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Distributed String Mining Framework

This software package implements the algorithm published in [1]. It also includes the extensions proposed in [2].

  • [1] Niko Välimäki and Simon J. Puglisi: Distributed String Mining for High-Throughput Sequencing Data. In Proc. 12th Workshop on Algorithms in Bioinformatics (WABI'12), Springer-Verlag, LNCS 7534, pages 441-452, Ljubljana, Slovenia, September 9-14, 2012.
  • [2] Sohan Seth, Niko Välimäki, Samuel Kaski and Antti Honkela: Exploration and retrieval of whole-metagenome sequencing samples. Bioinformatics, Vol. 30, No. 17, pages 2471-2479. doi: 10.1093/bioinformatics/btu340, May 19, 2014.

CHANGELOG

  • 2014-01-13 Added wrapper-distance-matrix/smtxt2entropy.c that was used in the experiments of [2].
  • 2014-01-04 Added example scripts for the SLURM batch job system (under wrapper-SLURM/). Improved the server-side parallelization. Scaling was tested up to 256 (high-CPU) server-processes and 50,944 simultaneous (low-CPU) client-threads divided over 29 cluster nodes.

REQUIREMENTS AND COMPILING

Run make clean and make to compile. The requirements are

  • GNU GCC (g++ 4.3) environment including the OpenMP library.
  • TCP connectivity between the cluster nodes (some range of vacant TCP port numbers).
  • some synchronization when initializing the server-side and client-side programs (i.e. wrapper-scripts).

The first requirement should be fullfilled in typical linux installations. The second requirement depends on the cluster environment (see technical details on this below). The third requirement is crucial and it will require some scripting to be able to run the framework on specific cluster environments; to help you get started, we provide example wrapper-scripts for the SLURM batch job system.

INSTALLATION AND GETTING STARTED

The current installation is, in short, to write suitable wrapper-scripts around the main C/C++ program. We provide example wrapper-scripts for the SLURM batch job system. The main computation is divided over

  1. preprocessing of each dataset (builder),
  2. 64-256 CPU intensive processes (metaserver),
  3. memory intensive processes which use very little CPU (metaenumerate), and
  4. post-processing of the mined substrings (see e.g. wrapper-distance-matrix/smtxt2entropy.c).

The preprocessing step (1) is ran separately from (2) and (3). Steps (2) and (3) are run in parallel so that (2) is started first. The processes in Step (1) and (3) use memory that depends on the dataset sizes. Processes from Step (2) require only a small amount of memory.

To get started, please download the following example data (~25 MB). The rest of our example commands use these data files.

mkdir example
cd example
wget http://www.cs.helsinki.fi/u/nvalimak/dsm-framework/toydata-1.fasta.gz
wget http://www.cs.helsinki.fi/u/nvalimak/dsm-framework/toydata-2.fasta.gz
wget http://www.cs.helsinki.fi/u/nvalimak/dsm-framework/toydata-3.fasta.gz
wget http://www.cs.helsinki.fi/u/nvalimak/dsm-framework/toydata-4.fasta.gz
wget http://www.cs.helsinki.fi/u/nvalimak/dsm-framework/toydata-5.fasta.gz
gunzip toydata-?.fasta.gz

PREPROCESSING THE DATA

The input data for the dsm-framework must be in FASTA format. It is recommended that you first trim the FASTQ short-read data according to sequencing quality and output the trimmed short-reads as a FASTA file.

Then the FASTA input files must be preprocessed with:

    ./builder -v input.fasta

It will output the resulting index under the filename input.fasta.fmi. You should run builder independendly over each of your input datasets. The preprocessing can be parallelized by building multiple indexes simultaneously, however, these processes might require considerable amount of main-memory (depending on the input size).

If you have access to a cluster environment with SLURM batch job system, you can use the following commands to build indexes for the example data. Notice that you might need to give the input filename with full directory path according to your own cluster environment.

export DSM_FRAMEWORK_PATH=/path/to/dsm-framework/
sbatch $DSM_FRAMEWORK_PATH/wrapper-SLURM/example-builder.sh toydata-1.fasta
sbatch $DSM_FRAMEWORK_PATH/wrapper-SLURM/example-builder.sh toydata-2.fasta
sbatch $DSM_FRAMEWORK_PATH/wrapper-SLURM/example-builder.sh toydata-3.fasta
sbatch $DSM_FRAMEWORK_PATH/wrapper-SLURM/example-builder.sh toydata-4.fasta
sbatch $DSM_FRAMEWORK_PATH/wrapper-SLURM/example-builder.sh toydata-5.fasta

See the specific scripts above for details and SLURM settings.

