FlexRaw(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation FlexRaw(3)NAMEPDL::IO::FlexRaw-- A flexible binary I/O format for PerlDL
SYNOPSIS
use PDL;
use PDL::IO::FlexRaw;
# To obtain the header for reading (if multiple files use the
# same header, for example):
#
$hdr = PDL::IO::FlexRaw::_read_flexhdr("filename.hdr")
($x,$y,...) = readflex("filename" [, $hdr])
($x,$y,...) = mapflex("filename" [, $hdr] [, $opts])
$hdr = writeflex($file, $pdl1, $pdl2,...)
writeflexhdr($file, $hdr)
# if $PDL::IO::FlexRaw::writeflexhdr is true and
# $file is a filename, writeflexhdr() is called automatically
#
$hdr = writeflex($file, $pdl1, $pdl2,...) # need $hdr for something
writeflex($file, $pdl1, $pdl2,...) # ..if $hdr not needed
DESCRIPTION
FlexRaw is a generic method for the input and output of `raw' data
arrays. In particular, it is designed to read output from FORTRAN 77
UNFORMATTED files and the low-level C write function, even if the files
are compressed or gzipped. As in FastRaw, the data file is
supplemented by a header file (although this can be replaced by the
optional $hdr argument). More information can be included in the
header file than for FastRaw -- the description can be extended to
several data objects within a single input file.
For example, to read the output of a FORTRAN program
real*4 a(4,600,600)
open (8,file='banana',status='new',form='unformatted')
write (8) a
close (8)
the header file (`banana.hdr') could look like
# FlexRaw file header
# Header word for F77 form=unformatted
Byte 1 4
# Data
Float 3 # this is ignored
4 600 600
Byte 1 4 As is this, as we've got all dims
The data can then be input using
$a = (readflex('banana'))[1];
The format of the hdr file is an extension of that used by FastRaw.
Comment lines (starting with #) are allowed, as are descriptive names
(as elsewhere: byte, short, ushort, long, float, double) for the data
types -- note that case is ignored by FlexRaw. After the type, one
integer specifies the number of dimensions of the data `chunk', and
subsequent integers the size of each dimension. So the specifier above
(`Float 3 4 600 600') describes our FORTRAN array. A scalar can be
described as `float 0' (or `float 1 1', or `float 2 1 1', etc.).
When all the dimensions are read -- or a # appears after whitespace --
the rest of the current input line is ignored, unless badvalues are
being read or written. In that case, the next token will be the string
"badvalue" followed by the bad value used, if needed.
What about the extra 4 bytes at the head and tail, which we just threw
away? These are added by FORTRAN (at least on Suns, Alphas and Linux),
and specify the number of bytes written by each WRITE -- the same
number is put at the start and the end of each chunk of data. You may
need to know all this in some cases. In general, FlexRaw tries to
handle it itself, if you simply add a line saying `f77' to the header
file, before any data specifiers:
# FlexRaw file header for F77 form=unformatted
F77
# Data
Float 3
4 600 600
-- the redundancy in FORTRAN data files even allows FlexRaw to
automatically deal with files written on other machines which use back-
to-front byte ordering. This won't always work -- it's a 1 in 4
billion chance it won't, even if you regularly read 4Gb files! Also,
it currently doesn't work for compressed files, so you can say `swap'
(again before any data specifiers) to make certain the byte order is
swapped.
The optional $hdr argument allows the use of an anonymous array to give
header information, rather than using a .hdr file. For example,
$header = [
{Type => 'f77'},
{Type => 'float', NDims => 3, Dims => [ 4,600,600 ] }
];
@a = readflex('banana',$header);
reads our example file again. As a special case, when NDims is 1, Dims
may be given as a scalar.
Within PDL, readflex and writeflex can be used to write several pdls to
a single file -- e.g.
use PDL;
use PDL::IO::FlexRaw;
@pdls = ($pdl1, $pdl2, ...);
$hdr = writeflex("fname",@pdls);
@pdl2 = readflex("fname",$hdr);
writeflexhdr("fname",$hdr); # not needed if $PDL::IO::FlexRaw::writeflexhdr is set
@pdl3 = readflex("fname");
-- "writeflex" produces the data file and returns the file header as an
anonymous hash, which can be written to a .hdr file using
"writeflexhdr".
If the package variable $PDL::IO::FlexRaw::writeflexhdr is true, and
the "writeflex" call was with a filename and not a handle,
"writeflexhdr" will be called automatically (as done by "writefraw".
The reading of compressed data is switched on automatically if the
filename requested ends in .gz or .Z, or if the originally specified
filename does not exist, but one of these compressed forms does.
If "writeflex" and "readflex" are given a reference to a file handle as
a first parameter instead of a filename, then the data is read or
written to the open filehandle. This gives an easy way to read an
arbitrary slice in a big data volume, as in the following example:
use PDL;
use PDL::IO::FastRaw;
open(DATA, "raw3d.dat");
binmode(DATA);
# assume we know the data size from an external source
($width, $height, $data_size) = (256,256, 4);
my $slice_num = 64; # slice to look at
# Seek to slice
seek(DATA, $width*$height*$data_size * $slice_num, 0);
$pdl = readflex \*DATA, [{Dims=>[$width, $height], Type=>'long'}];
WARNING: In later versions of perl (5.8 and up) you must be sure that
your file is in "raw" mode (see the perlfunc man page entry for
"binmode", for details). Both readflex and writeflex automagically
switch the file to raw mode for you -- but in code like the snipped
above, you could end up seeking the wrong byte if you forget to make
the binmode() call.
