Introduction to HDF5 HDF5 User Guide |
HDF5 Reference Manual Other HDF5 documents and links |
This is an introduction to the HDF5 data model and programming model. Being a Getting Started or QuickStart document, this
Introduction to HDF5 is intended to provide enough information for you to develop a basic understanding of how HDF5 works and is meant to be used. Knowledge of the current version of HDF will make it easier to follow the text, but it is not required. More complete information of the sort you will need to actually use HDF5 is available in the HDF5 documentation. Available documents include the following:Code examples are available in the source code tree when you install HDF5.
hdf5/examples
,
hdf5/doc/html/examples/
, and
hdf5/doc/html/Tutor/examples/
contain the examples
used in this document.
HDF5 is a completely new Hierarchical Data Format product consisting of a data format specification and a supporting library implementation. HDF5 is designed to address some of the limitations of the older HDF product and to address current and anticipated requirements of modern systems and applications. 1
We urge you to look at HDF5, the format and the library, and give us
feedback on what you like or do not like about it, and what features
you would like to see added to it.
Why HDF5?
HDF5 includes the following improvements.
A detailed list of changes in HDF5 between the current release and
the preceding major release can be found in the file
RELEASE.txt
,
with a highlights summary in the document
"HDF5 Software Changes from Release to Release"
in the
HDF5 Application Developer's Guide.
HDF5 files are organized in a hierarchical structure, with two primary structures: groups and datasets.
Working with groups and group members is similar in many ways to working with directories and files in UNIX. As with UNIX directories and files, objects in an HDF5 file are often described by giving their full (or absolute) path names.
- /
signifies the root group.
/foo
signifies a member of the root group called foo
.
/foo/zoo
signifies a member of the group foo
, which in turn is a member of the root group.
Any HDF5 group or dataset may have an associated attribute list. An HDF5 attribute is a user-defined HDF5 structure that provides extra information about an HDF5 object. Attributes are described in more detail below.
An HDF5 group is a structure containing zero or more HDF5 objects. A group has two parts:
A dataset is stored in a file in two parts: a header and a data array.
The header contains information that is needed to interpret the array portion of the dataset, as well as metadata (or pointers to metadata) that describes or annotates the dataset. Header information includes the name of the object, its dimensionality, its number-type, information about how the data itself is stored on disk, and other information used by the library to speed up access to the dataset or maintain the file's integrity.
There are four essential classes of information in any header: name, datatype, dataspace, and storage layout:
Name.
A dataset name is a sequence of alphanumeric ASCII characters.Datatype.
HDF5 allows one to define many different kinds of datatypes. There are two categories of datatypes: atomic datatypes and compound datatypes. Atomic datatypes can also be system-specific, orNATIVE
, and all datatypes can be named:
NATIVE
datatypes are system-specific instances of atomic datatypes.
Atomic datatypes include integers and floating-point numbers. Each atomic type belongs to a particular class and has several properties: size, order, precision, and offset. In this introduction, we consider only a few of these properties.
Atomic classes include integer, float, string, bit field, and opaque. (Note: Only integer, float and string classes are available in the current implementation.)
Properties of integer types include size, order (endian-ness), and signed-ness (signed/unsigned).
Properties of float types include the size and location of the exponent and mantissa, and the location of the sign bit.
The datatypes that are supported in the current implementation are:
NATIVE
datatypes. Although it is possible to describe nearly any kind of atomic datatype, most applications will use predefined datatypes that are supported by their compiler. In HDF5 these are called native datatypes. NATIVE
datatypes are C-like datatypes that are generally supported by the hardware of the machine on which the library was compiled. In order to be portable, applications should almost always use the NATIVE
designation to describe data values in memory.
The NATIVE
architecture has base names which do not follow the same rules as the others. Instead, native type names are similar to the C type names. The following figure shows several examples.
Example |
Corresponding C Type |
H5T_NATIVE_CHAR |
signed char |
H5T_NATIVE_UCHAR |
unsigned char |
H5T_NATIVE_SHORT |
short |
H5T_NATIVE_USHORT |
unsigned short |
H5T_NATIVE_INT |
int |
H5T_NATIVE_UINT |
unsigned |
H5T_NATIVE_LONG |
long |
H5T_NATIVE_ULONG |
unsigned long |
H5T_NATIVE_LLONG |
long long |
H5T_NATIVE_ULLONG |
unsigned long long |
H5T_NATIVE_FLOAT |
float |
H5T_NATIVE_DOUBLE |
double |
H5T_NATIVE_LDOUBLE |
long double |
H5T_NATIVE_HSIZE |
hsize_t |
H5T_NATIVE_HSSIZE |
hssize_t |
H5T_NATIVE_HERR |
herr_t |
H5T_NATIVE_HBOOL |
hbool_t |
See Datatypes in the HDF Users Guide for further information.
A compound datatype is one in which a collection of several datatypes are represented as a single unit, a compound datatype, similar to a struct in C. The parts of a compound datatype are called members. The members of a compound datatype may be of any datatype, including another compound datatype. It is possible to read members from a compound type without reading the whole type.
Named datatypes. Normally each dataset has its own datatype, but sometimes we may want to share a datatype among several datasets. This can be done using a named datatype. A named datatype is stored in the file independently of any dataset, and referenced by all datasets that have that datatype. Named datatypes may have an associated attributes list.
See Datatypes
Dataspace.
A dataset dataspace describes the dimensionality of the dataset. The dimensions of a dataset can be fixed (unchanging), or they may be unlimited, which means that they are extendible (i.e. they can grow larger).Properties of a dataspace consist of the rank (number of dimensions) of the data array, the actual sizes of the dimensions of the array, and the maximum sizes of the dimensions of the array. For a fixed-dimension dataset, the actual size is the same as the maximum size of a dimension. When a dimension is unlimited, the maximum size is set to the
valueH5P_UNLIMITED
. (An example below shows how to create extendible datasets.)
A dataspace can also describe portions of a dataset, making it possible to do partial I/O operations on selections. Selection is supported by the dataspace interface (H5S). Given an n-dimensional dataset, there are currently four ways to do partial selection:
Since I/O operations have two end-points, the raw data transfer functions require two dataspace arguments: one describes the application memory dataspace or subset thereof, and the other describes the file dataspace or subset thereof.
See Dataspaces and Partial I/O
in the HDF Users Guide for further information.Storage layout.
