netcdf-c/include/ncoffsets.h

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/*********************************************************************
* Copyright 2018, UCAR/Unidata
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* See netcdf/COPYRIGHT file for copying and redistribution conditions.
*********************************************************************/
Primary change: add dap4 support Specific changes: 1. Add dap4 code: libdap4 and dap4_test. Note that until the d4ts server problem is solved, dap4 is turned off. 2. Modify various files to support dap4 flags: configure.ac, Makefile.am, CMakeLists.txt, etc. 3. Add nc_test/test_common.sh. This centralizes the handling of the locations of various things in the build tree: e.g. where is ncgen.exe located. See nc_test/test_common.sh for details. 4. Modify .sh files to use test_common.sh 5. Obsolete separate oc2 by moving it to be part of netcdf-c. This means replacing code with netcdf-c equivalents. 5. Add --with-testserver to configure.ac to allow override of the servers to be used for --enable-dap-remote-tests. 6. There were multiple versions of nctypealignment code. Try to centralize in libdispatch/doffset.c and include/ncoffsets.h 7. Add a unit test for the ncuri code because of its complexity. 8. Move the findserver code out of libdispatch and into a separate, self contained program in ncdap_test and dap4_test. 9. Move the dispatch header files (nc{3,4}dispatch.h) to .../include because they are now shared by modules. 10. Revamp the handling of TOPSRCDIR and TOPBUILDDIR for shell scripts. 11. Make use of MREMAP if available 12. Misc. minor changes e.g. - #include <config.h> -> #include "config.h" - Add some no-install headers to /include - extern -> EXTERNL and vice versa as needed - misc header cleanup - clean up checking for misc. unix vs microsoft functions 13. Change copyright decls in some files to point to LICENSE file. 14. Add notes to RELEASENOTES.md
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#ifndef NCOFFSETS_H
#define NCOFFSETS_H 1
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/* Define indices for every primitive C type */
/* NAT => NOT-A-TYPE*/
Fix more memory leaks in netcdf-c library This is a follow up to PR https://github.com/Unidata/netcdf-c/pull/1173 Sorry that it is so big, but leak suppression can be complex. This PR fixes all remaining memory leaks -- as determined by -fsanitize=address, and with the exceptions noted below. Unfortunately. there remains a significant leak that I cannot solve. It involves vlens, and it is unclear if the leak is occurring in the netcdf-c library or the HDF5 library. I have added a check_PROGRAM to the ncdump directory to show the problem. The program is called tst_vlen_demo.c To exercise it, build the netcdf library with -fsanitize=address enabled. Then go into ncdump and do a "make clean check". This should build tst_vlen_demo without actually executing it. Then do the command "./tst_vlen_demo" to see the output of the memory checker. Note the the lost malloc is deep in the HDF5 library (in H5Tvlen.c). I am temporarily working around this error in the following way. 1. I modified several test scripts to not execute known vlen tests that fail as described above. 2. Added an environment variable called NC_VLEN_NOTEST. If set, then those specific tests are suppressed. This should mean that the --disable-utilities option to ./configure should not need to be set to get a memory leak clean build. This should allow for detection of any new leaks. Note: I used an environment variable rather than a ./configure option to control the vlen tests. This is because it is temporary (I hope) and because it is a bit tricky for shell scripts to access ./configure options. Finally, as before, this only been tested with netcdf-4 and hdf5 support.
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#define NC_NATINDEX 0
#define NC_CHARINDEX 1
#define NC_UCHARINDEX 2
#define NC_SHORTINDEX 3
#define NC_USHORTINDEX 4
#define NC_INTINDEX 5
#define NC_UINTINDEX 6
#define NC_LONGINDEX 7
#define NC_ULONGINDEX 8
#define NC_LONGLONGINDEX 9
#define NC_ULONGLONGINDEX 10
#define NC_FLOATINDEX 11
#define NC_DOUBLEINDEX 12
#define NC_PTRINDEX 13
#define NC_NCVLENINDEX 14
#define NC_NCTYPES 15
typedef struct NCalignment {
char* type_name;
size_t alignment;
} NCalignment;
typedef NCalignment NCtypealignvec;
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/* Capture in struct and in a vector*/
Fix more memory leaks in netcdf-c library This is a follow up to PR https://github.com/Unidata/netcdf-c/pull/1173 Sorry that it is so big, but leak suppression can be complex. This PR fixes all remaining memory leaks -- as determined by -fsanitize=address, and with the exceptions noted below. Unfortunately. there remains a significant leak that I cannot solve. It involves vlens, and it is unclear if the leak is occurring in the netcdf-c library or the HDF5 library. I have added a check_PROGRAM to the ncdump directory to show the problem. The program is called tst_vlen_demo.c To exercise it, build the netcdf library with -fsanitize=address enabled. Then go into ncdump and do a "make clean check". This should build tst_vlen_demo without actually executing it. Then do the command "./tst_vlen_demo" to see the output of the memory checker. Note the the lost malloc is deep in the HDF5 library (in H5Tvlen.c). I am temporarily working around this error in the following way. 1. I modified several test scripts to not execute known vlen tests that fail as described above. 2. Added an environment variable called NC_VLEN_NOTEST. If set, then those specific tests are suppressed. This should mean that the --disable-utilities option to ./configure should not need to be set to get a memory leak clean build. This should allow for detection of any new leaks. Note: I used an environment variable rather than a ./configure option to control the vlen tests. This is because it is temporary (I hope) and because it is a bit tricky for shell scripts to access ./configure options. Finally, as before, this only been tested with netcdf-4 and hdf5 support.
