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Using UTF-8 Encoding in HDF5 Applications

Introduction

Text and character data are often discussed as though text means ASCII text. We even go so far as to call a file containing only ASCII text a plain text file. This works reasonably well for English (though better for American English than British English), but what if that plain text file is in French, German, Chinese, or any of several hundred other languages? This document introduces the use of UTF-8 encoding (see note 1), enabling the use of a much more extensive and flexible character set that can faithfully represent any of those languages.

This document assumes a working familiarity with UTF-8 and Unicode. Any reader who is unfamiliar with UTF-8 encoding should read the Wikipedia UTF-8 article (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UTF-8) before proceeding; it provides an excellent primer.

For our context, the most important UTF-8 concepts are:

More specific technical details will only become important if they affect the specifics of your application design or implementation.

How and Where Is UTF-8 Supported in HDF5?

HDF5 uses characters in object names (which are actually link names, but that’s a story for a different article), dataset raw data, attribute names, and attribute raw data. Though the mechanisms differ, you can use either ASCII or UTF-8 character sets in all of these situations.

Object and Attribute Names

By default, HDF5 creates object and attribute names with ASCII character encoding. An object or attribute creation property list setting is required to create object names with UTF-8 characters. This uses the function H5Pset_char_encoding, which sets the character encoding used for object and attribute names.

For example, the following call sequence could be used to create a dataset with its name encoded with the UTF-8 character set:

    lcpl_id =    H5Pcreate(H5P_LINK_CREATE) ;
    error =      H5Pset_char_encoding(lcpl_id, H5T_CSET_UTF8) ;
    dataset_id = H5Dcreate2(group_id, "datos_ñ", datatype_id, dataspace_id, 
                 lcpl_id, H5P_DEFAULT, H5P_DEFAULT) ;               

If the character encoding of an attribute name is unknown, the combination of an H5Aget_create_plist call and an H5Pget_char_encoding call will reveal that information. If the character encoding of an object name is unknown, the information can be accessed through the object’s H5L_info_t structure which can be obtained using H5Lvisit or H5Lget_info_by_idx calls.

Character Datatypes in Datasets and Attributes

Like object names, HDF5 character data in datasets and attributes is encoded as ASCII by default. Setting up attribute or dataset character data to be UTF-8-encoded is accomplished while defining the attribute or dataset datatype. This makes use of the function H5Tset_cset, which sets the character encoding to be used in building a character datatype.

For example, the following commands could be used to create an 8-character, UTF-8 encoded, string datatype for use in either an attribute or dataset:

    datatype_id = H5Tcopy(H5T_C_S1) ;
    error =       H5Tset_cset(datatype_id, H5T_CSET_UTF8) ;
    error =       H5Tset_size(datatype_id, "8") ;                   

If a character or string datatype’s character encoding is unknown, the combination of an H5Aget_type or H5Dget_type call and an H5Tget_cset call can be used to determine that.

Caveats, Pitfalls, and Things to Watch For

Programmers who are accustomed to using ASCII text without accommodating other text encodings will have to be aware of certain common issues as they begin using UTF-8 encodings.

Cross-platform Portability

Since the HDF5 Library handles datatypes directly, UTF-8 encoded text in dataset and attribute datatypes in a well-designed HDF5 application and file should work transparently across platforms. The same should be true of handling names of groups, datasets, committed datatypes, and attributes within a file.

Be aware, however, of system or application limitations once data or other information has been extracted from an HDF5 file. The application or system must be designed to accommodate UTF-8 encodings if the information is then used elsewhere in the application or system environment.

Data from a UTF-8 encoded HDF5 datatype, in either a dataset or an attribute, that has been established within an HDF5 application should “just work” within the HDF5 portions of the application.

Filenames

Since file access is a system issue, filenames do not fall within the scope of HDF5’s UTF-8 capabilities; filenames are encoded at the system level.

Linux and Mac OS systems normally handle UTF-8 encoded filenames correctly while Windows systems generally do not.

The Plain Text Illusion

Beware the use of the term plain text. Plain text is at best ambiguous, but often misleading. Many will assume that plain text means ASCII, but plain text German or French, for example, cannot be represented in ASCII. Plain text is only unambiguous in the context of English (and even then can be problematic!).

Storage Size

Programmers and data users accustomed to working strictly with ASCII data generally make the reasonable assumption that 1 character, be it in an object name or in data, requires 1 byte of storage. This equation does not work when using UTF-8 or any other Unicode encoding. With Unicode encoding, number of characters is not synonymous with number of bytes. One must get used to thinking in terms of number of characters when talking about content, reserving number of bytes for discussions of storage size.

When working with Unicode text, one can no longer assume a 1:1 correspondence between the number of characters and the data storage requirement.

System Dependencies

Linux, Unix, and similar systems generally handle UTF-8 encodings in correct and predictable ways. There is an apparent consensus in the Linux community that “UTF-8 is just the right way to go.”

Mac OS systems generally handle UTF-8 encodings correctly.

Windows systems use a different Unicode encoding, UCS-2 (discussed in this UTF-16 article) at the system level. Within an HDF5 file and application on a Windows system, UTF-8 encoding should work correctly and as expected. Problems may arise, however, when that UTF-8 encoding is exposed directly to the Windows system. For example:

Common Characters in UTF-8 and ASCII

One interesting feature of UTF-8 and ASCII is that the ASCII character set is a discrete subset of the UTF-8 character set. And where they overlap, the encodings are identical. This means that a character string consisting entirely of members of the ASCII character set can be encoded in either ASCII or UTF-8, the two encodings will be indistinguishable, and the encodings will require exactly the same storage space.

See Also

For object and attribute names:
H5Pset_char_encoding
H5Pget_char_encoding
For dataset and attribute datatypes:
H5Tset_cset
H5Tget_cset
 
UTF-8 article on Wikipedia


Notes
1.  UTF-8 is the only Unicode standard encoding supported in HDF5.



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Describes HDF5 Release 1.8.18, November 2016.
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