The HDF5 format makes it possible to store data in a variety of ways. The default storage layout format is contiguous, meaning that data is stored in the same linear way that it is organized in memory. Two other storage layout formats are currently defined for HDF5: compact, and chunked. In the future, other storage layouts may be added.Compact storage is used when the amount of data is small and can be stored directly in the object header. (Note: Compact storage is not supported in this release.)
Chunked storage involves dividing the dataset into equal-sized "chunks" that are stored separately. Chunking has three important benefits.
See Datasets in the HDF Users Guide for further information. Also see Dataset Chunking Issues
.The Attribute API (H5A) is used to read or write attribute information. When accessing attributes, they can be identified by name or by an index value. The use of an index value makes it possible to iterate through all of the attributes associated with a given object.
The HDF5 format and I/O library are designed with the assumption that attributes are small datasets. They are always stored in the object header of the object they are attached to. Because of this, large datasets should not be stored as attributes. How large is "large" is not defined by the library and is up to the user's interpretation. (Large datasets with metadata can be stored as supplemental datasets in a group with the primary dataset.)
See Attributes
in the HDF Users Guide for further information.For those who are interested, this section takes a look at the low-level elements of the file as the file is written to disk (or other storage media) and the relation of those low-level elements to the higher level elements with which users typically are more familiar. The HDF5 API generally exposes only the high-level elements to the user; the low-level elements are often hidden. The rest of this Introduction does not assume an understanding of this material.
The format of an HDF5 file on disk encompasses several key ideas of the HDF4 and AIO file formats as well as addressing some shortcomings therein. The new format is more self-describing than the HDF4 format and is more uniformly applied to data objects in the file.
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Figure 1: Relationships among the
HDF5 root group, other groups, and objects
|
An HDF5 file appears to the user as a directed graph. The nodes of this graph are the higher-level HDF5 objects that are exposed by the HDF5 APIs:
At the lowest level, as information is actually written to the disk, an HDF5 file is made up of the following objects:
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Figure 2: HDF5 objects -- datasets, datatypes, or dataspaces
|
See the HDF5 File Format
Specification for further information.
The current HDF5 API is implemented only in C. The API provides routines for creating HDF5 files, creating and writing groups, datasets, and their attributes to HDF5 files, and reading groups, datasets and their attributes from HDF5 files.
All C routines in the HDF 5 library begin with a prefix of the form H5*, where * is a single letter indicating the object on which the operation is to be performed:
H5Fopen
, which opens an HDF5 file.
H5Gset
,which sets the working group to the specified group.
H5Tcopy
,which creates a copy of an existing datatype.
H5Screate_simple
, which creates simple dataspaces.
H5Dread
, which reads all or part of a dataset into a buffer in memory.
H5Pset_chunk
, which sets the number of dimensions and the size of a chunk.
H5Aget_name
, which retrieves name of an attribute.
H5Zregister
, which registers new compression and uncompression functions for use with the HDF5 library.
H5Eprint
, which prints the current error stack.
H5Rcreate
, which creates a reference.
H5Iget_type
, which retrieves the type of an object.
There are a number definitions and declarations that should be included with any HDF5 program. These definitions and declarations are contained in several include files. The main include
file ishdf5.h
. This file includes all of the other files that your program is likely to need. Be sure to include hdf5.h
in any program that uses the HDF5 library.
In this section we describe how to program some basic operations on files, including how to
This programming model shows how to create a file and also how to close the file.
The following code fragment implements the specified model. If there is a possibility that the file already exists, the user must add the flag H5ACC_TRUNC
to the access mode to overwrite the previous file's information.
hid_t file; /* identifier */
/*
* Create a new file using H5ACC_TRUNC access,
* default file creation properties, and default file
* access properties.
* Then close the file.
*/
file = H5Fcreate(FILE, H5ACC_TRUNC, H5P_DEFAULT, H5P_DEFAULT);
status = H5Fclose(file);
Recall that datatypes and dimensionality (dataspace) are independent objects, which are created separately from any dataset that they might be attached to. Because of this the creation of a dataset requires, at a minimum, separate definitions of datatype, dimensionality, and dataset. Hence, to create a dataset the following steps need to be taken:
The following code illustrates the creation of these three components of a dataset object.
hid_t dataset, datatype, dataspace; /* declare identifiers */
/*
* Create dataspace: Describe the size of the array and
* create the data space for fixed size dataset.
*/
dimsf[0] = NX;
dimsf[1] = NY;
dataspace = H5Screate_simple(RANK, dimsf, NULL);
/*
* Define datatype for the data in the file.
* We will store little endian integer numbers.
*/
datatype = H5Tcopy(H5T_NATIVE_INT);
status = H5Tset_order(datatype, H5T_ORDER_LE);
/*
* Create a new dataset within the file using defined
* dataspace and datatype and default dataset creation
* properties.
* NOTE: H5T_NATIVE_INT can be used as datatype if conversion
* to little endian is not needed.
*/
dataset = H5Dcreate(file, DATASETNAME, datatype, dataspace, H5P_DEFAULT);
The datatype, dataspace and dataset objects should be released once they are no longer needed by a program. Since each is an independent object, the must be released (or closed) separately. The following lines of code close the datatype, dataspace, and datasets that were created in the preceding section.
H5Tclose(datatype);
H5Dclose(dataset);
H5Sclose(dataspace);
Having defined the datatype, dataset, and dataspace parameters, you write out the data with a call to
H5Dwrite
.
/*
* Write the data to the dataset using default transfer
* properties.
*/
status = H5Dwrite(dataset, H5T_NATIVE_INT, H5S_ALL, H5S_ALL,
H5P_DEFAULT, data);
The third and fourth parameters of
H5Dwrite
in the example describe the dataspaces in memory and in the file, respectively. They are set to the value H5S_ALL
to indicate that an entire dataset is to be written. In a later section we look at how we would access a portion of a dataset.
Example 1 contains a program that creates a file and a dataset, and writes the dataset to the file.
Reading is analogous to writing. If, in the previous example, we wish to read an entire dataset, we would use the same basic calls with the same parameters. Of course, the routine H5Dread
would replace H5Dwrite
.
Although reading is analogous to writing, it is often necessary to query a file to obtain information about a dataset. For instance, we often need to know about the datatype associated with a dataset, as well dataspace information (e.g. rank and dimensions). There are several "get" routines for obtaining this information. The following code segment illustrates how we would get this kind of information:
/*
* Get datatype and dataspace identifiers and then query
* dataset class, order, size, rank and dimensions.