"mapflex" memory maps, rather than reads, the data files. Its
interface is similar to "readflex". Extra options specify if the data
is to be loaded `ReadOnly', if the data file is to be `Creat'-ed anew
on the basis of the header information or `Trunc'-ated to the length of
the data read. The extra speed of access brings with it some
limitations: "mapflex" won't read compressed data, auto-detect f77
files, or read f77 files written by more than a single unformatted
write statement. More seriously, data alignment constraints mean that
"mapflex" cannot read some files, depending on the requirements of the
host OS (it may also vary depending on the setting of the `uac' flag on
any given machine). You may have run into similar problems with common
blocks in FORTRAN.
For instance, floating point numbers may have to align on 4 byte
boundaries -- if the data file consists of 3 bytes then a float, it
cannot be read. "mapflex" will warn about this problem when it occurs,
and return the PDLs mapped before the problem arose. This can be dealt
with either by reorganizing the data file (large types first helps, as
a rule-of-thumb), or more simply by using "readflex".
BUGS
The test on two dimensional byte arrays fail using g77 2.7.2, but not
Sun f77. I hope this isn't my problem!
Assumes gzip is on the PATH.
Can't auto-swap compressed files, because it can't seek on them.
The header format may not agree with that used elsewhere.
Should it handle handles?
Mapflex should warn and fallback to reading on SEGV? Would have to
make sure that the data was written back after it was `destroyed'.
FUNCTIONS
readflex
Read a binary file with flexible format specification
Usage:
($x,$y,...) = readflex("filename" [, $hdr])
($x,$y,...) = readflex(FILEHANDLE [, $hdr])
writeflex
Write a binary file with flexible format specification
Usage:
$hdr = writeflex($file, $pdl1, $pdl2,...) # or
$hdr = writeflex(FILEHANDLE, $pdl1, $pdl2,...)
# now you must call writeflexhdr()
writeflexhdr($file, $hdr)
or
$PDL::IO::FlexRaw::writeflexhdr = 1; # set so we don't have to call writeflexhdr
$hdr = writeflex($file, $pdl1, $pdl2,...) # remember, $file must be filename
writeflex($file, $pdl1, $pdl2,...) # remember, $file must be filename
writeflexhdr
Write the header file corresponding to a previous writeflex call
Usage:
writeflexhdr($file, $hdr)
$file or "filename" is the filename used in a previous writeflex
If $file is actually a "filename" then writeflexhdr() will be
called automatically if $PDL::IO::FlexRaw::writeflexhdr is true.
If writeflex() was to a FILEHANDLE, you will need to call
writeflexhdr() yourself since the filename cannot be determined
(at least easily).
mapflex
Memory map a binary file with flexible format specification
Usage:
($x,$y,...) = mapflex("filename" [, $hdr] [, $opts])
All of these options default to false unless set true:
ReadOnly - Data should be readonly
Creat - Create file if it doesn't exist
Trunc - File should be truncated to a length that conforms
with the header
_read_flexhdr
Read a FlexRaw header file and return a header structure.
Usage:
$hdr = PDL::IO::FlexRaw::_read_flexhdr($file)
Note that "_read_flexhdr" is supposed to be an internal function. It
was not originally documented and it is not tested. However, there
appeared to be no other method for obtaining a header structure from a
file, so I figured I would write a small bit of documentation on it.
Bad Value Support
As of PDL-2.4.8, PDL::IO::FlexRaw has support for reading and writing
pdls with bad values in them.
On "writeflex", a piddle argument with "$pdl->badflag == 1" will have
the keyword/token "badvalue" added to the header file after the
dimension list and an additional token with the bad value for that pdl
if "$pdl->badvalue != $pdl->orig_badvalue".
On "readflex", a pdl with the "badvalue" token in the header will
automatically have its badflag set and its badvalue as well if it is
not the standard default for that type.
The new badvalue support required some additions to the header
structure. However, the interface is still being finalized. For
reference the current $hdr looks like this:
$hdr = {
Type => 'byte', # data type
NDims => 2, # number of dimensions
Dims => [640,480], # dims
BadFlag => 1, # is set/set badflag
BadValue => undef, # undef==default
};
$badpdl = readflex('badpdl', [$hdr]);
If you use bad values and try the new PDL::IO::FlexRaw bad value
support, please let us know via the perldl mailing list. Suggestions
and feedback are also welcome.
AUTHOR
Copyright (C) Robin Williams <rjrw@ast.leeds.ac.uk> 1997. All rights
reserved. There is no warranty. You are allowed to redistribute this
software / documentation under certain conditions. For details, see the
file COPYING in the PDL distribution. If this file is separated from
the PDL distribution, the copyright notice should be included in the
file.
Documentation contributions copyright (C) David Mertens, 2010.
perl v5.18.1 2013-05-26 FlexRaw(3)