osmium-export - export OSM data
osmium export [OPTIONS] OSM-FILE
The OSM data model with its nodes, ways, and relations is very
different from the data model usually used for geodata with features having
point, linestring, or polygon geometries (or their cousins, the multipoint,
multilinestring, or multipolygon geometries).
The export command transforms OSM data into a more usual
GIS data model. Nodes will be translated into points and ways into
linestrings or polygons (if they are closed ways). Multipolygon and boundary
relations will be translated into multipolygons. This transformation is not
loss-less, especially information in non-multipolygon, non-boundary
relations is lost.
All tags are preserved in this process. Note that most GIS formats
(such as Shapefiles, etc.) do not support arbitrary tags. Transformation
into other GIS formats will need extra steps mapping tags to a limited list
of attributes. This is outside the scope of this command.
The osmium export command has to keep an index of the node
locations in memory or in a temporary file on disk while doing its work.
There are several different ways it can do that which have different
advantages and disadvantages. The default is good enough for most cases, but
see the osmium-index-types(5) man page for details.
Objects with invalid geometries are silently omitted from the
output. This is the case for ways with less than two nodes or closed ways or
relations that can’t be assembled into a valid (multi)polygon. See
the options --show-errors/-e and --stop-on-error/-E for how to
modify this behaviour.
The input file will be read twice (once for the relations, once
for nodes and ways), so this command can not read its input from STDIN.
This command will not work on full history files.
This command will work with negative IDs on OSM objects (for
instance on files created with JOSM).
- -c, --config=FILE
- Read configuration from specified file.
- -C,
--print-default-config
- Print the default config to STDOUT. Useful if you want to change it and
not write the whole thing manually. If you use this option all other
options are ignored.
- -e, --show-errors
- Output any geometry errors on STDERR. This includes ways with a single
node or areas that can’t be assembled from multipolygon relations.
This output is not suitable for automated use, there are other tools that
can create very detailed errors reports that are better for that (see
https://osmcode.org/osm-area-tools/).
- -E, --stop-on-error
- Usually geometry errors (due to missing node locations or broken polygons)
are ignored and the features are omitted from the output. If this option
is set, any error will immediately stop the program.
- --geometry-types=TYPES
- Specify the geometry types that should be written out. Usually all created
geometries (points, linestrings, and (multi)polygons) are written to the
output, but you can restrict the types using this option. TYPES is a
comma-separated list of the types (“point”,
“linestring”, and “polygon”).
- -a, --attributes=ATTRS
- In addition to tags, also export attributes specified in this
comma-separated list. By default, none are exported. See the
ATTRIBUTES section below for the known attributes list and an
explanation.
- -i, --index-type=TYPE
- Set the index type. For details see the osmium-index-types(5) man
page.
- -I, --show-index-types
- Shows a list of available index types. For details see the
osmium-index-types(5) man page. If you use this options all other
options are ignored.
- -n, --keep-untagged
- If this is set, features without any tags will be in the exported data. By
default these features will be omitted from the output. Tags are the OSM
tags, not attributes (like id, version, uid, ...) without the tags removed
by the exclude_tags or include_tags settings.
- -u, --add-unique-id=TYPE
- Add a unique ID to each feature. TYPE can be either counter in
which case the first feature will get ID 1, the next ID 2 and so on. The
type of object does not matter in this case. Or the TYPE is type_id
in which case the ID is a string, the first character is the type of
object (`n' for nodes, `w' for linestrings created from ways, and `a' for
areas created from ways and/or relations, after that there is a unique ID
based on the original OSM object ID(s). If the input file has negative
IDs, this can create IDs such as `w-12'. In spaten exports the ID is
written into the @fid field. For counter the value will be an
integer, for type_id it will be a string.
- -x,
--format-option=OPTION(=VALUE)
- Set an output format option. The options available depend on the output
format. See the OUTPUT FORMAT OPTIONS section for available
options. If the VALUE is not set, the OPTION will be set to
“true”. If needed you can specify this option multiple times
to set several options. Options set on the command line overwrite options
set in the config file.
- -h, --help
- Show usage help.
- -v, --verbose
- Set verbose mode. The program will output information about what it is
doing to STDERR.
- --progress
- Show progress bar. Usually a progress bar is only displayed if STDOUT and
STDERR are detected to be TTY. With this option a progress bar is always
shown. Note that a progress bar will never be shown when reading from
STDIN or a pipe.
