sufficient cache to store all imported nodes typically greatly increases the speed of the import. Each cached node requires 8 bytes of cache, plus about 10% - 30% overhead. As a rule of thumb, give a bit more than the size of the import file in PBF format. If the RAM is not big enough, use about 75% of memory. Make sure to leave enough RAM for PostgreSQL. It needs at least the amount of shared_buffers given in its configuration. Defaults to 800.
--cache-strategy=STRATEGY
This deprecated option will be ignored.
-x, --extra-attributes
Include attributes of each object in the middle tables and make them available to the outputs. Attributes are: user name, user id, changeset id, timestamp and version.
--flat-nodes=FILENAME
The flat-nodes mode is a separate method to store slim mode node information on disk. Instead of storing this information in the main PostgreSQL database, this mode creates its own separate custom database to store the information. As this custom database has application level knowledge about the data to store and is not general purpose, it can store the data much more efficiently. Storing the node information for the full planet requires more than 300GB in PostgreSQL, the same data is stored in “only” 50GB using the flat-nodes mode. This can also increase the speed of applying diff files. This option activates the flat-nodes mode and specifies the location of the database file. It is a single large file. This mode is only recommended for full planet imports as it doesn’t work well with small imports. The default is disabled.
--middle-schema=SCHEMA
Use PostgreSQL schema SCHEMA for all tables, indexes, and functions in the middle (default is no schema, i.e. the public schema is used).
--middle-way-node-index-id-shift=SHIFT
Set ID shift for way node bucket index in middle. Experts only. See documentation for details.

OUTPUT OPTIONS

-O, --output=OUTPUT
Specifies the output back-end to use. Currently osm2pgsql supports pgsql, flex, gazetteer and null. pgsql is the default output back-end and is optimized for rendering with Mapnik. gazetteer is intended for geocoding with Nominatim. The experimental flex backend allows more flexible configuration. null does not write any output and is only useful for testing or with --slim for creating slim tables.
-S, --style=FILE
The style file. This specifies how the data is imported into the database, its format depends on the output. (For the pgsql output, the default is /usr/share/osm2pgsql/default.style, for other outputs there is no default.)

PGSQL OUTPUT OPTIONS

-i, --tablespace-index=TABLESPC
Store all indexes in the PostgreSQL tablespace TABLESPC. This option also affects the middle tables.
--tablespace-main-data=TABLESPC
Store the data tables in the PostgreSQL tablespace TABLESPC.
--tablespace-main-index=TABLESPC
Store the indexes in the PostgreSQL tablespace TABLESPC.
--latlong
Store coordinates in degrees of latitude & longitude.
-m, --merc
Store coordinates in Spherical Mercator (Web Mercator, EPSG:3857) (the default).
-E, --proj=SRID
Use projection EPSG:SRID.
-p, --prefix=PREFIX
Prefix for table names (default: planet_osm). This option affects the middle as well as the pgsql output table names.
--tag-transform-script=SCRIPT
Specify a Lua script to handle tag filtering and normalisation. The script contains callback functions for nodes, ways and relations, which each take a set of tags and returns a transformed, filtered set of tags which are then written to the database.
-x, --extra-attributes
Include attributes (user name, user id, changeset id, timestamp and version). This also requires additional entries in your style file.
-k, --hstore
Add tags without column to an additional hstore (key/value) column in the database tables.
-j, --hstore-all
Add all tags to an additional hstore (key/value) column in the database tables.
-z, --hstore-column=PREFIX
Add an additional hstore (key/value) column named PREFIX containing all tags that have a key starting with PREFIX, eg \--hstore-column "name:" will produce an extra hstore column that contains all name:xx tags.
--hstore-match-only
Only keep objects that have a value in at least one of the non-hstore columns.
--hstore-add-index
Create indexes for all hstore columns after import.
-G, --multi-geometry
Normally osm2pgsql splits multi-part geometries into separate database rows per part. A single OSM object can therefore use several rows in the output tables. With this option, osm2pgsql instead generates multi-geometry features in the PostgreSQL tables.
-K, --keep-coastlines
Keep coastline data rather than filtering it out. By default objects tagged natural=coastline will be discarded based on the assumption that Shapefiles generated by OSMCoastline (https://osmdata.openstreetmap.de/) will be used for the coastline data.
--reproject-area
Compute area column using spherical mercator coordinates even if a different projection is used for the geometries.
--output-pgsql-schema=SCHEMA
Use PostgreSQL schema SCHEMA for all tables, indexes, and functions in the pgsql output (default is no schema, i.e. the public schema is used).

EXPIRE OPTIONS

-e, --expire-tiles=[MIN_ZOOM-]MAX-ZOOM
Create a tile expiry list.
-o, --expire-output=FILENAME
Output file name for expired tiles list.
--expire-bbox-size=SIZE
Max size for a polygon to expire the whole polygon, not just the boundary.

ADVANCED OPTIONS

-I, --disable-parallel-indexing
Disable parallel clustering and index building on all tables, build one index after the other.
--number-processes=THREADS
Specifies the number of parallel threads used for certain operations.
--with-forward-dependencies=BOOL
Propagate changes from nodes to ways and node/way members to relations (Default: true).

SEE ALSO