*/
datatype = H5Dget_type(dataset); /* datatype identifier */
class = H5Tget_class(datatype);
if (class == H5T_INTEGER) printf("Data set has INTEGER type \n");
order = H5Tget_order(datatype);
if (order == H5T_ORDER_LE) printf("Little endian order \n");
size = H5Tget_size(datatype);
printf(" Data size is %d \n", size);
dataspace = H5Dget_space(dataset); /* dataspace identifier */
rank = H5Sget_simple_extent_ndims(dataspace);
status_n = H5Sget_simple_extent_dims(dataspace, dims_out);
printf("rank %d, dimensions %d x %d \n", rank, dims_out[0], dims_out[1]);
In the previous discussion, we describe how to access an entire dataset with one write (or read) operation. HDF5 also supports access to portions (or selections) of a dataset in one read/write operation. Currently selections are limited to hyperslabs, their unions, and the lists of independent points. Both types of selection will be discussed in the following sections. Several sample cases of selection reading/writing are shown on the following figure.
a |
b |
c |
d |
In example (a) a single hyperslab is read from the midst of a two-dimensional array in a file and stored in the corner of a smaller two-dimensional array in memory. In (b) a regular series of blocks is read from a two-dimensional array in the file and stored as a contiguous sequence of values at a certain offset in a one-dimensional array in memory. In (c) a sequence of points with no regular pattern is read from a two-dimensional array in a file and stored as a sequence of points with no regular pattern in a three-dimensional array in memory. In (d) a union of hyperslabs in the file dataspace is read and the data is stored in another union of hyperslabs in the memory dataspace.
As these examples illustrate, whenever we perform partial read/write operations on the data, the following information must be provided: file dataspace, file dataspace selection, memory dataspace and memory dataspace selection. After the required information is specified, actual read/write operation on the portion of data is done in a single call to the HDF5 read/write functions H5Dread(write).
Hyperslabs are portions of datasets. A hyperslab selection can be a logically contiguous collection of points in a dataspace, or it can be regular pattern of points or blocks in a dataspace. The following picture illustrates a selection of regularly spaced 3x2 blocks in an 8x12 dataspace.
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Four parameters are required to describe a completely general hyperslab. Each parameter is an array whose rank is the same as that of the dataspace:
start
: a starting location for the hyperslab. In the example start
is (0,1).
stride
: the number of elements to separate each element or block to be selected. In the example stride
is (4,3). If the stride parameter is set to NULL, the stride size defaults to 1 in each dimension.
count
: the number of elements or blocks to select along each dimension. In the example, count
is (2,4).
block
: the size of the block selected from the dataspace. In the example, block
is (3,2). If the block parameter is set to NULL, the block size defaults to a single element in each dimension, as if the block array was set to all 1s.
In what order is data copied? When actual I/O is performed data values are copied by default from one dataspace to another in so-called row-major, or C order. That is, it is assumed that the first dimension varies slowest, the second next slowest, and so forth.
Example without strides or blocks. Suppose we want to read a 3x4 hyperslab from a dataset in a file beginning at the element This describes the dataspace from which we wish to read. We need to define the dataspace in memory analogously. Suppose, for instance, that we have in memory a 3 dimensional 7x7x3 array into which we wish to read the 3x4 hyperslab described above beginning at the element Notice that we must describe two things: the dimensions of the in-memory array, and the size and position of the hyperslab that we wish to read in. The following code illustrates how this would be done.
<1,2>
in the dataset. In order to do this, we must create a dataspace that describes the overall rank and dimensions of the dataset in the file, as well as the position and size of the hyperslab that we are extracting from that dataset. The following code illustrates the selection of the hyperslab in the file dataspace.
/*
* Define file dataspace.
*/
dataspace = H5Dget_space(dataset); /* dataspace identifier */
rank = H5Sget_simple_extent_ndims(dataspace);
status_n = H5Sget_simple_extent_dims(dataspace, dims_out, NULL);
/*
* Define hyperslab in the dataset.
*/
offset[0] = 1;
offset[1] = 2;
count[0] = 3;
count[1] = 4;
status = H5Sselect_hyperslab(dataspace, H5S_SELECT_SET, offset, NULL,
count, NULL);
<3,0,0>
. Since the in-memory dataspace has three dimensions, we have to describe the hyperslab as an array with three dimensions, with the last dimension being 1: <3,4,1>
.
/*
* Define memory dataspace.
*/
dimsm[0] = 7;
dimsm[1] = 7;
dimsm[2] = 3;
memspace = H5Screate_simple(RANK_OUT,dimsm,NULL);
/*
* Define memory hyperslab.
*/
offset_out[0] = 3;
offset_out[1] = 0;
offset_out[2] = 0;
count_out[0] = 3;
count_out[1] = 4;
count_out[2] = 1;
status = H5Sselect_hyperslab(memspace, H5S_SELECT_SET, offset_out, NULL,
count_out, NULL);
/*
Example 2 contains a complete program that performs these operations.
Example with strides and blocks. Consider the 8x12 dataspace described above, in which we selected eight 3x2 blocks. Suppose we wish to fill these eight blocks.
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This hyperslab has the following parameters: Suppose that the source dataspace in memory is this 50-element one dimensional array called start=(0,1), stride=(4,3), count=(2,4), block=(3,2).
vector
:
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The following code will write 48 elements from
vector
to our file dataset, starting with the second element in vector
.
/* Select hyperslab for the dataset in the file, using 3x2 blocks, (4,3) stride * (2,4) count starting at the position (0,1). */ start[0] = 0; start[1] = 1; stride[0] = 4; stride[1] = 3; count[0] = 2; count[1] = 4; block[0] = 3; block[1] = 2; ret = H5Sselect_hyperslab(fid, H5S_SELECT_SET, start, stride, count, block); /* * Create dataspace for the first dataset. */ mid1 = H5Screate_simple(MSPACE1_RANK, dim1, NULL); /* * Select hyperslab. * We will use 48 elements of the vector buffer starting at the second element. * Selected elements are 1 2 3 . . . 48 */ start[0] = 1; stride[0] = 1; count[0] = 48; block[0] = 1; ret = H5Sselect_hyperslab(mid1, H5S_SELECT_SET, start, stride, count, block); /* * Write selection from the vector buffer to the dataset in the file. * ret = H5Dwrite(dataset, H5T_NATIVE_INT, midd1, fid, H5P_DEFAULT, vector)
After these operations, the file dataspace will have the following values.
