Bio::DB::IndexedBase(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | Bio::DB::IndexedBase(3pm) |
Bio::DB::IndexedBase - Base class for modules using indexed sequence files
use Bio::DB::XXX; # a made-up class that uses Bio::IndexedBase # 1/ Bio::SeqIO-style access # Index some sequence files my $db = Bio::DB::XXX->new('/path/to/file'); # from a single file my $db = Bio::DB::XXX->new(['file1', 'file2']); # from multiple files my $db = Bio::DB::XXX->new('/path/to/files/'); # from a directory # Get IDs of all the sequences in the database my @ids = $db->get_all_primary_ids; # Get a specific sequence my $seq = $db->get_Seq_by_id('CHROMOSOME_I'); # Loop through all sequences my $stream = $db->get_PrimarySeq_stream; while (my $seq = $stream->next_seq) { # Do something... } # 2/ Access via filehandle my $fh = Bio::DB::XXX->newFh('/path/to/file'); while (my $seq = <$fh>) { # Do something... } # 3/ Tied-hash access tie %sequences, 'Bio::DB::XXX', '/path/to/file'; print $sequences{'CHROMOSOME_I:1,20000'};
Bio::DB::IndexedBase provides a base class for modules that want to index and read sequence files and provides persistent, random access to each sequence entry, without bringing the entire file into memory. This module is compliant with the Bio::SeqI interface and both. Bio::DB::Fasta and Bio::DB::Qual both use Bio::DB::IndexedBase.
When you initialize the module, you point it at a single file, several files, or a directory of files. The first time it is run, the module generates an index of the content of the files using the AnyDBM_File module (BerkeleyDB preferred, followed by GDBM_File, NDBM_File, and SDBM_File). Subsequently, it uses the index file to find the sequence file and offset for any requested sequence. If one of the source files is updated, the module reindexes just that one file. You can also force reindexing manually at any time. For improved performance, the module keeps a cache of open filehandles, closing less-recently used ones when the cache is full.
Entries may have any line length up to 65,536 characters, and different line lengths are allowed in the same file. However, within a sequence entry, all lines must be the same length except for the last. An error will be thrown if this is not the case!
This module was developed for use with the C. elegans and human genomes, and has been tested with sequence segments as large as 20 megabases. Indexing the C. elegans genome (100 megabases of genomic sequence plus 100,000 ESTs) takes ~5 minutes on my 300 MHz pentium laptop. On the same system, average access time for any 200-mer within the C. elegans genome was <0.02s.
The two constructors for this class are new() and newFh(). The former creates a Bio::DB::IndexedBase object which is accessed via method calls. The latter creates a tied filehandle which can be used Bio::SeqIO style to fetch sequence objects in a stream fashion. There is also a tied hash interface.
After the database is created, you can use methods like get_all_primary_ids() and get_Seq_by_id() to retrieve sequence objects.
Once tied, you can use the hash to retrieve an individual sequence by its ID, like this:
my $seq = $db{CHROMOSOME_I};
The keys() and values() functions will return the sequence IDs and their sequences, respectively. In addition, each() can be used to iterate over the entire data set:
while (my ($id,$sequence) = each %db) { print "$id => $sequence\n"; }
When dealing with very large sequences, you can avoid bringing them into memory by calling each() in a scalar context. This returns the key only. You can then use tied(%db) to recover the Bio::DB::IndexedBase object and call its methods.
while (my $id = each %db) { print "$id: $db{$sequence:1,100}\n"; print "$id: ".tied(%db)->length($id)."\n"; }
In addition, you may invoke the FIRSTKEY and NEXTKEY tied hash methods directly to retrieve the first and next ID in the database, respectively. This allows one to write the following iterative loop using just the object-oriented interface:
my $db = Bio::DB::IndexedBase->new('/path/to/file'); for (my $id=$db->FIRSTKEY; $id; $id=$db->NEXTKEY($id)) { # do something with sequence }
Several attributes of each sequence are stored in the index file. Given a sequence ID, these attributes can be retrieved using the following methods:
Bio::DB::IndexedBase is compliant with the Bio::DB::SeqI and hence with the Bio::RandomAccessI interfaces.
Database do not necessarily provide any meaningful internal primary ID for the sequences they store. However, Bio::DB::IndexedBase's internal primary IDs are the IDs of the sequences. This means that the same ID passed to get_Seq_by_id() and get_Seq_by_primary_id() will return the same sequence.
Since this database index has no notion of sequence version or namespace, the get_Seq_by_id(), get_Seq_by_acc() and get_Seq_by_version() are identical.
When a sequence is deleted from one of the files, this deletion is not detected by the module and removed from the index. As a result, a "ghost" entry will remain in the index and will return garbage results if accessed.
Also, if you are indexing a directory, it is wise to not add or remove files from it.
In case you have changed the files in a directory, or the sequences in a file, you can to rebuild the entire index, either by deleting it manually, or by passing -reindex=>1 to new() when initializing the module.
DB_File
Bio::DB::Fasta
Bio::DB::Qual
Lincoln Stein <lstein@cshl.org>.
Copyright (c) 2001 Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory.
Florent Angly (for the modularization)
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. See DISCLAIMER.txt for disclaimers of warranty.
