beachmat 2.2.1
This document describes the use of the beachmat API for storing data in R matrices. We will demonstrate the API on numeric matrices, though same semantics are used for matrices of other types (e.g., logical, integer, character). First, we include the relevant header file:
#include "beachmat/numeric_matrix.h"
Three types of output matrices are supported - simple matrix
, *gCMatrix
and HDF5Matrix
objects.
For example, a simple numeric output matrix with nrow
rows and ncol
columns is created by:
// returns a std::unique_ptr<numeric_output> object
auto odptr=beachmat::create_numeric_output(
nrow, /* size_t */
ncol, /* size_t */
oparam /* beachmat::output_param */
);
The beachmat::output_param
class specifies the output matrix representation.
It is simply constructed by passing the class and package names:
beachmat::output_param simple_param;
beachmat::output_param simple_param2("matrix", "base"); /* default */
beachmat::output_param sparse_param("dgCMatrix", "Matrix");
Other class/package combinations can be handled by external linkage if available.
Otherwise, the output_param
constructor will default to an ordinary matrix.
Another option is to allow the function to dynamically choose the output type to match that of an existing matrix. This is useful for automatically choosing an output format that reflects the choice of input format. For example, if data are supplied to a function in a simple matrix, it would be reasonable to expect that the output is similarly small enough to be stored as a simple matrix. On the other hand, if the input is file-backed, it suggests that the output may also be very large and thus require file-backed storage.
Dynamic choice of output type is performed by using the Rcpp::Robject
object containing the input matrix to initialize the output_param
object.
If we have a matrix object dmat
, the output type can be matched to the input type with:
beachmat::output_param oparam(dmat /* Rcpp::RObject */);
auto odptr=beachmat::create_numeric_output(nrow, ncol, oparam);
A similar process can be used for a pointer dptr
to an existing *_matrix
instance:
beachmat::output_param oparam(dptr->get_class(), dptr->get_package());
The set_col()
method fills column c
with elements pointed to by an iterator out
to a Rcpp vector.
c
should be a zero-indexed integer in [0, ncol)
, and there should be at least nrow
accessible elements, i.e., *out
and *(out+nrow-1)
should be valid entries.
odptr->set_col(
c, /* size_t */
out /* Rcpp::Vector::iterator */
);
out
can be an iterator to a Rcpp::NumericVector
, Rcpp::LogicalVector
or Rcpp::IntegerVector
; type conversions will occur as expected to the type of the output matrix.
No value is returned by this method.
set_col()
can also be used with first
and last
arguments.
This will fill column c
from rows first
to last-1
with the entries from *out
to *(out+last-first-1)
, respectively.
Both first
and last
should be in [0, nrow]
and zero-indexed, with the additional requirement that last >= first
.
odptr->set_col(
c, /* size_t */
out, /* Rcpp::Vector::iterator */
first, /* size_t */
last /* size_t */
);
The set_col_indexed()
method fills column c
with the vector of elements starting at iterator val
at a vector of row indices starting at idx
.
Row indices can be unordered and duplicated1 But obviously they should be zero-indexed.; later entries will override earlier ones.
Note that no check is performed for the sanity of the row indices.
odptr->set_col_indexed(
c, /* size_t */
N, /* size_t */
idx, /* Rcpp::IntegerVector::iterator */
valm /* Rcpp::Vector::iterator */
);
The set_row()
method fills row r
with elements pointed to by an iterator out
to a Rcpp vector.
r
should be a zero-indexed integer in [0, nrow)
, and there should be at least nrow
accessible elements, i.e., *out
and *(out+nrow-1)
should be valid entries.
No value is returned.
odptr->set_row(
r, /* size_t */
out /* Rcpp::Vector::iterator */
);
Filling of a range of the row can be achieved with the first
and last
arguments.
This will fill row r
from columns first
to last-1
with entries from *out
to *(out+last-first-1)
, respectively.
Both first
and last
should be in [0, ncol]
and zero-indexed, with the additional requirement that last >= first
.
odptr->set_row(
r, /* size_t */
out, /* Rcpp::Vector::iterator */
first, /* size_t */
last /* size_t */
);
The set_row_indexed()
method fills row r
with the vector of elements starting at iterator val
at a vector of column indices starting at idx
.