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Notice that the values are inserted in the file dataset in row-major order.
Example 3 includes this code and other example code illustrating the use of hyperslab selection.
H5Sselect_elements
. Suppose, for example, that we wish to write the values 53, 59, 61, 67 to the following elements of the 8x12 array used in the previous example: (0,0), (3,3), (3,5), and (5,6). The following code selects the points and writes them to the dataset:
#define FSPACE_RANK 2 /* Dataset rank as it is stored in the file */ #define NPOINTS 4 /* Number of points that will be selected and overwritten */ #define MSPACE2_RANK 1 /* Rank of the second dataset in memory */ #define MSPACE2_DIM 4 /* Dataset size in memory */ hsize_t dim2[] = {MSPACE2_DIM}; /* Dimension size of the second dataset (in memory) */ int values[] = {53, 59, 61, 67}; /* New values to be written */ hsize_t coord[NPOINTS][FSPACE_RANK]; /* Array to store selected points from the file dataspace */ /* * Create dataspace for the second dataset. */ mid2 = H5Screate_simple(MSPACE2_RANK, dim2, NULL); /* * Select sequence of NPOINTS points in the file dataspace. */ coord[0][0] = 0; coord[0][1] = 0; coord[1][0] = 3; coord[1][1] = 3; coord[2][0] = 3; coord[2][1] = 5; coord[3][0] = 5; coord[3][1] = 6; ret = H5Sselect_elements(fid, H5S_SELECT_SET, NPOINTS, (const hsize_t **)coord); /* * Write new selection of points to the dataset. */ ret = H5Dwrite(dataset, H5T_NATIVE_INT, mid2, fid, H5P_DEFAULT, values);
After these operations, the file dataspace will have the following values:
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Example 3 contains a complete program that performs these subsetting operations.
Selecting a union of hyperslabs
The HDF5 Library allows the user to select a union of hyperslabs and
write or read the selection into another selection. The shapes of
the two selections may differ, but the number of elements must be equal.
Suppose that we want to read two overlapping hyperslabs from the dataset written in the previous example into a union of hyperslabs in the memory dataset. This exercise is illustrated in the two figures immediately below. Note that the memory dataset has a different shape from the previously written dataset. Similarly, the selection in the memory dataset could have a different shape than the selected union of hyperslabs in the original file; for simplicity, we will preserve the selection's shape in this example.
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The following lines of code show the required steps.
First obtain the dataspace identifier for the dataset in the file.
/* * Get dataspace of the open dataset. */ fid = H5Dget_space(dataset);Then select the hyperslab with the size 3x4 and the left upper corner at the position (1,2):
/* * Select first hyperslab for the dataset in the file. The following * elements are selected: * 10 0 11 12 * 18 0 19 20 * 0 59 0 61 * */ start[0] = 1; start[1] = 2; block[0] = 1; block[1] = 1; stride[0] = 1; stride[1] = 1; count[0] = 3; count[1] = 4; ret = H5Sselect_hyperslab(fid, H5S_SELECT_SET, start, stride, count, block);Now select the second hyperslab with the size 6x5 at the position (2,4), and create the union with the first hyperslab.
/* * Add second selected hyperslab to the selection. * The following elements are selected: * 19 20 0 21 22 * 0 61 0 0 0 * 27 28 0 29 30 * 35 36 67 37 38 * 43 44 0 45 46 * 0 0 0 0 0 * Note that two hyperslabs overlap. Common elements are: * 19 20 * 0 61 */ start[0] = 2; start[1] = 4; block[0] = 1; block[1] = 1; stride[0] = 1; stride[1] = 1; count[0] = 6; count[1] = 5; ret = H5Sselect_hyperslab(fid, H5S_SELECT_OR, start, stride, count, block);Note that when we add the selected hyperslab to the union, the second argument to the
H5Sselect_hyperslab
function
has to be H5S_SELECT_OR
instead of H5S_SELECT_SET
.
Using H5S_SELECT_SET
would reset the selection to
the second hyperslab.
Now define the memory dataspace and select the union of the hyperslabs in the memory dataset.
/* * Create memory dataspace. */ mid = H5Screate_simple(MSPACE_RANK, mdim, NULL); /* * Select two hyperslabs in memory. Hyperslabs has the same * size and shape as the selected hyperslabs for the file dataspace. */ start[0] = 0; start[1] = 0; block[0] = 1; block[1] = 1; stride[0] = 1; stride[1] = 1; count[0] = 3; count[1] = 4; ret = H5Sselect_hyperslab(mid, H5S_SELECT_SET, start, stride, count, block); start[0] = 1; start[1] = 2; block[0] = 1; block[1] = 1; stride[0] = 1; stride[1] = 1; count[0] = 6; count[1] = 5; ret = H5Sselect_hyperslab(mid, H5S_SELECT_OR, start, stride, count, block);Finally we can read the selected data from the file dataspace to the selection in memory with one call to the
H5Dread
function.
ret = H5Dread(dataset, H5T_NATIVE_INT, mid, fid, H5P_DEFAULT, matrix_out);
Example 3 includes this code along with the previous selection example.
VL datatypes are useful to the scientific community in many different ways, some of which are listed below:
Value1: Object1, Object3, Object9 Value2: Object0, Object12, Object14, Object21, Object22 Value3: Object2 Value4: <none> Value5: Object1, Object10, Object12 . .
Feature1: Dataset1:Region, Dataset3:Region, Dataset9:Region Feature2: Dataset0:Region, Dataset12:Region, Dataset14:Region, Dataset21:Region, Dataset22:Region Feature3: Dataset2:Region Feature4: <none> Feature5: Dataset1:Region, Dataset10:Region, Dataset12:Region . .
H5Dread
to fail while reading in
VL datatype information if the memory required exceeds that which is available.
In this case, the H5Dread
call will fail gracefully and any
VL data which has been allocated prior to the memory shortage will be returned
to the system via the memory management routines detailed below.
It may be possible to design a partial read API function at a
later date, if demand for such a function warrants.
