Memory-mapped I/O

Mmap.AnonymousType

Mmap.Anonymous(name::AbstractString="", readonly::Bool=false, create::Bool=true)

Create an IO-like object for creating zeroed-out mmapped-memory that is not tied to a file for use in Mmap.mmap. Used by SharedArray for creating shared memory arrays.

Examples

julia> anon = Mmap.Anonymous();

julia> isreadable(anon)
true

julia> iswritable(anon)
true

julia> isopen(anon)
true
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Mmap.mmapFunction

Mmap.mmap(io::Union{IOStream,AbstractString,Mmap.AnonymousMmap}[, type::Type{Array{T,N}}, dims, offset]; grow::Bool=true, shared::Bool=true)
Mmap.mmap(type::Type{Array{T,N}}, dims)

Create an Array whose values are linked to a file, using memory-mapping. This provides a convenient way of working with data too large to fit in the computer's memory.

The type is an Array{T,N} with a bits-type element of T and dimension N that determines how the bytes of the array are interpreted. Note that the file must be stored in binary format, and no format conversions are possible (this is a limitation of operating systems, not Julia).

dims is a tuple or single Integer specifying the size or length of the array.

The file is passed via the stream argument, either as an open IOStream or filename string. When you initialize the stream, use "r" for a "read-only" array, and "w+" to create a new array used to write values to disk.

If no type argument is specified, the default is Vector{UInt8}.

Optionally, you can specify an offset (in bytes) if, for example, you want to skip over a header in the file. The default value for the offset is the current stream position for an IOStream.

The grow keyword argument specifies whether the disk file should be grown to accommodate the requested size of array (if the total file size is < requested array size). Write privileges are required to grow the file.

The shared keyword argument specifies whether the resulting Array and changes made to it will be visible to other processes mapping the same file.

For example, the following code

# Create a file for mmapping
# (you could alternatively use mmap to do this step, too)
A = rand(1:20, 5, 30)
s = open("/tmp/mmap.bin", "w+")
# We'll write the dimensions of the array as the first two Ints in the file
write(s, size(A,1))
write(s, size(A,2))
# Now write the data
write(s, A)
close(s)

# Test by reading it back in
s = open("/tmp/mmap.bin")   # default is read-only
m = read(s, Int)
n = read(s, Int)
A2 = Mmap.mmap(s, Matrix{Int}, (m,n))

creates a m-by-n Matrix{Int}, linked to the file associated with stream s.

A more portable file would need to encode the word size – 32 bit or 64 bit – and endianness information in the header. In practice, consider encoding binary data using standard formats like HDF5 (which can be used with memory-mapping).

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Mmap.mmap(io, BitArray, [dims, offset])

Create a BitArray whose values are linked to a file, using memory-mapping; it has the same purpose, works in the same way, and has the same arguments, as mmap, but the byte representation is different.

Examples

julia> io = open("mmap.bin", "w+");

julia> B = Mmap.mmap(io, BitArray, (25,30000));

julia> B[3, 4000] = true;

julia> Mmap.sync!(B);

julia> close(io);

julia> io = open("mmap.bin", "r+");

julia> C = Mmap.mmap(io, BitArray, (25,30000));

julia> C[3, 4000]
true

julia> C[2, 4000]
false

julia> close(io)

julia> rm("mmap.bin")

This creates a 25-by-30000 BitArray, linked to the file associated with stream io.

source

Mmap.sync!Function

Mmap.sync!(array)

Forces synchronization between the in-memory version of a memory-mapped Array or BitArray and the on-disk version.

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© 2009–2019 Jeff Bezanson, Stefan Karpinski, Viral B. Shah, and other contributors
Licensed under the MIT License.
https://docs.julialang.org/en/v1.2.0/stdlib/Mmap/