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=pod
=head1 NAME
B<FunLib: the Funtools Programming Interface>
=head1 SYNOPSIS
A description of the Funtools library.
=head1 DESCRIPTION
B<Introduction to the Funtools Programming Interface>
To create a Funtools application, you need to include
the funtools.h definitions file in your code:
#include <funtools.h>
You then call Funtools subroutines and functions to access Funtools data.
The most important routines are:
=over 4
=item *
FunOpen: open a Funtools file
=item *
FunInfoGet: get info about an image or table
=item *
FunImageGet: retrieve image data
=item *
FunImageRowGet: retrieve image data by row
=item *
FunImagePut: output image data
=item *
FunImageRowPut: output image data by row
=item *
FunColumnSelect: select columns in a table for access
=item *
FunTableRowGet: retrieve rows from a table
=item *
FunTableRowPut: output rows to a table
=item *
FunClose: close a Funtools file
=back
Your program must be linked against the libfuntools.a library,
along with the math library. The following libraries also might be required
on your system:
=over 4
=item *
-lsocket -lnsl for socket support
=item *
-ldl for dynamic loading
=back
For example, on a Solaris system using gcc, use the following link line:
gcc -o foo foo.c -lfuntools -lsocket -lnsl -ldl -lm
On a Solaris system using Solaris cc, use the following link line:
gcc -o foo foo.c -lfuntools -lsocket -lnsl -lm
On a Linux system using gcc, use the following link line:
gcc -o foo foo.c -lfuntools -ldl -lm
Once configure has built a Makefile on your platform, the required
"extra" libraries (aside from -lm, which always is required) are
specified in that file's EXTRA_LIBS variable. For example, under
Linux you will find:
grep EXTRA_LIBS Makefile
EXTRA_LIBS = -ldl
...
The Funtools library contains both the zlib library
(http://www.gzip.org/zlib/) and Doug Mink's WCS library
(http://tdc-www.harvard.edu/software/wcstools/). It is not necessary
to put these libraries on a Funtools link line. Include files
necessary for using these libraries are installed in the Funtools
include directory.
B<Funtools Programming Tutorial>
The
FunOpen()
function is used to open a FITS file, an array, or a raw event file:
/* open the input FITS file for reading */
ifun = FunOpen(iname, "r", NULL);
/* open the output FITS file for writing, and connect it to the input file */
ofun = FunOpen(iname, "w", ifun);
A new output file can inherit header parameters automatically from
existing input file by passing the input Funtools handle as the last
argument to the new file's
FunOpen()
call as shown above.
For image data, you then can call
FunImageGet()
to read an image into memory.
float buf=NULL;
/* extract and bin the data section into an image buffer */
buf = FunImageGet(fun, NULL, "bitpix=-32");
If the (second) buf argument to this call is NULL, buffer space is allocated
automatically. The (third) plist argument can be used to specify the
return data type of the array. If NULL is specified, the data type of
the input file is used.
To process an image buffer, you would generally make a call to
FunInfoGet() to determine the
dimensions of the image (which may have been changed from the original
file dimensions due to Funtools image
sectioning on the command line). In a FITS image, the index along
the dim1 axis varies most rapidly, followed by the dim2 axis, etc.
Thus, to access each pixel in an 2D image, use a double loop such as:
buf = FunImageGet(fun, NULL, "bitpix=-32");
FunInfoGet(fun, FUN_SECT_DIM1, &dim1, FUN_SECT_DIM2, &dim2, 0);
for(i=1; i<=dim2; i++){
for(j=1; j<=dim1; j++){
... process buf[((i-1)*dim1)+(j-1)] ...
}
}
or:
buf = FunImageGet(fun, NULL, "bitpix=-32");
FunInfoGet(fun, FUN_SECT_DIM1, &dim1, FUN_SECT_DIM2, &dim2, 0);
for(i=0; i<(dim1*dim2); i++){
... process buf[i] ...