HDF5 has native VL strings for each language API, which are stored the
same way on disk, but are exported through each language API in a natural way
for that language. When retrieving VL strings from a dataset, users may choose
to have them stored in memory as a native VL string or in HDF5's hvl_t
struct for VL datatypes.
VL strings may be created in one of two ways: by creating a VL datatype with
a base type of H5T_NATIVE_ASCII
, H5T_NATIVE_UNICODE
,
etc., or by creating a string datatype and setting its length to
H5T_VARIABLE
. The second method is used to access
native VL strings in memory. The library will convert between the two types,
but they are stored on disk using different datatypes and have different
memory representations.
Multi-byte character representations, such as UNICODE or wide characters in C/C++, will need the appropriate character and string datatypes created so that they can be described properly through the datatype API. Additional conversions between these types and the current ASCII characters will also be required.
Variable-width character strings (which might be compressed data or some other encoding) are not currently handled by this design. We will evaluate how to implement them based on user feedback.
H5Tvlen_create()
function
as follows:
H5Tvlen_create
(hid_t base_type_id
);
The base datatype will be the datatype that the sequence is composed of, characters for character strings, vertex coordinates for polygon lists, etc. The base datatype specified for the VL datatype can be of any HDF5 datatype, including another VL datatype, a compound datatype, or an atomic datatype.
H5Tget_super()
function, described in the H5T documentation.
H5Dread
may need
to allocate to store VL data while reading the data, the
H5Dget_vlen_size()
function is provided:
H5Dvlen_get_buf_size
(hid_t dataset_id
,
hid_t type_id
,
hid_t space_id
,
hsize_t *size
)
This routine checks the number of bytes required to store the VL data from
the dataset, using the space_id
for the selection in the dataset
on disk and the type_id
for the memory representation of the
VL data in memory. The *size
value is modified according to
how many bytes are required to store the VL data in memory.
H5Dread
and H5Dwrite
functions
with the dataset transfer property list.
Default memory management is set by using H5P_DEFAULT
for the dataset transfer property list identifier.
If H5P_DEFAULT
is used with H5Dread
,
the system malloc
and free
calls
will be used for allocating and freeing memory.
In such a case, H5P_DEFAULT
should also be passed
as the property list identifier to H5Dvlen_reclaim
.
The rest of this subsection is relevant only to those who choose not to use default memory management.
The user can choose whether to use the
system malloc
and free
calls or
user-defined, or custom, memory management functions.
If user-defined memory management functions are to be used,
the memory allocation and free routines must be defined via
H5Pset_vlen_mem_manager()
, as follows:
H5Pset_vlen_mem_manager
(hid_t plist_id
,
H5MM_allocate_t alloc
,
void *alloc_info
,
H5MM_free_t free
,
void *free_info
)
The alloc
and free
parameters
identify the memory management routines to be used.
If the user has defined custom memory management routines,
alloc
and/or free
should be set to make
those routine calls (i.e., the name of the routine is used as
the value of the parameter);
if the user prefers to use the system's malloc
and/or free
, the alloc
and
free
parameters, respectively, should be set to
NULL
The prototypes for the user-defined functions would appear as follows:
typedef
void
*(*H5MM_allocate_t
)(size_t size
,
void *info
) ;
typedef
void
(*H5MM_free_t
)(void *mem
,
void *free_info
) ;
The alloc_info
and free_info
parameters can be
used to pass along any required information to the user's memory management
routines.
In summary, if the user has defined custom memory management
routines, the name(s) of the routines are passed in the
alloc
and free
parameters and the
custom routines' parameters are passed in the
alloc_info
and free_info
parameters.
If the user wishes to use the system malloc
and
free
functions, the alloc
and/or
free
parameters are set to NULL
and the alloc_info
and free_info
parameters are ignored.
H5Dvlen_reclaim()
function call, as follows:
H5Dvlen_reclaim
(hid_t type_id
,
hid_t space_id
,
hid_t plist_id
,
void *buf
);
The type_id
must be the datatype stored in the buffer,
space_id
describes the selection for the memory buffer
to free the VL datatypes within,
plist_id
is the dataset transfer property list which
was used for the I/O transfer to create the buffer, and
buf
is the pointer to the buffer to free the VL memory within.
The VL structures (hvl_t
) in the user's buffer are
modified to zero out the VL information after it has been freed.
If nested VL datatypes were used to create the buffer, this routine frees them from the bottom up, releasing all the memory without creating memory leaks.
H5T_ARRAY
, allows the
construction of true, homogeneous, multi-dimensional arrays.
Since these are homogeneous arrays, each element of the array will be
of the same datatype, designated at the time the array is created.
Arrays can be nested. Not only is an array datatype used as an element of an HDF5 dataset, but the elements of an array datatype may be of any datatype, including another array datatype.
Array datatypes cannot be subdivided for I/O; the entire array must be transferred from one dataset to another.
Within certain limitations, outlined in the next paragraph, array datatypes may be N-dimensional and of any dimension size. Unlimited dimensions, however, are not supported. Functionality similar to unlimited dimension arrays is available through the use of variable-length datatypes.
The maximum number of dimensions, i.e., the maximum rank, of an array
datatype is specified by the HDF5 library constant H5S_MAX_RANK
.
The minimum rank is 1 (one).
All dimension sizes must be greater than 0 (zero).
One array datatype may only be converted to another array datatype if the number of dimensions and the sizes of the dimensions are equal and the datatype of the first array's elements can be converted to the datatype of the second array's elements.
H5Tarray_create
, for creating an array datatype,
and two, H5Tget_array_ndims
and H5Tget_array_dims
,
for working with existing array datatypes.
H5Tarray_create
creates a new array datatype object.
Parameters specify
H5Tarray_create
(
hid_t base
,
int rank
,
const hsize_t dims[/*rank*/]
,
const int perm[/*rank*/]
)
The function H5Tget_array_ndims
returns the rank of a
specified array datatype.
H5Tget_array_ndims
(
hid_t adtype_id
)
H5Tget_array_dims
retrieves the
permutation of the array and the size of each dimension.
(Note: The permutation feature is not implemented in Release 1.4.)
H5Tget_array_dims
(
hid_t adtype_id
,
hsize_t *dims[]
,
int *perm[]
)
Properties of compound datatypes. A compound datatype is similar to a struct in C or a common block in Fortran. It is a collection of one or more atomic types or small arrays of such types. To create and use of a compound datatype you need to refer to various properties of the data compound datatype:
Properties of members of a compound datatype are defined when the member is added to the compound type and cannot be subsequently modified.
