Mercurial > repos > jgarbe > redup
view redup.xml @ 0:df1e7c7dd9cb draft default tip
Initial uploaded of files
author | jgarbe |
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date | Wed, 27 Nov 2013 14:39:56 -0500 |
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<tool id="redup" name="Redup" version="1.0"> <description>Remove exact duplicate reads from paired-end fastq files</description> <command interpreter="perl"> ## Need to handle file names, probably should fix redup.pl redup.pl #if $opt_n: -n $opt_n #end if $fastq1_in $fastq2_in $unique1_out $unique2_out #if $opt_n: > $duplicates #end if </command> <inputs> <param name="fastq1_in" type="data" format="fastq" label="Fastq Input 1"/> <param name="fastq2_in" type="data" format="fastq" label="Fastq Input 2"/> <param name="opt_n" type="integer" value="20" optional="true" label="Number of most duplicated sequences printed out. (default 20)"> <validator type="in_range" message="Value can not be negative" min="0"/> </param> </inputs> <stdio> <exit_code range="1:" level="fatal"/> </stdio> <outputs> <data format_source="fastq1_in" name="unique1_out" label="${tool.name} on ${on_string}: fastq1.unique" /> <data format_source="fastq2_in" name="unique2_out" label="${tool.name} on ${on_string}: fastq2.unique" /> <data format="fasta" name="duplicates" label="${tool.name} on ${on_string}: top duplicates" > <filter>opt_n != None</filter> </data> </outputs> <tests> <test> <param name="fastq1_in" ftype="fastq" value="input1.fastq" /> <param name="fastq2_in" ftype="fastq" value="input2.fastq" /> <param name="opt_n" value="20" /> <output name="unique1_out" file="output1.fastq" /> <output name="unique2_out" file="output2.fastq" /> <output name="duplicates" file="duplicates.fasta" /> </test> </tests> <help> This script removes duplicate paired-end reads from the input files sample1_R1.fastq and sample1_R2.fastq and prints out unique reads to the files sample1_R1.fastq.unique and sample2_R2.fastq.unique. Reads must have the exact same sequence to be called duplicates, quality scores are ignored. The top N (default 20) most duplicated sequences are printed out in fasta format, making it convenient for using BLAST to identify them. </help> </tool>