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Running OpenStreetMap Carto with Docker

Docker is a virtualized environment that allows you to run software without altering your system permanently. The software runs in so called containers that are easy to setup and tear down. It makes setting up a development environment for openstreetmap-carto much easier. The development environment consists of a PostgreSQL database to store the data and Kosmtik for previewing the style.

Prerequisites

Docker is available for Linux, macOS and Windows. Install the software in order to be able to run Docker containers. You also need Docker Compose, which should be available once you installed Docker itself. Otherwise you need to install Docker Compose manually.

Quick start

If you are eager to get started here is an overview over the necessary steps. Read on below to get the details.

  • git clone https://github.com/gravitystorm/openstreetmap-carto.git to clone openstreetmap-carto repository
  • download OpenStreetMap data in osm.pbf format to a file data.osm.pbf and place it within the openstreetmap-carto directory
  • docker-compose up import to import the data (only necessary the first time or when you change the data file)
  • docker-compose up kosmtik to run the style preview application
  • browse to http://localhost:6789 to view the output of Kosmtik
  • Ctrl+C to stop the style preview application
  • docker-compose stop db to stop the database container

Repositories

Instructions above will clone main openstreetmap-carto repository. To test your own changes you should fork gravitystorm/openstreetmap-carto repository and clone your fork.

Importing data

openstreetmap-carto needs a database populated with rendering data to work. You first need a data file to import. It's probably easiest to grab an PBF of OSM data from Mapzen or Geofabrik. Once you have that file put it into the openstreetmap-carto directory and run docker-compose up import in the openstreetmap-carto directory. This starts the PostgreSQL container (downloads it if it not exists) and starts a container that runs osm2pgsql to import the data. The container is built the first time you run that command if it not exists. At startup of the container the script scripts/docker-startup.sh is invoked which prepares the database and itself starts osm2pgsql for importing the data.

osm2pgsql has a few command line options and the import by default uses a RAM cache of 512 MB, 1 worker and expects the import file to be named data.osm.pbf. If you want to customize any of these parameters you have to set the environment variables OSM2PGSQL_CACHE (e.g. export OSM2PGSQL_CACHE=1024 on Linux to set the cache to 1 GB) for the RAM cache (the value depends on the amount of RAM you have available, the more you can use here the faster the import may be), OSM2PGSQL_NUMPROC for the number of workers (this depends on the number of processors you have and whether your harddisk is fast enough e.g. is a SSD), or OSM2PGSQL_DATAFILE if your file has a different name.

You can also tune the PostgreSQL during the import phases, with PG_WORK_MEM (default to 16MB) and PG_MAINTENANCE_WORK_MEM (default to 256MB), which will eventually write work_mem and maintenance_work_mem to the postgresql.auto.conf once, making them applied each time the database started. Note that unlike osm2pgsql variables, once thay are set, you can only change them by running ALTER SYSTEM on your own, changing postgresql.auto.conf or remove the database volume by docker-compose down -v && docker-compose rm -v and import again.

If you want to customize and remember the values, supply it during your first import:

PG_WORK_MEM=128MB PG_MAINTENANCE_WORK_MEM=2GB \
OSM2PGSQL_CACHE=2048 OSM2PGSQL_NUMPROC=4 \
OSM2PGSQL_DATAFILE=taiwan.osm.pbf \
docker-compose up import 

Variables will be remembered in .env if you don't have that file, and values in the file will be applied unless you manually assign them.

Depending on your machine and the size of the extract the import can take a while. When it is finished you should have the data necessary to render it with openstreetmap-carto.

Test rendering

After you have the necessary data available you can start Kosmtik to produce a test rendering. For that you run docker-compose up kosmtik in the openstreetmap-carto directory. This starts a container with Kosmtik and also starts the PostgreSQL database container if it is not already running. The Kosmtik container is built the first time you run that command if it not exists. At startup of the container the script scripts/docker-startup.sh is invoked which downloads necessary shapefiles with scripts/get-shapefiles.py (if they are not already present) and indexes them. It afterwards runs Kosmtik. If you have to customize anything, you can do so in the script. The Kosmtik config file can be found in .kosmtik-config.yml. If you want to have a local configuration for our project.mml you can place a localconfig.js or localconfig.json file into the openstreetmap-carto directory.

The shapefile data that is downloaded is owned by the user with UID 1000. If you have another default user id on your system, consider changing the line USER 1000 in the file Dockerfile.

After startup is complete you can browse to http://localhost:6789 to view the output of Kosmtik. By pressing Ctrl+C on the command line you can stop the container. The PostgreSQL database container is still running then (you can check with docker ps). If you want to stop the database container as well you can do so by running docker-compose stop db in the openstreetmap-carto directory.