X-Git-Url: https://git.openstreetmap.org./nominatim.git/blobdiff_plain/86588419fb1c3fffe131c0e8d99ecea3c77d67c5..6463839b4b5c3577dcce72795513c1a75444adb4:/docs/customize/Tokenizers.md?ds=sidebyside diff --git a/docs/customize/Tokenizers.md b/docs/customize/Tokenizers.md index f75bc6a5..58606c29 100644 --- a/docs/customize/Tokenizers.md +++ b/docs/customize/Tokenizers.md @@ -19,7 +19,22 @@ they can be configured. The legacy tokenizer implements the analysis algorithms of older Nominatim versions. It uses a special Postgresql module to normalize names and queries. -This tokenizer is currently the default. +This tokenizer is automatically installed and used when upgrading an older +database. It should not be used for new installations anymore. + +### Compiling the PostgreSQL module + +The tokeinzer needs a special C module for PostgreSQL which is not compiled +by default. If you need the legacy tokenizer, compile Nominatim as follows: + +``` +mkdir build +cd build +cmake -DBUILD_MODULE=on +make +``` + +### Enabling the tokenizer To enable the tokenizer add the following line to your project configuration: @@ -47,6 +62,7 @@ normalization functions are hard-coded. The ICU tokenizer uses the [ICU library](http://site.icu-project.org/) to normalize names and queries. It also offers configurable decomposition and abbreviation handling. +This tokenizer is currently the default. To enable the tokenizer add the following line to your project configuration: @@ -189,6 +205,23 @@ The following is a list of sanitizers that are shipped with Nominatim. rendering: heading_level: 6 +##### clean-postcodes + +::: nominatim.tokenizer.sanitizers.clean_postcodes + selection: + members: False + rendering: + heading_level: 6 + +##### clean-tiger-tags + +::: nominatim.tokenizer.sanitizers.clean_tiger_tags + selection: + members: False + rendering: + heading_level: 6 + + #### Token Analysis @@ -206,15 +239,20 @@ by a sanitizer (see for example the The token-analysis section contains the list of configured analyzers. Each analyzer must have an `id` parameter that uniquely identifies the analyzer. The only exception is the default analyzer that is used when no special -analyzer was selected. +analyzer was selected. There are analysers with special ids: + + * '@housenumber'. If an analyzer with that name is present, it is used + for normalization of house numbers. + * '@potcode'. If an analyzer with that name is present, it is used + for normalization of postcodes. Different analyzer implementations may exist. To select the implementation, -the `analyzer` parameter must be set. Currently there is only one implementation -`generic` which is described in the following. +the `analyzer` parameter must be set. The different implementations are +described in the following. ##### Generic token analyzer -The generic analyzer is able to create variants from a list of given +The generic analyzer `generic` is able to create variants from a list of given abbreviation and decomposition replacements and introduce spelling variations. ###### Variants @@ -331,6 +369,22 @@ the mode by adding: to the analyser configuration. +##### Housenumber token analyzer + +The analyzer `housenumbers` is purpose-made to analyze house numbers. It +creates variants with optional spaces between numbers and letters. Thus, +house numbers of the form '3 a', '3A', '3-A' etc. are all considered equivalent. + +The analyzer cannot be customized. + +##### Postcode token analyzer + +The analyzer `postcodes` is pupose-made to analyze postcodes. It supports +a 'lookup' varaint of the token, which produces variants with optional +spaces. Use together with the clean-postcodes sanitizer. + +The analyzer cannot be customized. + ### Reconfiguration Changing the configuration after the import is currently not possible, although