Importing/exporting data#

This section of the user guide covers importing/exporting data to the Virtual Data Lake (VDL) using crandas. Users can upload existing pandas DataFrames, create new crandas CDataFrames, or upload CSV files. Access tables via handle or name and use CDataFrame.open() for aggregated information.

Upload pandas Dataframe#

If you have an existing data in a pandas DataFrame that you want to upload to the VDL, you can use the crandas.upload_pandas_dataframe() function. This function takes a pandas DataFrame as its parameter and uploads it to the VDL. You can also optionally specify a name for the table.

For example, let’s say you have a pandas DataFrame called my_data that you want to upload to the VDL:

import crandas as cd
import pandas as pd

my_data = pd.DataFrame({"fruit": ["orange", "apple", "raspberry"]})
uploaded_data = cd.upload_pandas_dataframe(my_data)

This will upload my_data to the VDL and return a CDataFrame object that you can use to interact with the uploaded data. A CDataFrame behaves similarly to a pandas DataFrame, however it is stored in secret-shared form in the VDL.

The advantage of this approach is that it enables users to read any file type that is accepted by pandas by first utilizing pandas, followed by crandas.

Create new crandas CDataFrame#

Alternatively, if you want to create a new crandas CDataFrame from scratch, you can use the crandas.DataFrame() function. This function calls the pandas DataFrame constructor and uploads the resulting table using upload_pandas_dataframe(). If you specify a name for the table, it will be passed on to upload_pandas_dataframe().

Note

When uploading data with missing values, it is important to specify certain additional data. For more information look here.

For example, let’s say you want to create a brand new CDataFrame called my_table with columns A, B, and C.

my_table = cd.DataFrame({
    "A": [1, 2, 3],
    "B": [4, 5, 6],
    "C": [7, 8, 9]
}, name="my_table")

This will create a new CDataFrame called my_table with the columns that we specified and upload it to the Virtual Data Lake. You can now use the my_table object to interact with the uploaded data.

Handles and names#

State objects, such as tables, now have two distinct identifiers: handles and names.

  • Handles are randomly generated 32-byte strings, usually encoded as 64 hexadecimal digits. Each table has a unique handle that remains fixed (e.g. 6E14C5275C5E90E31D84FCE0CE5F6D3D1BFE587C21D2278C52D4A092C4AB19F7).

  • Names are a user-friendly way to refer to handles and therefore tables. Handles are generated by the VDL and will always be unique but names are assigned by a user. If a table is given a name already assigned to a different table, the old table will lose its name but will still be accessible by its handle.

When uploading a new table with an existing name, the server reassigns the name to the new table, and the old name-handle mapping is lost. This is in contrast to handles, which always remain unique for each table.

To upload a table with a name, use the following syntax:

cdf = cd.upload_pandas_dataframe(df, name="input")

The name will then be assigned.

Upload CSV file to the VDL#

To upload a CSV file to the VDL, you can utilize the crandas.read_csv() function. This function accepts the name of the CSV file as its parameter and facilitates its upload to the server. In addition, users may opt to specify a name for the resulting table.

To upload a file called my_data.csv to the VDL, we simply need to do this:

uploaded_data = cd.read_csv("my_data.csv")

This will upload my_data.csv to the VDL and return a CDataFrame object that you can use to interact with the uploaded data. Note that for this to work, the file must be in the current directory, otherwise we must specify the path to it.

Access an uploaded table#

Any table that has been uploaded to the VDL can be referenced by its handle, a hexadecimal string of characters. Optionally, tables can also have a name attached to them. It is often better to assign a name instead of using the handle for practical reasons. To access a table, we use the crandas.get_table() function. This function takes the table’s handle/name as its parameter and returns a CDataFrame.

If you (or someone you are collaborating with) have previously uploaded a table with the name my_table, you can access it by name or handle:

# Using the name
my_table = cd.get_table("my_table")

# Using the handle
my_table = cd.get_table("63FE905BB6DF9AD2E7D32DD092C75B1FC2CEB52BDBC4AEAB7AAEF14DBFCB6224")

This will return the CDataFrame object for my_table, which you can then perform operations on.

How to open CDataFrames#

After performing a a computation, you will want to access the resulting data. The CDataFrame.open() method allows you to retrieve a CDataFrame and open it. This downloads the open data, exposing it and not making it private. In general, opening CDataFrames is not allowed. In non-demo environments, there will be strict controls over which CDataFrames can be opened.

Warning

An attempt to use .open() in a production environment will be met with an error.

Given a CDataFrame we can retrieve it using CDataFrame.open() which will output a pandas DataFrame.

# create the CDataFrame
df = cd.DataFrame({'A': [1, 2], 'B': [3, 4]})
# open the CDataFrame
opened_df = df.open()

The opened table opened_df is now a normal pandas DataFrame with data in the clear.

>>> print(opened_df)
   A  B
0  1  3
1  2  4

These are the ways we can import and export data in the VDL.

By using these functions, you can easily upload data to VDL for further privacy-preserving analysis and processing.

Removing objects from the VDL#

After working with data, you might want to delete it from the VDL. This is as simple as calling the StateObject.remove() method.

# You simply remove a CDataFrame using the following command
df.remove()

This will not only get rid of the python CDataFrame used to interact with the table, but also the table in the server.

Now that we know how to add data to the VDL, we can learn how that data is structured so we can start working with it.