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typedef struct NCtypealignset {
NCalignment charalign; /* char*/
NCalignment ucharalign; /* unsigned char*/
NCalignment shortalign; /* short*/
NCalignment ushortalign; /* unsigned short*/
NCalignment intalign; /* int*/
NCalignment uintalign; /* unsigned int*/
NCalignment longalign; /* long*/
NCalignment ulongalign; /* unsigned long*/
NCalignment longlongalign; /* long long*/
NCalignment ulonglongalign; /* unsigned long long*/
NCalignment floatalign; /* float*/
NCalignment doublealign; /* double*/
NCalignment ptralign; /* void**/
NCalignment ncvlenalign; /* nc_vlen_t*/
} NCtypealignset;
Fix various problem around VLEN's re: https://github.com/Unidata/netcdf-c/issues/541 re: https://github.com/Unidata/netcdf-c/issues/1208 re: https://github.com/Unidata/netcdf-c/issues/2078 re: https://github.com/Unidata/netcdf-c/issues/2041 re: https://github.com/Unidata/netcdf-c/issues/2143 For a long time, there have been known problems with the management of complex types containing VLENs. This also involves the string type because it is stored as a VLEN of chars. This PR (mostly) fixes this problem. But note that it adds new functions to netcdf.h (see below) and this may require bumping the .so number. These new functions can be removed, if desired, in favor of functions in netcdf_aux.h, but netcdf.h seems the better place for them because they are intended as alternatives to the nc_free_vlen and nc_free_string functions already in netcdf.h. The term complex type refers to any type that directly or transitively references a VLEN type. So an array of VLENS, a compound with a VLEN field, and so on. In order to properly handle instances of these complex types, it is necessary to have function that can recursively walk instances of such types to perform various actions on them. The term "deep" is also used to mean recursive. At the moment, the two operations needed by the netcdf library are: * free'ing an instance of the complex type * copying an instance of the complex type. The current library does only shallow free and shallow copy of complex types. This means that only the top level is properly free'd or copied, but deep internal blocks in the instance are not touched. Note that the term "vector" will be used to mean a contiguous (in memory) sequence of instances of some type. Given an array with, say, dimensions 2 X 3 X 4, this will be stored in memory as a vector of length 2*3*4=24 instances. The use cases are primarily these. ## nc_get_vars Suppose one is reading a vector of instances using nc_get_vars (or nc_get_vara or nc_get_var, etc.). These functions will return the vector in the top-level memory provided. All interior blocks (form nested VLEN or strings) will have been dynamically allocated. After using this vector of instances, it is necessary to free (aka reclaim) the dynamically allocated memory, otherwise a memory leak occurs. So, the recursive reclaim function is used to walk the returned instance vector and do a deep reclaim of the data. Currently functions are defined in netcdf.h that are supposed to handle this: nc_free_vlen(), nc_free_vlens(), and nc_free_string(). Unfortunately, these functions only do a shallow free, so deeply nested instances are not properly handled by them. Note that internally, the provided data is immediately written so there is no need to copy it. But the caller may need to reclaim the data it passed into the function. ## nc_put_att Suppose one is writing a vector of instances as the data of an attribute using, say, nc_put_att. Internally, the incoming attribute data must be copied and stored so that changes/reclamation of the input data will not affect the attribute. Again, the