- --no-progress
- Do not show progress bar. Usually a progress bar is displayed if STDOUT
and STDERR are detected to be a TTY. With this option the progress bar is
suppressed. Note that a progress bar will never be shown when reading from
STDIN or a pipe.
- -F, --input-format=FORMAT
- The format of the input file(s). Can be used to set the input format if it
can’t be autodetected from the file name(s). This will set the
format for all input files, there is no way to set the format for some
input files only. See osmium-file-formats(5) or the libosmium
manual for details.
- -f,
--output-format=FORMAT
- The format of the output file. Can be used to set the output file format
if it can’t be autodetected from the output file name. See the
OUTPUT FORMATS section for a list of formats.
- --fsync
- Call fsync after writing the output file to force flushing buffers to
disk.
- -o, --output=FILE
- Name of the output file. Default is `-' (STDOUT).
- -O, --overwrite
- Allow an existing output file to be overwritten. Normally osmium
will refuse to write over an existing file.
The config file is in JSON format. The top-level is an object
which contains the following optional names:
- •
- attributes: An object specifying which attributes of OSM objects to
export. See the ATTRIBUTES section.
- •
- format_options: An object specifying output format options. The options
available depend on the output format. See the OUTPUT FORMAT
OPTIONS section for available options. These options can also be set
using the command line option --format-option/-x.
- •
- linear_tags: An expression specifying tags that should be treated as
linear tags. See below for details and also look at the AREA HANDLING
section.
- •
- area_tags: An expression specifying tags that should be treated as area
tags. See below for details and also look at the AREA HANDLING
section.
- •
- exclude_tags: A list of tag expressions. Tags matching these expressions
are excluded from the output. See the FILTER EXPRESSION section.
- •
- include_tags: A list of tag expressions. Tags matching these expressions
are included in the output. See the FILTER EXPRESSION section.
The area_tags and linear_tags can have the following values:
- true
- All tags match. (An empty list [] can also be used to mean the same, but
this use is deprecated because it can be confusing.)
- false
- No tags match.
- Array
- The array contains one or more expressions as described in the FILTER
EXPRESSION section.
- null
- If the area_tags or linear_tags is set to null or not set at all, the
inverse of the other setting is used. So if you do not set the linear_tags
but have some expressions in area_tags, areas will be created for all
objects matching those expressions and linestrings for everything else.
This can be simpler, because you only have to keep one list, but in cases
where an object can be interpreted as both an area and a linestring, only
one interpretation will be used.
The exclude_tags and include_tags options are mutually exclusive.
If you want to just exclude some tags but leave most tags untouched, use the
exclude_tags setting. If you only want a defined list of tags, use
include_tags.
When no config file is specified, the following settings are
used:
-
{
"attributes": {
"type": false,
"id": false,
"version": false,
"changeset": false,
"timestamp": false,
"uid": false,
"user": false,
"way_nodes": false
},
"format_options": {
},
"linear_tags": true,
"area_tags": true,
"exclude_tags": [],
"include_tags": []
}
A filter expression specifies a tag or tags that should be matched
in the data.
Some examples:
- amenity
- Matches all objects with the key “amenity”.
- highway=primary
- Matches all objects with the key “highway” and value
“primary”.
- highway!=primary
- Matches all objects with the key “highway” and a value other
than “primary”.
- type=multipolygon,boundary
- Matches all objects with key “type” and value
“multipolygon” or “boundary”.
- name,name:de=Kastanienallee,Kastanienstrasse
- Matches any object with a “name” or “name:de”
tag with the value “Kastanienallee” or
“Kastanienstrasse”.
- addr:*
- Matches all objects with any key starting with “addr:”
- name=*Paris
- Matches all objects with a name that contains the word
“Paris”.
If there is no equal sign (“=”) in the expression
only keys are matched and values can be anything. If there is an equal sign
(“=”) in the expression, the key is to the left and the value
to the right. An exclamation sign (“!”) before the equal sign
means: A tag with that key, but not the value(s) to the right of the equal
sign. A leading or trailing asterisk (“*”) can be used for
substring or prefix matching, respectively. Commas (“,”) can
be used to separate several keys or values.
All filter expressions are case-sensitive. There is no way to
escape the special characters such as “=”, “*”
and “,”. You can not mix comma-expressions and
“*”-expressions.
