nf-core/deepvariant
Please consider using/contributing to https://github.com/nf-core/sarek
22.10.6
.
Learn more.
Usage
Table of contents
- Introduction
- Running the pipeline
- Updating the pipeline
- Reproducibility
- Main arguments
- Reference Genomes
- Exome Data
- Job Resources
- Automatic resubmission
- Custom resource requests
- AWS batch specific parameters
- Other command line parameters
- Memory
General Nextflow info
Nextflow handles job submissions on SLURM or other environments, and supervises running the jobs. Thus the Nextflow process must run until the pipeline is finished. We recommend that you put the process running in the background through screen
/ tmux
or similar tool. Alternatively you can run nextflow within a cluster job submitted your job scheduler.
It is recommended to limit the Nextflow Java virtual machines memory. We recommend adding the following line to your environment (typically in ~/.bashrc
or ~./bash_profile
):
Running the pipeline
The typical command for running the pipeline is as follows:
Note that the pipeline will create the following files in your working directory:
About preprocessing
DeepVariant, in order to run at its fastest, requires some indexed and compressed versions of both the reference genome and the BAM files. With DeepVariant in Nextflow, if you wish, you can only use as an input the fasta and the BAM file and let us do the work for you in a clean and standarized way (standard tools like samtools are used for indexing and every step is run inside of a Docker container).
This is how the list of the needed input files looks like. If these are passed all as input parameters, the preprocessing steps will be skipped.
If you do not have all of them, these are the file you can give as input to the Nextflow pipeline, and the rest will be automatically produced for you .
Updating the pipeline
When you run the above command, Nextflow automatically pulls the pipeline code from GitHub and stores it as a cached version. When running the pipeline after this, it will always use the cached version if available - even if the pipeline has been updated since. To make sure that you’re running the latest version of the pipeline, make sure that you regularly update the cached version of the pipeline:
Reproducibility
It’s a good idea to specify a pipeline version when running the pipeline on your data. This ensures that a specific version of the pipeline code and software are used when you run your pipeline. If you keep using the same tag, you’ll be running the same version of the pipeline, even if there have been changes to the code since.
First, go to the nf-core/deepvariant releases page and find the latest version number - numeric only (eg. 1.3.1
). Then specify this when running the pipeline with -r
(one hyphen) - eg. -r 1.3.1
.
This version number will be logged in reports when you run the pipeline, so that you’ll know what you used when you look back in the future.
Main Arguments
-profile
Use this parameter to choose a configuration profile. Profiles can give configuration presets for different compute environments. Note that multiple profiles can be loaded, for example: -profile standard,docker
- the order of arguments is important!
standard
- The default profile, used if
-profile
is not specified at all. - Runs locally and expects all software to be installed and available on the
PATH
.
- The default profile, used if
docker
- A generic configuration profile to be used with Docker
- Pulls software from dockerhub:
nfcore/deepvariant
singularity
- A generic configuration profile to be used with Singularity
- Pulls software from singularity-hub
conda
awsbatch
- A generic configuration profile to be used with AWS Batch.
test
- A profile with a complete configuration for automated testing
- Includes links to test data so needs no other parameters
test_s3
- A profile for testing the pipeline with files on an s3 bucket
- Other than the
docker
profile no further inputs are required
none
- No configuration at all. Useful if you want to build your own config from scratch and want to avoid loading in the default
base
config profile (not recommended).
- No configuration at all. Useful if you want to build your own config from scratch and want to avoid loading in the default
--bam
Use this to specify the BAM file
OR
--bam_folder
Use this to specify a folder containing BAM files. Allows multiple BAM files to be analyzed at once. All BAM files will be analyzed unless --bame_file_prefix
is used (see below). For example:
! TIP All the input files can be used in s3 buckets too and the s3://path/to/files/in/bucket can be used instead of a local path.
--bam_file_prefix
- In case only some specific files inside the BAM folder should be used as input, a file prefix can be defined by:
--bam_file_prefix
--bed
- Path to bedfile, specifying region to be analysed must also be supplied
Reference Genomes
The pipelines can acccept the refernece genome that was used to create the BAM file(s) in one of two ways. Either the reference genome can be specified eg --genome hg19
(default) or by supplying a relevant fasta file (and optionally the indexes).
