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jHDF - Pure Java HDF5 library

jHDF CI Coverage Maven Central Javadocs JetBrains Supported DOI

This project is a pure Java implementation for accessing HDF5 files. It is written from the file format specification and is not using any HDF Group code, it is not a wrapper around the C libraries. The file format specification is available from the HDF Group here. More information on the format is available on Wikipedia. I presented a webinar about jHDF for the HDF Group which is available on YouTube the example code used and slides can be found here.

The intention is to make a clean Java API to access HDF5 data. Currently, the project is targeting HDF5 read-only compatibility. For progress see the change log. Java 8, 11, 17 and 21 are officially supported.

Here is an example of reading a dataset with jHDF (see ReadDataset.java)

try (HdfFile hdfFile = new HdfFile(Paths.get("/path/to/file.hdf5"))) {
	Dataset dataset = hdfFile.getDatasetByPath("/path/to/dataset");
	// data will be a Java array with the dimensions of the HDF5 dataset
	Object data = dataset.getData();
}

For an example of traversing the tree inside a HDF5 file see PrintTree.java. For more examples see package io.jhdf.examples

Why should I use jHDF?

  • Easy integration with JVM based projects. The library is available on Maven Central, and GitHub Packages, so using it should be as easy as adding any other dependency. To use the libraries supplied by the HDF Group you need to load native code, which means you need to handle this in your build, and it complicates distribution of your software on multiple platforms.
  • The API design intends to be familiar to Java programmers, so hopefully it works as you might expect. (If this is not the case, open an issue with suggestions for improvement)
  • No use of JNI, so you avoid all the issues associated with calling native code from the JVM.
  • Fully debug-able you can step fully through the library with a Java debugger.
  • Provides access to datasets ByteBuffers to allow for custom reading logic, or integration with other libraries.
  • Integration with Java logging via SLF4J
  • Performance? Maybe, the library uses Java NIO MappedByteBuffers which should provide fast file access. In addition, when accessing chunked datasets the library is parallelized to take advantage of modern CPUs. jHDF will also allow parallel reading of multiple datasets or multiple files. I have seen cases where jHDF is significantly faster than the C libraries, but as with all performance issues, it is case specific, so you will need to do your own tests on the cases you care about. If you do run tests please post the results so everyone can benefit, here are some results I am aware of:
  • Security - jHDF is pure Java and therefore benefits from the memory safety provided by the JVM. The HDF5 Group library is written using non-memory safe languages, therefore susceptible to memory related security bugs.

Why should I not use jHDF?

  • If you want to write HDF5 files. Currently, this is not supported. This will be supported in the future, but full read-only compatibility is currently the goal. If you would be intrested in this please comment on, or react to issue #354.
  • If jHDF does not yet support a feature you need. If this is the case you should receive a UnsupportedHdfException, open an issue and support can be added. For scheduling, the features which will allow the most files to be read are prioritized. If you really want to use a new feature feel free to work on it and open a PR, any help is much appreciated.
  • If you want to read slices of chunked datasets (slicing of contiguous datasets is supported since v0.6.6). This is an excellent feature of HDF5, and one reason why it's suited to large datasets. Support will be added in the future, but currently it is not possible. If you would be interested in this please comment on, or react to issue #52
  • If you want to read datasets larger than can fit in a Java array (i.e. Integer.MAX_VALUE elements). This issue would also be addressed by slicing.

Why did I start jHDF?

Mostly it's a challenge, HDF5 is a fairly complex file format with lots of flexibility, writing a library to access it is interesting. Also, as a widely used file format for storing scientific, engineering, and commercial data, it would seem like a good idea to be able to read HDF5 files with more than one library. In particular JVM languages are among the most widely used so having a native HDF5 implementation seems useful.

Developing jHDF

  • Fork this repository and clone your fork
  • Inside the jhdf directory run ./gradlew build (./gradlew.bat build on Windows) this will run the build and tests fetching dependencies.
  • Import the Gradle project jhdf into your IDE.
  • Make your changes and add tests.
  • Run ./gradlew check to run the build and tests.
  • Once you have made any changes please open a pull request.

To see other available Gradle tasks run ./gradlew tasks

If you have read this far please consider staring this repo. If you are using jHDF in a commercial product please consider making a donation. Thanks!