All OSM objects (nodes, ways, and relations) have
attributes, areas inherit their attributes from the ways and/or
relations they were created from. The attributes known to osmium export
are:
- •
- type (`node', `way', or `relation')
- •
- id (64 bit object ID)
- •
- version (version number)
- •
- changeset (changeset ID)
- •
- timestamp (time of object creation in seconds since Jan 1 1970)
- •
- uid (user ID)
- •
- user (user name)
- •
- way_nodes (ways only, array with node IDs)
For areas, the type will be way or relation if the area was
created from a closed way or a multipolygon or boundary relation,
respectively. The id for areas is the id of the closed way or the
multipolygon or boundary relation.
By default the attributes will not be in the export, because they
are not necessary for most uses of OSM data. If you are interested in some
(or all) attributes, add an attributes object to the config file. Add a
member for each attribute you are interested in, the value can be either
false (do not output this attribute), true (output this attribute with the
attribute name prefixed by the @ sign) or any string, in which case the
string will be used as the attribute name.
Another option is to specify attributes list in a comma-separated
string for the --attributes/-a command-line option. This way you
cannot control column names, but also you won’t have to create a
config file.
Depending on your choice of values for the attributes objects,
attributes can have the same name as tag keys. If this is the case, the
conflicting tag is silently dropped. So if there is a tag
“@id=foo” and you have set id to true in the attributes
object, the tag will not show up in the output.
Note that the id is not necessarily unique. Even the combination
type and id is not unique, because a way may end up in the output file as
LineString and as (Multi)Polygon. See the --add-unique-id/-u option
for a unique ID.
Multipolygon relations will be assembled into multipolygon
geometries forming areas. Some closed ways will also form areas. Here are
the detailed rules:
- Non-closed
way
- A non-closed way (with the last node location not the same as the first
node location) is always (regardless of any tags) a linestring, not an
area.
- Relation
- A relation tagged type=multipolygon or type=boundary is always (regardless
of any tags) assembled into an area.
- Closed way
- For a closed way (with the last node location the same as the first node
location) the tags are checked: If the way has an area=yes tag, an area is
created. If the way has an area=no tag, a linestring is created. An area
tag with a value other than yes or no is ignored. The configuration
settings area_tags and linear_tags can be used to augment the area check.
If any of the tags matches the area_tags, an area is created. If any of
the tags matches the linear_tags, a linestring is created. If both match,
an area and a linestring is created. This is important because some
objects have tags that make them both, an area and a linestring.
The following output formats are supported:
- •
- geojson (alias: json): GeoJSON (RFC7946). The output file will contain a
single FeatureCollection object. This is the default format.
- •
- geojsonseq (alias: jsonseq): GeoJSON Text Sequence (RFC8142). Each line
(beginning with a RS (0x1e, record separator) and ending in a linefeed
character) contains one GeoJSON object. Used for streaming GeoJSON.
- •
- pg: PostgreSQL COPY text format. One line per object containing the WGS84
geometry as WKB, the tags in JSON format and, optionally, more columns for
id and attributes. You have to create the table manually, then use the
PostgreSQL COPY command to import the data. Enable verbose output to see
the SQL commands needed to create the table and load the data.
- •
- spaten: Spaten, a binary format that is suitable for large data sets.
- •
- text (alias: txt): A simple text format with the geometry in WKT format
followed by the comma-delimited tags. This is mainly intended for
debugging at the moment. THE FORMAT MIGHT CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE!
- •
- print_record_separator (default: true). Set to false to not print the RS
(0x1e, record separator) character when using the GeoJSON Text Sequence
Format. Ignored for other formats.
- •
- tags_type (default: jsonb). Set to hstore to use HSTORE format instead of
JSON/JSONB when using the Pg Format. Ignored in other formats.
osmium export exits with exit code
- 0
- if everything went alright,
- 1
- if there was an error processing the data, or
- 2
- if there was a problem with the command line arguments.
osmium export will usually keep all node locations and all
objects needed for assembling the areas in memory. For larger data files,
this can need several tens of GBytes of memory. See the
osmium-index-types(5) man page for details.
Export into GeoJSON format:
-
osmium export data.osm.pbf -o data.geojson
Use a config file and export into GeoJSON Text Sequence
format:
-
osmium export data.osm.pbf -o data.geojsonseq -c export-config.json
Copyright (C) 2013-2023 Jochen Topf <jochen@topf.org>.
License GPLv3+: GNU GPL version 3 or later
<https://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>. This is free software: you are
free to change and redistribute it. There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent
permitted by law.
If you have any questions or want to report a bug, please go to
https://osmcode.org/contact.html
Jochen Topf <jochen@topf.org>.