## Populating the database
-Your installation comes with no geographic data loaded. You can either create new data using one of the editors (Potlatch 2, iD, JOSM etc) or by loading an OSM extract.
+Your installation comes with no geographic data loaded. You can either create new data using one of the editors (iD, JOSM etc) or by loading an OSM extract.
After installing but before creating any users or data, import an extract with [Osmosis](https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Osmosis) and the [``--write-apidb``](https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Osmosis/Detailed_Usage#--write-apidb_.28--wd.29) task.
```
$ bundle exec rails console
->> user = User.find_by_display_name("My New User Name")
+>> user = User.find_by(:display_name => "My New User Name")
=> #[ ... ]
>> user.status = "active"
=> "active"
```
$ bundle exec rails console
->> user = User.find_by_display_name("My New User Name")
+>> user = User.find_by(:display_name => "My New User Name")
=> #[ ... ]
>> user.roles.create(:role => "administrator", :granter_id => user.id)
=> #[ ... ]
Three of the built-in applications communicate via the API, and therefore need OAuth consumer keys configured. These are:
-* Potlatch 2
* iD
* The website itself (for the Notes functionality)
-For example, to use the Potlatch 2 editor you need to register it as an OAuth application.
+For example, to use the iD editor you need to register it as an OAuth application.
Do the following:
* Log into your Rails Port instance - e.g. http://localhost:3000
* Click on "my settings" on the user page
* Click on "oauth settings" on the My settings page
* Click on 'Register your application'.
-* Unless you have set up alternatives, use Name: "Local Potlatch" and URL: "http://localhost:3000"
+* Unless you have set up alternatives, use Name: "Local iD" and URL: "http://localhost:3000"
* Check the 'modify the map' box.
* Everything else can be left with the default blank values.
* Click the "Register" button
* On the next page, copy the "consumer key"
* Edit config/settings.local.yml in your rails tree
-* Add the "potlatch2_key" configuration key and the consumer key as the value
+* Add the "id_key" configuration key and the consumer key as the value
* Restart your rails server
An example excerpt from settings.local.yml:
```
# Default editor
-default_editor: "potlatch2"
-# OAuth consumer key for Potlatch 2
-potlatch2_key: "8lFmZPsagHV4l3rkAHq0hWY5vV3Ctl3oEFY1aXth"
+default_editor: "id"
+# OAuth consumer key for iD
+id_key: "8lFmZPsagHV4l3rkAHq0hWY5vV3Ctl3oEFY1aXth"
```
-Follow the same process for registering and configuring iD (`id_key`) and the website/Notes (`oauth_key`), or to save time, simply reuse the same consumer key for each.
+Follow the same process for registering and configuring the website/Notes (`oauth_key`), or to save time, simply reuse the same consumer key for each.
## Troubleshooting
* Passenger will, by design, use the Production environment and therefore the production database - make sure it contains the appropriate data and user accounts.
* Your production database will also need the extensions and functions installed - see [INSTALL.md](INSTALL.md)
* The included version of the map call is quite slow and eats a lot of memory. You should consider using [CGIMap](https://github.com/zerebubuth/openstreetmap-cgimap) instead.
-* The included version of the GPX importer is slow and/or completely inoperable. You should consider using [the high-speed GPX importer](https://git.openstreetmap.org/gpx-import.git/).
* Make sure you generate the i18n files and precompile the production assets: `RAILS_ENV=production rake i18n:js:export assets:precompile`
* Make sure the web server user as well as the rails user can read, write and create directories in `tmp/`.
-* If you want to use diff replication then you might want to consider installing the shared library special SQL functions for the `xid_to_int4` function. A pure SQL version is available, but may become a performance issue on large databases with a high rate of changes. Note that you will need a version of PostgreSQL < 9.6 (yes, _less than_) to use `xid` indexing, whether pure SQL or shared library.
* If you expect to serve a lot of `/changes` API calls, then you might also want to install the shared library versions of the SQL functions.