13 KiB
Importing the Database
The following instructions explain how to create a Nominatim database
from an OSM planet file. It is assumed that you have already successfully
installed the Nominatim software itself and the nominatim
tool can be found
in your PATH
. If this is not the case, return to the
installation page.
Creating the project directory
Before you start the import, you should create a project directory for your new database installation. This directory receives all data that is related to a single Nominatim setup: configuration, extra data, etc. Create a project directory apart from the Nominatim software and change into the directory:
mkdir ~/nominatim-project
cd ~/nominatim-project
In the following, we refer to the project directory as $PROJECT_DIR
. To be
able to copy&paste instructions, you can export the appropriate variable:
export PROJECT_DIR=~/nominatim-project
The Nominatim tool assumes per default that the current working directory is
the project directory but you may explicitly state a different directory using
the --project-dir
parameter. The following instructions assume that you run
all commands from the project directory.
!!! tip "Migration Tip"
Nominatim used to be run directly from the build directory until version 3.6.
Essentially, the build directory functioned as the project directory
for the database installation. This setup still works and can be useful for
development purposes. It is not recommended anymore for production setups.
Create a project directory that is separate from the Nominatim software.
Configuration setup in .env
The Nominatim server can be customized via an .env
configuration file in the
project directory. This is a file in dotenv
format which looks the same as variable settings in a standard shell environment.
You can also set the same configuration via environment variables. All
settings have a NOMINATIM_
prefix to avoid conflicts with other environment
variables.
There are lots of configuration settings you can tweak. A full reference can be found in the chapter Configuration Settings. Most should have a sensible default.
Flatnode files
If you plan to import a large dataset (e.g. Europe, North America, planet),
you should also enable flatnode storage of node locations. With this
setting enabled, node coordinates are stored in a simple file instead
of the database. This will save you import time and disk storage.
Add to your .env
:
NOMINATIM_FLATNODE_FILE="/path/to/flatnode.file"
Replace the second part with a suitable path on your system and make sure the directory exists. There should be at least 75GB of free space.
Downloading additional data
Wikipedia/Wikidata rankings
Wikipedia can be used as an optional auxiliary data source to help indicate the importance of OSM features. Nominatim will work without this information but it will improve the quality of the results if this is installed. This data is available as a binary download. Put it into your project directory:
cd $PROJECT_DIR
wget https://nominatim.org/data/wikimedia-importance.csv.gz
wget -O secondary_importance.sql.gz https://nominatim.org/data/wikimedia-secondary-importance.sql.gz
The files are about 400MB and add around 4GB to the Nominatim database. For more information about importance, see Importance Customization.
!!! tip
If you forgot to download the wikipedia rankings, then you can
also add importances after the import. Download the SQL files, then
run nominatim refresh --wiki-data --secondary-importance --importance
.
Updating importances for a planet will take a couple of hours.
External postcodes
Nominatim can use postcodes from an external source to improve searching with postcodes. We provide precomputed postcodes sets for the US (using TIGER data) and the UK (using the CodePoint OpenData set. This data can be optionally downloaded into the project directory:
cd $PROJECT_DIR
wget https://nominatim.org/data/gb_postcodes.csv.gz
wget https://nominatim.org/data/us_postcodes.csv.gz
You can also add your own custom postcode sources, see Customization of postcodes.
Choosing the data to import
In its default setup Nominatim is configured to import the full OSM data set for the entire planet. Such a setup requires a powerful machine with at least 64GB of RAM and around 900GB of SSD hard disks. Depending on your use case there are various ways to reduce the amount of data imported. This section discusses these methods. They can also be combined.
Using an extract
If you only need geocoding for a smaller region, then precomputed OSM extracts are a good way to reduce the database size and import time. Geofabrik offers extracts for most countries. They even have daily updates which can be used with the update process described in the next section. There are also other providers for extracts.
Please be aware that some extracts are not cut exactly along the country boundaries. As a result some parts of the boundary may be missing which means that Nominatim cannot compute the areas for some administrative areas.
Dropping Data Required for Dynamic Updates
About half of the data in Nominatim's database is not really used for serving
the API. It is only there to allow the data to be updated from the latest
changes from OSM. For many uses these dynamic updates are not really required.
If you don't plan to apply updates, you can run the import with the
--no-updates
parameter. This will drop the dynamic part of the database as
soon as it is not required anymore.
You can also drop the dynamic part later using the following command:
nominatim freeze
Note that you still need to provide for sufficient disk space for the initial import. So this option is particularly interesting if you plan to transfer the database or reuse the space later.
!!! warning
The data structure for updates are also required when adding additional data
after the import, for example TIGER housenumber data.
If you plan to use those, you must not use the --no-updates
parameter.
