Provided by: osmctools_0.9-5_amd64 bug

NAME

       osmconvert - Converter of OSM files

SYNOPSIS

       osmconvert options [input file]

DESCRIPTION

       This  program  reads  different  file  formats  of the OpenStreetMap project and converts the data to the
       selected output file format.

   These formats can be read:
       .osm .osc .osc.gz .osh .o5m .o5c .pbf

   These formats can be written:
       .osm (default) .osc .osh .o5m .o5c .pbf

       Names of input files must be specified as command line parameters.  Use - to read  from  standard  input.
       You  do  not  need  to  specify  the input formats, osmconvert will recognize them by itself.  The output
       format is .osm by default. If you want a different  format,  please  specify  it  using  the  appropriate
       command line parameter.

OPTIONS

       -b=<x1>,<y1>,<x2>,<y2>

              If you want to limit the geographical region, you can define a bounding box. To do this, enter the
              southwestern and the northeastern corners of that area. For example: -b=-0.5,51,0.5,52

       -B=<border_polygon>

              Alternatively  to  a  bounding  box you can use a border polygon to limit the geographical region.
              The   format   of   a   border   polygon   file    can    be    found    in    the    OSM    Wiki:
              https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Osmosis/Polygon_Filter_File_Format
              You  do  not  need  to  strictly follow the format description, you must ensure that every line of
              coordinates starts with blanks.

       --complete-ways

              If applying a border box or a border polygon, all nodes the borders are  excluded;  even  then  if
              they  belong to a way which is not entirely excluded because it has some nodes inside the borders.
              This option will ensure that every way stays complete, even it it  intersects  the  borders.  This
              will  result  in  slower  processing, and the program will loose its ability to read from standard
              input. It is recommended to use .o5m format as input  format  to  compensate  most  of  the  speed
              disadvantage.

       --complex-multipolygons, --complex-boundaries

              Same as before, but multipolygons resp. boundaries will not be cut at the borders too.

       --all-to-nodes

              Some  applications do not have the ability to process ways or relations, they just accept nodes as
              input. However, more and more complex object are mapped as ways or even relations in order to  get
              all  their details into the database.  Apply this option if you want to convert ways and relations
              to nodes and thereby make them available to applications which can only deal with nodes.  For each
              way a node is created. The way's id is increased by 10^15 and taken as id for the  new  node.  The
              node's longitude and latitude are set to the way's geographical center. Same applies to relations,
              however they get 2*10^15 as id offset.

       --add-bbox-tags

              This  option  adds  a  tag  with  a  bounding box to each object.  The tag will contain the border
              coordinates in this order: min Longitude, min Latitude, max Longitude , max Latitude.  e.g.:  <tag
              k="bBox" v="-0.5000,51.0000,0.5000,52.0000"/>

       --add-bboxarea-tags

              A tag for an estimated area value for the bbox is added to each way and each relation. The unit is
              square meters.  For example:  <tag k="bBoxArea" v="33828002"/>

       --add-bboxweight-tags

              This option will add the binary logarithm of the bbox area of each way  and  each  relation.   For
              example:  <tag k="bBoxWeight" v="20"/>

       --add-bboxwidth-tags

              A  tag  for an estimated width value for the bbox is added to each way and each relation. The unit
              is meters.  For example:  <tag k="bBoxWidth" v="825"/>

       --add-bboxwidthweight-tags

              This option will add the binary logarithm of the bbox width of each way and  each  relation.   For
              example:  <tag k="bBoxWidthWeight" v="10"/>

       --object-type-offset=<id offset>

              If  applying  the  --all-to-nodes  option  as  explained  above, you may adjust the id offset. For
              example: --object-type-offset=4000000000
              By appending "+1" to the offset, the program will create ids in a sequence with step 1. This might
              be useful if the there is a  subsequently  running  application  which  cannot  process  large  id
              numbers. Example:
              --object-type-offset=1900000000+1

       --drop-broken-refs

              Use  this  option if you need to delete references to nodes which have been excluded because lying
              outside the borders (mandatory for some applications, e.g. Map Composer, JOSM).

       --drop-author

              For most applications the author tags are not needed.  If  you  specify  this  option,  no  author
              information will be written: no changeset, user or timestamp.

       --drop-version

              If  you  want to exclude not only the author information but also the version number, specify this
              option.

       --drop-nodes --drop-ways --drop-relations

              According to the combination of these parameters, no members  of  the  referred  section  will  be
              written.

