Dapper Dataflow Engine 0.95 (Default branch)


 
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Special Forums UNIX and Linux Applications Virtualization and Cloud Computing Dapper Dataflow Engine 0.95 (Default branch)
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Old 12-31-2008
Dapper Dataflow Engine 0.95 (Default branch)

Image Dapper, or "Distributed and Parallel Program Execution Runtime", is a tool for taming the complexities of developing for large-scale cloud and grid computing, enabling the user to create distributed computations from the essentials: the code that will execute, along with a dataflow graph description. It supports rich execution semantics, carefree deployment, a robust control protocol, modification of the dataflow graph at runtime, and an intuitive user interface. License: GNU Lesser General Public License (LGPL) Changes:
A new, flexible logging infrastructure has been added. Initializers for logging structures have been moved out of the Server and Client classes and into drivers. Finite state machines have been updated to the new annotation-driven API. The source code has been normalized to have 8 spaces instead of tabs. Image

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GRDREFORMAT(l)															    GRDREFORMAT(l)

NAME
grdreformat - Converting between different grdfile formats. SYNOPSIS
grdreformat ingrdfile[=id[/scale/offset[/NaNvalue]]] outgrdfile[=id[/scale/offset[/NaNvalue]]] [ -Rwest/east/south/north[r] ] [ -V ] DESCRIPTION
grdreformat reads a grdfile in one format and writes it out using another format. As an option the user may select a subset of the data to be written and to specify scaling, translation, and NaN-value. ingrdfile The grdfile to be read. Append format =id number if not a standard GMT netcdf-based grdfile. If id is set, you may optionally append scale and offset to scale the data and then add an offset. If scale and offset are supplied you may also append a value that represent 'not-a-number' (for floating-point grids this is unneccesary since the IEEE NaN is used; however short integers need a value which means no data available.) outgrdfile The grdfile to be written. Append format =id number if not a standard GMT netcdf-based grdfile. If id is set, you may optionally append scale and offset to scale the data and then add an offset. If scale and offset are supplied you may also append a value that represent 'not-a-number' (for floating-point grids this is unneccesary since the IEEE NaN is used; however short integers need a value which means no data available.) For format =id > 0 the size of the GMT grdheader block is hsize = 896 bytes, and the total size of the file is hsize + nx * ny * item_size, where item_size is the size in bytes of each element (1, 2, 4). Bit grids are stored using 4-byte integers, each holding 32 bits, so for these files the size equation is modified by using ceil (nx / 32) * 4 instead of nx. For header and grid details, see Appendix B. OPTIONS
-R west, east, south, and north specify the Region of interest. To specify boundaries in degrees and minutes [and seconds], use the dd:mm[:ss] format. Append r if lower left and upper right map coordinates are given instead of wesn. -V Selects verbose mode, which will send progress reports to stderr [Default runs "silently"]. EXAMPLES
To create a 4-byte raw floating point grid from the netcdf file data.grd, try grdreformat data.grd ras_data.b4=1 -V To make a 2-byte short integer file, scale it by 10, subtract 32000, setting NaNs to -9999, do grdreformat values.grd shorts.i2=2/10/-32000/-9999 -V To create a Sun standard 8-bit rasterfile for a subset of the data file image.grd, assuming the range in image.grd is 0-1 and we need 0-255, try grdreformat image.grd -R-60/-40/-40/-30 image.ras8=3/255/0 -V SEE ALSO
gmt(1gmt), grdmath(1gmt) 1 Jan 2004 GRDREFORMAT(l)