Do a normal import, add the external data and once you are done with
everything run nominatim freeze
.
Reverse-only Imports
If you only want to use the Nominatim database for reverse lookups or
if you plan to use the installation only for exports to a
photon database, then you can set up a database
without search indexes. Add --reverse-only
to your setup command above.
This saves about 5% of disk space, import time won't be significant faster.
Filtering Imported Data
Nominatim normally sets up a full search database containing administrative boundaries, places, streets, addresses and POI data. There are also other import styles available which only read selected data:
- admin Only import administrative boundaries and places.
- street Like the admin style but also adds streets.
- address Import all data necessary to compute addresses down to house number level.
- full Default style that also includes points of interest.
- extratags Like the full style but also adds most of the OSM tags into the extratags column.
The style can be changed with the configuration NOMINATIM_IMPORT_STYLE
.
To give you an idea of the impact of using the different styles, the table
below gives rough estimates of the final database size after import of a
2020 planet and after using the --drop
option. It also shows the time
needed for the import on a machine with 64GB RAM, 4 CPUS and NVME disks.
Note that the given sizes are just an estimate meant for comparison of
style requirements. Your planet import is likely to be larger as the
OSM data grows with time.
style | Import time | DB size | after drop |
---|---|---|---|
admin | 4h | 215 GB | 20 GB |
street | 22h | 440 GB | 185 GB |
address | 36h | 545 GB | 260 GB |
full | 54h | 640 GB | 330 GB |
extratags | 54h | 650 GB | 340 GB |
You can also customize the styles further. A description of the style format can be found in the customization guide.
Initial import of the data
!!! danger "Important" First try the import with a small extract, for example from Geofabrik.
Download the data to import. Then issue the following command from the project directory to start the import:
nominatim import --osm-file <data file> 2>&1 | tee setup.log
The project directory is the one that you have set up at the beginning. See creating the project directory.
Notes on full planet imports
Even on a perfectly configured machine
the import of a full planet takes around 2 days. Once you see messages
with Rank .. ETA
appear, the indexing process has started. This part takes
the most time. There are 30 ranks to process. Rank 26 and 30 are the most complex.
They take each about a third of the total import time. If you have not reached
rank 26 after two days of import, it is worth revisiting your system
configuration as it may not be optimal for the import.
Notes on memory usage
In the first step of the import Nominatim uses osm2pgsql
to load the OSM data into the PostgreSQL database. This step is very demanding
in terms of RAM usage. osm2pgsql and PostgreSQL are running in parallel at
this point. PostgreSQL blocks at least the part of RAM that has been configured
with the shared_buffers
parameter during
PostgreSQL tuning
and needs some memory on top of that. osm2pgsql needs at least 2GB of RAM for
its internal data structures, potentially more when it has to process very large
relations. In addition it needs to maintain a cache for node locations. The size
of this cache can be configured with the parameter --osm2pgsql-cache
.
When importing with a flatnode file, it is best to disable the node cache completely and leave the memory for the flatnode file. Nominatim will do this by default, so you do not need to configure anything in this case.
For imports without a flatnode file, set --osm2pgsql-cache
approximately to
the size of the OSM pbf file you are importing. The size needs to be given in
MB. Make sure you leave enough RAM for PostgreSQL and osm2pgsql as mentioned
above. If the system starts swapping or you are getting out-of-memory errors,
reduce the cache size or even consider using a flatnode file.
Testing the installation
Run this script to verify that all required tables and indices got created successfully.
nominatim admin --check-database
If you have installed the nominatim-api
package, then you can try out
your installation by executing a simple query on the command line:
nominatim search --query Berlin
or, when you have a reverse-only installation:
nominatim reverse --lat 51 --lon 45
If you want to run Nominatim as a service, make sure you have installed the right packages as per Installation.
Testing the Python frontend
To run the test server against the Python frontend, you must choose a web framework to use, either starlette or falcon. Make sure the appropriate packages are installed. Then run
nominatim serve
or, if you prefer to use Starlette instead of Falcon as webserver,
nominatim serve --engine starlette
Go to http://localhost:8088/status
and you should see the message OK
.
You can also run a search query, e.g. http://localhost:8088/search?q=Berlin
or, for reverse-only installations a reverse query,
e.g. http://localhost:8088/reverse?lat=27.1750090510034&lon=78.04209025
.
Do not use this test server in production. To run Nominatim via webservers like Apache or nginx, please continue reading Deploy the Python frontend.
Enabling search by category phrases
To be able to search for places by their type using special phrases you also need to import these key phrases like this:
nominatim special-phrases --import-from-wiki
Note that this command downloads the phrases from the wiki link above. You need internet access for the step.
You can also import special phrases from a csv file, for more information please see the Customization part.