DAP 4.0 Design: Difference between revisions

From OPeNDAP Documentation
⧼opendap2-jumptonavigation⧽
Line 19: Line 19:
= Data Types =
= Data Types =


DAP 4 will have a small increase in supported data types. All of the DAP 2 data types describes in ESE RFC 004.11 will be supported with their existing definition with the exceptions that Grid will be expanded so that it can be used in more situations and strings will comply with UTF-8. The additional types will support 64-bit integers, an Opaque type that can be used for data objects like JPEG images, Groups that can be used to build logical collections as in NetCDF4 or HDF5 (with some limitations over HDF5's definition of Group) and Dimensions. In addition, the server-side of DAP 4 will provide for Type Definitions which will allow data systems that have these to be presented with better fidelity than DAP 2.
DAP 4 will have a small increase in supported data types. All of the DAP 2 data types describes in [http://www.esdswg.org/spg/rfc/ese-rfc-004 ESE RFC 004.11] will be supported with their existing definition with the exceptions that Grid will be expanded so that it can be used in more situations and strings will comply with UTF-8. The additional types will support 64-bit integers, an Opaque type that can be used for data objects like JPEG images, Groups that can be used to build logical collections as in NetCDF4 or HDF5 (with some limitations over HDF5's definition of Group) and Dimensions. In addition, the server-side of DAP 4 will provide for Type Definitions which will allow data systems that have these to be presented with better fidelity than DAP 2.


== Support for Existing Types ==
== Support for Existing Types ==

Revision as of 16:43, 21 May 2009

Introduction

Overall Operation

Definitions

Type Definition
The representation of something in a data set which defines a data type; types are defined in a data set. The DAP provides a way to represent this definition and use it as a stand-in for a definition built using the DAP-supplied types.
Dimension
A name bound to a size, e.g., "lon" has a size of 1024
Coordinate Variable
A name bound to both a dimension and a datatype, e.g.,"height" is a vector of dimension "height" 32-bit floating point numbers, or "latitude" is an array of dimension "x" by dimension "y" 32-bit floating point numbers.
Grid
One or more N-dimensional array of values bound to 1 to N coordinate variables.

Data Types

DAP 4 will have a small increase in supported data types. All of the DAP 2 data types describes in ESE RFC 004.11 will be supported with their existing definition with the exceptions that Grid will be expanded so that it can be used in more situations and strings will comply with UTF-8. The additional types will support 64-bit integers, an Opaque type that can be used for data objects like JPEG images, Groups that can be used to build logical collections as in NetCDF4 or HDF5 (with some limitations over HDF5's definition of Group) and Dimensions. In addition, the server-side of DAP 4 will provide for Type Definitions which will allow data systems that have these to be presented with better fidelity than DAP 2.

Support for Existing Types

Changes in the Definition of Grid

While dimensions are scoped at the Dataset or Group level, coordinate variables are defined at the level of a Grid object. Grid objects in DAP4 are different from those in DAP2 in three ways beyond using (shared) dimensions:

  1. Each Grid object may hold more than one Array (what is often a dependent variable);
  2. Maps (often independent variables) may have more than one dimension; and
  3. Each Array within a Grid is not constrained to use all of the Grid's coordinate variables.

N.B: Coordinate variables in a Grid object are called Maps to conform to the old nomenclature and to avoid (re)using the word dimension.

Features of the DAP4 and DAP2 Grid object:

  1. Each Grid object defines a lexical scope.
  2. There is an explicit relation between the Grid object's maps (coordinate variables) and the indicial extents of the array.

A very simple Grid object

<grid>
    <map name="lon" dim="lon" type="Float32"/>
    <map name="lat" dim="lat" type="Float32"/>

    <array name="SST">
        <Byte/>
        <map name="lon">
        <map name="lat">
    </array>
</grid>

Notes:

  1. The map object may have the same name as a dimension object.
  2. Map objects may have attributes, even though they are not shown in the example.
  3. In an Grid's array object, <map...> elements are used to specify the array's dimensions; the word dimension is avoided to cut down on confusion.

