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140 lines
5.0 KiB
Markdown
140 lines
5.0 KiB
Markdown
# Place Ranking in Nominatim
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Nominatim uses two metrics to rank a place: search rank and address rank.
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This chapter explains what place ranking means and how it can be customized.
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## Search rank
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The search rank describes the extent and importance of a place. It is used
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when ranking search results. Simply put, if there are two results for a
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search query which are otherwise equal, then the result with the _lower_
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search rank will be appear higher in the result list.
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Search ranks are not so important these days because many well-known
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places use the Wikipedia importance ranking instead.
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The following table gives an overview of the kind of features that Nominatim
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expects for each rank:
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rank | typical place types | extent
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-------|---------------------------------|-------
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1-3 | oceans, continents | -
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4 | countries | -
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5-9 | states, regions, provinces | -
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10-12 | counties | -
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13-16 | cities, municipalities, islands | 15 km
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17-18 | towns, boroughs | 4 km
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19 | villages, suburbs | 2 km
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20 | hamlets, farms, neighbourhoods | 1 km
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21-25 | isolated dwellings, city blocks | 500 m
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The extent column describes how far a feature is assumed to reach when it
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is mapped only as a point. Larger features like countries and states are usually
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available with their exact area in the OpenStreetMap data. That is why no extent
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is given.
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## Address rank
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The address rank describes where a place shows up in an address hierarchy.
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Usually only administrative boundaries and place nodes and areas are
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eligible to be part of an address. Places that should not appear in the
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address must have an address rank of 0.
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The following table gives an overview how ranks are mapped to address parts:
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rank | address part
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-------------|-------------
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1-3 | _unused_
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4 | country
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5-9 | state
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10-12 | county
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13-16 | city
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17-21 | suburb
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22-24 | neighbourhood
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25 | squares, farms, localities
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26-27 | street
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28-30 | POI/house number
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The country rank 4 usually doesn't show up in the address parts of an object.
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The country is determined indirectly from the country code.
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Ranks 5-24 can be assigned more or less freely. They make up the major part
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of the address.
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Rank 25 is also an addressing rank but it is special because while it can be
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the parent to a POI with an addr:place of the same name, it cannot be a parent
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to streets. Use it for place features that are technically on the same level
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as a street (e.g. squares, city blocks) or for places that should not normally
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appear in an address unless explicitly tagged so (e.g place=locality which
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should be uninhabited and as such not addressable).
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The street ranks 26 and 27 are handled slightly differently. Only one object
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from these ranks shows up in an address.
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For POI level objects like shops, buildings or house numbers always use rank 30.
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Ranks 28 is reserved for house number interpolations. 29 is for internal use
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only.
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## Rank configuration
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Search and address ranks are assigned to a place when it is first imported
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into the database. There are a few hard-coded rules for the assignment:
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* postcodes follow special rules according to their length
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* boundaries that are not areas and railway=rail are dropped completely
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* the following are always search rank 30 and address rank 0:
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* highway nodes
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* landuse that is not an area
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Other than that, the ranks can be freely assigned via the JSON file according
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to their type and the country they are in. The name of the config file to be
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used can be changed with the setting `NOMINATIM_ADDRESS_LEVEL_CONFIG`.
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The address level configuration must consist of an array of configuration
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entries, each containing a tag definition and an optional country array:
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```
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[ {
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"tags" : {
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"place" : {
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"county" : 12,
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"city" : 16,
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},
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"landuse" : {
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"residential" : 22,
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"" : 30
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}
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}
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},
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{
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"countries" : [ "ca", "us" ],
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"tags" : {
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"boundary" : {
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"administrative8" : 18,
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"administrative9" : 20
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},
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"landuse" : {
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"residential" : [22, 0]
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}
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}
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}
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]
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```
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The `countries` field contains a list of countries (as ISO 3166-1 alpha 2 code)
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for which the definition applies. When the field is omitted, then the
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definition is used as a fallback, when nothing more specific for a given
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country exists.
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`tags` contains the ranks for key/value pairs. The ranks can be either a
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single number, in which case they are the search and address rank, or an array
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of search and address rank (in that order). The value may be left empty.
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Then the rank is used when no more specific value is found for the given
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key.
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Countries and key/value combination may appear in multiple definitions. Just
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make sure that each combination of country/key/value appears only once per
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file. Otherwise the import will fail with a UNIQUE INDEX constraint violation
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on import.
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