Hi Brett (and everyone else), It looks like your first assumption is probably correct: The Victoria polygon you're using is too big, it comprises of 10147 nodes (and can be found at http://downloads.cloudmade.com/oceania/australia_and_new_zealand/australia/victoria/victoria.poly ). If you don't mind having small parts of NSW and SA in the VIC polygon, then I recommend using a super-simple custom polygon for this.
JOSM has a plugin called "poly" that allows you to import and export to poly files, so I just made up a quick 4 node polygon of Victoria that should be fine to use: Victoria 1 140.955887 -33.713994 150.349971 -36.765387 150.312801 -39.210773 140.958166 -39.214549 140.955887 -33.713994 END END The notes on using the splitter ( http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Splitter ) under the --polygon-file part states that, "The name of a file containing a bounding polygon in osmosis polygon file format. Splitter uses this file when calculating the areas. It first calculates a grid using the given --resolution. The input file is read and for each node, a counter is increased for the related grid area. If the input file contains a bounding box, this is applied to the grid so that nodes outside of the bounding box are ignored. Next, if specified, the bounding polygon is used to zero those grid elements outside of the bounding polygon area. If the polygon area(s) describe(s) a rectilinear area with no more than 40 vertices, splitter will try to create output files that fit exactly into the area, else it will approximate the polygon area with rectangles." - Which just means that the splitter likes rectangles that fit lat / lon lines, and hence doesn't like anything with diagonal lines and lots of complexity. The --resolution parameter sounds like it enables you to specify how big it can make the split off squares when approximating diagonal parts of the polygon. The bigger the squares, the less it fits with the polygon, but it'll be much faster to compute. So it looks like a smaller --resolution number makes for bigger squares, by default it uses --resolution=13 Regardless, the Victoria.poly file I've provided here should work fine for you. I've used the poly file from http://download.geofabrik.de/australia-oceania/australia.html when creating mkgmap files for use with splitter, and also when using phyghtmap to get contours australia-wide (at 10m resolution I would expect about 1GB of contours in pbf format Australia-wide). So the Australia-wide polygon on the geofabrik.de website has 13 nodes with diagonal parts and it all works fine, so my 4 node polygon of Victoria should also work fine, hopefully without any tweaks to its geometry. Let us know if you have any further issues, and if you can, provide a link to any largish files in future rather than having them in the email body or attachment. Cheers :-) -- http://www.fastmail.fm - mmm... Fastmail...
Victoria.poly
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