We operate the "Fork & Pull" model explained at
https://help.github.com/articles/using-pull-requests
You should fork the project into your own repo, create a topic branch there and then make one or more pull requests back to the openstreetmap repository. Your pull requests will then be reviewed and discussed.
To understand the osm2pgsql code, it helps to know some history on it. Osm2pgsql was written in C in 2007 as a port of an older Python utility. In 2014 it was ported to C++ by MapQuest and the last C version was released as 0.86.0. In it's time, it has had varying contribution activity, including times with no maintainer or active developers.
Parts of the codebase still clearly show their C origin and could use rewriting in modern C++, making use of data structures in the standard library.
Osm2pgsql uses semantic versioning.
Bugs and known issues are fixed on the main branch only. Exceptions may be made for severe bugs.
Code must be written in the K&R 1TBS style with 4 spaces indentation. Tabs should never be used in the C++ code. Braces must always be used for code blocks, even one-liners.
Names should use underscores, not camel case, with class/struct names ending in _t
.
Template parameters must use all upper case.
Headers should be included in the order config.h
, C++ standard library headers,
C library headers, Boost headers, and last osm2pgsql files.
There is a .clang-format configuration available and all code must be run through clang-format before submitting. You can use git-clang-format after staging all your changes:
git-clang-format src/*pp tests/*pp
clang-format 7 or later is required.
Comments in code should follow the Doxygen convention using backslashes (not @-signs) for commands.
User documentation is available on the website, some
is stored in docs/
. Pages on the OpenStreetMap wiki are known to be
unreliable and outdated.
The man page can be built from source
with make man
. The result should be checked into the repository.
Ideally osm2pgsql should compile on Linux, OS X, FreeBSD and Windows. It is actively tested on Debian, Ubuntu and FreeBSD by the maintainers.
The code comes with a suite of tests. They are only compiled and run when
BUILD_TESTS=ON
is set in the CMake config.
Tests are executed by calling ctest
. You can call ctest
with -L NoDB
to
only run tests that don't need a database.
Regression tests require python and psycopg to be installed. On Ubuntu run:
sudo apt-get install python3-psycopg2
Most of these tests depend on being able to set up a database and run osm2pgsql
against it. This is most easily done using pg_virtualenv
. Just run
pg_virtualenv ctest
pg_virtualenv
creates a separate postgres server instance. The test databases
are created in this instance and the complete server is destroyed after the
tests are finished. ctest also calls appropriate fixtures that create the
separate tablespace required for some tests.
When running without pg_virtualenv
, you need to ensure that PostgreSQL is
running and that your user is a superuser of that system. You also need to
create an appropriate test tablespace manually. To do that, run:
sudo -u postgres createuser -s $USER
sudo mkdir -p /tmp/psql-tablespace
sudo chown postgres.postgres /tmp/psql-tablespace
psql -c "CREATE TABLESPACE tablespacetest LOCATION '/tmp/psql-tablespace'" postgres
Once this is all set up, all the tests should run (no SKIPs), and pass (no FAILs). If you find something which seems to be a bug, please check to see if it is a known issue at https://github.com/openstreetmap/osm2pgsql/issues and, if it's not already known, report it there.
If you have failing tests and want to look at the test database to figure out
what's happening, you can set the environment variable OSM2PGSQL_KEEP_TEST_DB
to anything. This will disable the database cleanup at the end of the test.
This will often be used together with the -s
option of pg_virtualenv
which
drops you into a shell after a failed test where you can still access the
database created by pg_virtualenv
.
If performance testing with a full planet import is required, indicate what needs testing in a pull request.
To create coverage reports, set BUILD_COVERAGE
in the CMake config to ON
,
compile and run the tests. Then run make coverage
. This will generate a
coverage report in coverage/index.html
in the build directory.
For this to work you need a coverage tool installed. For GCC this is gcov
,
for Clang this is llvm-cov
in the right version. CMake will automatically
try to find the correct tool. In any case the tool gcovr
is used to create
the report.
- Decide on a new version. (See semantic versioning.)
- Update version in CMakeLists.txt, look for
PACKAGE_VERSION
- Build man page (
make man
) and copy it todocs/osm2pgsql.1
. - ...
The current maintainers of osm2pgsql are Sarah Hoffmann and Paul Norman.