X-Git-Url: https://git.openstreetmap.org./rails.git/blobdiff_plain/d3d4cff1cf188667cf873d7879d98d8ef86fe474..c8e21c409c9bec446f0caa2526d5b07861bb3299:/CONFIGURE.md?ds=sidebyside diff --git a/CONFIGURE.md b/CONFIGURE.md index 278d1c398..598ea3f65 100644 --- a/CONFIGURE.md +++ b/CONFIGURE.md @@ -128,7 +128,6 @@ If you want to deploy The Rails Port for production use, you'll need to make a f * 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.