The Arrow C stream interface¶
The C stream interface builds on the structures defined in the C data interface and combines them into a higher-level specification so as to ease the communication of streaming data within a single process.
Semantics¶
An Arrow C stream exposes a streaming source of data chunks, each with the same schema. Chunks are obtained by calling a blocking pull-style iteration function.
Structure definition¶
The C stream interface is defined by a single struct
definition:
#ifndef ARROW_C_STREAM_INTERFACE
#define ARROW_C_STREAM_INTERFACE
struct ArrowArrayStream {
// Callbacks providing stream functionality
int (*get_schema)(struct ArrowArrayStream*, struct ArrowSchema* out);
int (*get_next)(struct ArrowArrayStream*, struct ArrowArray* out);
const char* (*get_last_error)(struct ArrowArrayStream*);
// Release callback
void (*release)(struct ArrowArrayStream*);
// Opaque producer-specific data
void* private_data;
};
#endif // ARROW_C_STREAM_INTERFACE
Note
The canonical guard ARROW_C_STREAM_INTERFACE
is meant to avoid
duplicate definitions if two projects copy the C data interface
definitions in their own headers, and a third-party project
includes from these two projects. It is therefore important that
this guard is kept exactly as-is when these definitions are copied.
The ArrowArrayStream structure¶
The ArrowArrayStream
provides the required callbacks to interact with a
streaming source of Arrow arrays. It has the following fields:
-
int (*ArrowArrayStream.get_schema)(struct ArrowArrayStream*, struct ArrowSchema *out)¶
Mandatory. This callback allows the consumer to query the schema of the chunks of data in the stream. The schema is the same for all data chunks.
This callback must NOT be called on a released
ArrowArrayStream
.Return value: 0 on success, a non-zero error code otherwise.
-
int (*ArrowArrayStream.get_next)(struct ArrowArrayStream*, struct ArrowArray *out)¶
Mandatory. This callback allows the consumer to get the next chunk of data in the stream.
This callback must NOT be called on a released
ArrowArrayStream
.Return value: 0 on success, a non-zero error code otherwise.
On success, the consumer must check whether the
ArrowArray
is marked released. If theArrowArray
is released, then the end of stream has been reached. Otherwise, theArrowArray
contains a valid data chunk.
-
const char *(*ArrowArrayStream.get_last_error)(struct ArrowArrayStream*)¶
Mandatory. This callback allows the consumer to get a textual description of the last error.
This callback must ONLY be called if the last operation on the
ArrowArrayStream
returned an error. It must NOT be called on a releasedArrowArrayStream
.Return value: a pointer to a NULL-terminated character string (UTF8-encoded). NULL can also be returned if no detailed description is available.
The returned pointer is only guaranteed to be valid until the next call of one of the stream’s callbacks. The character string it points to should be copied to consumer-managed storage if it is intended to survive longer.
-
void (*ArrowArrayStream.release)(struct ArrowArrayStream*)¶
Mandatory. A pointer to a producer-provided release callback.
-
void *ArrowArrayStream.private_data¶
Optional. An opaque pointer to producer-provided private data.
Consumers MUST not process this member. Lifetime of this member is handled by the producer, and especially by the release callback.
Error codes¶
The get_schema
and get_next
callbacks may return an error under the form
of a non-zero integer code. Such error codes should be interpreted like
errno
numbers (as defined by the local platform). Note that the symbolic
forms of these constants are stable from platform to platform, but their numeric
values are platform-specific.
In particular, it is recommended to recognize the following values:
EINVAL
: for a parameter or input validation errorENOMEM
: for a memory allocation failure (out of memory)EIO
: for a generic input/output error
Result lifetimes¶
The data returned by the get_schema
and get_next
callbacks must be
released independently. Their lifetimes are not tied to that of the
ArrowArrayStream
.
Stream lifetime¶
Lifetime of the C stream is managed using a release callback with similar usage as in the C data interface.
Thread safety¶
The stream source is not assumed to be thread-safe. Consumers wanting to
call get_next
from several threads should ensure those calls are
serialized.
C consumer example¶
Let’s say a particular database provides the following C API to execute a SQL query and return the result set as a Arrow C stream:
void MyDB_Query(const char* query, struct ArrowArrayStream* result_set);
Then a consumer could use the following code to iterate over the results:
static void handle_error(int errcode, struct ArrowArrayStream* stream) {
// Print stream error
const char* errdesc = stream->get_last_error(stream);
if (errdesc != NULL) {
fputs(errdesc, stderr);
} else {
fputs(strerror(errcode), stderr);
}
// Release stream and abort
stream->release(stream),
exit(1);
}
void run_query() {
struct ArrowArrayStream stream;
struct ArrowSchema schema;
struct ArrowArray chunk;
int errcode;
MyDB_Query("SELECT * FROM my_table", &stream);
// Query result set schema
errcode = stream.get_schema(&stream, &schema);
if (errcode != 0) {
handle_error(errcode, &stream);
}
int64_t num_rows = 0;
// Iterate over results: loop until error or end of stream
while ((errcode = stream.get_next(&stream, &chunk) == 0) &&
chunk.release != NULL) {
// Do something with chunk...
fprintf(stderr, "Result chunk: got %lld rows\n", chunk.length);
num_rows += chunk.length;
// Release chunk
chunk.release(&chunk);
}
// Was it an error?
if (errcode != 0) {
handle_error(errcode, &stream);
}
fprintf(stderr, "Result stream ended: total %lld rows\n", num_rows);
// Release schema and stream
schema.release(&schema);
stream.release(&stream);
}