Difference between revisions of "DBox folder"

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== Merge several data folders into a single dBox folder ==
 
== Merge several data folders into a single dBox folder ==
  
If you cannot merge all the data folders independently into a single data folder, you'll have to enter all the particles one by one using <tt>dBoxes.enterParticle</tt>;
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If you cannot merge all the data folders independently into a single data folder, you'll have to enter all the particles one by one using <tt>dBoxes.enterParticle</tt>; an example is shown below.
  
  <nowiki>%
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Imagine that you want to merge a cell array of folders (each one associated with a table with the same number of particles). You can generate an example with the tutorial tool:
% create several tutorial folders
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%
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  <nowiki> % create several tutorial folders
  
 
for i=1:10;
 
for i=1:10;
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end </nowiki>
 
end </nowiki>
  
<nowiki>% create a dBoxes folder
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or use your own cell arrays <tt>dataFolder</tt> and  <tt>tbl</tt>.
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<nowiki>% create a dBoxes folder
 
d = dBoxes('new', 'data.Boxes');
 
d = dBoxes('new', 'data.Boxes');
 
d.padding = 7;
 
d.padding = 7;

Revision as of 14:09, 12 October 2017

The dBox folder is an alternate way to store particle files. When you have, say, 100K files, it is a bad idea to put all of them on the same folder.

Instead of leaving all particles in the same data folder, inside the dBox folder there is a subdirectory hierarchy that allows saving the particles in different subfolders. This happens in a way totally transparent for the user.

Dynamo uses a class called dBoxes to manage this kind of generic data container. Check the different command line options with:

help dBoxes

Convert a normal data folder into a dBox folder

d = dBoxes.convertSimpleData(<foldername>,<dBoxes folder name>);

Merge several data folders into a single dBox folder

If you cannot merge all the data folders independently into a single data folder, you'll have to enter all the particles one by one using dBoxes.enterParticle; an example is shown below.

Imagine that you want to merge a cell array of folders (each one associated with a table with the same number of particles). You can generate an example with the tutorial tool:

 % create several tutorial folders

for i=1:10;
    testFolder =['testfolder',num2str(i)];
     dtutorial(testFolder,'M',100);
     dataFolder{i} = [testFolder,'/data'];
     tbl{i}      = [testFolder,'/real.tbl'];
end 

or use your own cell arrays dataFolder and tbl.

% create a dBoxes folder
d = dBoxes('new', 'data.Boxes');
d.padding = 7;
d.batch = 200;  % each subfolder will have only 200 particles

% updates the representation of the object in disk
d.updateSettingsField('padding',7);
d.updateSettingsField('batch',200);

% creates a table that will talk to all elements in the final data folder
globalTable = zeros(0,size(tbl{end},2));

disp('Merging folders.');
timeStart = clock();
for i=1:length(dataFolder)
    
    f = ddinfo(dataFolder{i},'v',0);
    tableForFolder = dread(tbl{i}); 
    
    % ensures the individual tables are sorted in ascending order of the
    % tags
    tableForFolder = dynamo_table_sort(tableForFolder);
    
    for itag = 1:f.N
        
        % file of particle in original folder
        file = dynamo_tag2file(f.tags(itag),f,0);
        
        %disp(file);
        
        % the file is transferred as copy, without passing the 
        % particle map into memory
        d.enterParticle(file,'directcopy',1);
        
    end
    
    % rearrange the tags in the table corresponding to a single folder
    tableForFolder(:,1) = [(size(globalTable,1)+1):(size(globalTable,1)+f.N)]';
    
    globalTable = [globalTable;tableForFolder];
    
    disp(sprintf('finished merging folder %d: %s',i,dataFolder{i}));
end
timeFinish = etime(clock(),timeStart);
disp('done merging. Averaging step.');

%%
 o = daverage('data.Boxes','t',globalTable);
 
 disp(sprintf('Seconds for creation of dBoxes %f',timeFinish));
 disp('Show average');
 dview(o);