.. index:: see: physical file format; file format file format see: low-level file format; file format NAPI; bypassing .. _Fileformat: ==================== Physical File format ==================== This section describes how NeXus structures are mapped to features of the underlying physical file format. This is a guide for people who wish to create NeXus files without using the NeXus-API. .. _Fileformat-HDF-Choice: .. index:: pair: HDF; file format Choice of HDF as Underlying File Format ####################################### At its beginnings, the founders of NeXus identified the Hierarchical Data Format (HDF) as a capable and efficient multi-platform data storage format. HDF was designed for large data sets and already had a substantial user community. HDF was developed and maintained initially by the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC) and later spun off into its own group called The HDF Group (THG: http://www.hdfgroup.org/). Rather then developing its own unique physical file format, the NeXus group choose to build NeXus on top of HDF. HDF (now HDF5) is provided with software to read and write data (this is the application-programmer interface, or API) using a large number of computing systems in common use for neutron and X-ray science. HDF is a binary data file format that supports compression and structured data. .. _Fileformat-Mapping-HDF: Mapping NeXus into HDF ###################### NeXus data structures map directly to HDF structures. NeXus *groups* are HDF4 *vgroups* or HDF5 *groups*, NeXus data sets (or *fields*) are HDF4 *SDS (scientific data sets)* or HDF5 *datasets*. Attributes map directly to HDF group or dataset :index:`attributes `. The only special case is the NeXus class name. HDF4 supports a group class which is set with the ``Vsetclass()`` call and read with ``VGetclass()``. HDF-5 has no group class. Thus the NeXus class is stored as an attribute to the HDF-5 group with the name ``NX_class`` and value of the NeXus class name. A NeXus ``link`` directly maps to the HDF linking mechanisms. .. note:: **Examples** are provided in the :ref:`Examples` chapter. These examples include software to write and read NeXus data files using the NAPI, as well as other software examples that use native (non-NAPI) libraries. In some cases the examples show the content of the NeXus data files that are produced. Here are links to some of the examples: - :ref:`Introduction-HowToWrite` - :ref:`Introduction-HowToRead` - :ref:`example.napi.simple.2d.write` - :ref:`code_native.writing` - :ref:`code_native.reading` - :ref:`Example-H5py-Writing` - :ref:`Example-H5py-Reading` Perhaps the easiest way to view the implementation of NeXus in HDF5 is to view how the data structures look. For this, we use the ``h5dump`` command-line utility provided with the HDF5 support libraries. Short examples are provided for the basic NeXus data components: - :ref:`group `: created in C NAPI by: .. code-block:: c NXmakegroup (fileID, "entry", "NXentry"); - :ref:`field `: created in C NAPI by: .. code-block:: c NXmakedata (fileID, "two_theta", NX_FLOAT32, 1, &n); NXopendata (fileID, "two_theta"); NXputdata (fileID, tth); - :ref:`attribute `: created in C NAPI by: .. code-block:: c NXputattr (fileID, "units", "degrees", 7, NX_CHAR); - :ref:`link ` created in C NAPI by: .. code-block:: c # --tba-- # TODO: write some text about HDF5 hard links # until then, see the h5dump example below See the sections :ref:`example.napi.simple.2d.write` and :ref:`example.napi.simple.3d.write.python` in the :ref:`Examples` chapter for examples that use the native HDF5 calls to write NeXus data files. .. compound:: .. rubric:: ``h5dump`` of a NeXus ``NXentry`` group .. _h5dump_group: .. literalinclude:: examples/h5dump_group.txt :tab-width: 4 :linenos: :language: guess .. compound:: .. rubric:: ``h5dump`` of a NeXus field (HDF5 dataset) .. _h5dump_field: .. literalinclude:: examples/h5dump_field.txt :tab-width: 4 :linenos: :language: guess .. compound:: .. rubric:: ``h5dump`` of a NeXus attribute .. _h5dump_attribute: .. literalinclude:: examples/h5dump_attribute.txt :tab-width: 4 :linenos: :language: guess .. compound:: .. rubric:: ``h5dump`` of a NeXus link .. _h5dump_link: .. literalinclude:: examples/h5dump_link.txt :tab-width: 4 :linenos: :language: guess .. _Fileformat-Mapping-XML: Mapping NeXus into XML ###################### .. index:: pair: file format; XML file; attributes attribute; file-level (NXroot) NXroot (base class); attributes This takes a bit more work than HDF. At the root of NeXus XML file is a XML element with the name ``NXroot``. Further XML attributes to ``NXroot`` define the NeXus file level attributes. An example NeXus XML data file is provided in the :ref:`Introduction` chapter as Example :ref:`A very simple NeXus Data file (in XML) `. NeXus groups are encoded into XML as elements with the name of the NeXus class and an XML attribute ``name`` which defines the NeXus name of the group. Further group attributes become XML attributes. An example: .. compound:: .. rubric:: NeXus group element in XML .. literalinclude:: examples/mapping1.xml.txt :tab-width: 4 :linenos: :language: guess NeXus data sets are encoded as XML elements with the name of the data. An attribute ``NAPItype`` defines the type and :index:`dimensions ` of the data. The actual data is stored as ``PCDATA`` [#PCDATA]_ in the element. Another example: .. [#PCDATA] ``PCDATA`` is the XML term for *parsed character data* (see: http://www.w3schools.com/xml/xml_cdata.asp). .. compound:: .. rubric:: NeXus data elements .. literalinclude:: examples/mapping2.xml.txt :tab-width: 4 :linenos: :language: guess .. index:: attribute; XML Data are printed in appropriate formats and in C storage order. The codes understood for ``NAPItype`` are all the NeXus data type names. The :index:`dimensions ` are given in square brackets as a comma separated list. No dimensions need to be given if the data is just a single value. Data attributes are represented as XML attributes. If the attribute is not a text string, then the attribute is given in the form: *type:value*, for example: ``signal="NX_POSINT:1"``. :index:`NeXus links ` are stored in XML as XML elements with the :index:`name ` ``NAPIlink`` and a XML attribute ``target`` which stores the path to the linked entity in the file. If the item is linked under a different name, then this name is specified as a XML attribute name to the element ``NAPIlink``. The authors of the NeXus API worked with the author of the miniXML XML library to create a reasonably efficient way of handling numeric data with XML. Using the NeXus API handling something like 400 detectors versus 2000 time channels in XML is not a problem. But you may hit limits with XML as the file format when data becomes to large or you try to process NeXus XML files with general XML tools. General XML tools are normally ill prepared to process large amounts of numbers. .. _Fileformat-SpecialAttributes: Special Attributes ################## .. index:: attribute; internal NeXus makes use of some special attributes for its internal purposes. These attributes are stored as normal group or data set attributes in the respective file format. These are: .. index:: single: link; target pair: attribute; target **target** This attribute is automatically created when items get linked. The target attribute contains a text string with the path to the source of the item linked. .. index:: pair: attribute; napimount **napimount** The ``napimount`` attribute is used to implement external linking in NeXus. The string is a URL to the file and group in the external file to link too. The system is meant to be extended. But as of now, the only format supported is: .. code-block:: text nxfile://path-to-file#path-infile This is a NeXus file in the file system at *path-to-file* and the group *path-infile* in that NeXus file. .. index:: pair: attribute; NAPIlink **NAPIlink** NeXus supports linking items in another group under another name. This is only supported natively in HDF-5. For HDF-4 and XML a crutch is needed. This crutch is a special class name or attribute ``NAPIlink`` combined with the target attribute. For groups, ``NAPILink`` is the group class, for data items a special attribute with the name ``NAPIlink``.