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date | Sun, 24 Jan 2021 03:54:01 +0000 |
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# Breaking news! Docker container at https://github.com/fubar2/toolfactory-galaxy-docker recommended as at December 2020 ## This ToolFactory is for docker use and is used in the new recommended Docker ToolFactory ## For non-Docker situations, use the ordinary ToolFactory https://github.com/fubar2/toolfactory # WARNING Install this tool to a throw-away private Galaxy or Docker container ONLY! Please NEVER on a public or production instance where a hostile user may be able to gain access if they can acquire an administrative account login. It only runs for server administrators - the ToolFactory tool will refuse to execute for an ordinary user since it can install new tools to the Galaxy server it executes on! This is not something you should allow other than on a throw away instance that is protected from potentially hostile users. ## Short Story Galaxy is easily extended to new applications by adding a new tool. Each new scientific computational package added as a tool to Galaxy requires an XML document describing how the application interacts with Galaxy. This is sometimes termed "wrapping" the package because the instructions tell Galaxy how to run the package as a new Galaxy tool. Any tool that has been wrapped is readily available to all the users through a consistent and easy to use interface once installed in the local Galaxy server. Most Galaxy tool wrappers have been manually prepared by skilled programmers, many using Planemo because it automates much of the boilerplate and makes the process much easier. The ToolFactory (TF) now uses Planemo under the hood for testing, but hides the command line complexities. The user will still need appropriate skills in terms of describing the interface between Galaxy and the new application, but will be helped by a Galaxy tool form to collect all the needed settings, together with automated testing and uploading to a toolshed with optional local installation. ## More Explanation The TF is an unusual Galaxy tool, designed to allow a skilled user to make new Galaxy tools. It appears in Galaxy just like any other tool but outputs include new Galaxy tools generated using instructions provided by the user and the results of Planemo lint and tool testing using small sample inputs provided by the TF user. The small samples become tests built in to the new tool. It offers a familiar Galaxy form driven way to define how the user of the new tool will choose input data from their history, and what parameters the new tool user will be able to adjust. The TF user must know, or be able to read, enough about the tool to be able to define the details of the new Galaxy interface and the ToolFactory offers little guidance on that other than some examples. Tools always depend on other things. Most tools in Galaxy depend on third party scientific packages, so TF tools usually have one or more dependencies. These can be scientific packages such as BWA or scripting languages such as Python and are managed by Conda. If the new tool relies on a system utility such as bash or awk where the importance of version control on reproducibility is low, these can be used without Conda management - but remember the potential risks of unmanaged dependencies on computational reproducibility. The TF user can optionally supply a working script where scripting is required and the chosen dependency is a scripting language such as Python or a system scripting executable such as bash. Whatever the language, the script must correctly parse the command line arguments it receives at tool execution, as they are defined by the TF user. The text of that script is "baked in" to the new tool and will be executed each time the new tool is run. It is highly recommended that scripts and their command lines be developed and tested until proven to work before the TF is invoked. Galaxy as a software development environment is actually possible, but not recommended being somewhat clumsy and inefficient. Tools nearly always take one or more data sets from the user's history as input. TF tools allow the TF user to define what Galaxy datatypes the tool end user will be able to choose and what names or positions will be used to pass them on a command line to the package or script. Tools often have various parameter settings. The TF allows the TF user to define how each parameter will appear on the tool form to the end user, and what names or positions will be used to pass them on the command line to the package. At present, parameters are limited to simple text and number fields. Pull requests for other kinds of parameters that galaxyxml can handle are welcomed. Best practice Galaxy tools have one or more automated tests. These should use small sample data sets and specific parameter settings so when the tool is tested, the outputs can be compared with their expected values. The TF will automatically create a test for the new tool. It will use the sample data sets chosen by the TF user when they built the new tool. The TF works by exposing *unrestricted* and therefore extremely dangerous scripting to all designated administrators of the host Galaxy server, allowing them to run scripts in R, python, sh and perl. For this reason, a Docker container is available to help manage the associated risks. ## Scripting uses To use a scripting language to create a new tool, you must first prepared and properly test a script. Use small sample data sets for testing. When the script is working correctly, upload the small sample datasets into a new history, start configuring a new ToolFactory tool, and paste the script into the script text box on the TF form. ### Outputs The TF will generate the new tool described on the TF form, and test it using planemo. Optionally if a local toolshed is running, it can be used to install the new tool back into the generating Galaxy. A toolshed is built in to the Docker container and configured so a tool can be tested, sent to that toolshed, then installed in the Galaxy where the TF is running using the default toolshed and Galaxy URL and API keys. Once it's in a ToolShed, it can be installed into any local Galaxy server from the server administrative interface. Once the new tool is installed, local users can run it - each time, the package and/or script that was supplied when it was built will be executed with the input chosen from the user's history, together with user supplied parameters. In other words, the tools you generate with the TF run just like any other Galaxy tool. TF generated tools work as normal workflow components. ## Limitations The TF is flexible enough to generate wrappers for many common scientific packages but the inbuilt automation will not cope with all possible situations. Users can supply overrides for two tool XML segments - tests and command and the BWA example in the supplied samples workflow illustrates their use. It does not deal with repeated elements or conditional parameters such as allowing a user to choose to see "simple" or "advanced" parameters (yet) and there will be plenty of packages it just won't cover - but it's a quick and efficient tool for the other 90% of cases. Perfect for that bash one liner you need to get that workflow functioning correctly for this afternoon's demonstration! ## Installation The Docker container https://github.com/fubar2/toolfactory-galaxy-docker/blob/main/README.md is the best way to use the TF because it is preconfigured to automate new tool testing and has a built in local toolshed where each new tool is uploaded. If you grab the docker container, it should just work after a restart and you can run a workflow to generate all the sample tools. Running the samples and rerunning the ToolFactory jobs that generated them allows you to add fields and experiment to see how things work. It can be installed like any other tool from the Toolshed, but you will need to make some configuration changes (TODO write a configuration). You can install it most conveniently using the administrative "Search and browse tool sheds" link. Find the Galaxy Main toolshed at https://toolshed.g2.bx.psu.edu/ and search for the toolfactory repository in the Tool Maker section. Open it and review the code and select the option to install it. If not already there please add: ``` <datatype extension="tgz" type="galaxy.datatypes.binary:Binary" mimetype="multipart/x-gzip" subclass="True" /> ``` to your local config/data_types_conf.xml. ## Restricted execution The tool factory tool itself will ONLY run for admin users - people with IDs in config/galaxy.yml "admin_users". *ONLY admin_users can run this tool* That doesn't mean it's safe to install on a shared or exposed instance - please don't. ## Generated tool Security Once you install a generated tool, it's just another tool - assuming the script is safe. They just run normally and their user cannot do anything unusually insecure but please, practice safe toolshed. Read the code before you install any tool. Especially this one - it is really scary. ## Attribution Creating re-usable tools from scripts: The Galaxy Tool Factory Ross Lazarus; Antony Kaspi; Mark Ziemann; The Galaxy Team Bioinformatics 2012; doi: 10.1093/bioinformatics/bts573 http://bioinformatics.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/reprint/bts573?ijkey=lczQh1sWrMwdYWJ&keytype=ref