Defining compound datatypes. Compound datatypes must be built out of other datatypes. First, one creates an empty compound datatype and specifies its total size. Then members are added to the compound datatype in any order.
Member names. Each member must have a descriptive name, which is the key used to uniquely identify the member within the compound datatype. A member name in an HDF5 datatype does not necessarily have to be the same as the name of the corresponding member in the C struct in memory, although this is often the case. Nor does one need to define all members of the C struct in the HDF5 compound datatype (or vice versa).
Offsets. Usually a C struct will be defined to hold a data point in memory, and the offsets of the members in memory will be the offsets of the struct members from the beginning of an instance of the struct. The library defines the macro to compute the offset of a member within a struct:
HOFFSET(s,m)
Here is an example in which a compound datatype is created to describe complex numbers whose type is defined by the
complex_t
struct.
typedef struct {
double re; /*real part */
double im; /*imaginary part */
} complex_t;
complex_t tmp; /*used only to compute offsets */
hid_t complex_id = H5Tcreate (H5T_COMPOUND, sizeof tmp);
H5Tinsert (complex_id, "real", HOFFSET(tmp,re),
H5T_NATIVE_DOUBLE);
H5Tinsert (complex_id, "imaginary", HOFFSET(tmp,im),
H5T_NATIVE_DOUBLE);
Example 4 shows how to create a compound datatype, write an array that has the compound datatype to the file, and read back subsets of the members.
An extendible dataset is one whose dimensions can grow. In HDF5, it is possible to define a dataset to have certain initial dimensions, then later to increase the size of any of the initial dimensions.
For example, you can create and store the following 3x3 HDF5 dataset:
1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
then later to extend this into a 10x3 dataset by adding 7 rows, such as this:
1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2
then further extend it to a 10x5 dataset by adding two columns, such as this:
1 1 1 3 3 1 1 1 3 3 1 1 1 3 3 2 2 2 3 3 2 2 2 3 3 2 2 2 3 3 2 2 2 3 3 2 2 2 3 3 2 2 2 3 3 2 2 2 3 3
HDF 5 requires you to use chunking in order to define extendible datasets. Chunking makes it possible to extend datasets efficiently, without having to reorganize storage excessively.
The following operations are required in order to write an extendible dataset:
For example, suppose we wish to create a dataset similar to the one shown above. We want to start with a 3x3 dataset, then later extend it in both directions.
Declaring unlimited dimensions. We could declare the dataspace to have unlimited dimensions with the following code, which uses the predefined constant
H5S_UNLIMITED
to specify unlimited dimensions.
hsize_t dims[2] = { 3, 3}; /* dataset dimensions at the creation time */ hsize_t maxdims[2] = {H5S_UNLIMITED, H5S_UNLIMITED}; /* * Create the data space with unlimited dimensions. */ dataspace = H5Screate_simple(RANK, dims, maxdims);
Enabling chunking. We can then set the dataset storage layout properties to enable chunking. We do this using the routine H5Pset_chunk
:
hid_t cparms; hsize_t chunk_dims[2] ={2, 5}; /* * Modify dataset creation properties to enable chunking. */ cparms = H5Pcreate (H5P_DATASET_CREATE); status = H5Pset_chunk( cparms, RANK, chunk_dims);Then create a dataset.
/* * Create a new dataset within the file using cparms * creation properties. */ dataset = H5Dcreate(file, DATASETNAME, H5T_NATIVE_INT, dataspace, cparms);
Extending dataset size. Finally, when we want to extend the size of the dataset, we invoke H5Dextend
to extend the size of the dataset. In the following example, we extend the dataset along the first dimension, by seven rows, so that the new dimensions are <10,3>
:
/* * Extend the dataset. Dataset becomes 10 x 3. */ dims[0] = dims[0] + 7; size[0] = dims[0]; size[1] = dims[1]; status = H5Dextend (dataset, size);
Example 5 shows how to create a 3x3 extendible dataset, write the dataset, extend the dataset to 10x3, write the dataset again, extend it again to 10x5, write the dataset again.
Example 6 shows how to read the data written by Example 7.
Groups provide a mechanism for organizing meaningful and extendible sets of datasets within an HDF5 file. The H5G API contains routines for working with groups.
Creating a group. To create a group, use
H5Gcreate
. For example, the following code
creates a group called Data
in the root group.
/* * Create a group in the file. */ grp = H5Gcreate(file, "/Data", 0);A group may be created in another group by providing the absolute name of the group to the
H5Gcreate
function or by specifying its location. For example,
to create the group Data_new
in the
Data
group, one can use the following sequence
of calls:
/* * Create group "Data_new" in the group "Data" by specifying * absolute name of the group. */ grp_new = H5Gcreate(file, "/Data/Data_new", 0);or
/* * Create group "Data_new" in the "Data" group. */ grp_new = H5Gcreate(grp, "Data_new", 0);Note that the group identifier
grp
is used
as the first parameter in the H5Gcreate
function
when the relative name is provided.
The third parameter in H5Gcreate
optionally
specifies how much file space to reserve to store the names
that will appear in this group. If a non-positive
value is supplied, then a default size is chosen.
H5Gclose
closes the group and releases the
group identifier.
Creating a dataset in a particular group. As with groups, a dataset can be created in a particular group by specifying its absolute name as illustrated in the following example:
/* * Create the dataset "Compressed_Data" in the group using the * absolute name. The dataset creation property list is modified * to use GZIP compression with the compression effort set to 6. * Note that compression can be used only when the dataset is * chunked. */ dims[0] = 1000; dims[1] = 20; cdims[0] = 20; cdims[1] = 20; dataspace = H5Screate_simple(RANK, dims, NULL); plist = H5Pcreate(H5P_DATASET_CREATE); H5Pset_chunk(plist, 2, cdims); H5Pset_deflate( plist, 6); dataset = H5Dcreate(file, "/Data/Compressed_Data", H5T_NATIVE_INT, dataspace, plist);A relative dataset name may also be used when a dataset is created. First obtain the identifier of the group in which the dataset is to be created. Then create the dataset with
H5Dcreate
as illustrated in the following
example:
/* * Open the group. */ grp = H5Gopen(file, "Data"); /* * Create the dataset "Compressed_Data" in the "Data" group * by providing a group identifier and a relative dataset * name as parameters to the H5Dcreate function. */ dataset = H5Dcreate(grp, "Compressed_Data", H5T_NATIVE_INT, dataspace, plist);
Accessing an object in a group.
