* [bzip2](http://www.bzip.org/)
* [zlib](https://www.zlib.net/)
* [ICU](http://site.icu-project.org/)
+ * [nlohmann/json](https://json.nlohmann.me/)
* [Boost libraries](https://www.boost.org/), including system and filesystem
* PostgreSQL client libraries
* a recent C++ compiler (gcc 5+ or Clang 3.8+)
* [PyICU](https://pypi.org/project/PyICU/)
* [PyYaml](https://pyyaml.org/) (5.1+)
* [datrie](https://github.com/pytries/datrie)
- * [PHP](https://php.net) (7.3+)
- * PHP-pgsql
- * PHP-intl (bundled with PHP)
- * PHP-cgi (for running queries from the command line)
For running continuous updates:
* [pyosmium](https://osmcode.org/pyosmium/)
-For running the experimental Python frontend:
+For running the Python frontend:
* one of the following web frameworks:
* [falcon](https://falconframework.org/) (3.0+)
* [starlette](https://www.starlette.io/)
* [uvicorn](https://www.uvicorn.org/)
+For running the legacy PHP frontend:
+
+ * [PHP](https://php.net) (7.3+)
+ * PHP-pgsql
+ * PHP-intl (bundled with PHP)
+
+
For dependencies for running tests and building documentation, see
the [Development section](../develop/Development-Environment.md).
Fast disks are essential. Using NVME disks is recommended.
Even on a well configured machine the import of a full planet takes
-around 2 days. On traditional spinning disks, 7-8 days are more realistic.
+around 2 days. When using traditional SSDs, 4-5 days are more realistic.
## Tuning the PostgreSQL database
and even reduce `autovacuum_work_mem` further. This will reduce the amount
of memory that autovacuum takes away from the import process.
-For the initial import, you should also set:
-
- fsync = off
- full_page_writes = off
-
-Don't forget to re-enable them after the initial import or you risk database
-corruption.
-
-
## Downloading and building Nominatim
### Downloading the latest release