Column indices can be unordered and duplicated2 And again, zero-indexed.; later entries will override earlier ones.
Note that no check is performed for the sanity of the column indices.
odptr->set_row_indexed(
r, /* size_t */
N, /* size_t */
idx, /* Rcpp::IntegerVector::iterator */
val, /* Rcpp::Vector::iterator */
);
The set()
method fills the matrix entry at row r
and column c
with the double-precision value Y
.
Both r
and c
should be zero-indexed integers in [0, nrow)
and [0, ncol)
respectively.
No value is returned by this method.
odptr->set(
r, /* size_t */
c, /* size_t */
Y /* double */
)
The yield()
method returns a Rcpp::RObject
object containing a matrix to pass to R.
Rcpp::RObject out = odptr->yield();
This is commonly used at the end of the function to return a matrix to R:
return dptr->yield();
Note that this operation may involve an R-level memory allocation, which may subsequently trigger garbage collection.
This is usually not a concern as Rcpp is excellent at protecting against unintended collection of objects.
However, one exception is that of random number generation, where the destruction of the Rcpp::RNGScope
may trigger a collection of unprotected SEXP
s.
This will almost always be the case when using yield()
naively, as the construction of the matrix SEXP
is done at the end of the function:
// Possible segfault:
extern "C" SEXP dummy1 () {
auto odptr=beachmat::create_numeric_output(nrow, ncol,
beachmat::output_param());
Rcpp::RNGScope rng;
// Do something with random numbers and store in odptr.
return odptr->yield();
}
One solution is to restrict the scope of the Rcpp::RNGScope
.
This ensures that there are no unprotected SEXP
objects upon destruction of the RNGScope
, as yield()
has not yet been called.
extern "C" SEXP dummy2 () {
auto odptr=beachmat::create_numeric_output(nrow, ncol,
beachmat::output_param());
{
Rcpp::RNGScope rng;
// Do something with random numbers and store in odptr.
}
return odptr->yield();
}
A subset of the access methods are also implemented for *_output
objects:
get_nrow()
and get_ncol()
get_row()
, get_col()
and get()
get_class()
, get_package()
and clone()
.These methods behave as described previously for *_matrix
objects.
They may be useful in situations where data are stored in an intermediate matrix and need to be queried before the matrix is fully filled.
In most applications, though, it is possible to fully fill the output matrix, call yield()
and then create a numeric_matrix
from the resulting Rcpp::RObject
.
This is often faster because certain optimizations become possible when beachmat knows that the supplied matrix is read-only
(for example, get_const_col()
and get_const_col_indexed()
).
Logical, integer and character output matrices are supported by changing the types in the creator function (and its variants):
// returns a std::unique_ptr<integer_output>
auto oimat=beachmat::create_integer_output(nrow, ncol, beachmat::output_param());
// returns a std::unique_ptr<logical_output>
auto olmat=beachmat::create_logical_output(nrow, ncol, beachmat::output_param());
// returns a std::unique_ptr<character_output>
auto ocmat=beachmat::create_character_output(nrow, ncol, beachmat::output_param());
For integer, logical and numeric matrices, out
can be an iterator for any Rcpp::NumericVector
, Rcpp::IntegerVector
or Rcpp::LogicalVector
objects.
For integer and logical matrices, Y
should be an integer.
For character matrices, out
should be of type Rcpp::StringVector::iterator
and Y
should be a Rcpp::String
object.
Additional notes
Rcpp::LogicalVector::iterator
as out
when storing data in a logical_output
.
This is because type conversion at the C++ level will not give the same results as conversion at the R level.The API is not thread-safe, due to (i) the use of cached class members and (ii) the potential for race conditions when writing to the same location on disk/memory.
The first issue can be solved by using clone()
to create *_output
copies for use in each thread3 Excepting HDF5 matrices, see comments here..
However, each copy may still read from and write to the same disk/memory location.
Furthermore, even if each copy writes to different rows or columns, they are not guaranteed to affect different parts of memory.
(Storage of rows of a sparse matrix, for example, is dependent on the nature of previous rows.)
It is thus the responsibility of the calling function to ensure that access is locked and unlocked appropriately across multiple threads, e.g., via #pragma omp critical
.