osmium-time-filter - filter OSM data by time from a history
file
osmium time-filter [OPTIONS] OSM-HISTORY-FILE
[TIME]
osmium time-filter [OPTIONS] OSM-HISTORY-FILE
FROM-TIME TO-TIME
Copy all objects that were valid at the given TIME or in
the time period between FROM-TIME (inclusive) and TO-TIME (not
inclusive) from the input file into the output file. If no time is given,
the current time is used.
Usually the INPUT-FILE will be an OSM data file with
history. If both FROM-TIME and TO-TIME are given, the result
will also have history data, it will also include deleted versions of
objects.
If only a single point in time was given, the result will be a
normal OSM file without history containing no deleted objects.
The format for the timestamps is
“yyyy-mm-ddThh:mm:ssZ”.
This commands reads its input file only once and writes its output
file in one go so it can be streamed, ie. it can read from STDIN and write
to STDOUT.
- -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
osmium-file-formats(5) or the libosmium manual for details.
- --fsync
- Call fsync after writing the output file to force flushing buffers to
disk.
- --generator=NAME
- The name and version of the program generating the output file. It will be
added to the header of the output file. Default is
“osmium/” and the version of osmium.
- -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.
- Add output header option. This command line option can be used multiple
times for different OPTIONs. See the osmium-output-headers(5) man
page for a list of available header options. For some commands you can use
the special format “OPTION!” (ie. an exclamation mark after
the OPTION and no value set) to set the value to the same as in the input
file.
osmium time-filter 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 time-filter does all its work on the fly and
doesn’t keep much data in main memory.
Extract current planet file from history planet:
-
osmium time-filter -o planet.osm.pbf history-planet.osh.pbf
Extract planet data how it appeared on January 1 2008 from history
planet:
-
osmium time-filter -o planet-20080101.osm.pbf history-planet.osh.pbf 2008-01-01T00:00:00Z
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>.