       --modify-tags=<tag_modification_list>

              The  tag  modification  list  determines  which  tags  will  be  modified.  The  example --modify-
              tags="highway=primary to =secondary" will change every "primary" highway  into  "secondary".   You
              can   also   use   comparisons   or   add  additional  tags:  --modify-way-tags="maxspeed>200  add
              highspeed=yes"

       --modify-node-tags=TAG_MODIFICATION_LIST                          --modify-way-tags=TAG_MODIFICATION_LIST
       --modify-relation-tags=TAG_MODIFICATION_LIST                 --modify-node-way-tags=TAG_MODIFICATION_LIST
       --modify-node-relation-tags=TAG_MODIFICATION_LIST --modify-way-relation-tags=TAG_MODIFICATION_LIST

              Same as above, but just for the specified object types.

       --diff

              Calculate difference between two files and create a new .osc or .o5c  file.   There  must  be  TWO
              input  files  and  borders  cannot  be  applied.  Both files must be sorted by object type and id.
              Created objects will appear in the output file as "modified", unless having version number 1.

       --diff-contents

              Similar to --diff, this option calculates differences between two OSM files.  Here,  to  determine
              the  differences complete OSM objects are consulted, not only the version numbers.  Unfortunately,
              this option strictly requires both input files to have .o5m format.

       --subtract

              The output file will not contain any object which exists in one of the input files following  this
              directive. For example: osmconvert input.o5m --subtract minus.o5m -o=output.o5m

       --pbf-granularity=<val>

              Rarely  .pbf files come with non-standard granularity.  osmconvert will recognize this and suggest
              to specify the abnormal lon/lat granularity using this command line option.  Allowed  values  are:
              100 (default), 1000, 10000, ..., 10000000.

       --emulate-osmosis --emulate-pbf2osm

              In  case of .osm output format, the program will try to use the same data syntax as Osmosis, resp.
              pbf2osm.

       --fake-author

              If you have dropped author information (--drop-author) that data will be  lost,  of  course.  Some
              programs however require author information on input although they do not need that data. For this
              purpose, you can fake the author information.  osmconvert will write changeset 1, timestamp 1970.

       --fake-version

              Same  as  --fake-author, but - if .osm xml is used as output format - only the version number will
              be written (version 1).  This is useful if you want to inspect the data with JOSM.

       --fake-lonlat

              Some programs depend on getting longitude/latitude values, even when the object in question  shall
              be deleted. With this option you can have osmconvert to fake these values:
              ... lat="0" lon="0" ...
              Note that this is for XML files only (.osc and .osh).

       -h

              Display a short parameter overview.

       --help

              Display this help.

       --merge-versions

              Some  .osc  files  contain  different  versions  of  one  object.   Use this option to accept such
              duplicates on input.

       --out-osm

              Data will be written in .osm format. This is the default output format.

       --out-osc

              The OSM Change format will be used for output. Please note  that  OSM  objects  which  are  to  be
              deleted will be represented by their ids only.

       --out-osh

              For  every  OSM  object, the appropriate 'visible' tag will be added to meet 'full planet history'
              specification.

       --out-o5m

              The .o5m format will be used. This format has the same structure as the conventional .osm  format,
              but the data are stored as binary numbers and are therefore much more compact than in .osm format.
              No  packing  is  used, so you can pack .o5m files using every file packer you want, e.g. lzo, bz2,
              etc.

       --out-o5c

              This is the change file format of .o5m data format. All <delete> tags will  not  be  performed  as
              delete actions but converted into .o5c data format.

       --out-pbf

              For output, PBF format will be used.

       --out-csv

              A  character  separated list will be written to output.  The default separator is Tab, the default
              columns are: type, id, name. You can change both by using the options --csv-separator= and --csv=

       --csv-headline

              Choose this option to print a headline to csv output.

       --csv-separator=<sep>

              You may change the default separator (Tab) to a different character  or  character  sequence.  For
              example: --csv-separator="; "

       --csv=<columns>

              If  you want to have certain columns in your csv list, please specify their names as shown in this
              example: --csv="@id name ref description" There are a few special column names  for  header  data:
              @otype  (object  type  0..2),  @oname  (object  type  name), @id @lon, @lat, @version, @timestamp,
              @changeset, @uid, @user

       --out-none

              This will be no standard output. This option is for testing purposes only.

       --timestamp=<date_and_time> --timestamp=NOW<seconds_relative_to_now>

              If you want to set the OSM timestamp of your output file, supply it with  this  option.  Date  and
              time    must    be    formatted    according    OSM   date/time   specifications.   For   example:
              --timestamp=2011-01-31T23:59:30Z You also can supply a relative time in  seconds,  e.g.  24h  ago:
              --timestamp=NOW-86400

       --out-timestamp

              With this option set, osmconvert prints just the time stamp of the input file, nothing else.

       --statistics

              This option activates a statistics counter. The program will print statistical data to stderr.

