Hi KB,

I imagine you will need a mix of generated and manually typed code to
generate the ArrowSchema from the definition and recipe to build the
ArrowArray from an instance, perhaps starting with well-tested
manually typed code that you replace with generated code as patterns
appear.

I think nanoarrow is appropriate for what you are trying to do...it
provides a "straightforward" (in terms of packaging complexity) path
to wrapping your generator functions in Rust and Python. We haven't
done a great job of documenting how to do that with examples but feel
free to ask here or open an issue in apache/arrow-nanoarrow asking for
help until we do.

Cheers!

-dewey

On Tue, Mar 5, 2024 at 11:14 PM kekronbekron
<[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Hi Dewey,
>
> Thank you for taking the time.
> My goal is to convert from a variety of big C data structures like this to 
> equivalent Arrow spec/schema.
> Then, I would like to store them (RecordBatches) to parquet or any other 
> relevant type.
> The CSV or JSON output from the example C program (smf84fmt) doesn't matter; 
> just wanted to point to the sample data format as in the header file.
>
> I had tried bindgen to create Rust definitions from the header files, but it 
> gets complicated real fast... more than I can comprehend at least.
>
> The types get crazier too, with singly linked lists (not there in the linked 
> example, but in other types), etc.
>
> Would *really* like to solve this in a systemtic way, without needing to hand 
> code the Arrow schema...
> Because the C header files are maintained (by a provider), it would work out 
> best if it's possible to create a conversion script, and then use the Arrow 
> schema in Python/Rust/etc.
>
> -KB
>
> On Wednesday, March 6th, 2024 at 07:59, Dewey Dunnington via user 
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > Hi KB,
> >
> > There might be some other approaches I'm not aware of; however, I had
> > some fun with Python's cffi package to generate some (untested)
> > nanoarrow code based on the struct definitions [1]. If all you need
> > are the types in Python or some other higher-level language (e.g., to
> > read one of the CSV or JSON files generated by the tool you linked),
> > you could generate Python code instead.
> >
> > I hope that's helpful!
> >
> > -dewey
> >
> > [1] https://gist.github.com/paleolimbot/e1667a57f837e4db7e973b9677e33ddb
> >
> > On Sun, Mar 3, 2024 at 10:08 PM kekronbekron
> > [email protected] wrote:
> >
> > > Hello,
> > >
> > > Say I have a whole bunch of fully typed (with unions and all) data 
> > > structures like the one here - 
> > > https://github.com/IBM/IBM-Z-zOS/blob/main/SMF-Tools/SMF84Formatter/smf84fmt.h.
> > > Say I'm parsing bytes with such a header...is it possible to then use 
> > > Arrow's C data interface (or maybe nanoarrow) to painlessly convert such 
> > > a struct to Arrow type(s)?
> > >
> > > - KB

Reply via email to