Hi,
Am 13.12.10 19:58, schrieb Scott Crosby:
True, but I am trying to figure out if it is a bad file, bad osmosis,
bad windows, or something else.
Or maybe a courios tag, which behaves under Windows different than under
Linux.
Is it one specific file, or several files? One day, or many days?
One file, every day since beginnig of this month.
Is the 10,600,000 nodes from different files or the same file?
The resulting XML file has 10,600,000 nodes.
Is it always 10,600,000:
I was the one who figured out that curious number.
I got this with --read-pbf --write-xml
Last node ID was 45544258.
Before I tried with several Bounding boxes and tag filters. With them I
got less nodes, but never an ID > 4554428. So it seems that 10,600,000
nodes are processed, and the error occurs in the read-pbf, not in the
filters afterwards or the write-process.
I and the others only have trouble with the 4GB-europe-Extract. Germany
and other smaller extraxcts have no problem (unless Geofabriks drives
are fullued up ;-)
For different windows users on the same file?
Different users, Windows XP and 7, always the same file from different
dates.
For different geofabrik extracts from the same region, but extracts
on different days?
All other extracts are a lot smalller, and have no problem.
For geofabrik extracts of different regions, but on the same day?
Every day since beginning of the month (I had not tested before, but
others did successfully)
Maybe something with java? Internationalization differences on
windows? Any interesting strings in nodes 10,600,000-10,604,000?
Not node-ID, that would be 4554428+x, as long as they are in Europe.
Greetings,
André Joost
_______________________________________________
osmosis-dev mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/osmosis-dev