code inside the netcdf library does only shallow copying rather than deep copy. As a result, one sees effects such as described in Github Issue https://github.com/Unidata/netcdf-c/issues/2143. Also, after defining the attribute, it may be necessary for the user to free the data that was provided as input to nc_put_att(). ## nc_get_att Suppose one is reading a vector of instances as the data of an attribute using, say, nc_get_att. Internally, the existing attribute data must be copied and returned to the caller, and the caller is responsible for reclaiming the returned data. Again, the code inside the netcdf library does only shallow copying rather than deep copy. So this can lead to memory leaks and errors because the deep data is shared between the library and the user. # Solution The solution is to build properly recursive reclaim and copy functions and use those as needed. These recursive functions are defined in libdispatch/dinstance.c and their signatures are defined in include/netcdf.h. For back compatibility, corresponding "ncaux_XXX" functions are defined in include/netcdf_aux.h. ```` int nc_reclaim_data(int ncid, nc_type xtypeid, void* memory, size_t count); int nc_reclaim_data_all(int ncid, nc_type xtypeid, void* memory, size_t count); int nc_copy_data(int ncid, nc_type xtypeid, const void* memory, size_t count, void* copy); int nc_copy_data_all(int ncid, nc_type xtypeid, const void* memory, size_t count, void** copyp); ```` There are two variants. The first two, nc_reclaim_data() and nc_copy_data(), assume the top-level vector is managed by the caller. For reclaim, this is so the user can use, for example, a statically allocated vector. For copy, it assumes the user provides the space into which the copy is stored. The second two, nc_reclaim_data_all() and nc_copy_data_all(), allows the functions to manage the top-level. So for nc_reclaim_data_all, the top level is assumed to be dynamically allocated and will be free'd by nc_reclaim_data_all(). The nc_copy_data_all() function will allocate the top level and return a pointer to it to the user. The user can later pass that pointer to nc_reclaim_data_all() to reclaim the instance(s). # Internal Changes The netcdf-c library internals are changed to use the proper reclaim and copy functions. It turns out that the places where these functions are needed is quite pervasive in the netcdf-c library code. Using these functions also allows some simplification of the code since the stdata and vldata fields of NC_ATT_INFO are no longer needed. Currently this is commented out using the SEPDATA \#define macro. When any bugs are largely fixed, all this code will be removed. # Known Bugs 1. There is still one known failure that has not been solved. All the failures revolve around some variant of this .cdl file. The proximate cause of failure is the use of a VLEN FillValue. ```` netcdf x { types: float(*) row_of_floats ; dimensions: m = 5 ; variables: row_of_floats ragged_array(m) ; row_of_floats ragged_array:_FillValue = {-999} ; data: ragged_array = {10, 11, 12, 13, 14}, {20, 21, 22, 23}, {30, 31, 32}, {40, 41}, _ ; } ```` When a solution is found, I will either add it to this PR or post a new PR. # Related Changes * Mark nc_free_vlen(s) as deprecated in favor of ncaux_reclaim_data. * Remove the --enable-unfixed-memory-leaks option. * Remove the NC_VLENS_NOTEST code that suppresses some vlen tests. * Document this change in docs/internal.md * Disable the tst_vlen_data test in ncdump/tst_nccopy4.sh. * Mark types as fixed size or not (transitively) to optimize the reclaim and copy functions. # Misc. Changes * Make Doxygen process libdispatch/daux.c * Make sure the NC_ATT_INFO_T.container field is set.