Any object in a group can be accessed by its absolute or
relative name. The following lines of code show how to use
the absolute name to access the dataset
Compressed_Data
in the group Data
created in the examples above:
/* * Open the dataset "Compressed_Data" in the "Data" group. */ dataset = H5Dopen(file, "/Data/Compressed_Data");The same dataset can be accessed in another manner. First access the group to which the dataset belongs, then open the dataset.
/* * Open the group "data" in the file. */ grp = H5Gopen(file, "Data"); /* * Access the "Compressed_Data" dataset in the group. */ dataset = H5Dopen(grp, "Compressed_Data");
Example 7
shows how to create a group in a file and a
dataset in a group. It uses the iterator function
H5Giterate
to find the names of the objects
in the root group, and H5Glink
and H5Gunlink
to create a new group name and delete the original name.
Think of an attribute as a small datasets that is attached to a normal dataset or group. The H5A API contains routines for working with attributes. Since attributes share many of the characteristics of datasets, the programming model for working with attributes is analogous in many ways to the model for working with datasets. The primary differences are that an attribute must be attached to a dataset or a group, and subsetting operations cannot be performed on attributes.
To create an attribute belonging to a particular dataset or group, first create a dataspace for the attribute with the call to H5Screate
, then create the attribute using H5Acreate
. For example, the following code creates an attribute called Integer_attribute
that is a member of a dataset whose identifier is dataset
. The attribute identifier is attr2
. H5Awrite
then sets the value of the attribute of that of the integer variable point
. H5Aclose
then releases the attribute identifier.
int point = 1; /* Value of the scalar attribute */ /* * Create scalar attribute. */ aid2 = H5Screate(H5S_SCALAR); attr2 = H5Acreate(dataset, "Integer attribute", H5T_NATIVE_INT, aid2, H5P_DEFAULT); /* * Write scalar attribute. */ ret = H5Awrite(attr2, H5T_NATIVE_INT, &point); /* * Close attribute dataspace. */ ret = H5Sclose(aid2); /* * Close attribute. */ ret = H5Aclose(attr2);
To read a scalar attribute whose name and datatype are known, first open the attribute using H5Aopen_name
, then use H5Aread to get its value. For example the following reads a scalar attribute called Integer_attribute
whose datatype is a native integer, and whose parent dataset has the identifier dataset
.
/* * Attach to the scalar attribute using attribute name, then read and * display its value. */ attr = H5Aopen_name(dataset,"Integer attribute"); ret = H5Aread(attr, H5T_NATIVE_INT, &point_out); printf("The value of the attribute \"Integer attribute\" is %d \n", point_out); ret = H5Aclose(attr);
Reading an attribute whose characteristics are not known. It may be necessary to query a file to obtain information about an attribute, namely its name, datatype, rank and dimensions. The following code opens an attribute by its index value using H5Aopen_index
, then reads in information about its datatype.
/* * Attach to the string attribute using its index, then read and display the value. */ attr = H5Aopen_idx(dataset, 2); atype = H5Tcopy(H5T_C_S1); H5Tset_size(atype, 4); ret = H5Aread(attr, atype, string_out); printf("The value of the attribute with the index 2 is %s \n", string_out);
In practice, if the characteristics of attributes are not known,
the code involved in accessing and processing the attribute can be quite
complex. For this reason, HDF5 includes a function called
H5Aiterate
, which applies a user-supplied function to each
of a set of attributes. The user-supplied function can contain the code
that interprets, accesses and processes each attribute.
Example 8 illustrates the use of the H5Aiterate
function, as well as the other attribute examples described above.
An object reference is based on the relative file address of the object header in the file and is constant for the life of the object. Once a reference to an object is created and stored in a dataset in the file, it can be used to dereference the object it points to. References are handy for creating a file index or for grouping related objects by storing references to them in one dataset.
Notes: Note the following elements of this example:
dataset = H5Dcreate ( fid1,"Dataset3",H5T_STD_REF_OBJ,sid1,H5P_DEFAULT );creates a dataset to store references. Notice that the
H5T_SDT_REF_OBJ
datatype is used to specify that
references to objects will be stored.
The datatype H5T_STD_REF_DSETREG
is used to store the
dataset region references and is be discussed later.
H5Rcreate
function create
references to the objects and store them in the buffer wbuf.
The signature of the H5Rcreate
function is:
herr_t H5Rcreate ( void* buf, hid_t loc_id, const char *name, H5R_type_t ref_type, hid_t space_id )
/Group1/Dataset1
identify the dataset. One could also use the group identifier
of group Group1
and the relative name of the dataset
Dataset1
to create the same reference.
H5R_OBJECT
).
Another type of reference, reference to the dataset region
(H5R_DATASET_REGION
), is discussed later.
-1
.
H5Dwrite
function writes a dataset with the
references to the file. Notice that the H5T_SDT_REF_OBJ
datatype is used to describe the dataset's memory datatype.
trefer1.h5
file created by this example
are as follows:
HDF5 "trefer1.h5" { GROUP "/" { DATASET "Dataset3" { DATATYPE { H5T_REFERENCE } DATASPACE { SIMPLE ( 4 ) / ( 4 ) } DATA { DATASET 0:1696, DATASET 0:2152, GROUP 0:1320, DATATYPE 0:2268 } } GROUP "Group1" { DATASET "Dataset1" { DATATYPE { H5T_STD_U32LE } DATASPACE { SIMPLE ( 4 ) / ( 4 ) } DATA { 0, 3, 6, 9 } } DATASET "Dataset2" { DATATYPE { H5T_STD_U8LE } DATASPACE { SIMPLE ( 4 ) / ( 4 ) } DATA { 0, 0, 0, 0 } } DATATYPE "Datatype1" { H5T_STD_I32BE "a"; H5T_STD_I32BE "b"; H5T_IEEE_F32BE "c"; } } } }Notice how the data in dataset
Dataset3
is described.
The two numbers with the colon in between represent a unique identifier
of the object. These numbers are constant for the life of the object.
H5T_STD_REF_OBJ
datatype must be used to
describe the memory datatype.
Dataset3
from the file created created
in Example 11. Then the program dereferences the references
to dataset Dataset1
, the group and the named datatype,
and opens those objects.
