Open Travel Data (OPTD) provides a collection of transport, travel and leisure related data. The project makes extensive use of already existing data sources such as Geonames and Wikipedia, and adds some glue around those (e.g. links).
All data sets are as carefully maintained as possible, and kept up-to-date by the OPTD team, which we would be glad to welcome you on!
Flat/data files are used with hat (^) separated columns, so that it should be easy to use with your own tools of choice.
- All the data sets, whcih are directly curated and maintained by OPTD,
are located in the
opentraveldata
directory. - The
data
directory contains a sub-directory per collected data source. For instance, thedata/unlocode
directory contains data snapshots from UN/LOCODE. See theREADME
file in that directory for more details. In all the cases, those data are collected legally, either directly from a download service, when it exists, or through public web screen-scraping methods when required. - Some usage examples can be found in the
examples
directory. - The
tools
directory contains scripts, which are used to generate the data sets. .travis
contains continuous integration (CI) related code.
GeoBases is a good addition to OPTD, offering easy-to-use data manipulation and visualization Python-based tools and API, on top of OPTD curated data files.
OpenTREP is a C++-based transport related full-text search library, with Python bindings, powering the Travel Search Web application. That Web application also gets its own Wikipedia template, so as to ease its use on that world wide encyclopedia.
The full stack of that Web application is open, from the data sources up to the front-end source code, through the back-end Python and C++ libraries. So, do not hesitate to contribute, for instance just for the fun of it.
An independent Service Delivery Quality (SDQ) project aims at monitoring the quality of data provide by OPTD. There is still some work to be done in order to automate most of the steps, though.
This is the master repository of the Open Travel Data (OPTD) project. For backwards compatability reasons, all changes are synchronized back to the old repository.
The data curated and/or generated by the OPTD project are governed by the CC-BY license.
- Share — copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format
- Adapt — remix, transform, and build upon the material for any purpose, even commercially.
This license is acceptable for Free Cultural Works. The licensor cannot revoke these freedoms as long as you follow the license terms.
- Attribution — You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made. You may do so in any reasonable manner, but not in any way that suggests the licensor endorses you or your use.
- No additional restrictions — You may not apply legal terms or technological measures that legally restrict others from doing anything the license permits.
For the data in the
data
directory,
you should check directly with the corresponding data producer. In no way
OPTD endorses you to use, remix, transform or build upon those data sources.
Any contribution or feedback is welcome!
Please do not hesitate to open an issue request or to suggest enhancement through pull request (PR)!
If you notice something missing, like Laudamotion airline (OE) at some point, you can just step up, and we will try to fix what is wrong.
You can also become a regular contributor: just create a GitHub account and we will enlist you right away! That is the surest way for you to know that you will always be best served (by yourself) and receive our eternal gratefulness :)
OpenTravelData aims at being useful to the human kind, no more, no less. Anyone is welcome to contribute to make our world a better place. Knowledge is key, essential to preserve our freedom. We are happy that you read so far, thanks!