| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Bug Fix & Feature
Description:
The selection offset was being ignored for optimized hyperslab selection
I/O operations.
Additionally, I've found that the restrictions on optimized selection
I/O operations were too strict and found a way to allow more hyperslabs
to use the optimized I/O routines.
Solution:
Incorporate the selection offset into the selection location when performing
optimized I/O operations.
Allow optimized I/O on any single hyperslab selection and also allow
hyperslab operations on chunked datasets.
Platforms tested:
FreeBSD 4.5 (sleipnir)
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Code cleanup
Description:
Check in some small speedups for chunked storage I/O.
Platforms tested:
Solaris 2.6 (baldric)
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Bug fix.
Description:
Builds for parallel testing exposed some places that I forgot to get rid of
using IDs in internal APIs.
Solution:
Switch sections of code to use proper data structures instead of IDs.
Platforms tested:
Parallel compiles from daily tests.
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Code cleanup
Description:
Get rid of IDs from internal function calls and some small cleanups from
the old-stype => generic property list conversion.
Platforms tested:
FreeBSD 4.4 (hawkwind)
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Document bug fix.
Description:
When reading or writing to chunked datasets and the data needed datatype
conversion, and the amount of data was more than one conversion buffer,
data in the conversion buffer was getting corrupted.
Solution:
Corrected error in advancing buffer pointer where it was being advanced
by the number of elements instead of the number of bytes.
Platforms tested:
FreeBSD 4.4 (hawkwind)
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Bug Fix
Description:
When writing (or reading) the entire dataset to a chunked dataset, there
was a boundary case where the code to generate the description of the
piece of the dataset to read into the buffer for data conversion would
attempt to read off the boundary of the dataset. This was occuring because
the code to detect the edge of the dataset was not propagating the change
up through the remaining dimensions when an edge in a fast changing
dimension was detected.
Solution:
Propagate edge detection up through slower changing dimensions properly.
Platforms tested:
Linux 2.2.18smp (eirene)
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Kludge
Description:
Since we're only about halfway through converting the internal use of
property lists from the "old way" to the generic property lists, we turned
off snapshots to avoid exposing lots of API changes to users, until the
APIs settled down.
Getting the snapshots rolling again seems to have become a priority, so
some changes are going to have to be made now that were going to be
postponed until we were completely finished with the conversion. This
requires that the old API functions be able to deal with both the old
and new property lists smoothly.
Solution:
Kludge together the property list code so that they can transparently handle
dealing with both the old and new property lists
Platforms tested:
FreeBSD 4.4 (hawkwind)
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Code cleanup (sorta)
Description:
When the first versions of the HDF5 library were designed, I remembered
vividly the difficulties of porting code from a 32-bit platform to a 16-bit
platform and asked that people use intn & uintn instead of int & unsigned
int, respectively. However, in hindsight, this was overkill and
unnecessary since we weren't going to be porting the HDF5 library to
16-bit architectures.
Currently, the extra uintn & intn typedefs are causing problems for users
who'd like to include both the HDF5 and HDF4 header files in one source
module (like Kent's h4toh5 library).
Solution:
Changed the uintn & intn's to unsigned and int's respectively.
Platforms tested:
FreeBSD 4.4 (hawkwind)
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Code cleanups, mostly..
Description:
Work on pacifying the SGI compiler to get the generic properties working
correctly with --enable-parallel and --enable-fortran. It's not quite
fixed yet, but I need to head home and these patches help... :-/
Platforms tested:
IRIX64 6.5 (modi4)
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New Features!
Description:
Start migrating the internal use of property lists in the library from the
older implementation to the new generic property lists.
Currently, only the dataset transfer property lists are migrated to the
new architecture, all the rest of the property list types are still using
the older architecture.
Also, the backward compatibility features are not implemented yet, so
applications which use dataset transfer properties may need to make the
following changes:
H5Pcreate(H5P_DATASET_XFER) -> H5Pcreate_list(H5P_DATASET_XFER_NEW)
and
H5Pclose(<a dataset transfer property list>) -> H5Pclose_list(id)
This still may have some bugs in it, especially with Fortran, but I should
be wrapping up those later today.
Platforms tested:
FreeBSD 4.4 (hawkwind)
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Bug Fix, Code Cleanup, Code Optimization, etc.
Description:
Fold in the hyperslab speedups, clean up compile warnings and change a
few things from using 'unsigned' or 'hsize_t' to use 'size_t' instead.