The program reads and displays the dataset's data, the group's comment, and
the number of members of the compound datatype.
Output file contents: The output of this program is as follows:
Dataset data : 0 3 6 9 Group comment is Foo! Number of compound datatype members is 3
Notes: Note the following elements of this example:
H5Dread
function was used to read dataset
Dataset3
containing the references to the objects.
The H5T_STD_REF_OBJ
memory datatype was
used to read references to memory.
H5Rdereference
obtains the object's identifier.
The signature of this function is:
hid_t H5Rdereference (hid_t datatset, H5R_type_t ref_type, void *ref)
H5R_OBJECT
was used to specify a reference to an
object. Another type, used to specifiy a reference to a dataset
region and discussed later, is H5R_DATASET_REGION
.
H5Rget_object_type
should be used to
identify the type of object the reference points to.
Notes: Note the following elements of this example:
dset1=H5Dcreate(fid1,"Dataset1",H5T_STD_REF_DSETREG,sid1,H5P_DEFAULT);creates a dataset to store references to the dataset(s) regions (selections). Notice that the
H5T_STD_REF_DSETREG
datatype is used.
H5Sselect_hyperslab
and H5Sselect_elements
. The handle was created when dataset
Dataset2
was created and it describes the dataset's
dataspace. It was not closed when the dataset was closed to decrease
the number of function calls used in the example.
In a real application program, one should open the dataset and determine
its dataspace using the H5Dget_space
function.
H5Rcreate
is used to create a dataset region reference
and store it in a buffer. The signature of the function is:
herr_t H5Rcreate(void *buf, hid_t loc_id, const char *name, H5R_type_t ref_type, hid_t space_id)
/Dataset2
were
used to identify the dataset. The reference to the region of this
dataset is stored in the buffer buf.
H5R_DATASET_REGION
datatype is used.
trefer2.h5
created by this program
are as follows:
HDF5 "trefer2.h5" { GROUP "/" { DATASET "Dataset1" { DATATYPE { H5T_REFERENCE } DATASPACE { SIMPLE ( 4 ) / ( 4 ) } DATA { DATASET 0:744 {(2,2)-(7,7)}, DATASET 0:744 {(6,9), (2,2), (8,4), (1,6), (2,8), (3,2), (0,4), (9,0), (7,1), (3,3)}, NULL, NULL } } DATASET "Dataset2" { DATATYPE { H5T_STD_U8LE } DATASPACE { SIMPLE ( 10, 10 ) / ( 10, 10 ) } DATA { 0, 3, 6, 9, 12, 15, 18, 21, 24, 27, 30, 33, 36, 39, 42, 45, 48, 51, 54, 57, 60, 63, 66, 69, 72, 75, 78, 81, 84, 87, 90, 93, 96, 99, 102, 105, 108, 111, 114, 117, 120, 123, 126, 129, 132, 135, 138, 141, 144, 147, 150, 153, 156, 159, 162, 165, 168, 171, 174, 177, 180, 183, 186, 189, 192, 195, 198, 201, 204, 207, 210, 213, 216, 219, 222, 225, 228, 231, 234, 237, 240, 243, 246, 249, 252, 255, 255, 255, 255, 255, 255, 255, 255, 255, 255, 255, 255, 255, 255, 255 } } } }Notice how raw data of the dataset with the dataset regions is displayed. Each element of the raw data consists of a reference to the dataset (
DATASET number1:number2
) and its selected region.
If the selection is a hyperslab, the corner coordinates of the hyperslab
are displayed.
For the point selection, the coordinates of each point are displayed.
Since only two selections were stored, the third and fourth elements of the
dataset Dataset1
are set to NULL
.
This was done by the buffer inizialization in the program.
H5T_STD_REF_DSETREG
must be used during
read operation.
H5Rdereference
to obtain the dataset identifier
from the read dataset region reference.
ORUse
H5Rget_region
to obtain the dataspace identifier for
the dataset containing the selection from the read dataset region reference.
H5Sget_select_
*, can be used to obtain information
about the selection.
Output: The output of this program is :
Number of elements in the dataset is : 100 0 3 6 9 12 15 18 21 24 27 30 33 36 39 42 45 48 51 54 57 60 63 66 69 72 75 78 81 84 87 90 93 96 99 102 105 108 111 114 117 120 123 126 129 132 135 138 141 144 147 150 153 156 159 162 165 168 171 174 177 180 183 186 189 192 195 198 201 204 207 210 213 216 219 222 225 228 231 234 237 240 243 246 249 252 255 255 255 255 255 255 255 255 255 255 255 255 255 255 255 Number of elements in the hyperslab is : 36 Hyperslab coordinates are : ( 2 , 2 ) ( 7 , 7 ) Number of selected elements is : 10 Coordinates of selected elements are : ( 6 , 9 ) ( 2 , 2 ) ( 8 , 4 ) ( 1 , 6 ) ( 2 , 8 ) ( 3 , 2 ) ( 0 , 4 ) ( 9 , 0 ) ( 7 , 1 ) ( 3 , 3 )Notes: Note the following elements of this example:
H5Dread
with the H5T_STD_REF_DSETREG
datatype specified.
dset2 = H5Rdereference (dset1,H5R_DATASET_REGION,&rbuf[0]);or to obtain spacial information (dataspace and selection) with the call to
H5Rget_region
:
sid2=H5Rget_region(dset1,H5R_DATASET_REGION,&rbuf[0]);The reference to the dataset region has information for both the dataset itself and its selection. In both functions:
H5Sget_select
*
functions used to obtain information about selections:
H5Sget_select_npoints:
returns the number of elements in
the hyperslabH5Sget_select_hyper_nblocks:
returns the number of blocks
in the hyperslabH5Sget_select_blocklist:
returns the "lower left" and
"upper right" coordinates of the blocks in the hyperslab selectionH5Sget_select_bounds:
returns the coordinates of the
"minimal" block containing a hyperslab selectionH5Sget_select_elem_npoints:
returns the number of points
in the element selectionH5Sget_select_elem_points:
returns the coordinates of
the element selection
Introduction to HDF5 HDF5 User Guide |
HDF5 Reference Manual Other HDF5 documents and links |
The HDF Group Help Desk:
Describes HDF5 Release 1.10. |
Copyright by
The HDF Group
and the Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois |