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test_import.nf |
DSL2 IS AN EXPERIMENTAL FEATURE UNDER DEVELOPMENT. SYNTAX, ORGANISATION AND LAYOUT OF THIS REPOSITORY MAY CHANGE IN THE NEAR FUTURE!
A repository for hosting nextflow DSL2
module files containing tool-specific process definitions and their associated documentation.
Table of contents
Terminology
The features offered by Nextflow DSL 2 can be used in various ways depending on the granularity with which you would like to write pipelines. Please see the listing below for the hierarchy and associated terminology we have decided to use when referring to DSL 2 components:
- Module: A
process
that can be used within different pipelines and is as atomic as possible i.e. cannot be split into another module. An example of this would be a module file containing the process definition for a single tool such asFastQC
. This repository has been created to only host atomic module files that should be added to thetools
sub-directory along with the required documentation, software and tests. - Sub-workflow: A chain of multiple modules that offer a higher-level of functionality within the context of a pipeline. For example, a sub-workflow to run multiple QC tools with FastQ files as input. Sub-workflows should be shipped with the pipeline implementation and if required they should be shared amongst different pipelines directly from there. As it stands, this repository will not host sub-workflows.
- Workflow: What DSL 1 users would consider an end-to-end pipeline. For example, from one or more inputs to a series of outputs. This can either be implemented using a large monolithic script as with DSL 1, or by using a combination of DSL 2 individual modules and sub-workflows.
Using existing modules
The Nextflow include
statement can be used within your pipelines in order to load module files that you have available locally.
You should be able to get a good idea as to how other people are using module files by looking at pipelines available in nf-core e.g. nf-core/chipseq
(work in progress)
Configuration and parameters
The module files hosted in this repository define a set of processes for software tools such as fastqc
, trimgalore
, bwa
etc. This allows you to share and add common functionality across multiple pipelines in a modular fashion.
The definition and standards for module files are still under discussion amongst the community but hopefully, a description should be added here soon!
Offline usage
If you want to use an existing module file available in nf-core/modules
, and you're running on a system that has no internet connection, you'll need to download the repository (e.g. git clone https://github.com/nf-core/modules.git
) and place it in a location that is visible to the file system on which you are running the pipeline. Then run the pipeline by creating a custom config file called e.g. custom_module.conf
containing the following information:
include /path/to/downloaded/modules/directory/
Then you can run the pipeline by directly passing the additional config file with the -c
parameter:
nextflow run /path/to/pipeline/ -c /path/to/custom_module.conf
Note that the nf-core/tools helper package has a
download
command to download all required pipeline files + singularity containers + institutional configs + modules in one go for you, to make this process easier.
Adding a new module file
If you decide to upload your module file to nf-core/modules
then this will
ensure that it will be automatically downloaded, and available at run-time to
all nf-core pipelines, and to everyone within the Nextflow community! See
nf-core/modules/software
for examples.
The definition and standards for module files are still under discussion amongst the community. Currently the following points have been agreed on:
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "SHOULD", etc. are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119.
Defining inputs, outputs and parameters
- A module file SHOULD only define inputs and outputs as parameters. Additionally,
- it MUST define threads or resources where required for a particular process using
task.cpus
- it MUST be possible to pass additional parameters to the tool as a command line string via the
params.<MODULE>_args
parameter. - All NGS modules MUST accept a triplet [name, single_end, reads] as input. The single-end boolean values MUST be specified through the input channel and not inferred from the data e.g. here.
- it MUST define threads or resources where required for a particular process using
- Process names MUST be all uppercase.
- Each process MUST emit a file
<TOOL>.version.txt
containing a single line with the software's version in the formatv<VERSION_NUMBER>
. - All outputs MUST be named using
emit
.
Atomicity
- Software that can be piped together SHOULD be added to separate module files unless there is an run-time, storage advantage in implementing in this way e.g.
bwa mem | samtools view -C -T ref.fasta
to output CRAM instead of SAM.
Publishing results
-
The module MUST accept the parameters
params.out_dir
andparams.publish_dir
and MUST publish results into${params.out_dir}/${params.publish_dir}
. -
The
publishDirMode
MUST be configurable viaparams.publish_dir_mode
-
The module MUST accept a parameter
params.publish_results
accepting at least"none"
, to publish no files at all, and"default"
, to publish a sensible selection of files.
It MAY accept further options.
-
To ensure consistent naming, files SHOULD be renamed according to the
$name
variable before returning them.
Testing
- Every module MUST be tested by adding a test workflow with a toy dataset.
- Test data MUST be stored within this repo. It is RECOMMENDED to re-use generic files from
tests/data
by symlinking them into the test directory of the module. Specific files MUST be added to the test-directory directly. Test files MUST be kept as tiny as possible.
Software requirements
- Software requirements SHOULD be declared in a conda
environment.yml
file, including exact version numbers. Additionally, there MUST be aDockerfile
that containerizes the environment, or packages the software if conda is not available.
File formats
- Wherever possible, CRAM files SHOULD be used over BAM files.
- Wherever possible, FASTQ files SHOULD be compressed using gzip.
Documentation
Please add some documentation to the top of the module file in the form of native Nextflow comments. This has to be specified in a particular format as you will be able to see from other examples in the nf-core/modules/nf
directory.
Uploading to nf-core/modules
Fork the nf-core/modules
repository to your own GitHub account. Within the local clone of your fork add the module file to the nf-core/modules/software
directory. Please keep the naming consistent between the module and documentation files e.g. bwa.nf
and bwa.md
, respectively.
Commit and push these changes to your local clone on GitHub, and then create a pull request on nf-core/modules
GitHub repo with the appropriate information.
We will be notified automatically when you have created your pull request, and providing that everything adheres to nf-core guidelines we will endeavour to approve your pull request as soon as possible.
Help
If you have any questions or issues please send us a message on Slack.