Remark: If your cluster does not have SLURM, modify e.g. the script wrapper-simple/distributebuild.sh to build multiple indexes at once. The script expects a list of cluster node names as standard input. Please see the actual script to setup the correct paths to your fasta files etc. You will need to modify it to suite your own cluster environment.

INITIALIZING THE SERVER

The server must be set up before running the clients. It expects a list of dataset names as input. This list must match the dataset names that the clients use when they connect to the server.

usage: ./metaserver [options] < names.txt

  names.txt         A list of expected library names (read from stdin).

Mandatory option:
 -E,--emax <double> Maximum entropy to output.

Other options:
 -p,--port <p>      Listen to port number p.
 -P,--pmin <int>    p_min value (min. number of samples to have occ's in),
                    default 2.
 --pmax <int>       p_max value (max. number of samples to have occ's in),
                    default no-limit. Set p_min=p_max=1 to restrict the 
                    output to sample-specific substrings.
 -e,--emin <double> Minimum entropy to output (default 0.0)
 -F,--topfreq <p>   Print the top-p output frequencies.
 -T,--toptimes <p>  Print the top-p latencies.
 -v,--verbose       Print progress information.
 --debug            More verbose but still safe.
 -A,--outputall     Even more verbose (not safe).

Here follows an example using the SLURM scripts. First, you need to construct a text file that contains a list of dataset names. In this example, you can use:

echo -e "toydata-1\ntoydata-2\ntoydata-3\ntoydata-4\ntoydata-5" > sample-names.txt

Thus, the resulting file sample-names.txt should look like

toydata-1
toydata-2
toydata-3
toydata-4
toydata-5

Then you can initialize the server-side processes using the attached script

export DSM_FRAMEWORK_PATH=/path/to/dsm-framework/
rm -fr tmp_dsmframework_config
mkdir tmp_dsmframework_config
$DSM_FRAMEWORK_PATH/wrapper-SLURM/example-server.sh sample-names.txt tmp_dsmframework_config

The script will store temporary configuration files under the directory tmp_dsmframework_config/. These files are used track the hostname of each server process so that the client-side processes know which hosts to connect to. The files also store the TCP port number and the (unique) hash associated with each server.

RUNNING THE CLIENTS

The clients are run using metaenumerate. The dataset name assigned to each client is determined from the index filename. Currently, the name is truncated from the index filename by finding the last / symbol and the first . symbol. Thus, starting the client for the index file /path/index01.fmi will use index01 as the client's dataset name. The server will compare the dataset name against its own list (see above).

usage: ./metaenumerate [options] <index>  < hostinfo.txt

 <index>        Index file.
 hostinfo.txt   A list of server details, say 
                   <hostname> <TCP port n:o> <hash>
                to connect to (read from stdin).

Options:
 --check        Check integrity of index and quit.
 --port <p>     Connect to port <p>.
 --verbose      Print progress information.
Debug options:
 --debug        Print more progress information.

Here follows an example on how to initialize the client side processes. First, you need to make sure that all the server-side processes are up and running - you might want to set up SLURM job dependencies to ensure that the server-side processes are started first. Once you initialize the client processes, they will connect to the server processes, load the index and start the computation. Here, each client is associated with one index (i.e. one dataset).

export DSM_FRAMEWORK_PATH=/path/to/dsm-framework/
$DSM_FRAMEWORK_PATH/wrapper-SLURM/example-client.sh sample-names.txt tmp_dsmframework_config

The resulting output is found under the files server-output*.txt.gz. See the above example scripts and papers [1] and [2] for details. More information and related Matlab packages are available at https://github.com/HIITMetagenomics

Remark: If your cluster does not have SLURM, the script wrapper-simple/distribute.sh gives an example how to distribute the client processes. You will need to modify it to suite your own cluster environment.

POST-PROCESSING THE MINED SUBSTRINGS

The experiments in paper [2] use the script given in wrapper-distance-matrix/smtxt2entropy.c. You can compile and run it to directly post-process the output from metaserver in your scripts:

cd /path/to/dsm-framework/wrapper-distance-matrix
gcc -Wall -O2 -o smtxt2entropy smtxt2entropy.c -lm
../metaserver [server-side-parameters] | ./smtxt2entropy -v -s <nsamples> -e <estep> -N <normf> -F <outputfile>

where <nsamples> is the number of samples, <estep> is the stepping to consider all values (0;estep;1), <normf> is the file storing a list of normalization factors (if needed), and <outputfile> is the output filename prefix.