Getting started with silx.io

This tutorial explains how to read data files using the silx.io.open() function.

The target audience are developers without knowledge of the h5py library.

If you are already familiar with h5py, you just need to know that the silx.io.open() function returns objects that mimic h5py file objects, and that the main supported file formats are:

  • HDF5

  • all formats supported by the FabIO library

  • SPEC data files

Knowledge about the python dictionary type and the numpy ndarray type are prerequisites for this tutorial.

Background

In the past, it was necessary to learn how to use multiple libraries to read multiple data formats. The library FabIO was designed to read in images in many formats, but not to read in more heterogeneous formats, such as HDF5 or SPEC.

To read SPEC data files in Python, a common solution was to use the PyMca module PyMca5.PyMcaIO.specfilewrapper. Regarding HDF5 files, the de-facto standard for reading them in Python is the h5py library.

silx tries to provide a unified way to read all data formats supported at the ESRF. Today, HDF5 is the preferred format to store data for many scientific institutions, including most synchrotrons. Hence, it was decided to provide tools for reading data that mimic the h5py library’s API.

Definitions

HDF5

The HDF5 format is a hierarchical data format, designed to store and organise large amounts of data.

An HDF5 file contains a number of datasets, which are multidimensional arrays of a homogeneous type.

These datasets are stored in container structures called groups. Groups can also be stored in other groups, allowing to define a hierarchical tree structure.

Both datasets and groups may have attributes attached to them. Attributes are used to document an object. Attributes are similar to datasets in several respects (data containers of homogeneous type), but there sizes are typically much smaller than the object data themselves.

It is quite common to compare an HDF5 file to a filesystem. Groups are analogous to directories, while datasets are analogous to files, and attributes are analogous to file metadata (creation date, last modification…).

../_images/silx_view_edf.png

h5py

The h5py library is a pythonic interface to the HDF5 binary data format.

It exposes an HDF5 group as a python object that resembles a python dictionary and an HDF5 dataset or attribute as an object that resembles a numpy array.

API description

All main objects, i.e., File, Group and Dataset, share the following attributes:

  • attrs: Attributes, as a dictionary of metadata for the group or dataset.

  • basename: String giving the basename of this group or dataset.

  • name: String giving the full path to this group or dataset, relative to the root group (file).

  • file: File object at the root of the tree structure containing this group or dataset.

  • parent: Group object containing this group or dataset.

File object

The API of the file objects returned by the silx.io.open() function tries to be as close as possible to the API of the h5py.File objects used to read HDF5 data.

An h5py file is a group with just a few extra attributes and methods.

The objects defined in silx.io implement a subset of these attributes and methods:

  • filename: Name of the file on disk.

  • mode: String indicating whether the file is open in read mode (“r”) or write mode (“w”). silx.io.open() always returns objects in read mode.

  • close(): Close this file. All child objects, groups and datasets, will become invalid.

The parent of a file is None, and its name is an empty string.

Group object

Group objects behave like python dictionaries.

One can iterate over group’s keys(), that are the names of the objects encapsulated by the group (datasets and sub-groups). The values() method returns an iterator over the encapsulated objects. The items() method returns an iterator over (name, value) pairs.

Groups provide a get() method that retrieves an item, or information about an item. Like standard python dictionaries, a default parameter can be used to specify a value to be returned if the given name is not a member of the group.

Two methods are provided to visit recursively all members of a group, visit() and visititems(). The former takes as argument a callable with the signature callable(name) -> None or return value. The latter takes as argument a callable with the signature callable(name, object) -> None or return value (object being a a group or dataset instance.)

Example

Accessing data

In this first example below, we open a Spec data file and print some pieces of its information.

