Hi Brad, I really like this idea. I'm not going to open a ticket yet but talk with Dan/team about some options. We have an alternate directory structure modeled from last fall I'd like to get in place before we start something like this ( is not yet implemented, but it or something similar would be required to properly add in the hg19 GTAK-sort. will involve a bit of other data shuffling w/ .loc changes to keep external links functional ). There are also some other repo ideas in play. Let me get some internal feedback next week, then I'll start a Trello ticket with some basics from our side that we can use to vet a plan to go forward, assuming the rest of the team likes idea. I think test cases/index validation would probably be part of this somehow. And certainly some simplification we be welcomed in the more cluttered dirs, if that can be managed while keeping enough around for reproducibility needs. Very topical, thanks for bring up and offering to help out! These can be great deal of work to create and makes total sense to share. I'll send and update later next week, hopefully with a Trello link so we can get started. Jen Galaxy On 2/21/13 12:43 PM, Brad Chapman wrote:
Hi all; Is there a way for community members to contribute indexes to the rsync server? This resource is awesome and I'm working on migrating the CloudBioLinux retrieval scripts to use this instead of the custom S3 buckets we'd set up previously:
https://github.com/chapmanb/cloudbiolinux/blob/master/cloudbio/biodata/galax...
It's great to have this as a public shared resource and I'd like to be able to contribute back. From an initial pass, here are the things I'd like to do:
- Include bowtie2 indexes for more genomes.
- Include novoalign indexes for a number of commonly used genomes.
- Clean up hg19 to include a full canonically sorted hg19, with indexes. Broad has a nice version prepped so GATK will be happy with it, and you need to stick with this ordering if you're ever going to use a GATK tool on it. Right now there is a partial hg19canon (without the random/haplotype chromosomes) and the structure is a bit complex.
What's the best way to contribute these? Right now I have a lot of the indexes on S3. For instance, the hg19 indexes are here:
https://s3.amazonaws.com/biodata/genomes/hg19-bowtie.tar.xz https://s3.amazonaws.com/biodata/genomes/hg19-bowtie2.tar.xz https://s3.amazonaws.com/biodata/genomes/hg19-bwa.tar.xz https://s3.amazonaws.com/biodata/genomes/hg19-novoalign.tar.xz https://s3.amazonaws.com/biodata/genomes/hg19-seq.tar.xz https://s3.amazonaws.com/biodata/genomes/hg19-ucsc.tar.xz
I'm happy to format these differently or upload somewhere that would make it easy to include. Thanks again for setting this up, I'm looking forward to working off a shared repository of data, Brad ___________________________________________________________ Please keep all replies on the list by using "reply all" in your mail client. To manage your subscriptions to this and other Galaxy lists, please use the interface at:
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