Version 22 (modified by 16 years ago) ( diff ) | ,
---|
Release
The latest release is JOSM 1.5. Get it at: http://josm.openstreetmap.de/download/josm-1.5.jar. The hotlink to the always latest release is http://josm.openstreetmap.de/download/josm.jar
Nightly Builds
You can always grab the latest nightly build - version from http://josm.openstreetmap.de/download/josm-latest.jar. It is usually pretty stable too.
Getting the Source
JOSM is available under GPL, and so of course you can get the sources and compile, modify or redistribute it by yourself. You can grab the sources via subversion
svn co http://josm.openstreetmap.de/svn/trunk josm
Or you can inspect single files over the web frontend at http://josm.openstreetmap.de/svn.
Compiling
Using ant
The easiest way to compile JOSM provided Java on your machine is properly set up is to go to the josm directory and type:
ant
That will create a dist/josm-custom.jar
file if successful.
Using eclipse
Use eclipse and the provided .project
and .classpath
file. Just add a new Java Project using the JOSM source folder as existing path.
Using javac
You can also build josm without ant or eclipse. To do so, change into the src/
folder and call javac
on the file org/openstreetmap/josm/Main
with all libs from ../lib/*.jar
in your classpath (you have to specify all subsequent). If running linux, be sure to have your JAVA_HOME
set.
As example, this could look like:
$ cd ~/src $ svn co http://josm.openstreetmap.de/svn josm ''tons of output here'' $ export JAVA_HOME=/usr/local/jdk1.5.0 $ cd josm/src $ javac -cp .:../lib/MinML2.jar:../lib/metadata-extractor-2.3.1.jar:../lib/gettext-common-0.9.jar org/openstreetmap/josm/gui/MainApplication.java
Running
Microsoft Windows
Double clicking on the jar file.
If this does not help, you probably need to install Java
If you want to be able to handle more points in JOSM you can create a shortcut like the following example:
C:\WINNT\system32\java.exe -jar -Xmx512M "C:\PATH-TO-JOSM\josm-latest.jar"
Linux / *BSD
- using the shell
-
Go to the directory where the josm-latest.jar is and type
to launch. Replace
java -jar josm-latest.jar
''josm-latest.jar''
with the name of the jar file you loaded, e.G.josm.jar
for releases.
If this don't help, try to set you JAVA_HOME variable to the java location (the root location, not the bin. As example:
export JAVA_HOME=/usr/lib/sun-j2se5.0-jdk java -jar ''josm.jar''
- KDE
- There is a tutorial on how to setup your environment to start jar-files by clicking on them.
- GNOME
- Right click on the JAR file, and select Open with "Sun Java 5.0 Runtime", or whatever java version you have.
- XGL/Compiz
-
Type this into a shell:
as described here: http://kubasik.net/blog/index.php/2006/06/19/java-sun-150-and-xglcompiz-on-ubuntu/
export AWT_TOOLKIT=MToolkit && java -jar josm-test.jar
MacOS
1.) If you have downloaded "josm-latest.jar" you can start JOSM by clicking on the josm-latest.jar file in the MacOS Finder (you might get the warning that you are about to open a file from the internet - just accept).
This way to start JOSM should be sufficient in most cases.
2.) However, if you need to start it up with additional Java parameter(s) (e.g. -Xmx512M) you can also use the MacOS "Terminal" and start JOSM (Java) manually:
Start the "Terminal" application (e.g. by typing "Terminal" into the Spotlight search)
Now you have two options
a.) type in the following command and press "Enter" to start JOSM without any special java options (same result like clicking in the Finder):
java -jar FOLDER/josm-latest.jar
Whereas "FOLDER" should be replaced by the name of the folder you have josm-latest.jar downloaded to. If you have downloaded it to the standard MacOS "Download" Folder it would look like:
java -jar Download/josm-latest.jar
b.) to use additional java options just add them the FOLDER/josm-latest.jar
If you for example have experienced the "Out of memory" warning (e.g. trying to load geo-tagged photos to JOSM) you would start JOSM like this:
java -Xmx256M -jar FOLDER/josm-latest.jar
This would allow JOSM to use up to 256 MB of RAM (memory). The java option "-Xmx256M" set's the maximum Java heap size to 265 MB. You are free to replace -Xmx256M by any number appropriate for your system (e.g. -Xmx512M or even -Xmx1024M).
By the way. To get an overview of the Java start options you can type in:
java -help
Attachments (2)
-
OSX_Error.png
(28.0 KB
) - added by 10 years ago.
Error message from Mac OS X : In this case using Java 6 rather than Java 7.
-
SearchTerminal.png
(83.4 KB
) - added by 7 years ago.
How to find macOS Terminal
Download all attachments as: .zip