Rhdf5lib provides the C and C++ HDF5
libraries. It is primarily useful to developers of other R packages who want to make use of the capabilities of the HDF5 library directly in the C or C++ code of their own packages, rather than using a higher level interface such as the rhdf5 package. Using Rhdf5lib make life easier for users, as they do not have to worry about installing libraries at a system level, and for developers since they can work with a defined version of the library rather than developing strategies to cope with the potential for multiple versions.
Rhdf5lib is very much inspired by the zlibbioc and Rhtslib packages.*
There is an example package, usingRhdf5lib, that demonstrates how packages should link to Rhdf5lib.
To link successfully to the HDF5 library included in Rhdf5lib a package must include both a src/Makevars.win
and src/Makevars
file.
Add the following lines to both src/Makevars
and src/Makevars.win
RHDF5_LIBS=$(shell "${R_HOME}/bin${R_ARCH_BIN}/Rscript" -e \ 'Rhdf5lib::pkgconfig("PKG_C_LIBS")') PKG_LIBS=$(RHDF5_LIBS)
The statement for each platform modifies the $PKG_LIBS
variable. If your package needs to add additional information to the $PKG_LIBS
variable, do so by adding to the PKG_LIBS=$(RHDF5_LIBS)
line, e.g.,
PKG_LIBS=$(RHDF5_LIBS) -L/path/to/foolib -lfoo
Note that the use of $(shell ...)
necessitates using GNU Make, and you need to make this requirement explict in your package's DESCRIPTION file via the entry:
SystemRequirements: GNU make
The default behaviour of Rhdf5lib::pkgconfig
is to report the location of the shared library as the result of system.file("lib", package="Rhdf5lib")
. If this is inappropriate for your system e.g. a cluster with a shared file system, use the environment variable RHDF5LIB_RPATH
to override this and set an appropriate location for your infrastructure.
Valid options to provide to pkgconfig()
are: PKG_C_LIBS
, PKG_CXX_LIBS
, PKG_C_HL_LIBS
and PKG_CXX_HL_LIBS
. Choose the most appropriate depending upon whether your linking code requires the C++ API (C
vs CXX
) and/or the HDF5 'high-level' API (HL
). Choosing options that you don't require should not harm performance, but will result in a larger library and greater memory usage for your application, so it is good practice to select only the features you need.
In order for the C/C++ compiler to find the HDF5 headers during package installation, add Rhdf5lib to the LinkingTo field of the DESCRIPTION file of your package, e.g.
LinkingTo: Rhdf5lib
In you C or C++ code files, you can then use the standard include techniques, e.g., #include "hdf5.h"
or #include "H5Cpp.h"
. You can inspect the header files manually to check their names and declared functions. To find their location on your system you can use the following code:
```{R headers} system.file(package="Rhdf5lib", "include")
# Non-standard ZLIB location *Rhdf5lib* requires the ZLIB compression library to be installed on non-Windows platforms. If installation fails due with a message reporting that **zlib.h** can not be found, it is possible to provide the appropriate path explicitly during installation via the `configure.args` argument e.g. ```r BiocManager::install('Rhdf5lib', configure.args = "--with-zlib='/path/to/zlib/'")
Here /path/to/zlib
should be the directory that contains both include/zlib.h
and lib/libz.a
. For example, on a typical Ubuntu installation this may be /usr/
while for libraries installed via miniconda this location could be /home/<USER>/miniconda3/
.
MLS was supported by the BMBF-funded Heidelberg Center for Human Bioinformatics (HD-HuB) within the German Network for Bioinformatics Infrastructure (de.NBI), Förderkennzeichen #031A537B
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