The rest of the documentation details each of the object methods. Internal methods are usually preceded with a _
Title : new Usage : my $db = Bio::DB::IndexedBase->new($path, -reindex => 1); Function: Initialize a new database object Returns : A Bio::DB::IndexedBase object Args : A single file, or path to dir, or arrayref of files Optional arguments: Option Description Default ----------- ----------- ------- -glob Glob expression to search for files in directories * -makeid A code subroutine for transforming IDs None -maxopen Maximum size of filehandle cache 32 -debug Turn on status messages 0 -reindex Force the index to be rebuilt 0 -dbmargs Additional arguments to pass to the DBM routine None -index_name Name of the file that will hold the indices -clean Remove the index file when finished 0
The -dbmargs option can be used to control the format of the index. For example, you can pass $DB_BTREE to this argument so as to force the IDs to be sorted and retrieved alphabetically. Note that you must use the same arguments every time you open the index!
The -makeid option gives you a chance to modify sequence IDs during indexing. For example, you may wish to extract a portion of the gi|gb|abc|xyz nonsense that GenBank Fasta files use. The original header line can be recovered later. The option value for -makeid should be a code reference that takes a scalar argument (the full header line) and returns a scalar or an array of scalars (the ID or IDs you want to assign). For example:
$db = Bio::DB::IndexedBase->new('file.fa', -makeid => \&extract_gi); sub extract_gi { # Extract GI from GenBank my $header = shift; my ($id) = ($header =~ /gi\|(\d+)/m); return $id || ''; }
extract_gi() will be called with the full header line, e.g. a Fasta line would include the ">", the ID and the description:
>gi|352962132|ref|NG_030353.1| Homo sapiens sal-like 3 (Drosophila) (SALL3)
In the database, this sequence can now be retrieved by its GI instead of its complete ID:
my $seq = $db->get_Seq_by_id(352962132);
The -makeid option is ignored after the index is constructed.
Title : newFh Usage : my $fh = Bio::DB::IndexedBase->newFh('/path/to/files/', %options); Function: Index and get a new Fh for a single file, several files or a directory Returns : Filehandle object Args : Same as new()
Title : dbmargs Usage : my @args = $db->dbmargs; Function: Get stored dbm arguments Returns : Array Args : None
Title : glob Usage : my $glob = $db->glob; Function: Get the expression used to match files in directories Returns : String Args : None
Title : index_dir Usage : $db->index_dir($dir); Function: Index the files that match -glob in the given directory Returns : Hashref of offsets Args : Dirname Boolean to force a reindexing the directory
Title : get_all_primary_ids, get_all_ids, ids Usage : my @ids = $db->get_all_primary_ids; Function: Get the IDs stored in all indexes. This is a Bio::DB::SeqI method implementation. Note that in this implementation, the internal database primary IDs are also the sequence IDs. Returns : List of ids Args : None
Title : index_file Usage : $db->index_file($filename); Function: Index the given file Returns : Hashref of offsets Args : Filename Boolean to force reindexing the file
Title : index_files Usage : $db->index_files(\@files); Function: Index the given files Returns : Hashref of offsets Args : Arrayref of filenames Boolean to force reindexing the files
Title : index_name Usage : my $indexname = $db->index_name($path); Function: Get the full name of the index file Returns : String Args : None
Title : path Usage : my $path = $db->path($path); Function: When a single file or a directory of files is indexed, this returns the file directory. When indexing an arbitrary list of files, the return value is the path of the current working directory. Returns : String Args : None
Title : get_PrimarySeq_stream Usage : my $stream = $db->get_PrimarySeq_stream(); Function: Get a SeqIO-like stream of sequence objects. The stream supports a single method, next_seq(). Each call to next_seq() returns a new PrimarySeqI compliant sequence object, until no more sequences remain. This is a Bio::DB::SeqI method implementation. Returns : A Bio::DB::Indexed::Stream object Args : None
Title : get_Seq_by_id, get_Seq_by_acc, get_Seq_by_version, get_Seq_by_primary_id Usage : my $seq = $db->get_Seq_by_id($id); Function: Given an ID, fetch the corresponding sequence from the database. This is a Bio::DB::SeqI and Bio::DB::RandomAccessI method implementation. Returns : A sequence object Args : ID
Title : _calculate_offsets Usage : $db->_calculate_offsets($filename, $offsets); Function: This method calculates the sequence offsets in a file based on ID and should be implemented by classes that use Bio::DB::IndexedBase. Returns : Hash of offsets Args : File to process Hashref of file offsets keyed by IDs.
Title : offset Usage : my $offset = $db->offset($id); Function: Get the offset of the indicated sequence from the beginning of the file in which it is located. The offset points to the beginning of the sequence, not the beginning of the header line. Returns : String Args : ID of sequence
Title : strlen Usage : my $length = $db->strlen($id); Function: Get the number of characters in the sequence string. Returns : Integer Args : ID of sequence
Title : length Usage : my $length = $db->length($id); Function: Get the number of residues of the sequence. Returns : Integer Args : ID of sequence
Title : linelen Usage : my $linelen = $db->linelen($id); Function: Get the length of the line for this sequence. Returns : Integer Args : ID of sequence
Title : headerlen Usage : my $length = $db->headerlen($id); Function: Get the length of the header line for the indicated sequence. Returns : Integer Args : ID of sequence
Title : header_offset Usage : my $offset = $db->header_offset($id); Function: Get the offset of the header line for the indicated sequence from the beginning of the file in which it is located. Returns : String Args : ID of sequence
Title : alphabet Usage : my $alphabet = $db->alphabet($id); Function: Get the molecular type of the indicated sequence: dna, rna or protein Returns : String Args : ID of sequence
Title : file Usage : my $file = $db->file($id); Function: Get the the name of the file in which the indicated sequence can be found. Returns : String Args : ID of sequence
2021-08-15 | perl v5.32.1 |