re: https://github.com/Unidata/netcdf-c/issues/2189
Compression of a variable whose type is variable length
fails for all current filters. This is because at some point,
the compression buffer will contain pointers to data instead
of the actual data. Compression of pointers of course is meaningless.
The PR changes the behavior of nc_def_var_filter so that it will
fail with error NC_EFILTER if an attempt is made to add a filter
to a variable whose type is variable-length.
A variable is variable-length if it is of type string or VLEN
or transitively (via a compound type) contains a string or VLEN.
Also added a test case for this.
## Misc Changes
1. Turn off a number of debugging statements
After a long discussion, I implemented the rules at the end of that issue.
They are documented in nccopy.1.
Additionally, I added a new, per-variable, -c flag that allows
for the direct setting of the chunking parameters for a variable.
The form is
-c var:c1,c2,...ck
where var is the name of the variable (possibly a fully qualified name)
and the ci are the chunksizes for that variable. It must be the case
that the rank of the variable is k. If the new form is used as well
as the old form, then the new form overrides the old form for the
specified variable. Note that multiple occurrences of the new form
-c flag may be specified.
Misc. Other fixes
1. Added -M <size> option to nccopy to specify the minimum
allowable chunksize.
2. Removed the unused variables from bigmeta.c
(Issue https://github.com/Unidata/netcdf-c/issues/1079)
3. Fixed failure of nc_test4/tst_filter.sh by using the new -M
flag (#1) to allow filter test on a small chunk size.
implementation. Deleted obsolete win32, soon to be replaced by Ward's
Windows 32- and 64-bit fixes for building with MSYS/MinGW. Made
cosmetic cleanup to output of "make check" to make it easier for users
to interpret. Fixed bug NCF-175: ncdump -t incorrectly interpreting
units attribute (such as "days") without a base time (such as "since
2007-01-01") as a time unit.
Changed name to 4.2.1-beta.