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EXTERNL int NC_class_alignment(int ncclass, size_t*);
EXTERNL void NC_compute_alignments(void);
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Fix various problem around VLEN's re: https://github.com/Unidata/netcdf-c/issues/541 re: https://github.com/Unidata/netcdf-c/issues/1208 re: https://github.com/Unidata/netcdf-c/issues/2078 re: https://github.com/Unidata/netcdf-c/issues/2041 re: https://github.com/Unidata/netcdf-c/issues/2143 For a long time, there have been known problems with the management of complex types containing VLENs. This also involves the string type because it is stored as a VLEN of chars. This PR (mostly) fixes this problem. But note that it adds new functions to netcdf.h (see below) and this may require bumping the .so number. These new functions can be removed, if desired, in favor of functions in netcdf_aux.h, but netcdf.h seems the better place for them because they are intended as alternatives to the nc_free_vlen and nc_free_string functions already in netcdf.h. The term complex type refers to any type that directly or transitively references a VLEN type. So an array of VLENS, a compound with a VLEN field, and so on. In order to properly handle instances of these complex types, it is necessary to have function that can recursively walk instances of such types to perform various actions on them. The term "deep" is also used to mean recursive. At the moment, the two operations needed by the netcdf library are: * free'ing an instance of the complex type * copying an instance of the complex type. The current library does only shallow free and shallow copy of complex types. This means that only the top level is properly free'd or copied, but deep internal blocks in the instance are not touched. Note that the term "vector" will be used to mean a contiguous (in memory) sequence of instances of some type. Given an array with, say, dimensions 2 X 3 X 4, this will be stored in memory as a vector of length 2*3*4=24 instances. The use cases are primarily these. ## nc_get_vars Suppose one is reading a vector of instances using nc_get_vars (or nc_get_vara or nc_get_var, etc.). These functions will return the vector in the top-level memory provided. All interior blocks (form nested VLEN or strings) will have been dynamically allocated. After using this vector of instances, it is necessary to free (aka reclaim) the dynamically allocated memory, otherwise a memory leak occurs. So, the recursive reclaim function is used to walk the returned instance vector and do a deep reclaim of the data. Currently functions are defined in netcdf.h that are supposed to handle this: nc_free_vlen(), nc_free_vlens(), and nc_free_string(). Unfortunately, these functions only do a shallow free, so deeply nested instances are not properly handled by them. Note that internally, the provided data is immediately written so there is no need to copy it. But the caller may need to reclaim the data it passed into the function. ## nc_put_att Suppose one is writing a vector of instances as the data of an attribute using, say, nc_put_att. Internally, the incoming attribute data must be copied and stored so that changes/reclamation of the input data will not affect the attribute. Again, the code inside the netcdf library does only shallow copying rather than deep copy. As a result, one sees effects such as described in Github Issue https://github.com/Unidata/netcdf-c/issues/2143. Also, after defining the attribute, it may be necessary for the user to free the data that was provided as input to nc_put_att(). ## nc_get_att Suppose one is reading a vector of instances as the data of an attribute using, say, nc_get_att. Internally, the existing attribute data must be copied and returned to the caller, and the caller is responsible for reclaiming the returned data. Again, the code inside the netcdf library does only shallow copying rather than deep copy. So this can lead to memory leaks and errors because the deep data is shared between the library and the user. # Solution The solution is to build properly recursive reclaim and copy functions and use those as needed. These recursive functions are defined in libdispatch/dinstance.c and their signatures are defined in include/netcdf.h. For back compatibility, corresponding "ncaux_XXX" functions are defined in include/netcdf_aux.h. ```` int nc_reclaim_data(int ncid, nc_type xtypeid, void* memory, size_t count); int nc_reclaim_data_all(int ncid, nc_type xtypeid, void* memory, size_t count); int nc_copy_data(int ncid, nc_type xtypeid, const void* memory, size_t count, void* copy); int nc_copy_data_all(int ncid, nc_type xtypeid, const void* memory, size_t count, void** copyp); ```` There are two variants. The first two, nc_reclaim_data() and nc_copy_data(), assume the top-level vector is managed by the caller. For reclaim, this is so the user can use, for example, a statically allocated vector. For copy, it assumes the user provides the space into which the copy is stored. The second two, nc_reclaim_data_all() and nc_copy_data_all(), allows the functions to manage the top-level. So for nc_reclaim_data_all, the top level is assumed to be dynamically allocated and will be free'd by nc_reclaim_data_all(). The nc_copy_data_all() function will allocate the top level and return a pointer to it to the user. The user can later pass that pointer to nc_reclaim_data_all() to reclaim the instance(s). # Internal Changes The netcdf-c library internals are changed to use the proper reclaim and copy functions. It turns out that the places where these functions are needed is quite pervasive in the netcdf-c library code. Using these functions also allows some simplification of the code since the stdata and vldata fields of NC_ATT_INFO are no longer needed. Currently this is commented out using the SEPDATA \#define macro. When any bugs are largely fixed, all this code will be removed. # Known Bugs 1. There is still one known failure that has not been solved. All the failures revolve around some variant of this .cdl file. The proximate cause of failure is the use of a VLEN FillValue. ```` netcdf x { types: float(*) row_of_floats ; dimensions: m = 5 ; variables: row_of_floats ragged_array(m) ; row_of_floats ragged_array:_FillValue = {-999} ; data: ragged_array = {10, 11, 12, 13, 14}, {20, 21, 22, 23}, {30, 31, 32}, {40, 41}, _ ; } ```` When a solution is found, I will either add it to this PR or post a new PR. # Related Changes * Mark nc_free_vlen(s) as deprecated in favor of ncaux_reclaim_data. * Remove the --enable-unfixed-memory-leaks option. * Remove the NC_VLENS_NOTEST code that suppresses some vlen tests. * Document this change in docs/internal.md * Disable the tst_vlen_data test in ncdump/tst_nccopy4.sh. * Mark types as fixed size or not (transitively) to optimize the reclaim and copy functions. # Misc. Changes * Make Doxygen process libdispatch/daux.c * Make sure the NC_ATT_INFO_T.container field is set.
