ohsome2X
Query OSM History Data (count, length, area) about specific OSM Features or OSM User activity (user-count) for your areas of interest.
Input: Accepts GeoJSON or PostgreSQL/PostGIS as input source.
Output: Creates a GeoJSON File or new result table in your PostgreSQL/PostGIS database.
The package includes a library with a single class to run.
Additionally it includes ohsome2x-cli
, a command-line tool with a configuration wizard to create and run a query-configuration-JSON.
This library/tool makes use of the ohsome API (https://api.ohsome.org) as data backend and many other great open-source libraries.
Currently supported ohsome API query types are:
//standard
elements/count/groupBy/boundary
elements/length/groupBy/boundary
elements/area/groupBy/boundary
elements/perimeter/groupBy/boundary
//ratio
elements/count/ratio/groupBy/boundary
elements/length/ratio/groupBy/boundary
elements/area/ratio/groupBy/boundary
elements/perimeter/ratio/groupBy/boundary
//group by tags within each boundary
elements/count/groupBy/boundary/groupBy/tag
elements/length/groupBy/boundary/groupBy/tag
elements/area/groupBy/boundary/groupBy/tag
elements/perimeter/groupBy/boundary/groupBy/tag
//contributors
users/count/groupBy/boundary
This software is developed by HeiGIT:
Usage
There are two ways how you can use ohsome2x.
1. Without installation using the npm package runner npx
Info: The npx
command comes with the installation of npm
.
To run the command-line wizard:
Syntax info:
$ npx @giscience/ohsome2x
-------------------------
USAGE:
with 'npx'
npx @giscience/ohsome2x createconfig [(-o|--out) path]
npx @giscience/ohsome2x run (-c|--conf) fullConfig.json
as local command
node ohsome2x-cli.js createconfig [(-o|--out) path]
node ohsome2x-cli.js run (-c|--conf) fullConfig.json
-------------------------
2. With installation as library to use it in your Node.js script
-
For use as library in Node.js install the package:
$ npm install @giscience/ohsome2x
-
You find the built library in the /dist
folder after executing:
$ npm run build
-
Write your own JavaScript or TypeScript file:
See Examples and API section to learn how to do it. Enjoy!
Example
Query the number of buildings in a bbox around Heidelberg in a yearly resolution from 2008 to 2020
Step 1. You need some input (one or many polygons): heidelberg.geojson
{
"type": "FeatureCollection",
"features": [
{
"type": "Feature",
"properties": {"id": "Heidelberg"},
"geometry": {
"type": "Polygon",
"coordinates": [
[ [8.625984191894531, 49.38527827629032],
[8.735504150390625, 49.38527827629032],
[8.735504150390625, 49.433975502014675],
[8.625984191894531, 49.433975502014675],
[8.625984191894531, 49.38527827629032]
]]}}]}
Step 2. Specify your query as JSON-file (you can use the commandline wizard to create this): myquery.json
Info: for the filter Syntax see: https://docs.ohsome.org/ohsome-api/stable/filter.html
{
"ohsomeQuery": {
"queryType": "elements/count/groupBy/boundary",
"filter": "building=* and building!=no and geometry:polygon",
"time": "2008/2020/P1Y"
},
"source": {
"geometryId": "id",
"name": "heidelberg.geojson",
"store": { "path": "heidelberg.geojson", "type": "geojson" }
},
"target": {
"horizontalTimestampColumns": false,
"createGeometry": true,
"transformToWebmercator": false,
"storeZeroValues": true,
"computeValuePerArea": true,
"name": "heidelberg_buildings_count.geojson",
"store": { "path": "heidelberg_buildings_count.geojson", "type": "geojson" }
}
}
Step 3. Run the Query
$ npx @giscience/ohsome2x run --conf myquery.json
API
Basic Usage
Node:
const Ohsome2X = require('@giscience/ohsome2x');
const config = {
ohsomeQuery: {...},
source: {...},
target: {...}
}
const ohsome2x = new Ohsome2X(config);
ohsome2x.run().catch(console.log);
TypeScript:
import Ohsome2X = require('@giscience/ohsome2x');
import {Ohsome2XConfig} from '@giscience/ohsome2x/dist/config_types_interfaces';
const config: Ohsome2XConfig = {
ohsomeQuery: {...},
source: {...},
target: {...}
}
const ohsome2x = new Ohsome2X(config);
ohsome2x.run().catch(console.log);
Events
The Ohsome2X object currently provides 2 event types that can be listened to:
-
progress
for getting progress updates. Especially useful for iterative processing of large input datasets
progress
provides the following object to your callback (use processed and total to compute a progress percentage):
{
"type": "progress",
"processed": <number> of already finished input geometries,
"total": <number> of all input geometries,
"cursor": <number> that indicates the current state of iterative processing in case you configured source and target as PostGIS-Stores and specified a fetchSize,
"fetchSize": <number> fetchSize that is currently used to fetch the next chunk of source data,
"timestamp": <string> ISO timestamp
}
-
finished
to get some information on duration and finishing time:
{
"type": "finished",
"duration": <string> a human readable duration like '2 days 13 hours 45 min 12 seconds',
"duration_ms": <number> duration in milliseconds,
"timestamp": <string> ISO timestamp
}
Example:
const Ohsome2X = require('@giscience/ohsome2x');
const config = {
ohsomeQuery: {
"queryType": "users/count/groupBy/boundary",
"filter": "natural=tree and type:node",
"time": "2010/2020/P1Y"
},
source: {
"schema": "public",
"name": "my_source_table_name",
"geometryId": "id",
"geometryColumn": "geom",
"fetchSize": 5000,
"cursor": null,
"store": {
"host": "your.postgis.server.com",
"port": "5434",
"database": "your_database_name",
"user": "username",
"password": "secret",
"type": "postgis"
}
},
target: {...another PostGIS target config...}
}
const ohsome2x = new Ohsome2X(config);
ohsome2x.on('progress', (evt)=>console.log(evt, ((evt.processed / evt.total) * 100).toFixed(0) +'%'));
ohsome2x.on('finished', (evt)=>console.log(evt.duration));
ohsome2x.run().catch(console.log);
Related
- OhsomeHeX - The OSM History Explorer: Uses this library as backend
- ohsome API - WebAPI to query OSM History Data
- OSHDB - The OpenStreetMap History Database: Query OSM History Data with Java
- ohsome.org - Get information about all these technologies and more
- heigit.org - The Heidelberg Institute for Geoinformation Technology: The non-profit company behind all those useful tools.