This software contains two main pieces:
mod_tile
: An Apache 2 module to deliver map tiles.renderd
: A daemon that renders map tiles using mapnik.
Together they efficiently render and serve raster map tiles for example to use within a slippy map. The two consist of the classic raster tile stack from OpenStreetMap.org.
As an alternative to renderd
its drop-in replacement
Tirex can be used in
combination with mod_tile
.
- GNU/Linux Operating System (works best on Debian or Ubuntu)
- Apache 2 HTTP webserver
- Mapnik
- Cairo 2D graphics library
- Curl library (SSL variant)
- Iniparser library
- GLib library
Starting from the following operation systems and their versions:
- Debian 11 (Bullseye)
- Ubuntu 21.04 (Hirsute Hippo)
the software and all dependencies can be installed simply with:
$ apt install libapache2-mod-tile renderd
These packages for Debian and Ubuntu are being maintained by the Debian GIS Team in the respective repository.
You may want to compile this software yourself. Either for developing on it or when using it on an operating system this is not being packaged for.
We prepared instructions for you on how to build the software on the following distributions:
- CentOS 7
- Fedora 34
- Ubuntu 20.04 (this should work as well for Debian 10)
After you either installed the software packages or copiled the software
yourself, you can continue with the configuration. For your convenience
example configuration files are distributed with the software packages and
located in the etc
directory of this repository.
A very basic example-map and data can be found in the utils/example-map
directory. For a simple test copy it over to /var/www/example-map
.
Copy the configuration files to their place, too:
$ cp etc/renderd/renderd.conf /etc/renderd.conf $ cp etc/apache2/renderd.conf /etc/apache2/conf-available/renderd.conf $ cp etc/apache2/renderd-example-map.conf /etc/apache2/conf-available/renderd-example-map.conf
Enable the configuration:
$ sudo a2enmod tile $ sudo a2enconf renderd $ sudo a2enconf renderd-example-map
Restart apache2:
$ sudo a2enmod tile $ sudo a2enconf renderd
And run the rendering daemon
$ renderd -f
Make sure the /var/cache/renderd/tiles
directory is writable by
the user running the renderd process.
Try loading a tile in your browser, e.g.
http://localhost/renderd-example/tiles/0/0/0.png
You may edit /etc/renderd.conf
to indicate the location of different
mapnik style sheets (up to ten) and the endpoints you wish to use to access
it.
It is recommended to checkout switch2osm for nice tutorials on how to set up a full tile server like on OpenStreetMap.org, using this software together with a PostgreSQL database and data from OpenStreetMap.
The rendering is implemented in a multithreaded process
called renderd
which opens either a unix or tcp socket
and listens for requests to render tiles. It uses Mapnik
to render tiles using the rendering rules defined in
the configuration file /etc/renderd.conf
. Its configuration
also allows to specify the number of rendering
threads.
The render daemon implements a queuing mechanism with multiple
priority levels to provide an as up-to-date viewing experience
given the available rendering resources. The highest priority
is for on the fly rendering of tiles not yet in the tile cache,
two priority levels for re-rendering out of date tiles on the fly
and two background batch rendering queues. The on the fly rendering
queues are limited to a short 32 metatile size to minimize latency.
The size of the main background queue is determined
at compile time, see: render_config.h
An Apache module called mod_tile
enhances the regular
Apache file serving mechanisms to provide:
- When tiles have expired it requests the rendering daemon to render (or re-render) the tile.
- Remapping of the file path to the hashed layout.
- Prioritizes rendering requests depending on the available resources on the server and how out of date they are.
- Use tile storage other than a plain posix file system. e.g it can store tiles in a ceph object store, or proxy them from another tile server.
- Tile expiry. It estimates when the tile is next likely to be rendered and adds the appropriate HTTP cache expiry headers. This is a configurable heuristic.
To avoid problems with directories becoming too large and to avoid too many tiny files. They store the rendered tiles in "meta tiles" in a special hashed directory structure. These combine 8x8 actual tiles into a single metatile file. This is a more efficient use of disk space and inodes.
The metatiles are then stored in the following directory structure:
/[base_dir]/[TileSetName]/[Z]/[xxxxyyyy]/[xxxxyyyy]/[xxxxyyyy]/[xxxxyyyy]/[xxxxyyyy].png
Where base_dir
is a configurable base path for all tiles. TileSetName
is the name of the style sheet rendered. Z
is the zoom level.
[xxxxyyyy]
is an 8 bit number, with the first 4 bits taken from the x
coordinate and the second 4 bits taken from the y coordinate. This
attempts to cluster 16x16 square of tiles together into a single sub
directory for more efficient access patterns.
Apache serves the files as if they were present under
/[TileSetName]/Z/X/Y.png
with the path being converted automatically.
mod_tile
is designed for high performance tile serving. If the
underlying disk system allows it, it can easily provide > 10k tiles/s
on a single serve.
Rendering performance is mostly dependent on mapnik and postgis performance,
however renderd
tries to make sure it uses underlying hardware as
efficiently as possible and scales well on multi core systems. renderd
also provides built-in features to scale to multi server rendering set-ups.
Copyright (c) 2007 - 2021 by mod_tile contributors (see AUTHORS)
This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.
See the COPYING for the full license text.