--genome
Standard versions of the genome are prepared with all their compressed and indexed file in a lifebit s3 bucket.
They can be used with the following values for the --genome
tag:
hg19
- Use if reads were aligned against hg19 reference genome to produce input bam file(s)
hg19chr20
- For testing purposes: chromosome 20 of the hg19 reference genome
h38
- Use if reads were aligned against GRCh38 reference genome to produce input bam file(s)
grch37primary
- Use if reads were aligned against GRCh37 primary reference genome to produce input bam file(s)
hs37d5
- Use if reads were aligned against hs37d5 reference genome to produce input bam file(s)
--genomes_base
Base directory location of genomes (default = “s3://deepvariant-data/genomes”) for use on computing clusters
OR you can use your own reference genome version, by using the following parameters:
The following parameter are optional:
--fasta
- Path to fasta reference
--fai
- Path to fasta index generated using
samtools faidx
--fastagz
- Path to gzipped fasta
--gzfai
- Path to index of gzipped fasta generated using
samtools faidx
--gzi
- Path to bgzip index format (.gzi)
If the fai
, fastagz
, gzfai
and gzi
parameters are not passed, they will be automatically be produced for you and you will be able to find them in the “preprocessingOUTPUT” folder.
Exome Data
--exome
- For exome bam files
If you are running on exome data you need to prodive the --exome
flag so that the right verison of the model will be used.
Job Resources
Automatic resubmission
Each step in the pipeline has a default set of requirements for number of CPUs, memory and time. For most of the steps in the pipeline, if the job exits with an error code of 143
(exceeded requested resources) it will automatically resubmit with higher requests (2 x original, then 3 x original). If it still fails after three times then the pipeline is stopped.
Custom resource requests
Wherever process-specific requirements are set in the pipeline, the default value can be changed by creating a custom config file. See the files in conf
for examples.
AWS Batch specific parameters
Running the pipeline on AWS Batch requires a couple of specific parameters to be set according to your AWS Batch configuration. Please use the -awsbatch
profile and then specify all of the following parameters.
--awsqueue
The JobQueue that you intend to use on AWS Batch.
--awsregion
The AWS region to run your job in. Default is set to eu-west-1
but can be adjusted to your needs.
Please make sure to also set the -w/--work-dir
and --outdir
parameters to a S3 storage bucket of your choice - you’ll get an error message notifying you if you didn’t.
Other command line parameters
--outdir
The output directory where the results will be saved.
--email
Set this parameter to your e-mail address to get a summary e-mail with details of the run sent to you when the workflow exits. If set in your user config file (~/.nextflow/config
) then you don’t need to speicfy this on the command line for every run.
-name
Name for the pipeline run. If not specified, Nextflow will automatically generate a random mnemonic.
This is used in the MultiQC report (if not default) and in the summary HTML / e-mail (always).
NB: Single hyphen (core Nextflow option)
-resume
Specify this when restarting a pipeline. Nextflow will used cached results from any pipeline steps where the inputs are the same, continuing from where it got to previously.
You can also supply a run name to resume a specific run: -resume [run-name]
. Use the nextflow log
command to show previous run names.
NB: Single hyphen (core Nextflow option)
-c
Specify the path to a specific config file (this is a core NextFlow command).
NB: Single hyphen (core Nextflow option)
Note - you can use this to override defaults. For example, you can specify a config file using -c
that contains the following:
--max_memory
Use to set a top-limit for the default memory requirement for each process. Should be a string in the format integer-unit. eg. `—max_memory ‘8.GB’“
--max_time
Use to set a top-limit for the default time requirement for each process.
Should be a string in the format integer-unit. eg. --max_time '2.h'
--max_cpus
Use to set a top-limit for the default CPU requirement for each process.
Should be a string in the format integer-unit. eg. --max_cpus 1
--plaintext_email
Set to receive plain-text e-mails instead of HTML formatted.
### --multiqc_config
Specify a path to a custom MultiQC configuration file.
Memory
DeepVariant is quite memory intensive. The most memory intensive process is make_examples
. The memory requirement should be approximately 10-15x the size of your BAM file. For example, for a 5GB BAM file the memory should be set to 50GB. Fortunately this is set automaticaally for you in base.config
for all of the man deepvariant processes, so you don’t need change anything more and can run the pipeline as normal.