Bernhard R. Fischer
Bernhard R. Fischer
I now tested it on Linux and on FreeBSD with clang on both systems and it works as expected. So there is something special about your system or your version...
Please check the folder `/usr/local/share/smrender/SeaMapSymbols`. You can symlink it to the folder from where you run Smrender. `ln -s /usr/local/share/smrender/SeaMapSymbols` (execute from within the folder where you run smrender)
I suggest to use the ruleset found in `/usr/local/share/smrender/r100k_ye` as a good starting point (rules.osm is pretty old).
Well, it depends on what you consider as default. But since you have to setup the rendering directory before the 1st time you run smrender on your data, it's up...
Thank you, I will have a look at it. Regarding LoL110: Yes it may be that it wasn't imported because we had discussions about maintainability of lights. But I'll try...
Regarding Taginfo: I'm not sure if I understand this right but does it show which OSM tags are used throughout the project? If so, I think it doesn't make much...
Ok, thanks for clarification. Yes, Smrender was created primarily to make sea charts and, as you already noted, I include a default ruleset aiming at rendering a sea chart. But...
> PS: Do you happen to know if [List of Lights](https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/OpenSeaMap/List_of_Lights_Import) publication 110 (Greenland, S. America) was ever imported at all? I had to think a while to remember where...
I just realized that you already posted the link in your 1st post, sorry. And I don't think somebody else did the import since this is not as trivial as...
Same on Ubuntu 24.04, yubikey-manager-qt 1.2.5-1build2.