A more complex Grid object

<dataset>
    <dimension name="pt" size="4096">

    <grid>
        <map name="longitude" dim="pt" type="Float32"/>
        <map name="latitude" dim="pt" type="Float32"/>
        <map name="altitude" dim="pt" type="Float32"/>
        <map name="time" dim="pt" type="Float32">
            << attributes >> <!-- The syntax for attributes is in flux -->
        </map>

        <array name="Radioactivity">
            << attributes >> <!-- for example, scale_factor and add_offset -->
            <Byte/>
            <map name="longitude"/>
            <map name="latitude"/>
            <map name="altitude"/>
            <map name="time"/>
        </array>

        <array name="surface_temp">
             << attributes >>
             <float64/>
             <map name="longitude"/>
             <map name="latitude"/>
             <map name="time"/>
        </array>
    </grid>
</dataset>

An example Grid with Maps that are not vectors

<dataset>
    <dimension name="x" size="4096">
    <dimension name="y" size="4096">

    <grid name="SST_Swath">
        <!-- We could list multiple dims in a space-separated list
             but purists will gag. I'm experimenting with different 
             syntaxes -->
        <map name="longitude" type="Float32"/>
            <dim name="x"/>
            <dim name="y"/>
        </map>
        <map name="latitude" type="Float32"/>
            <dim name="x"/>
            <dim name="y"/>
        </map>

        <!-- This grid has two maps, each of which are two-dimensional
             arrays. It can be used to store satellite 'swath' data. -->
        <array name="SST">
            << attributes >> <!-- for example, scale_factor and add_offset -->
            <Byte/>
            <map name="longitude"/>
            <map name="latitude"/>
        </array>
    </grid>
</dataset>

Note:

  1. The highest dimension of the Grid's Maps cannot exceed the dimensionality of the Grid's Array.
  2. When using the [] operator on a Grid in a DAP Constraint expression, the arguments enclosed in the square brackets correspond to the dimensions declared in the Map and not the Maps themselves. Thus a CE like SST_Swath[10:20][40:50] means that the array SST_Swath.SST and the maps SST_Swath.longitude and SST_Swath.latitude will all be returned sub-sampled to elements 10 to 20 in their first dimension and 40 to 50 in their second. In a DAP2 grid where all of the maps are vectors, there is a one-to-one correspondence between the [] operators and Maps, but in a DAP4 Grid there is a one-to-one correspondence between the [] operators and dimensions.

Changes to the String Type

New Datatypes

Groups

The DDX will be modified so that it contains one or more Groups. If only one Group is present (which describes the case for DAP 3.2 and earlier) then the declaration can be left out, but if there are two or more groups, the declarations must be present.

Group characteristics:

  • Any configuration of Groups other than one (anonymous) Group which holds all the variables in a data set must be declared.
  • If declared, Groups must be named.
  • A Group can contain any object, including a Group
  • Variables and Attributes are named using / <group name> / ... / <variable name> to reflect their hierarchy.
  • Each Group declares a new lexical scope for values.
  • A Group cannot be an Array or a Grid (although the distinction between those two might become blurred or non-existent; Group is fundamentally a scalar container-type).
  • This definition does not completely subsume the HDF5 Group type but is equivalent to the netCDF 4 version of it.

Shared Dimensions

Shared dimensions will be added to DAP in the dimensions section of the Dataset or Group objects. Each dimension will consist of a name and a size.

 
<dimension name="lat" size="1024"/>
<dimension name="lon" size="1024"/>

Characteristics of dimensions:

  • Dimensions are not associated with a data type.
  • Dimensions do not have attributes.
  • Dimensions bound to a type define coordinate variables.
  • Shared dimensions may be used by both Grids and Arrays.
  • A Coordinate variable is not restricted to to being a single dimension; a N-dimensional coordinate variable would use N dimensions.

Background on shared dimensions and coordinate variables

From an email exchange, John Caron wrote:

James:

Is it that an dimension is a formal declaration of an independent parameter?

