On Sun, Oct 26, 2008 at 06:11:04PM -0700, Michal Migurski wrote:
What is the difference between osmosis and osm2pgsql, with regards to
postGIS?
osm2pgsql creates the structure needed for Mapnik. Osmosis creates a
structure more simliar to the one in the OSM central database.
If I've been
Shaun McDonald wrote:
On 27 Oct 2008, at 00:50, Michal Migurski wrote:
Planet dumps are not snapshots - they do not represent a consistent
view at any particular point in time because they take a number of
hours to generate, during which time new changes are constantly
being made to the
On Mon, Oct 27, 2008 at 08:22:32AM +, Tom Hughes wrote:
Shaun McDonald wrote:
On 27 Oct 2008, at 00:50, Michal Migurski wrote:
Planet dumps are not snapshots - they do not represent a consistent
view at any particular point in time because they take a number of
hours to generate,
Others have already commented on most of your points but I'll add my
thoughts in case there's some gaps.
Michal Migurski wrote:
Hi,
I've been trying to keep up to date with the dumps and diffs from
http://planet.openstreetmap.org/
, and I'm running into a number of bugs related to cutoff
Jochen Topf wrote:
If the planet dump plus the diff from the same day is what everybody
wants anyway, why not do this on the server side and hold the planet
back after the first diff is available, run this over the planet and
then publish that as the planet?
It would add delay to the
Hi,
Brett Henderson wrote:
Brett Henderson has offered to look into creating the dailies from
history as well, but I don't know about the status of that.
Are you referring to the daily changesets?
[...]
Or did you mean planets instead of dailies?
Mix-up on my part, sorry, yes I meant
Yep, as others have commented there are two tables types in the osm
database; current tables, and history tables. The planet dumper
just reads current tables which is the fastest approach.
Unfortunately the current tables change constantly during the
planet generation process
On Mon, Oct 27, 2008 at 9:39 PM, Michal Migurski [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm liking Jochen Topf's suggestion here:
If the planet dump plus the diff from the same day is what everybody
wants anyway, why not do this on the server side and hold the planet
back after the first diff is
On Mon, Oct 27, 2008 at 9:40 PM, Michal Migurski [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Now that I think about it though, I think what I did was take one of
the planet dumps from http://hypercube.telascience.org/planet/ (which
*are* consistant snapshots), and run the dailies from there.
Is there any reason
On Tue, Oct 28, 2008 at 7:39 AM, Michal Migurski [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Finally, the boundaries between the hourlies and dailies seem
misaligned.
This shouldn't be the case.
After running the remaining hourlies for the 22nd, I attempted to
pick up on the 23rd with a daily. The
On Mon, Oct 27, 2008 at 9:39 PM, Michal Migurski [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
I'm liking Jochen Topf's suggestion here:
If the planet dump plus the diff from the same day is what
everybody
wants anyway, why not do this on the server side and hold the planet
back after the first diff
Michal Migurski wrote:
The final event in each weekly planet dump does not fall on an even
day boundary. In the case of the most recent Oct. 22nd planet.osm, it
was necessary to experiment with hourly diffs from that day to find
that the boundary was approx. 2:00pm. Hourlies up to and
Hi,
Michal Migurski wrote:
I've noticed some misalignments between the data in the dumps and the
osm2pgsql importer that leads to unavoidable holes in the data.
As TomH has already said, this is not a bug, it stems from the fact that
the full planet export reads the current tables and as
The final event in each weekly planet dump does not fall on an
even day boundary. In the case of the most recent Oct. 22nd
planet.osm, it was necessary to experiment with hourly diffs from
that day to find that the boundary was approx. 2:00pm. Hourlies up
to and including
On Oct 26, 2008, at 5:50 PM, Frederik Ramm wrote:
Brett Henderson has offered to look into creating the dailies from
history as well, but I don't know about the status of that.
If you use osmosis, it is safe (and in fact recommended) that, after
loading the database with a planet file
On 27 Oct 2008, at 00:50, Michal Migurski wrote:
The final event in each weekly planet dump does not fall on an
even day boundary. In the case of the most recent Oct. 22nd
planet.osm, it was necessary to experiment with hourly diffs from
that day to find that the boundary was approx.
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