}
Finally, you can write the resulting image to disk using
FunImagePut():
FunImagePut(fun2, buf, dim1, dim2, -32, NULL);
Note that Funtools automatically takes care of book-keeping tasks such as
reading and writing FITS headers (although you can, of course, write
your own header or add your own parameters to a header).
For binary tables and raw event files, a call to
FunOpen()
will be followed by a call to the
FunColumnSelect()
routine to select columns to be read from the input file and/or
written to the output file:
typedef struct evstruct{
double time;
int time2;
} *Ev, EvRec;
FunColumnSelect(fun, sizeof(EvRec), NULL,
"time", "D", "rw", FUN_OFFSET(Ev, time),
"time2", "J", "w", FUN_OFFSET(Ev, time2),
NULL);
Columns whose (third) mode argument contains an "r" are "readable",
i.e., columns will be read from the input file and converted into the
data type specified in the call's second argument. These columns
values then are stored in the specified offset of the user record
structure. Columns whose mode argument contains a "w" are
"writable", i.e., these values will be written to the output file.
The
FunColumnSelect()
routine also offers the option of automatically merging user
columns with the original input columns when writing the output
rows.
Once a set of columns has been specified, you can retrieve rows using
FunTableRowGet(),
and write the rows using
FunTableRowPut():
Ev ebuf, ev;
/* get rows -- let routine allocate the array */
while( (ebuf = (Ev)FunTableRowGet(fun, NULL, MAXROW, NULL, &got)) ){
/* process all rows */
for(i=0; i<got; i++){
/* point to the i'th row */
ev = ebuf+i;
/* time2 is generated here */
ev->time2 = (int)(ev->time+.5);
/* change the input time as well */
ev->time = -(ev->time/10.0);
}
/* write out this batch of rows with the new column */
FunTableRowPut(fun2, (char *)ebuf, got, 0, NULL);
/* free row data */
if( ebuf ) free(ebuf);
}
The input rows are retrieved into an array of user structs, which
can be accessed serially as shown above. Once again, Funtools
automatically takes care of book-keeping tasks such as reading and writing
FITS headers (although you can, of course, write your own header or
add your own parameters to a header).
When all processing is done, you can call
FunClose()
to close the file(s):
FunClose(fun2);
FunClose(fun);
These are the basics of processing FITS files (and arrays or raw event
data) using Funtools. The routines in these examples are described in
more detail below, along with a few other routines that support
parameter access, data flushing, etc.
B<Compiling and Linking>
To create a Funtools application, a software developer will include
the funtools.h definitions file in Funtools code:
#include <funtools.h>
The program is linked against the libfuntools.a library, along with the
math library (and the dynamic load library, if the latter is available
on your system):
gcc -o foo foo.c -lfuntools -ldl -lm
If gcc is used, Funtools filtering can be performed using dynamically
loaded shared objects that are built at run-time. Otherwise, filtering
is performed using a slave process.
Funtools has been built on the following systems:
=over 4
=item *
Sun/Solaris 5.X
=item *
Linux/RedHat Linux 5.X,6.X,7.X
=item *
Dec Alpha/OSF1 V4.X
=item *
WindowsNT/Cygwin 1.0
=item *
SGI/IRIX64 6.5
=back
B<A Short Digression on Subroutine Order>
There is a natural order for all I/O access libraries. You would not
think of reading a file without first opening it, or writing a file
after closing it. A large part of the experiment in funtools is to use
the idea of "natural order" as a means of making programming
easier. We do this by maintaining the state of processing for a given
funtools file, so that we can do things like write headers and flush
extension padding at the right time, without you having to do it.
For example, if you open a new funtools file for writing using
FunOpen(),
then generate an array of image data and call
FunImagePut(),
funtools knows to write the image header automatically.
There is no need to think about writing a standard header.
Of course, you can add parameters to the file first by
calling one of the
FunParamPut()
routines, and these parameters will automatically be added
to the header when it is written out. There still is no
need to write the header explicitly.
