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Oxford Nanopore Technologies fast5 API software

Project description

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ont_fast5_api

ont_fast5_api is a simple interface to HDF5 files of the Oxford Nanopore .fast5 file format.

It provides:

  • Concrete implementation of the fast5 file schema using the generic h5py library

  • Plain-english-named methods to interact with and reflect the fast5 file schema

  • Tools to convert between multi_read and single_read formats

  • Tools to compress/decompress raw data in files

Getting Started

The ont_fast5_api is available on PyPI and can be installed via pip:

pip install ont-fast5-api

Alternatively, it is available on github where it can be built from source:

git clone https://github.com/nanoporetech/ont_fast5_api
pip install ./ont_fast5_api

Dependencies

ont_fast5_api is a pure python project and should run on most python versions and operating systems.

It requires:

Interface - get_fast5_file

The ont_fast5_api provides a simple interface to access the data structures in .fast5 files of either single- or multi- read format using the same method calls.

For example to print the raw data from all reads in a file:

from ont_fast5_api.fast5_interface import get_fast5_file

def print_all_raw_data():
    fast5_filepath = "test/data/single_reads/read0.fast5" # This can be a single- or multi-read file
    with get_fast5_file(fast5_filepath, mode="r") as f5:
        for read in f5.get_reads():
            raw_data = read.get_raw_data()
            print(read.read_id, raw_data)

Interface - Console Scripts

The ont_fast5_api provides terminal/command-line console_scripts for converting between files in the Oxford Nanopore single_read and multi_read .fast5 file formats. These are provided to ensure compatibility between tools which expect either the single_read or multi_read .fast5 file formats.

The scripts are added during installation and can be called from the terminal/command-line or from within python.

single_to_multi_fast5

This script converts folders containing single_read_fast5 files into multi_read_fast5_files:

single_to_multi_fast5
    -i, --input_path <(path) folder containing single_read_fast5 files>
    -s, --save_path <(path) to folder where multi_read fast5 files will be output>
    [optional] -t, --threads <(int) number of CPU threads to use; default=1>
    [optional] -f, --filename_base <(string) name for new multi_read file; default="batch" (see note-1)>
    [optional] -n, --batch_size <(int) number of single_reads to include in each multi_read file; default=4000>
    [optional] --recursive <if included, recursively search sub-directories for single_read files>

note-1: newly created multi_read files require a name. This is the filename_base with the batch count and .fast5 appended to it; e.g. -f batch yields batch_0.fast5, batch_1.fast5, ...

example usage:

single_to_multi_fast5 --input_path /data/reads --save_path /data/multi_reads
    --filename_base batch_output --batch_size 100 --recursive

Where /data/reads and/or its subfolders contain single_read .fast5 files. The output will be multi_read fast5 files each containing 100 reads, in the folder: /data/multi_reads with the names: batch_output_0.fast5, batch_output_1.fast5 etc.

multi_to_single_fast5

This script converts folders containing multi_read_fast5 files into single_read_fast5 files:

multi_to_single_fast5
    -i, --input_path <(path) folder containing multi_read_fast5 files>
    -s, --save_path <(path) to folder where single_read fast5 files will be output>
    [optional] -t, --threads <(int) number of CPU threads to use; default=1>
    [optional] --recursive <if included, recursively search sub-directories for multi_read files>

example usage:

multi_to_single_fast5 --input_path /data/multi_reads --save_path /data/single_reads
    --recursive

Where /data/multi_reads and/or its subfolders contain multi_read .fast5 files. The output will be single_read .fast5 files in the folder /data/single_reads with one subfolder per multi_read input file

fast5_subset

This script extracts reads from multi_read_fast5_file(s) based on a list of read_ids:

fast5_subset
    -i, --input <(path) to folder containing multi_read_fast5 files or an individual multi_read_fast5 file>
    -s, --save_path <(path) to folder where multi_read fast5 files will be output>
    -l,--read_id_list <(file) either sequencing_summary.txt file or a file containing a list of read_ids>
    [optional] -f, --filename_base <(string) name for new multi_read file; default="batch" (see note-1)>
    [optional] -n, --batch_size <(int) number of single_reads to include in each multi_read file; default=4000>
    [optional] --recursive <if included, recursively search sub-directories for single_read files>

example usage:

fast5_subset --input /data/multi_reads --save_path /data/subset
    --read_id_list read_id_list.txt --batch_size 100 --recursive

Where /data/multi_reads and/or its subfolders contain multi_read .fast5 files and read_id_list.txt is a text file either containing 1 read_id per line or a tsv file with a column named read_id. The output will be multi_read .fast5 files each containing 100 reads, in the folder: /data/multi_reads with the names: batch_output_0.fast5, batch_output_1.fast5 etc.

compress_fast5

This script copies and converts raw data between vbz and gzip compression formats:

compress_fast5
    -i, --input_path <(path) folder containing multi_read_fast5 files>
    -s, --save_path <(path) to folder where single_read fast5 files will be output>
    -c, --compression <(str) [vbz, gzip] target compression format>
    [optional] -t, --threads <(int) number of CPU threads to use; default=1>
    [optional] --recursive <if included, recursively search sub-directories for fast5 files>

example usage:

compress_fast5 --input_path /data/uncompressed_reads --save_path /data/compressed_reads
    --compression vbz --recursive --threads 40

Where /data/uncompressed_reads and/or its subfolders contain .fast5 files. The output will be a copy of the input folder structure containing compressed reads preserving both the folder structure and file type.

NB compress_fast5 will copy .fast5 files in order to compress them due to HDF5 implementation constraints. Further detail of HDF5 data management strategies can be found: https://support.hdfgroup.org/HDF5/doc/Advanced/FileSpaceManagement/FileSpaceManagement.pdf

VBZ Compression

VBZ compression is a compression algorithm developed by Oxford Nanopore to reduce file size and improve read/write performance when handling raw data in Fast5 files. Previously, the default compression was GZIP and comparing to GZIP we see a compression improvement of >30% and a CPU performance improvement of >10X for compression and >5X for decompression. Further details of the implementation and benchmarks can be found here: https://github.com/nanoporetech/vbz_compression

Benchmarking the performance of compression within the ont_fast5_api against a normal file copy showed compressing from gzip to vbz was approximately 2x slower than copying files. In other words, if it would take two hours to copy a set of files from an input folder to an output folder then it should take four hours to compress those files with VBZ. Running the script without compressing (i.e. the same type of compression in and out; gzip->gzip) was approximately 2x faster than a file copy since it can utilise mutiple threads.

Glossary of Terms:

HDF5 file format - a portable file format for storing and managing data. It is designed for flexible and efficient I/O and for high volume and complex data

Fast5 - an implementation of the HDF5 file format, with specific data schemas for Oxford Nanopore sequencing data

Single read fast5 - A fast5 file containing all the data pertaining to a single Oxford Nanopore read. This may include raw signal data, run metadata, fastq-basecalls and any other additional analyses

Multi read fast5 - A fast5 file containing data pertaining to a multiple Oxford Nanopore reads.

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