Provided by: rel2gpx_0.27-1_all bug

NAME

       rel2gpx - create GPX-Tracks from OSM relation

SYNOPSIS

       rel2gpx [options] <relation-Id>

DESCRIPTION

       This  script  can  download  GPX  tracks  from a given OSM relation to feed it to your GPS
       device.  Most relations are not ordered in one single line.  The script tries to bring all
       parts into a reasonable order.

OPTIONS

              Relation-Id

              OSM Id of the to be exported relation. See also pption -f

       -i file

              Read OSM-data from local file.  If this option is missing data will be fetched from
              openstreetmap.org

       -x file

              write XML-file in osm-format, which  contains  the  data  of  all  objects  of  the
              relation (only in connection with -i).

       -r typ

              Work  on  all  relations  of type=route and route=typ (only in connection with -i).
              Possible values for typ: bicycle, hiking, train.

       -f file

              Read relation-Ids from file (only in  connection  with  -i).   The  text  file  can
              contain  one  Id  per line.  Lines starting with "#" will be ignored.  You can also
              add comments to data lines.

       -g

              Create a GPX track file.

       -p

              Enable output of various plausibility checks.

       -s

              Enable statistics output to STDOUT

       -w

              Output statistics and plausibility checks into HTML file

       -o

              Respect directions (oneway, forward/backward).

              The name of the GPX and HTML file will be created from the  name  of  the  relation
              inside  the  OSM  database.  If this does not exist the relation-Id will be used as
              name.  When using options -f or -i the name will be created from the relation  list
              or the OSM-file respectively.

SEE ALSO

       Homepage is only in German:
         http://mr-unseld.de/?q=de/node/170

AUTHOR

       This  manual  page  was  written  by  Andreas  Tille  <tille@debian.org>  for  the  Debian
       distribution but can be freely used for any other purpose.