Maintaining state in this way means that there are certain rules of
order which should be maintained in any funtools program. In particular,
we strongly recommend the following ordering rules be adhered to:
=over 4
=item *
When specifying that input extensions be copied to an output file
via a reference handle, open the output file B<before> reading the
input file. (Otherwise the initial copy will not occur).
=item *
Always write parameters to an output file using one of the
FunParamPut() calls
B<before> writing any data. (This is a good idea for all FITS
libraries, to avoid having to recopy data is the FITS header needs
to be extended by adding a single parameter.)
=item *
If you retrieve an image, and need to know the data
type, use the FUN_SECT_BITPIX option of
FunInfoGet(),
B<after> calling
FunImageGet(), since
it is possible to change the value of BITPIX from the latter.
=item *
When specifying that input extensions be copied to an output file
via a reference handle, close the output file B<before> closing
input file, or else use
FunFlush()
explicitly on the output file
B<before> closing the input file. (Otherwise the final copy will
not occur).
=back
We believe that these are the natural rules that are implied in most
FITS programming tasks. However, we recognize that making explicit use
of "natural order" to decide what automatic action to take on behalf
of the programmer is experimental. Therefore, if you find that your
needs are not compatible with our preferred order, please let us know
-- it will be most illuminating for us as we evaluate this experiment.
B<Funtools Programming Examples>
The following complete coding examples are provided to illustrate the
simplicity of Funtools applications. They can be found in the funtest
subdirectory of the Funtools distribution. In many cases, you should
be able to modify one of these programs to generate your own Funtools
program:
=over 4
=item *
evread.c: read and write binary tables
=item *
evcols.c: add column and rows to binary tables
=item *
evmerge.c: merge new columns with existing columns
=item *
evnext.c: manipulate raw data pointers
=item *
imblank.c: blank out image values below a threshold
=item *
asc2fits.c: convert a specific ASCII table to FITS binary table
=back
B<The Funtools Programming Reference Manual>
#include <funtools.h>
Fun FunOpen(char *name, char *mode, Fun ref)
void *FunImageGet(Fun fun, void *buf, char *plist)
int FunImagePut(Fun fun, void *buf, int dim1, int dim2, int bitpix, char *plist)
void * FunImageRowGet(Fun fun, void *buf, int rstart, int rstop, char *plist)
void * FunImageRowPut(Fun fun, void *buf, int rstart, int rstop, int dim1, int dim2, int bitpix, char *plist)
int FunColumnSelect(Fun fun, int size, char *plist, ...)
void FunColumnActivate(Fun fun, char *s, char *plist)
int FunColumnLookup(Fun fun, char *s, int which, char **name, int *type, int *mode, int *offset, int *n, int *width)
void *FunTableRowGet(Fun fun, void *rows, int maxrow, char *plist, int *nrow)
int FunTableRowPut(Fun fun, void *rows, int nev, int idx, char *plist)
int FunParamGetb(Fun fun, char *name, int n, int defval, int *got)
int FunParamGeti(Fun fun, char *name, int n, int defval, int *got)
double FunParamGetd(Fun fun, char *name, int n, double defval, int *got)
char *FunParamGets(Fun fun, char *name, int n, char *defval, int *got)
int FunParamPutb(Fun fun, char *name, int n, int value, char *comm, int append)
int FunParamPuti(Fun fun, char *name, int n, int value, char *comm, int append)
int FunParamPutd(Fun fun, char *name, int n, double value, int prec, char *comm, int append)
int FunParamPuts(Fun fun, char *name, int n, char *value, char *comm, int append)
int FunInfoGet(Fun fun, int type, ...)
int FunInfoPut(Fun fun, int type, ...)
void FunFlush(Fun fun, char *plist)
void FunClose(Fun fun)
=head1 SEE ALSO
See funtools(n) for a list of Funtools help pages
=cut
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