John:

I know that some people prefer that interpretation. My own opinion is that's it more complicated.

Abstractly, I think its reasonable to say that the number of dimensions of a variable indicates its dimensionality in the topological sense. I think its necessary to allow "independent variables" to have topological dimensionality > 1. eg lat(x,y), lon(x,y). lat and lon can still be considered independent variables, but they are not orthogonal. Neither is associated exclusively with one

dimension.

Concretely, dimensions are used for all sorts of reasons, and are not just about topological dimensionality. For instance, they control the grouping of data and the layout of files. So in real files, you see this mixture of uses.

That's why the explicit assignment of coord variables is needed, which makes your Grid attractive, because that's a way of explicitly saying what the independent variables are. One needs shared dimensions between data and coordinate variables, so that one can unambiguously assign coordinate values to a data value.

The downsides of using Grid for this purpose:

  • the name "Grid" connotes gridded data, eg model data, and this shared dimension thing is needed for other types of data, eg point data.
  • If Grid scopes the dimension, then all variables sharing a dimension have to be contained in the grid. So its impossible to have some dimensions globally shared, and others locally shared.

So my preference would be to use Groups to scope shared dimensions, rather than Grids. But still use Grids (or some evolution of Grids) to assign coordinate variables to data variables.

Type Definitions

Opaque

64-bit Integers

Suggested Types not Included

Discussed in this section are types that are present in some other systems (e.g., ASN 1.1) but that are not includes in DAP 4 along with the rationale of not including them.

Enumeration

This type will be taxing to client builders because there is an unbounded set of potential values. At the same time most (all?) clients will implement this type as a set with no actual knowledge of the set elements semantics, so it is no different than a byte or integer type with a attribute that provides a binding between (integral) formal values and String, et c., actual values.

Boolean

The additional semantic information provided by this type seems very limited given the cost associated with each additional data type in a protocol such as DAP.

Date/Time

Of all the types suggested but not included, this has the most potential. Unfortunately, it's very unlikely that this type would be implemented correctly by a majority of servers. It is certainly possible to include it in the DAP itself, but servers would have to provide a mapping from the encoding of date/time in each relevant data source to some sort of a standard representation (e.g., ISO 8601). That seems unlikely and thus it seems most likely that a date/time type would not be used consistently. A better solution is to use Attributes which provide the potential for third party mediation or augmentation.

Attributes

Attributes in DAP 4 are largely unchanged from DAP 2 with the only change being the addition of a new type of attribute to hold XML which is supplied for a data source using some external system.

Existing Attribute Types

New Attribute Types

XML

Names

Services

Examples

Responses

Persistent representations

DDX Document Organization

DAP and the DDX will be extended to include Groups, Shared dimensions and user-defined types. Groups will be added as a kind of constructor-type with properties similar to Structure and to Java or C++ namespaces. Unlike Structure, Groups cannot be dimensioned.

A rough syntax which describes how these additions will fit into the DAP and the existing DDX Notation is (Replace with XML schema):

Dataset :== Groups
Groups :== null | Group Groups
Group :== Types Dimensions Attributes Variables Groups
Types :== null | Type Types
Dimensions :== null | Dimension Dimensions
Attributes :== null | Attribute Attributes
Variables :== null | Variable Variables

This pseudo-grammar does not capture what can be produced for a Group, et cetera. Instead it shows how these sections of the DDX must be organized. It also does not show that a valid Dataset can have only Types (user-define types) and does not need to have variables, but it must have one or the other or both.


Examples

Group Examples

This data set contains one Group - the root group - which has by convention the name '/'

<Dataset ... >
    ...
</Dataset>

This data set contains two Groups, one after the other.

<Dataset ... >
<group name="primary">
    ...
</group>
<group name="secondary">
    ...
</group>
</Dataset>

This data set contains more Groups, and shows they can be nested.

<Dataset ... >
<group name="primary">
    ...
    <group name="in_situ">
        ...
    </group>

</group>
<group name="secondary">
    ...
</group>
</Dataset>

Appendices

DDX Schema

BNF for the Binary part of the Data Response