gd_putdata — write data to a Dirfile database
#include <getdata.h>
size_t gd_putdata(DIRFILE *dirfile, const char
*field_code, off_t first_frame, off_t
first_sample, size_t num_frames, size_t
num_samples, gd_type_t data_type, const void
*data_in);
The gd_putdata() function writes data to a dirfile(5)
database specified by dirfile for the field field_code, which
may not contain a representation suffix. It writes num_frames frames
plus num_samples samples to this field, starting first_sample
samples past frame first_frame. The data is read from the
user-supplied buffer data_in, which is has a data type specified by
data_type. This interface cannot write to field representations.
The dirfile argument must point to a valid DIRFILE object
previously created by a call to gd_open(3).
Unless using GD_HERE (see below), the first sample written
will be
first_frame * samples_per_frame +
first_sample
as measured from the start of the dirfile, where samples_per_frame is the
number of samples per frame as returned by gd_spf(3). The number of
samples which gd_putdata() attempts to write is, similarly,
num_frames * samples_per_frame +
num_samples.
Although calling gd_putdata() using both samples and frames is possible,
the function is typically called with either num_samples and
first_sample, or num_frames and first_frames, equal to
zero.
Instead of explicitly specifying the origin of the write, the
caller may pass the special symbol GD_HERE as first_frame.
This will result in the write occurring at the current position of the I/O
pointer for the field (see gd_getdata(3) for a discussion of I/O
pointers). In this case, the value of first_sample is ignored.
The data_type argument should be one of the following
symbols, which indicates the type of the input data:
- GD_UINT8
- unsigned 8-bit integer
- GD_INT8
- signed (two's complement) 8-bit integer
- GD_UINT16
- unsigned 16-bit integer
- GD_INT16
- signed (two's complement) 16-bit integer
- GD_UINT32
- unsigned 32-bit integer
- GD_INT32
- signed (two's complement) 32-bit integer
- GD_UINT64
- unsigned 64-bit integer
- GD_INT64
- signed (two's complement) 64-bit integer
- GD_FLOAT32
- IEEE-754 standard 32-bit single precision floating point number
- GD_FLOAT64
- IEEE-754 standard 64-bit double precision floating point number
- GD_COMPLEX64
- C99-conformant 64-bit single precision complex number
- GD_COMPLEX128
- C99-conformant 128-bit double precision complex number
The type of the input data need not be the same as the type of the
data stored in the database. Type conversion will be performed as necessary
to write the appropriate type. The argument data_in must point to a
valid memory location of containing all the data to be written.
Upon successful completion, the I/O pointer of the field will be
on the sample immediately following the last sample written, if possible. On
error, the position of the I/O pointer is not specified.
In all cases, gd_putdata() returns the number of samples
(not bytes) successfully written to the database, which may be zero if an
error has occurred.
On error, this function returns zero and stores a negative-valued
error code in the DIRFILE object which may be retrieved by a
subsequent call to gd_error(3). Possible error codes are:
- GD_E_ACCMODE
- The specified dirfile was opened read-only.
- GD_E_ALLOC
- The library was unable to allocate memory.
- GD_E_BAD_CODE
- The field specified by field_code, or one of the fields it uses for
input, was not found in the database.
- GD_E_BAD_DIRFILE
- An invalid dirfile was supplied.
- GD_E_BAD_FIELD_TYPE
- Either the field specified by field_code, or one of the fields it
uses for input, was of MULTIPLY, DIVIDE, WINDOW,
INDIR, or SINDIR type, or a LINCOM with more than one
input field, or a POLYNOM with quadratic or higer terms.
Alternately, the caller may have attempted to write to the implicit INDEX
field, which is not possible.
- GD_E_BAD_TYPE
- An invalid data_type was specified.
- GD_E_DIMENSION
- The field specified by field_code was not a vector field. The
caller should use gd_put_carray(3), gd_put_constant(3), or
gd_put_string(3) instead. Or, a scalar field was found where a
vector field was expected in the definition of field_code.
- GD_E_DOMAIN
- An attempt was made to write to a LINTERP field with a look-up
table which was not monotonic or not purely real.
- GD_E_INTERNAL_ERROR
- An internal error occurred in the library while trying to perform the
task. This indicates a bug in the library. Please report the incident to
the maintainer.
- GD_E_IO
- An error occurred while trying to open, read from, or write to a file on
disk containing a raw field or a LINTERP table.
- GD_E_LUT
- A LINTERP table was malformed.
- GD_E_PROTECTED
- The data of the RAW field backing field_code was protected
from change by a /PROTECT directive.
- GD_E_RANGE
- An attempt was made to write data either before the beginning-of-frame
marker for field_code, or the raw field it depends on, or else
outside the addressable Dirfile range (more than 2**63 samples beyond the
start of the Dirfile).
- GD_E_RECURSE_LEVEL
- Too many levels of recursion were encountered while trying to resolve
field_code. This usually indicates a circular dependency in field
specification in the dirfile.
- GD_E_UNSUPPORTED
- Reading from dirfiles with the encoding scheme of the specified dirfile is
not supported by the library. See dirfile-encoding(5) for details on
dirfile encoding schemes.
A descriptive error string for the error may be obtained by
calling gd_error_string(3).
When operating on a platform whose size_t is N-bytes
wide, a single call of gd_putdata() will never write more than
(2**(N-M) - 1) samples, where M is the size, in bytes,
of the largest data type used to calculate the stored field. If a larger
request is specified, less data than requested will be written, without
raising an error. This limit is imposed even when data_type is
GD_NULL (i.e., even when no actual I/O or calculation occurs). In all
cases, the actual amount of data is returned.
The putdata() function appeared in GetData-0.3.0.
In GetData-0.7.0, this function was renamed to
gd_getdata().
The GD_HERE symbol used for sequential writes appeared in
GetData-0.8.0.
GD_SIZE(3), gd_error(3), gd_error_string(3),
gd_getdata(3), gd_open(3), gd_put_carray(3),
gd_put_constant(3), gd_put_sarray(3), gd_put_string(3),
gd_seek(3), gd_spf(3), dirfile(5), dirfile-encoding(5)