Platforms tested:
FreeBSD 4.3 (hawkwind), Solaris 2.7 (arabica), Irix64 6.5 (modi4)
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Code cleanup
Description:
Removed some more warnings during compilation on SGI machines..
Platforms tested:
Irix64-6.5 (modi4)
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Document bug fix
Description:
IMPORTANT! IMPORTANT! IMPORTANT!
A case where metadata in a file could get corrupted in certain unusual
sitations was detected and fixed.
In certain circumstances, metadata could get cached in the raw data cache,
and if that particular piece of metadata was updated on disk while
incorrectly cached, the new metadata would get overwritten with the stale
metadata from the raw data cache when it was flushed out.
Additionally, I've patched up the raw data cache to be smarter about how
much it caches and how much I/O it triggers, leading to some speedups.
Solution:
Changed the raw data I/O routines which perform caching to require a
parameter with the size of the dataset being accessed and limited the
cache to no more than that many bytes.
Platforms tested:
FreeBSD 4.3 (hawkwind)
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Update
Description:
Changed
#include <hdf_file.h>
construct to
#include "hdf_file.h"
so that the GNU compiler can more easily pick up the dependencies
which it places in the .depend and Dependencies files. Also
regenerated the Dependencies to go along with this.
Platforms tested:
Linux
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Bug Fix
Description:
Partial hyperslabs which exactly fit the size of the lowest dimension of
a chunked dataset weren't being output correctly.
Solution:
Forgot to divide the offset (seq_len) by the size of the lower dimension
hyperslabs - fixed now.
Platforms tested:
FreeBSD 4.2 (hawkwind)
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Bug fix.
Description:
Fencepost error in determining number of elements to include in a
partial hyperslab for a chunk.
Solution:
Changed "<down_size[i]"s into "<=down_size[i]"s in a few places, to allow
for exactly one slab being left to output/input.
Platforms tested:
FreeBSD 4.2 (hawkwind)
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Bug Fixes
Description:
Fixed a bug in H5Shyper.c where 'contiguous' hyperslabs (i.e. ones which
took up an entire dataset) were not being detected correctly and would
instead be read a part at a time instead of all at once.
Also fixed a bug in the handling of hyperslabs for chunked datasets where
hyperslabs from chunks which weren't aligned on exact dimension bounaries
were not reading/writing data correctly.
Solution:
H5Shyper.c was a single line change from a 'block' size to a 'count' size.
H5Fseq.c changes we much more significant and involved detecting when
non-chunk aligned sequences of data were being written and constructing
hyperslab blocks to pass down to the chunking I/O routine (which only
understand hyperslab I/O requests, not element sequence requests).
This was complicated by the need to align the hyperslabs requested on
dimension boundaries...
Platforms tested:
FreeBSD 4.2. (hawkwind)
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Code cleanup.
Description:
Fixed _lots_ (I mean _tons_) of warnings spit out by the gcc with the
extra warnings. Including a few show-stoppers for compression on IRIX
machines.
Solution:
Changed lots of variables' types to more sensible and consistent types,
more range-checking, more variable typecasts, etc.
Platforms tested:
FreeBSD 4.2 (hawkwind), IRIX64-64 (modi4)
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Small code optimization
Description:
Removed some unnecessary buffer assignments.
Platforms tested:
Solaris 2.6 (baldric)
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Code optimization
Description:
Minor tweaks throughout the optimized regular hyperslab code to increase
speed. This set of improvements increase the benchmark time from taking
~5.46 seconds to ~4.50 seconds, or around a 20% further speedup.
Platforms tested:
Solaris 2.6 (baldric)
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Feature symmetry
Description:
A while ago I needed to get the 'type' of data being accessed during writes
to the VFL driver, so I put in code to get the information down there.
Albert asked for the same information during reads, so I've added that in.
Tested:
FreeBSD 4.1.1 (hawkwind)
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Purpose:
Parallel Bug Fixes
Description:
Was out of sync with header file re-arrangements I checked in last night.
Solution:
Fixed to use new header files, etc.
Platforms tested:
O2K (modi4)
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Maintainance & performance enhancements
Description:
Re-arranged header files to protect private symbols better.
Changed optimized regular hyperslab I/O to compute the offsets more
efficiently from previous method of using matrix operations.
Added sequential I/O operations at a more abstract level (at the same level
as H5F_arr_read/write), to support the optimized hyperslab I/O.
Platforms tested:
Solaris 2.6 (baldric) & FreeBSD 4.1.1 (hawkwind)
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