Global settings
nctoolkit let’s you set global settings using options.
Setting the number of cores in use
If you are working with ensembles, you will probably to change the number of cores used for processing multiple files. For example, you can process multiple files in parallel using 6 cores as follows.
nc.options(cores = 6)
Setting the temporary directory to use
By default nctoolkit uses the OS’s temporary directories when it needs to create temporary files. In most cases this is optimal. Most of the time reading and writing to temporary folders is faster. However, in some cases this may not be a good idea because you may not have enough space in the temporary folder. In this case you can change the directory used for saving temporary files as follows:
nc.options(temp_dir = "/foo")
Turning progress bars on or off
By default, nctoolkit will display a progress bar when it thinks a process will take a long time for a multi-file dataset. If you always want a progress bar to display when calculations are being carried out on multi-file datasets, regardless of their size, you can do the following:
nc.options(progress = 'on')
If you find the progress bar annoying or distracting, you can just do this:
nc.options(progress = 'off')
Switching off lazy evaluation
By default evaluation in nctoolkit is lazy, so things are only evaluated when they have to be. If you want things to be evaluated each time a method is used, you can do this:
nc.options(lazy = False)
Setting global settings using a configuration file
You may want to set some global settings either permanently or on a project level. You can do this by setting up a configruation file. This should be a plain text file called .nctoolkitrc or nctoolkitrc. It should be placed in one of two locations: your working directory or your home directory. When nctoolkit is imported, it will look first in your working directory and then in your home directory for a file called .nctoolkitrc or nctoolkitrc. It will then use the first it finds to change the global settings from the defaults.
The structure of this file is straightforward. For example, if you wanted to set evaluation to lazy and the number of cores used for processing multi-file datasets, you would the following in your configuration file:
lazy : True
cores : 6
The files roughly follow Python dictionary syntax, with the setting and value separate by :. Note that unless the setting is specified in the file, the defaults will be used. If you do not provide a configuration file, nctoolkit will use the default settings.