[Bioperl-l] fastq splitter - working but not before xmas!!

Fields, Christopher J cjfields at illinois.edu
Thu May 24 19:05:40 UTC 2012


Sean,

I have been working on a XS-based interface that basically just returns hashrefs, this uses Heng Li's kseq.h library.  I can probably push this out to CPAN sometime in the next week or so.  I did some initial (very rough) benchmarks and when using a simple count it parsed 30M reads in about 25-30 seconds.

chris

On May 16, 2012, at 1:05 PM, Sean O'Keeffe wrote:

> So now I've got a bunch of fastq's all about 17GB in size. The script is
> puttering away but this is tediously slow.
> I tried the the fastq-dump tool from sra toolkit but it didn't like my
> commands (fastq-dump --split-files <input_fastq_file> ) - my ignorance no
> doubt.
> 
> Any ideas out there on speeding up Bio::SeqIO::fastq output?
> Thanks.
> 
> On 1 March 2012 03:16, Joel Martin <j_martin at lbl.gov> wrote:
> 
>> Just a caution to double check that the read1 and read2 names match after
>> splitting.  I don't know if this thread jinxed me or what, but I just for
>> the first time received a concatenated fastq file formatted as you
>> describe, except the first read1 doesn't match the first read2.  zut alores!
>> 
>> came up with converting to scarf, /usr/bin/sort the scarf, then read that
>> with tossing into single or paired files and reconverting to fastq in the
>> process.  it wasn't too bad, but I don't think bioperl has a scarf
>> conversion, it's basically fastq with : substituted for \n.  most
>> delimeters that aren't : would work better but i already had a fastq2scarf
>> from early solexa days ( i think ).
>> 
>> # this was the last step, if it's handy for this plague of hideous files,
>> the fixed fields for : would need adjusting
>> use strict;
>> 
>> open( my $oph, '>', 'paired.fq' ) or die $!;
>> open( my $osh, '>', 'single.fq' ) or die $!;
>> 
>> my ( $pend, $pname, $pline );
>> 
>> while ( <>) {
>>  my ( $name, $end ) = /^(\S+)\s(\d)/;
>> 
>>  if ( $end == 1 ) {
>>    if ( $pend ) {
>>      print_reads( $osh, $pline );
>>    }
>>    $pend = $end;
>>    $pname = $name;
>>    $pline = $_;
>>  }
>>  elsif ( $end == 2 ) {
>>    my $fh = $pend == 1 && $pname eq $name ? $oph : $osh;
>>    print_reads( $fh, $pline, $_ );
>>    $pend = '';
>>  }
>>  else {
>>    die "ERROR: can't interpret line $. $_";
>>  }
>> }
>> sub print_reads {
>>  my ( $fh, @reads ) = @_;
>>  for my $scarf ( @reads ) {
>>    my @stuff = split /:/,$scarf,12;
>>    print $fh '@',join(':', at stuff[0..9]),"\n$stuff[10]\n+\n$stuff[11]";
>>  }
>> }
>> 
>> Joel
>> 
>> On Wed, Feb 29, 2012 at 11:52 AM, George Hartzell <hartzell at alerce.com>wrote:
>> 
>>> Fields, Christopher J writes:
>>>> Just want to say, if you can set up a local perl and local::lib it
>>>> makes your life a LOT easier.  Particularly if you are running jobs
>>>> on older versions of RHEL, which notoriously stuck with
>>>> outdated/broken versions of perl (as well as other tools).
>>>> [...]
>>> 
>>> And Perlbrew takes away your last excuse for not building perls and
>>> setting up local::lib's.
>>> 
>>> http://perlbrew.pl/
>>> 
>>> g.
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> Bioperl-l mailing list
>>> Bioperl-l at lists.open-bio.org
>>> http://lists.open-bio.org/mailman/listinfo/bioperl-l
>>> 
>> 
>> 
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