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154 lines
5.7 KiB
Markdown
154 lines
5.7 KiB
Markdown
## Configuring the Import
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Which OSM objects are added to the database and which of the tags are used
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can be configured via the import style configuration file. This
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is a JSON file which contains a list of rules which are matched against every
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tag of every object and then assign the tag its specific role.
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The style to use is given by the `NOMINATIM_IMPORT_STYLE` configuration
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option. There are a number of default styles, which are explained in detail
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in the [Import section](../admin/Import.md#filtering-imported-data). These
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standard styles may be referenced by their name.
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You can also create your own custom style. Put the style file into your
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project directory and then set `NOMINATIM_IMPORT_STYLE` to the name of the file.
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It is always recommended to start with one of the standard styles and customize
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those. You find the standard styles under the name `import-<stylename>.style`
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in the standard Nominatim configuration path (usually `/etc/nominatim` or
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`/usr/local/etc/nominatim`).
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The remainder of the page describes the format of the file.
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### Configuration Rules
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A single rule looks like this:
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```json
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{
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"keys" : ["key1", "key2", ...],
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"values" : {
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"value1" : "prop",
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"value2" : "prop1,prop2"
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}
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}
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```
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A rule first defines a list of keys to apply the rule to. This is always a list
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of strings. The string may have four forms. An empty string matches against
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any key. A string that ends in an asterisk `*` is a prefix match and accordingly
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matches against any key that starts with the given string (minus the `*`). A
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suffix match can be defined similarly with a string that starts with a `*`. Any
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other string constitutes an exact match.
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The second part of the rules defines a list of values and the properties that
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apply to a successful match. Value strings may be either empty, which
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means that they match any value, or describe an exact match. Prefix
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or suffix matching of values is not possible.
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For a rule to match, it has to find a valid combination of keys and values. The
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resulting property is that of the matched values.
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The rules in a configuration file are processed sequentially and the first
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match for each tag wins.
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A rule where key and value are the empty string is special. This defines the
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fallback when none of the rules match. The fallback is always used as a last
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resort when nothing else matches, no matter where the rule appears in the file.
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Defining multiple fallback rules is not allowed. What happens in this case,
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is undefined.
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### Tag Properties
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One or more of the following properties may be given for each tag:
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* `main`
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A principal tag. A new row will be added for the object with key and value
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as `class` and `type`.
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* `with_name`
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When the tag is a principal tag (`main` property set): only really add a new
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row, if there is any name tag found (a reference tag is not sufficient, see
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below).
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* `with_name_key`
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When the tag is a principal tag (`main` property set): only really add a new
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row, if there is also a name tag that matches the key of the principal tag.
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For example, if the main tag is `bridge=yes`, then it will only be added as
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an extra row, if there is a tag `bridge:name[:XXX]` for the same object.
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If this property is set, all other names that are not domain-specific are
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ignored.
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* `fallback`
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When the tag is a principal tag (`main` property set): only really add a new
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row, when no other principal tags for this object have been found. Only one
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fallback tag can win for an object.
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* `operator`
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When the tag is a principal tag (`main` property set): also include the
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`operator` tag in the list of names. This is a special construct for an
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out-dated tagging practise in OSM. Fuel stations and chain restaurants
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in particular used to have the name of the chain tagged as `operator`.
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These days the chain can be more commonly found in the `brand` tag but
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there is still enough old data around to warrant this special case.
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* `name`
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Add tag to the list of names.
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* `ref`
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Add tag to the list of names as a reference. At the moment this only means
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that the object is not considered to be named for `with_name`.
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* `address`
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Add tag to the list of address tags. If the tag starts with `addr:` or
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`is_in:`, then this prefix is cut off before adding it to the list.
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* `postcode`
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Add the value as a postcode to the address tags. If multiple tags are
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candidate for postcodes, one wins out and the others are dropped.
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* `country`
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Add the value as a country code to the address tags. The value must be a
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two letter country code, otherwise it is ignored. If there are multiple
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tags that match, then one wins out and the others are dropped.
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* `house`
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If no principle tags can be found for the object, still add the object with
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`class`=`place` and `type`=`house`. Use this for address nodes that have no
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other function.
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* `interpolation`
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Add this object as an address interpolation (appears as `class`=`place` and
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`type`=`houses` in the database).
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* `extra`
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Add tag to the list of extra tags.
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* `skip`
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Skip the tag completely. Useful when a custom default fallback is defined
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or to define exceptions to rules.
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A rule can define as many of these properties for one match as it likes. For
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example, if the property is `"main,extra"` then the tag will open a new row
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but also have the tag appear in the list of extra tags.
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### Changing the Style of Existing Databases
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There is normally no issue changing the style of a database that is already
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imported and now kept up-to-date with change files. Just be aware that any
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change in the style applies to updates only. If you want to change the data
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that is already in the database, then a reimport is necessary.
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