Structs DSV Format
The XINA Structs DSV format provides a standard delimited text data file format. This is recommended for data files attached to events, and forms the basis for the struct buffer file format.
Files must use the UTF-8 encoding. New lines will be interpretted from either \n
or \r\n
. The conf
object may define other customization of the format:
Key | Value | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
delimiter | string | auto detect (',' , '\t' , ';' ) |
value delimiter |
quote_char | character | " (double quote character) |
value quote character |
ignore_lines | number | auto detect | lines to ignore before UUID |
mode | "row" or "col" |
auto-detect | file row/col format (see below) |
t | "auto" , "iso8601" , "s" , "ms" , or "us" |
"auto" |
time format (see below) |
zone | string | time zone to use if not provided |
The first processed line of the file must contain an appropriately generated 128-bit UUID in the standard 36 character format, followed by a single line containing the column header. Lines may preceed the UUID, but they will be ignored. These can be explicitly ignored with the ignore_lines
parameter. If this is not provided the parser will interpret the first line starting with a 36 character UUID and no other values as the start of the file data.
If the mode
property is "row"
, the file must contain three columns:
Name | Description | Alternate Names |
---|---|---|
t | Unix time or ISO8601 zoned timestamp | time, timestamp |
k | key | key, mn, mnemonic, n, name |
v | value (numeric, empty, or null ) |
val, value |
The header is used to determine the order of the columns.
For example (whitespace added for clarity, not required):
123e4567-e89b-12d3-a456-426614174000
t , mn , v
0 , v_mon , 1
0 , i_mon , 5
1 , t_mon , 100
2 , v_mon , 1.1
2 , i_mon , 4
3 , t_mon ,
4 , v_mon , 1.2
4 , i_mon , 3
5 , t_mon , 101
If mode
is "col"
, the file must first contain a time column, followed by a column for each mnemonic. The column headers must specify the mnemonic name or ID for each column. Unlike row
, null
values must be spelled out explicitly, as empty values will not create a point in the database.
For example, the following is equivalent to the above example (whitespace added for clarity, not required):
123e4567-e89b-12d3-a456-426614174000
t , v_mon , i_mon , t_mon
0 , 1 , 5 ,
1 , , , 100
2 , 1.1 , 4 ,
3 , , , null
4 , 1.2 , 3 ,
5 , , , 101
If the mode
property is not specified, the mode will be determined by the number of columns in the file. If there are exactly 3 columns with names matching the required columns for the "row"
mode, that mode is used; otherwise the file is assumed to use the column mode.
Time Parsing
The mode of time processing is determined by the value for t
in conf
. The auto
mode attempts to interpret the most likely formatting for the timestamp. If the value is an integer or floating point format, it will be interpretted as a Unix timestamp, with precision based on these rules:
- t >
1e16
: error, value above typical range - t >
1e14
: microseconds - t >
1e11
: milliseconds - t >
1e8
: seconds - t <=
1e8
: error, value below typical range
Otherwise it will be interpretted as a zoned ISO8601 timestamp. If t
is set explicitly in the configuration the time will always be interpretted in that context. The ISO timestamp may use the standard format: 2023-05-31T17:55:07.000
or condensed 20230531T175507.000
. If the zone
property provided in the configuration, the timestamps do not require a zone. Otherwise they must include an explicit zone.