.. This file is part of khmer, https://github.com/dib-lab/khmer/, and is Copyright (C) 2012-2015 Michigan State University Copyright (C) 2015-2016 The Regents of the University of California. It is licensed under the three-clause BSD license; see LICENSE. Contact: khmer-project@idyll.org Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. * Neither the name of the Michigan State University nor the names of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software without specific prior written permission. THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. Contact: khmer-project@idyll.org Development Nuts and Bolts ========================== Third-party use --------------- We ask that third parties who build upon the codebase to do so from a versioned release. This will help them determine when bug fixes apply and generally make it easier to collaborate. If more intensive modifications happen then we request that the repository is forked, again preferably from a version tag. Build framework --------------- `make` should build everything, including tests and "development" code. git and GitHub strategies ------------------------- Still in the works, but read `this `__. Make a branch on dib-lab (preferred so others can contribute) or fork the repository and make a branch there. Each piece or fix you are working on should have its own branch; make a pull request to dib-lab/master to aid in code review, testing, and feedback. If you want your code integrated then it needs to be mergeable. Code coverage ------------- Travis and CodeCov calculate code coverage for every build, and post changes in code coverage to every pull request thread after a successful build. Code coverage should never go down and new functionality needs to be tested. Pipelines --------- All khmer scripts used by a published recommended analysis pipeline must be included in ``scripts/`` and meet the standards therein implied. Command line scripts -------------------- Python command-line scripts should use '-' instead of '_' in the name. (Only filenames containing code for import should use _.) Please follow the command-line conventions used in ``scripts/``, as described in the :doc:`scripts and sandbox documentation `. Command line thoughts: If a input filename is required, typically UNIX commands don't use a flag to specify it. Also, positional arguments typically aren't used with multiple files. CTB's overall philosophy is that new files, with new names, should be created as the result of filtering etc.; this allows easy chaining of commands. We're thinking about how best to allow override of this, e.g. :: filter-abund.py [ -o ] All code in ``scripts/`` must have automated tests; see ``tests/test_scripts.py``. Otherwise it belongs in ``sandbox/``. When files are overwritten, they should only be opened to be overwritten after the input files have been shown to exist. That prevents stupid command line mistakes from trashing important files. A general error should be signaled by exit code `1` and success by `0`. Linux supports exit codes from `0` to `255` where the value `1` means a general error. An exit code of `-1` will get converted to `255`. CLI reading: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1183876/what-are-the-best-practices-for-implementing-a-cli-tool-in-perl http://catb.org/esr/writings/taoup/html/ch11s06.html http://figshare.com/articles/tutorial_pdf/643388 Python / C integration ---------------------- The Python extension that wraps the C++ core of khmer lives in ``src/khmer/_cpy_khmer.cc`` This wrapper code is tedious and annoying so we use a static analysis tool to check for correctness. https://gcc-python-plugin.readthedocs.io/en/latest/cpychecker.html Developers using Ubuntu Precise will want to install the gcc-4.6-plugin-dev package Example usage: :: CC="/home/mcrusoe/src/gcc-plugin-python/gcc-python-plugin/gcc-with-cpychecker --maxtrans=512" python setup.py build_ext 2>&1 | less False positives abound: ignore errors about the C++ standard library. This tool is primarily useful for reference count checking, error-handling checking, and format string checking. Errors to ignore: "Unhandled Python exception raised calling 'execute' method", "AttributeError: 'NoneType' object has no attribute 'file'" Warnings to address: :: src/khmer/_cpy_khmer.cc:3109:1: note: this function is too complicated for the reference-count checker to fully analyze: not all paths were analyzed Adjust --maxtrans and re-run. :: src/khmer/_cpy_khmer.cc:2191:61: warning: Mismatching type in call to Py_BuildValue with format code "i" [enabled by default] argument 2 ("D.68937") had type "long long unsigned int" but was expecting "int" for format code "i" See below for a format string cheat sheet One also benefits by matching C type with the function signature used later. "I" for unsigned int "K" for unsigned long long a.k.a oxli::HashIntoType. Linking Against liboxli ----------------------- The C++ library can be installed as a shared library and linked against from external projects. To build and install it, run: :: make install-liboxli This command can be given an optional ``PREFIX`` variable to control where the library and headers are installed (by default, in ``/usr/local``. Code can then include the headers by prefixing their paths with ``oxli/``. For example, to use ``Hashgraph``, use ``#include "oxli/hashgraph.hh"``. To compile, add ``-Ioxli`` to your compiler invocation. Experimental Cython Bindings ---------------------------- khmer includes experimental Cython bindings in ``khmer/_oxli``. ``wrapper.pxd`` contains all the C++ library declarations. To use extension classes in regular Python code, simply ``import`` them: for example, to get the wrapped ``ReadParser``, use ``from khmer._oxli.parsing import FastxParser``. Extension classes can all be used in external Cython code by using `cimport`; the declarations in ``wrapper.pxd`` can also be used, meaning you have access to liboxli. Note that for any ``cimport``'ed code to work, you'll need to install liboxli and include ``oxli`` in your Cython project's ``Extension`` class. This is done by adding ``oxli`` to the ``libraries`` argument of your ``Extension`` object in ``setup.py``, which instructs setuptools to add ``-Ioxli`` to its compiler invocation. An example: :: cy_ext = Extension('mypackage.example', sources = 'mypackage/example.pyx', extra_compile_args = ['-arch', 'x86_64', '-stdlib=libc++'], libraries = ['oxli'], include_dirs = [], language = 'c++') Read handling ------------- Several bugs have gone unnoticed due to inconsistencies in read handling. On the C++ side, there are an abundance of ``consume`` functions for loading Fasta/Fastq sequences. On the Python side, read handling is sometimes delegated to the C++ library, and sometimes handled in Python using screed. In an attempt to normalize read handling in Python, the functions in ``khmer/utils.py`` should be used whenever possible. Here, ``broken_paired_reader`` in ``khmer/utils.py`` should be used to do all paired-end sequence handling, and sequence loading should go through ``khmer.utils.clean_input_reads(iter)``; this is a generator that wraps the iterator produced by ``screed.open``, and it adds a ``cleaned_seq`` attribute to screed ``Record`` objects. This attribute should be used for any k-mer or graph operations, while the normal ``sequence`` attribute is what should be written out. ``write_record`` and ``write_record_pair`` should be used to output records. All of these functions are aware of FASTA and FASTQ records, too. For applying operations to collections of reads, the ``ReadBundle`` class is available. This is used to wrap a collection of reads for examination and processing in situations where (for example) something should be done to either both reads in a pair, or neither. Some basic rules of sequence handling in khmer are: * consume and produce "broken paired" format, such that pairs of sequences always stay together; see ``khmer.utils.broken_paired_reader``. * when looking at the coverage of reads (for trimming or digital normalization) always consider pairs; see ``khmer.utils.ReadBundle(...)``. * only apply graph or k-mer operations to sequences consisting only of ATCG; typically this will be ``record.cleaned_seq``. See ``khmer.utils.clean_input_read(...)``.