>>> import silx.io
>>> sf = silx.io.open("data/CuZnO_2.spec")
<silx.io.spech5.SpecH5 at 0x7f00d0760f90>
>>> print(sf.keys())
['1.1', '2.1', '3.1', '4.1', '5.1', '6.1', '7.1', ...]
>>> print(sf["1.1"])
<silx.io.spech5.ScanGroup object at 0x7f00d0715b90>

We opened a file, keeping a reference to the file object as sf. We then printed all items contained in the root group. We can see that all these items are groups. Let us look at what is inside these groups, and find datasets:

>>> grp = sf["2.1"]
... for name in grp:
...     item = grp[name]
...     print("Found item " + name)
...     if silx.io.is_dataset(item):
...         print("'%s' is a dataset.\n" % name)
...     elif silx.io.is_group(item):
...         print("'%s' is a group.\n" % name)
...
Found item title
title is a dataset.

Found item start_time
start_time is a dataset.

Found item instrument
instrument is a group.

Found item measurement
measurement is a group.

Found item sample
sample is a group.

We could have replaced the first three lines by the following single line, using the iterator returned by the group method items():

>>> for name, item in sf["2.1"].items():
...

In addition to silx.io.is_group() and silx.io.is_dataset(), you can also use silx.io.is_file() and silx.io.is_softlink().

Let’s look at a dataset:

>>> print(sf["2.1/title"])
<HDF5-like dataset "title": shape (), type "|S29">

As you can see, printing a dataset does not print the data itself, it only print a representation of the dataset object. The printed information tells that the object is similar to a numpy array, with a shape and a type.

In this case, we are dealing with a scalar dataset, so we can use the same syntax as in numpy to access the scalar value, result = dset[()]:

>>> print(sf["2.1/title"][()])
2  ascan  phi 0.61 1.61  20 1

Similarly, you need to use numpy slicing to access values in a numeric array:

>>> print (sf["2.1/measurement/Phi"])
<HDF5-like dataset "Phi": shape (21,), type "<f4">
>>> print (sf["2.1/measurement/Phi"][0:10])
[ 0.61000001  0.66000003  0.70999998  0.75999999  0.81        0.86000001
  0.91000003  0.95999998  1.00999999  1.05999994]
>>> entire_phi_array = sf["2.1/measurement/Phi"][:]

Here we could read the entire array by slicing it with [:], because we know it is a 1D array. For a 2D array, the slicing argument would be [:, :].

For a dataset of unknown dimensionality (including scalar datasets), the Ellipsis object (represented by ...) can be used to slice the object.

>>> print(sf["2.1/title"][...])
2  ascan  phi 0.61 1.61  20 1
>>> print (sf["2.1/measurement/Phi"][...])
[ 0.61000001  0.66000003  0.70999998  0.75999999  0.81        0.86000001
  0.91000003  0.95999998  1.00999999  1.05999994  1.11000001  1.15999997
  1.21000004  1.25999999  1.30999994  1.36000001  1.40999997  1.46000004
  1.50999999  1.55999994  1.61000001]

To read more about the usage of Ellipsis to slice arrays, see “Indexing numpy arrays” in the scipy documentation.

Note that slicing a scalar dataset via [()] is not strictly equivalent to slicing via [...]. The former returns the actual scalar value in the dataset, while the latter always returns an array object, which happens to be 0D in the case of a scalar.

>>> sf["2.1/instrument/positioners/Delta"][()]
0.0
>>> sf["2.1/instrument/positioners/Delta"][...]
array(0.0, dtype=float32)

Closing the file

You should always make sure to close the files that you opened. The simplest way of closing a file is to call its close() method.

import silx.io
sf = silx.io.open("data/CuZnO_2.spec")

# read the information you need...
maxPhi = sf["2.1/measurement/Phi"][...].max()

sf.close()

The drawback of this method is that, if an error is arising while processing the file, the program might never reach the sf.close() line. Leaving files open can cause various issues to the rest of your program, such as consuming memory, not being able to reopen the file when you need it…

The best way to ensure that the file is always properly closed is to use the file inside its context manager:

import silx.io

with silx.io.open("data/CuZnO_2.spec") as sf:
    # read the information you need...
    maxPhi = sf["2.1/measurement/Phi"][...].max()