The scripts in this directory are used to extract, transform and load (ETL) the core datasets for Colouring London. This README acts as a guide for setting up the Colouring London database with these datasets and updating it.
1. Sign up for the Ordnance Survey [Data Exploration License](https://www.ordnancesurvey.co.uk/business-government/licensing-agreements/data-exploration-sign-up). You should receive an e-mail with a link to log in to the platform (this could take up to a week).
2. Navigate to https://orders.ordnancesurvey.co.uk/orders and click the button for: ✏️ Order. From here you should be able to click another button to add a product.
3. Drop a rectangle or Polygon over London and make the following selections, clicking the "Add to basket" button for each:
4. You should be then able to check out your basket and download the files. Note: there may be multiple `.zip` files to download for MasterMap due to the size of the dataset.
6. Unzip the MasterMap `.zip` files and move all the `.gz` files from each to a single folder in a convenient location. We will use this folder in later steps.
Before creating or updating a Colouring London database, you'll need to make sure the downloaded OS files are available to the Ubuntu machine where the database is hosted. If you are using Virtualbox, you could host share folder(s) containing the OS files with the VM (e.g. [see these instructions for Mac](https://medium.com/macoclock/share-folder-between-macos-and-ubuntu-4ce84fb5c1ad)).
You should already have set up PostgreSQL and created a database in an Ubuntu environment. If not, follow one of the linked guides: [setup dev environment](../docs/setup-dev-environment.md) or [setup prod environment](../docs/setup-production-environment.md). Open a terminal in Ubuntu and create the environment variables to use `psql` if you haven't already:
Load all new geometries. This step will only load geometries that are not already present (based on the `TOID`). Note: you should ensure that `mastermap_dir` has permissions that will allow the linux `find` command to work without using sudo.