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/* From libdispatch/dinstance.c */
EXTERNL int NC_type_alignment(int ncid, nc_type xtype, size_t*);
Improve performance of the nc_reclaim_data and nc_copy_data functions. re: Issue https://github.com/Unidata/netcdf-c/issues/2685 re: PR https://github.com/Unidata/netcdf-c/pull/2179 As noted in PR https://github.com/Unidata/netcdf-c/pull/2179, the old code did not allow for reclaiming instances of types, nor for properly copying them. That PR provided new functions capable of reclaiming/copying instances of arbitrary types. However, as noted by Issue https://github.com/Unidata/netcdf-c/issues/2685, using these most general functions resulted in a significant performance degradation, even for common cases. This PR attempts to mitigate the cost of using the general reclaim/copy functions in two ways. First, the previous functions operating at the top level by using ncid and typeid arguments. These functions were augmented with equivalent versions that used the netcdf-c library internal data structures to allow direct access to needed information. These new functions are used internally to the library. The second mitigation involves optimizing the internal functions by providing early tests for common cases. This avoids unnecessary recursive function calls. The overall result is a significant improvement in speed by a factor of roughly twenty -- your mileage may vary. These optimized functions are still not as fast as the original (more limited) functions, but they are getting close. Additional optimizations are possible. But the cost is a significant "uglification" of the code that I deemed a step too far, at least for now. ## Misc. Changes 1. Added a test case to check the proper reclamation/copy of complex types. 2. Found and fixed some places where nc_reclaim/copy should have been used. 3. Replaced, in the netcdf-c library, (almost all) occurrences of nc_reclaim_copy with calls to NC_reclaim/copy. This plus the optimizations is the primary speed-up mechanism. 4. In DAP4, the metadata is held in a substrate in-memory file; this required some changes so that the reclaim/copy code accessed that substrate dispatcher rather than the DAP4 dispatcher. 5. Re-factored and isolated the code that computes if a type is (transitively) variable-sized or not. 6. Clean up the reclamation code in ncgen; adding the use of nc_reclaim exposed some memory problems.
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/* From libdispatch/dinstance_intern.c */
/**
* Internal version of NC_type_alignment
*/
struct NC_FILE_INFO; /* forward */
struct NC_TYPE_INFO; /* forward */
EXTERNL int NC_type_alignment_internal(struct NC_FILE_INFO* file, nc_type xtype, struct NC_TYPE_INFO* utype, size_t* alignp);
EXTERNL uintptr_t NC_read_align(uintptr_t addr, size_t alignment);
Primary change: add dap4 support Specific changes: 1. Add dap4 code: libdap4 and dap4_test. Note that until the d4ts server problem is solved, dap4 is turned off. 2. Modify various files to support dap4 flags: configure.ac, Makefile.am, CMakeLists.txt, etc. 3. Add nc_test/test_common.sh. This centralizes the handling of the locations of various things in the build tree: e.g. where is ncgen.exe located. See nc_test/test_common.sh for details. 4. Modify .sh files to use test_common.sh 5. Obsolete separate oc2 by moving it to be part of netcdf-c. This means replacing code with netcdf-c equivalents. 5. Add --with-testserver to configure.ac to allow override of the servers to be used for --enable-dap-remote-tests. 6. There were multiple versions of nctypealignment code. Try to centralize in libdispatch/doffset.c and include/ncoffsets.h 7. Add a unit test for the ncuri code because of its complexity. 8. Move the findserver code out of libdispatch and into a separate, self contained program in ncdap_test and dap4_test. 9. Move the dispatch header files (nc{3,4}dispatch.h) to .../include because they are now shared by modules. 10. Revamp the handling of TOPSRCDIR and TOPBUILDDIR for shell scripts. 11. Make use of MREMAP if available 12. Misc. minor changes e.g. - #include <config.h> -> #include "config.h" - Add some no-install headers to /include - extern -> EXTERNL and vice versa as needed - misc header cleanup - clean up checking for misc. unix vs microsoft functions 13. Change copyright decls in some files to point to LICENSE file. 14. Add notes to RELEASENOTES.md
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#endif /*NCOFFSETS_H*/