Difference between revisions of "BioPerl"
Line 51: | Line 51: | ||
sbatch -p carl.p bioperl-test.job | sbatch -p carl.p bioperl-test.job | ||
After job has finished (takes about 10-20 seconds), you will find three new files in the directory you started the job from: | |||
*sequence.fasta | |||
*bioperl-test.JOBID.err | |||
*bioperl-test.JOBID.out | |||
If the file "sequence.fasta" contains this: | |||
>#12345 example 1 | |||
aaaatgggggggggggccccgtt | |||
everything went fine and you can start to create your own scripts. | |||
== Documentation == | == Documentation == | ||
The full documentation can be found [http://bioperl.org/howtos/index.html here]. | The full documentation can be found [http://bioperl.org/howtos/index.html here]. |
Revision as of 12:48, 15 May 2017
Introduction
BioPerl is a collection of Perl modules that facilitate the development of Perl scripts for bioinformatics applications. It has played an integral role in the Human Genome Project.
Installed version
The currently installed version is 1.7.0.
Using BioPerl
If you want to use BioPerl on the cluster, you will have to load its corresponding module first. You can do that with the command:
module load BioPerl
After that BioPerl is loaded and operational.
Using BioPerl on the cluster
If you want to run jobs on the cluster, you will have to create a jobscript which needs to be submitted to SLURM.
An example jobscript for BioPerl could look like this:
#!/bin/bash #SBATCH --ntasks=1 #SBATCH --mem=2G #SBATCH --time=0-2:00 #SBATCH --job-name=BIOPERL-TEST #SBATCH --output=bioperl-test.%j.out #SBATCH --error=bioperl-test.%j.err module load BioPerl perl seqio.pl
If you want to run this example, please create a file with the bioperl-test.job containing the code above. You will also need to create a file called "seqio.pl" with the following content:
#!/bin/perl -w use Bio::Seq; use Bio::SeqIO; $seq_obj = Bio::Seq->new(-seq=>"aaaatgggggggggggccccgtt", -display_id => "#12345", -desc => "example 1", -alphabet => "dna" ); $seqio_obj = Bio::SeqIO->new(-file => '>sequence.fasta', -format => 'fasta' ); $seqio_obj->write_seq($seq_obj);
If you created both files you can submit your job with the following command:
sbatch -p carl.p bioperl-test.job
After job has finished (takes about 10-20 seconds), you will find three new files in the directory you started the job from:
- sequence.fasta
- bioperl-test.JOBID.err
- bioperl-test.JOBID.out
If the file "sequence.fasta" contains this:
>#12345 example 1 aaaatgggggggggggccccgtt
everything went fine and you can start to create your own scripts.
Documentation
The full documentation can be found here.