       --out-statistics

              Same as --statistics, but the statistical data will be written to standard output.

       -o=<outfile>

              Standard  output  will be rerouted to the specified file.  If no output format has been specified,
              the program will rely on the file name extension.

       -t=<tempfile>

              If borders are to be applied or broken references to be eliminated, osmconvert  creates  and  uses
              two   temporary   files.   This  parameter  defines  their  name  prefix.  The  default  value  is
              "osmconvert_tempfile".

       --parameter-file=FILE

              If you want to supply one ore more command line arguments by a parameter  file,  please  use  this
              option and specify the file name. Within the parameter file, parameters must be separated by empty
              lines.  Line feeds inside a parameter will be converted to spaces.  Lines starting with "// " will
              be treated as comments.

       -v --verbose

              With activated 'verbose' mode, some statistical data and diagnosis data will be displayed.  If  -v
              resp. --verbose is the first parameter in the line, osmconvert will display all input parameters.

TUNING

       To  speed-up the process, the program uses some main memory for a hash table. By default, it uses 1200 MB
       for storing a flag for every possible node, 150 for the way flags, and 10  relation  flags.   Every  byte
       holds the flags for 8 ID numbers, i.e., in 1200 MB the program can store 9600 million flags. As there are
       less  than  5700 million IDs for nodes at present (May 2018), 720 MB would suffice.  So, for example, you
       can decrease the hash sizes to e.g. 720, 80 and 2 MB using this option:

       --hash-memory=720-80-2

       But keep in mind that the OSM database is continuously expanding. For this reason the program-own default
       value is higher than shown in the example, and it may be appropriate to increase it in  the  future.   If
       you  do not want to bother with the details, you can enter the amount of memory as a sum, and the program
       will divide it by itself.  For example:

       --hash-memory=1000

       These 1000 MiB will be split in three parts: 800 for nodes, 150 for ways, and 50 for relations.

       Because we are taking hashes, it is not necessary to provide all the suggested memory; the  program  will
       operate  with  less  hash memory too.  But, in this case, the border filter will be less effective, i.e.,
       some ways and some relations will be left in the output file although they  should  have  been  excluded.
       The  maximum value the program accepts for the hash size is 4000 MiB; If you exceed the maximum amount of
       memory available on your system, the program will try  to  reduce  this  amount  and  display  a  warning
       message.

       There  is  another  temporary memory space which is used only for the conversion of ways and relations to
       nodes (option --all-to-nodes).  This space is sufficient for up to 25 Mio. OSM objects, 400  MB  of  main
       memory  are  needed for this purpose, 800 MB if extended option --add-bbox-tags has been invoked. If this
       is not sufficient or if you want to save memory, you can configure the maximum number of OSM  objects  by
       yourself. For example:

       --max-objects=35000000

       The  number of references per object is limited to 100,000. This will be sufficient for all OSM files. If
       you are going to create your own OSM files by converting shapefiles or other files to  OSM  format,  this
       might  result  in way objects with more than 100,000 nodes. For this reason you will need to increase the
       maximum accordingly. Example:

       --max-refs=400000

LIMITATIONS

       When extracting a geographical region (using -b or -B), the input file must contain the  objects  ordered
       by  their  type:  first,  all  nodes,  next,  all  ways,  followed by all relations. Within each of these
       sections, the objects section must be sorted by their id in ascending order.

       Usual .osm, .osc, .o5m, o5c and .pbf files adhere to this condition.  This means that you do not have  to
       worry about this limitation.  osmconvert will display an error message if this sequence is broken.

       If a polygon file for borders is supplied, the maximum number of polygon points is about 40,000.

NOTES

       This  program  is  for  experimental  use.  Expect  malfunctions and data loss. Do not use the program in
       productive or commercial systems.

       There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.  Please send any bug reports to marqqs@gmx.eu

EXAMPLE

       osmconvert europe.pbf --drop-author >europe.osm
       osmconvert europe.pbf |gzip >europe.osm.gz
       bzcat europe.osm.bz2 |./osmconvert --out-pbf >europe.pbf
       osmconvert europe.pbf -B=ch.poly >switzerland.osm
       osmconvert switzerland.osm --out-o5m >switzerland.o5m
       osmconvert june_july.osc --out-o5c >june_july.o5c
       osmconvert june.o5m june_july.o5c.gz --out-o5m >july.o5m
       osmconvert sep.osm sep_oct.osc oct_nov.osc >nov.osm
       osmconvert northamerica.osm southamerica.osm >americas.osm

SEE ALSO

       osmfilter(1), osmupdate(1)

AUTHORS

       osmconvert was written by Markus Weber

                                                 September 2013                                    OSMCONVERT(1)