Routino Introduction
Routino is an application for finding a route between two points using the dataset of topographical information collected by http://www.OpenStreetMap.org.Starting from the raw OpenStreetMap data (in the form of the '.osm' XML files available on the internet) a custom database is generated that contains the information useful for routing. With this database and two points specified by latitude and longitude an optimum route (either shortest or quickest) is determined. The route is calculated for OpenStreetMap highways (roads, paths etc) using one of the common forms of transport defined in OpenStreetMap (foot, bicycle, horse, motorcar, motorcycle etc).
When processing the OpenStreetMap data the types of highways are recorded and these set default limits on the types of traffic allowed. More specific information about permissions for different types of transport are also recorded as are maximum speed limits. Further restrictions like one-way streets, weight, height, width and length limits are also included where specified. Additionally a set of properties of each highway are also recorded. The processing of the input file is controlled by a configuration file which determines the information that is used.
When calculating a route the type of transport to be used is taken into account to ensure that the known restrictions are followed. Each of the different highway types can further be allowed or disallowed depending on preferences. For each type of highway a default speed limit is defined (although the actual speed used will be the lowest of the default and any specified in the original data). To make use of the information about restrictions the weight, height, width and length of the transport can also be specified. Further preferences about road properties (e.g. paved or not) can also be selected. The simplest type of turn restrictions (those formed from an initial way, a node and a second way) are also obeyed.
The result of calculating the route can be presented in several different ways. An HTML file can be produced that contains a description of the route to take with instructions for each of the important junctions. The contents of the file are created based on a set of translations specified in a configuration file. The route is also available in a GPX (GPS eXchange) XML format. format file containing either every point and highway segment (a track file) or just a waypoint and translated instructions for the important junctions (a route file). Additionally there are two plain text files that contain all data points or just the important ones (intended for debugging and further processing).
One of the design aims of Routino was to make the software are flexible as possible in selecting routing preferences but also have a sensible set of default values. Another design aim was that finding the optimum route should be very fast and most of the speed increases come from the carefully chosen and optimised data format.
Disclaimer
The route that is calculated by this software is only as good as the input data.Routino comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY for the software itself or the route that is calculated by it.
Demonstration
A live demonstration of the router for the UK is available on the internet:http://www.routino.org/uk/
The source code download available below also includes a set of files that can be used to create your own interactive map.
The interactive map is made possible by use of the OpenLayers Javascript library from http://www.openlayers.org/.
Documentation
A full set of documentation is available that describes how to install and use the programs as well as what should go in the configuration files and how it works.Status
Version 1.0 of Routino was released on 8th April 2009.Version 1.1 of Routino was released on 13th June 2009.
Version 1.2 of Routino was released on 21st October 2009.
Version 1.3 of Routino was released on 21st January 2010.
Version 1.4 of Routino was released on 31st May 2010.
Version 1.4.1 of Routino was released on 10th July 2010.
Version 1.5 of Routino was released on 30th October 2010.
Version 1.5.1 of Routino was released on 13th November 2010.
Version 2.0 of Routino was released on 30th May 2011.
Version 2.0.1 of Routino was released on 7th June 2011.
Version 2.0.2 of Routino was released on 26th June 2011.
Version 2.0.3 of Routino was released on 4th August 2011.
Version 2.1 of Routino was released on 3rd October 2011.
Version 2.1.1 of Routino was released on 23rd October 2011.
Version 2.1.2 of Routino was released on 12th November 2011.
Version 2.2 of Routino was released on 3rd March 2012.
Version 2.3 of Routino was released on 21st July 2012.
Version 2.3.1 of Routino was released on 11th August 2012.
Version 2.3.2 of Routino was released on 6th October 2012.
Version 2.4 of Routino was released on 8th December 2012.
Version 2.4.1 of Routino was released on 17th December 2012.
Version 2.5 of Routino was released on 9th February 2013.
Version 2.5.1 of Routino was released on 20th April 2013.
Version 2.6 of Routino was released on 6th July 2013.
The full version history is available in the NEWS.txt file.
Changes in Versions 2.6
Version 2.6 - mostly faster operation.- General:
- Force '<if>...</if>' in tagging rules to match even with no input tags.
Built-in translations for GPX-route file gave nonsense durations.
Handle some cases that potentially caused divide by zero (not crashes). - Compilation:
- All configuration is now contained in the top level file Makefile.conf.
Default to using -ffast-math option for faster maths and glibc workaround. - Code improvements:
- Improve router internal data structures to increase performance.
Add another layer of caching to significantly speed up slim mode operation.
Add a layer of file buffering to significantly speed up reading/writing.
Enable more compile-time warnings and fix them. - planetsplitter:
- Create a binary log file to allow searching for errors geographically.
Simplify processing for changes (segment files not kept).
Don't prune isolated regions for transport types we don't have. - Web pages (visualiser):
- Allow displaying the error logs on the map.
Allow selecting any item displayed and showing more information about it. - Extras:
- Create a separate directory to put extra (non-essential) programs and scripts.
- tagmodifier - a tagging rule testing program.
- errorlog - a script to summarise the planetsplitter error log.
- plot-time - a script to plot a graph of the planetsplitter execution time.
- find-fixme - search an OSM file for "fixme" tags and display them on a map.
Note: This version is not compatible with databases from previous versions.
License
This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Affero General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.It is important to note that for this program I have decided to use the Affero GPLv3 instead of just using the GPL. This license adds additional requirements to anybody who provides a networked service using this software.