The software in this directory generates the PhysioBank Index. On the master PhysioNet server, the script make-pbi is run nightly; if any of the constituent data collections have been updated more recently than the Index, the corresponding segments of the Index are regenerated using pbindex and the Index is re-assembled by make-pbi from its segments.
pbindex accepts a list of record names from its standard input, generates index entries for them based on the contents of their .hea (header) and annotation files, and writes those entries to the standard output.
For correct operation of the PhysioBank Record Search software, the sequence of record names in the PhysioBank Index must be kept in (C locale) sorted order. make-pbi ensures that the record names are supplied to pbindex in the correct order.
The aftypes and sigtypes files are read at run time by pbindex; they provide up-to-date maps of annotator and signal names to annotator and signal classes. For example, the signal class ECG includes signals with a variety of (lead) names, such as I, II, III, aVR, aVF, etc. These maps are updated as data collections that include new signal and annotator names are added to PhysioBank.
This package of software can be downloaded as a tarball, or as individual files (below).
Name Last modified Size Description
Parent Directory - Makefile 13-Mar-2012 20:48 620 'make' description file to automate installation local.css 02-Oct-2015 23:29 3.1K C# source file make-pbi 24-May-2013 20:29 3.0K script run nightly to keep PhysioBank Index up-to-date pbindex 10-Dec-2014 20:48 21K pbindex.c 10-Dec-2014 20:44 19K reads record names and writes index entries
If you would like help understanding, using, or downloading content, please see our Frequently Asked Questions. If you have any comments, feedback, or particular questions regarding this page, please send them to the webmaster. Comments and issues can also be raised on PhysioNet's GitHub page. Updated Friday, 28-Oct-2016 22:58:42 CEST |
PhysioNet is supported by the National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS) and the National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering (NIBIB) under NIH grant number 2R01GM104987-09.
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