This container allows you to easily set up an OpenStreetMap PNG tile server given a `.osm.pbf` file. It is based on the [latest Ubuntu 18.04 LTS guide](https://switch2osm.org/manually-building-a-tile-server-18-04-lts/) from [switch2osm.org](https://switch2osm.org/) and therefore uses the default OpenStreetMap style.
## Setting up the server
First create a Docker volume to hold the PostgreSQL database that will contain the OpenStreetMap data:
docker volume create openstreetmap-data
Next, download an .osm.pbf extract from geofabrik.de for the region that you're interested in. You can then start importing it into PostgreSQL by running a container and mounting the file as `/data.osm.pbf`. For example:
If your import is an extract of the planet and has polygonal bounds associated with it, like those from geofabrik.de, then it is possible to set your server up for automatic updates. Make sure to reference both the OSM file and the polygon file during the import process to facilitate this:
Your tiles will now be available at `http://localhost:80/tile/{z}/{x}/{y}.png`. The demo map in `leaflet-demo.html` will then be available on `http://localhost:80`. Note that it will initially take quite a bit of time to render the larger tiles for the first time.
Tiles that have already been rendered will be stored in `/var/lib/mod_tile`. To make sure that this data survives container restarts, you should create another volume for it:
Given that you've specified both the OSM data and polygon as specified in the *Automatic updates* section during server setup, you can enable the updating process by setting the variable `UPDATES` to `enabled`:
This will enable a background process that automatically downloads changes from the OpenStreetMap server, filters them for the relevant region polygon you specified, updates the database and finally marks the affected tiles for rerendering.
The import and tile serving processes use 4 threads by default, but this number can be changed by setting the `THREADS` environment variable. For example:
If you are planning to import the entire planet or you are running into memory errors then you may want to enable the `--flat-nodes` option for osm2pgsql. You can then use it during the import process as follows:
You can find an example of the import performance to expect with this image on the [OpenStreetMap wiki](https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Osm2pgsql/benchmarks#debian_9_.2F_openstreetmap-tile-server).
If you encounter such entries in the log, it will mean that the default shared memory limit (64 MB) is too low for the container and it should be raised:
renderd[121]: ERROR: failed to render TILE ajt 2 0-3 0-3
renderd[121]: reason: Postgis Plugin: ERROR: could not resize shared memory segment "/PostgreSQL.790133961" to 12615680 bytes: ### No space left on device
For too high values you may notice excessive CPU load and memory usage. It might be that you will have to experimentally find the best values for yourself.