[Bioperl-l] Bio::PopGen modules performance
Albert Vilella
avilella at gmail.com
Tue Nov 8 08:11:50 EST 2005
El dt 08 de 11 del 2005 a les 08:05 -0500, en/na Kevin Thornton va
escriure:
> That is possible. Although, like bioperl, the actual programs that
> people may need/want do not exist yet. The examples/ subdirectory in
> the libsequence source package contains two example programs, ms--
> and msbeta. The former is a basic simulation with recombination, and
> the latter a simulation with recombination where the shape of the
> genetic map on the sequence is described by a Beta(a,b) density
> sitting on top of the sequence. For both programs, the demographic
> model is the standard continuous approximation of a large Wright-
> Fisher population. One thing that would be quite quick to do is to
> document those a little better at the top of their source files.
Yes, that sounds good. If you want I can open a bugzilla ticket with the
generic subject "libsequence wrapper" and then add this first
approximation as a first item to achieve.
Bests,
Albert.
>
> --Kevin
> On Nov 8, 2005, at 1:43 AM, Albert Vilella wrote:
>
> > I would say that one way to have a Bioperl wrapper would be to have a
> > document in libsequence explaining how to call each binaries, with
> > which
> > options. For example:
> >
> > ms-like-binary --option1 <accepted-values>
> > --option2 <accepted-values>
> > --option3 <accepted-values>
> > [...]
> >
> > does-something-cool-binary --option1 <accepted-values>
> > --option2 <accepted-values>
> > [...]
> >
> > or with config files, along the lines of programs like PAML .ctl
> > files.
> >
> > This is definitively a fantastic wrapper to implement,
> >
> > Cheers,
> >
> > Albert.
> >
> >> This thread brings up something I've been meaning to post to this
> >> list for a while now. Recent versions of libsequence now contain
> >> definitions for all the data types and functions necessary to do
> >> coalescent simulations with recombination. The efficiency is quite
> >> good, easily on par with "ms", with a few extra nuts and bolts thrown
> >> in there that can lead to improved efficiency over ms. Also, the
> >> resulting data structure (i.e. the ancestral recombination graph),
> >> can be accessed directly, and/or mutations can be thrown down on
> >> them, and objects are returned that are compatible with the summary-
> >> statistic calculation factories already in the library.
> >>
> >> Here's where bioperl may come in. I have attempted to create a
> >> python wrapper for the library (using boost::python), with the
> >> ultimate goal of mentioning or submitting it to biopython.
> >> Unfortunately, there appears to be some limitations to boost::python
> >> that will prevent a full python interface to libsequence from
> >> appearing any time soon. However, the code is all there for someone
> >> who's motivated to provide perl wrappers. It is my understanding
> >> that a direct perl interface to a C++ API is not possible, or at
> >> least not easy. If I'm wrong here, I'd be interested in hearing more
> >> about it. However, some basic binaries could be provided which perl
> >> could call. While this would be a pain in that it wouldn't be self-
> >> contained perl, it would be quite fast, and potentially quite
> >> flexible.
> >
> >> If this sounds interesting to anybody, I'd be willing to discuss this
> >> further.
> >>
> >> --Kevin
> >> _________________________
> >> Kevin Thornton
> >> Molecular Biology and Genetics
> >> Cornell University
> >> http://www.molpopgen.org
>
> _________________________
> Kevin Thornton
> Molecular Biology and Genetics
> Cornell University
> http://www.molpopgen.org
>
>
More information about the Bioperl-l
mailing list