Other HDF5 documents and links 
Introduction to HDF5 
   HDF5 User Guide 
HDF5 Reference Manual 

HDF5 Glossary

atomic datatype
attribute
chunked layout
chunking
compound datatype
contiguous layout
dataset
dataspace
datatype
atomic
compound
enumeration
named
opaque
variable-length
enumeration datatype
file
group
path
root group
super block
file access mode
group
member
root group
hard link
hyperslab
identifier
link
hard
soft
member
name
named datatype
opaque datatype
path
property list
data transfer
dataset access
dataset creation
file access
file creation
root group
selection
hyperslab
serialization
soft link
storage layout
chunked
chunking
contiguous
super block
variable-length datatype

atomic datatype
A datatype which cannot be decomposed into smaller units at the API level.

attribute
A small dataset that can be used to describe the nature and/or the intended usage of the object it is attached to.

chunked layout
The storage layout of a chunked dataset.

chunking
A storage layout where a dataset is partitioned into fixed-size multi-dimensional chunks. Chunking tends to improve performance and facilitates dataset extensibility.

compound datatype
A collection of one or more atomic types or small arrays of such types. Similar to a struct in C or a common block in Fortran.

contiguous layout
The storage layout of a dataset that is not chunked, so that the entire data portion of the dataset is stored in a single contiguous block.

data transfer property list
The data transfer property list is used to control various aspects of the I/O, such as caching hints or collective I/O information.

dataset
A multi-dimensional array of data elements, together with supporting metadata.

dataset access property list
A property list containing information on how a dataset is to be accessed.

dataset creation property list
A property list containing information on how raw data is organized on disk and how the raw data is compressed.

dataspace
An object that describes the dimensionality of the data array. A dataspace is either a regular N-dimensional array of data points, called a simple dataspace, or a more general collection of data points organized in another manner, called a complex dataspace.

datatype
An object that describes the storage format of the individual data points of a data set. There are two categories of datatypes: atomic and compound datatypes. An atomic type is a type which cannot be decomposed into smaller units at the API level. A compound datatype is a collection of one or more atomic types or small arrays of such types.

enumeration datatype
A one-to-one mapping between a set of symbols and a set of integer values, and an order is imposed on the symbols by their integer values. The symbols are passed between the application and library as character strings and all the values for a particular enumeration datatype are of the same integer type, which is not necessarily a native type.

file
A container for storing grouped collections of multi-dimensional arrays containing scientific data.

file access mode
Determines whether an existing file will be overwritten, opened for read-only access, or opened for read/write access. All newly created files are opened for both reading and writing.

file access property list
File access property lists are used to control different methods of performing I/O on files:

file creation property list
The property list used to control file metadata.

group
A structure containing zero or more HDF5 objects, together with supporting metadata. The two primary HDF5 objects are datasets and groups.

hard link
A direct association between a name and the object where both exist in a single HDF5 address space.

hyperslab
A portion of a dataset. A hyperslab selection can be a logically contiguous collection of points in a dataspace or a regular pattern of points or blocks in a dataspace.

identifier
A unique entity provided by the HDF5 library and used to access an HDF5 object, such as a file, goup, dataset, datatype, etc.

link
An association between a name and the object in an HDF5 file group.

member
A group or dataset that is in another dataset, dataset A, is a member of dataset A.

name
A slash-separated list of components that uniquely identifies an element of an HDF5 file. A name begins that begins with a slash is an absolute name which is accessed beginning with the root group of the file; all other names are relative names and the associated objects are accessed beginning with the current or specified group.

named datatype
A datatype that is named and stored in a file. Naming is permanent; a datatype cannot be changed after being named.

opaque datatype
A mechanism for describing data which cannot be otherwise described by HDF5. The only properties associated with opaque types are a size in bytes and an ASCII tag.

path
The slash-separated list of components that forms the name uniquely identifying an element of an HDF5 file.

property list
A collection of name/value pairs that can be passed to other HDF5 functions to control features that are typically unimportant or whose default values are usually used.

root group
The group that is the entry point to the group graph in an HDF5 file. Every HDF5 file has exactly one root group.

selection
(1) A subset of a dataset or a dataspace, up to the entire dataset or dataspace. (2) The elements of an array or dataset that are marked for I/O.

serialization
The flattening of an N-dimensional data object into a 1-dimensional object so that, for example, the data object can be transmitted over the network as a 1-dimensional bitstream.

soft link
An indirect association between a name and an object in an HDF5 file group.

storage layout
The manner in which a dataset is stored, either contiguous or chunked, in the HDF5 file.

super block
A block of data containing the information required to portably access HDF5 files on multiple platforms, followed by information about the groups and datasets in the file. The super block contains information about the size of offsets, lengths of objects, the number of entries in group tables, and additional version information for the file.

variable-length datatype
A sequence of an existing datatype (atomic, variable-length (VL), or compound) which are not fixed in length from one dataset location to another.


Other HDF5 documents and links 
Introduction to HDF5 
   HDF5 User Guide 
HDF5 Reference Manual 

HDF Help Desk
Last modified: 18 October 1999
Describes HDF5 Release 1.5, Unreleased Development Branch