5

Note: While I target Windows Phone 7, it doesn't introduce anything besides a size restriction.

In an attempt to write a GPS / Routing / Map application for the Windows Phone 7, I'm trying to attempt to use OpenStreetMap for this and I want to get my data stored in a SQL Server Compact Edition database on my Windows Phone 7. This is giving me a lot of trouble so I'm getting clueless what the right way is...

Here is my progress:

  1. I've downloaded Belgium.osm.pbf, which contains all the Belgium OSM data in PBF format.

    Note that Belgium isn't that large, it's the country I live in so it seems as a good start.

    It would be nice if my database were near the size of that PBF file, because it is only 80 MB...

  2. Using Marc Gravell's protobuf-net, I now have written a parser which is giving me all the OSM data.

  3. On a first attempt I tried to just load it all in memory but that seems to be too big for my Windows Phone 7, as it results in a size > 512 MB. Then the idea was that I needed a database to store this information in, so it seems logic to store this in a SQL Server Compact Edition sdf file.

  4. Hence, I created the following DataContext and Tables in LINQ to SQL:

    public class RoutingContext : DataContext
    {
        public RoutingContext()
    #if WINDOWS_PHONE
            : base("Data Source = 'isostore:/RoutingDB.sdf'; Max Database Size = 1024; Max Buffer Size = 65536")
    #else
            : base("Data Source = './RoutingDB.sdf'; Max Database Size = 1024; Max Buffer Size = 65536")
    #endif
        {
    
        }
    
        public Table<Node> Nodes;
        public Table<Road> Roads;
        public Table<RoadNode> RoadNodes;
        public Table<NodeProperty> NodeProperties;
        public Table<RoadProperty> RoadProperties;
        public Table<StringData> Strings;
    }
    
    [Table]
    public class Node
    {
        [Column(IsPrimaryKey = true)]
        public int Id { get; set; }
    
        [Column()]
        public int Lon { get; set; }
    
        [Column()]
        public int Lat { get; set; }
    }
    
    [Table]
    public class NodeProperty
    {
        [Column()]
        public int NodeId { get; set; }
    
        [Column(DbType = "NVarChar(255) NOT NULL")]
        public int Key { get; set; }
    
        [Column(DbType = "NVarChar(255) NOT NULL")]
        public int Value { get; set; }
    }
    
    [Table]
    public class RoadProperty
    {
        [Column()]
        public int RoadId { get; set; }
    
        [Column(DbType = "NVarChar(255) NOT NULL")]
        public int Key { get; set; }
    
        [Column(DbType = "NVarChar(255) NOT NULL")]
        public int Value { get; set; }
    }
    
    [Table]
    public class Road
    {
        [Column(IsPrimaryKey = true)]
        public int Id { get; set; }
    }
    
    [Table]
    public class RoadNode
    {
        [Column()]
        public int RoadId { get; set; }
    
        [Column()]
        public int NodeId { get; set; }
    }
    
    [Table]
    public class StringData
    {
        [Column(IsPrimaryKey = true)]
        public int Id { get; set; }
    
        [Column(DbType = "NVarChar(255) NOT NULL")]
        public String String { get; set; }
    }
    
  5. First I went on the InsertOnSubmitTour() with a SubmitChanges() every now and then, but that apparently is way to slow as SubmitChanges() inserts row-per-row. So then I went to try SqlBulkCopy which apparently doesn't work for SQL Server Compact Edition, this made me end up with SqlCeBulkCopy which seems to be faster but still is slow.

There are two problems that I am experiencing with this solution:

  1. It is still pretty slow.

  2. The resulting size is many times bigger. Please note that Belgium.osm.pbf is only ~80 MB. The .sdf however appears to be ~592 MB, is there anything I can do about this?

So, here are my questions:

  1. Where did I completely go wrong? What should I do instead?

    I find it really weird that it's so hard to process a 80 MB file properly. Please also note that I'm doing all this computing on my computer at the moment and once it runs fair on the computer I'll try it on the Windows Phone 7.

  2. If there really is no handy LINQ solution, would it make sense to produce an indexed PBF?

    This however requires me to reinvent what a database could already provide to me.

  3. Would it make sense to increase the size on my computer, essentially making a writing a converter, then sent the ~592 MB .sdf database file to my phone?

    This seems to be a last resort that's in between option 1 and 2, but that doesn't make the application upload-able to MarketPlace as it's quite nasty to have to convert on the computer in advance and then somehow get it onto the phone.

Please note that I focus on question 1 and that the other questions are merely solutions if that is shown to be impossible, I'm just missing something that would make this go fluent but I have no idea...

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  • Part of me thinks you should get all the data into a database before you load the app.
    – surfasb
    Feb 6, 2012 at 23:35
  • @surfasb: I know, that's what I am planning. But my database is rather inefficient at the moment, see an example here, I know there is a lot of useless data being imported but it's hard to get that data out of the database. Upon import I would have to keep a separate in-memory node ID list to filter out nodes for roads I don't need (because they are load separately), or I need to delete them afterwards but that's also very slow. In other words, I haven't found the right way to store this yet. Feb 7, 2012 at 0:57

1 Answer 1

1

It makes sense to use a database for this. The size may be due to the compactness of the pbf file, also keep in mind that all data in SQL CE is unicode. Your question is unclear - what is slow? Also, you can try to Compact the database file after the import, it may shrink the file a bit. Depending on the resulting size, your .xap may still be small enough for MarketPlace. (As the .xap zips the sdf file as well)

6
  • The WriteToServer is slow, but I guess I can't do any further than trying to strip down my data and only store in the database what I really need in there, which would further optimize the disk footprint. My questions about this answer: Can I change it to not be unicode? Doesn't Compact have zero effect on only inserts? I don't think the MarketPlace accepts such big files... Feb 6, 2012 at 11:01
  • I wrote SqlCeBulkCopy and it concerns me that WriteToServer is slow, could you share some code? Max XAP size is 225 MB!
    – ErikEJ
    Feb 6, 2012 at 11:13
  • Which Compact are you talking about? That of SqlCeEngine or did you write your own one? Because that of SqlCeEngine didn't seem to do anything while it is running other than some probing around, this is because insert statements don't generate unallocated or free pages. I see that I can pass a collation which allows for ASCII strings, but I don't think the issue lies with strings. Do you have Reflector available such that I can package the output directory instead of the source directory? Or do you just want the code without libraries? And yeah, I noticed you are the author, nice support... :) Feb 6, 2012 at 11:25
  • I mean SqlCeEngine.Compact. SQL Compact data is Unicode no matter what you pass or define a collation. Yes, I have reflector
    – ErikEJ
    Feb 6, 2012 at 11:33
  • RoutingLibrary.exe is in this zip file, put belgium.osm.pbf in the same folder. In namespace Structure I have a class RoutingLoader in which LoadCountry does all the work; in the last if you'll see calls to AddBulk, which is the function in that class which does calls to your SqlCeBulkCopy. Feb 6, 2012 at 11:44

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