# HG changeset patch
# User fubar
# Date 1344853646 14400
# Node ID b55b59435fb125a1ac8da93677cbd4be964ac21e
# Parent 87613ace5113fa23aa982d54535205e8480edfdc
Now with bash working I think. Special case but working..
diff -r 87613ace5113 -r b55b59435fb1 fubar-galaxytoolfactory-2e68c2a22b43/README.txt
--- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
+++ b/fubar-galaxytoolfactory-2e68c2a22b43/README.txt Mon Aug 13 06:27:26 2012 -0400
@@ -0,0 +1,233 @@
+# WARNING before you start
+# Install this tool on a private Galaxy ONLY
+# Please NEVER on a public or production instance
+
+*Short Story*
+This is an unusual Galaxy tool that generates very simple new Galaxy tools that run the user
+a supplied script (R, python, perl, bash...) over a single input file.
+Whenever you run this tool, the ToolFactory, you should have prepared a script to paste into a text box,
+and a small test input example ready to select from your history to test your new script
+
+If the script runs sucessfully, a new Galaxy tool that runs your script can be generated.
+The new tool is in the form of a special new Galaxy datatype - toolshed.gz - as the name suggests,
+it's an archive ready to upload to a Galaxy ToolShed as a new tool repository.
+
+Once it's in a ToolShed, it can be installed into any local Galaxy server from
+the server administrative interface.
+
+Once your new tool is installed, local users can run it - each time, the script that was supplied
+when it was built will be executed with the input chosen from the user's history. In other words,
+the tools you generate with the ToolFactory run just like any other Galaxy tool,
+but run your script every time.
+
+*Reasons to read further*
+
+If you use Galaxy to support your research;
+
+You and fellow users are sometimes forced to take data out of Galaxy, process it with ugly
+little perl/awk/sed/R... scripts and put it back;
+
+You do this when you can't do some transformation in Galaxy (the 90/10 rule);
+
+You don't have enough developer resources for wrapping dozens of even relatively simple tools;
+
+Your research and your institution would be far better off if those feral scripts were all tucked safely in
+your local toolshed and Galaxy histories.
+
+*The good news* If it can be trivially scripted, it can be running safely in your
+local Galaxy via your own local toolshed in a few minutes - with functional tests.
+
+
+*Value proposition* The ToolFactory allows Galaxy to efficiently take over most of your lab's dark script matter,
+making it reproducible in Galaxy and shareable through the ToolShed.
+
+That's what this tool does. You paste a simple script and the tool returns
+a new, real Galaxy tool, ready to be installed from the local toolshed to local servers.
+Scripts can be wrapped and online literally within minutes.
+
+*To fully and safely exploit the awesome power* of this tool, Galaxy and the ToolShed,
+you should be a developer installing this tool on a private/personal/scratch local instance where you are an admin_user.
+Then, if you break it, you get to keep all the pieces
+see https://bitbucket.org/fubar/galaxytoolfactory/wiki/Home
+
+** Installation **
+This is a Galaxy tool. You can install it most conveniently using the administrative "Search and browse tool sheds" link.
+Find the Galaxy Test toolshed (not main) and search for the toolfactory repository.
+Open it and review the code and select the option to install it.
+
+If you can't get the tool that way, the xml and py files here need to be copied into a new tools subdirectory such as tools/toolfactory
+Your tool_conf.xml needs a new entry pointing to the xml file - something like::
+
+
+
+
+
+If not already there (I just added it to datatypes_conf.xml.sample), please add:
+
+to your local data_types_conf.xml.
+
+Ensure that html sanitization is set to False and uncommented in universe_wsgi.ini
+
+You'll have to restart the server for the new tool to be available.
+
+Of course, R, python, perl etc are needed on your path if you want to test scripts using those interpreters.
+Adding new ones to this tool code should be easy enough. Please make suggestions as bitbucket issues and code.
+The HTML file code automatically shrinks R's bloated pdfs, and depends on ghostscript. The thumbnails require imagemagick .
+
+* Restricted execution *
+The new tool factory tool will then be usable ONLY by admin users - people with IDs in admin_users in universe_wsgi.ini
+**Yes, that's right. ONLY admin_users can run this tool** Think about it for a moment. If allowed to run any
+arbitrary script on your Galaxy server, the only thing that would impede a miscreant bent on destroying all your
+Galaxy data would probably be lack of appropriate technical skills.
+
+*What it does* This is a tool factory for simple scripts in python, R and perl currently.
+Functional tests are automatically generated. How cool is that.
+
+LIMITED to simple scripts that read one input from the history.
+Optionally can write one new history dataset,
+and optionally collect any number of outputs into links on an autogenerated HTML
+index page for the user to navigate - useful if the script writes images and output files - pdf outputs
+are shown as thumbnails and R's bloated pdf's are shrunk with ghostscript so that and imagemagik need to
+be avaailable.
+
+Generated tools can be edited and enhanced like any Galaxy tool, so start small and build up since
+a generated script gets you a serious leg up to a more complex one.
+
+*What you do* You paste and run your script
+you fix the syntax errors and eventually it runs
+You can use the redo button and edit the script before
+trying to rerun it as you debug - it works pretty well.
+
+Once the script works on some test data, you can
+generate a toolshed compatible gzip file
+containing your script ready to run as an ordinary Galaxy tool in a
+repository on your local toolshed. That means safe and largely automated installation in any
+production Galaxy configured to use your toolshed.
+
+*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 fucking code before you install any tool.
+Especially this one - it is really scary.
+
+If you opt for an HTML output, you get all the script outputs arranged
+as a single Html history item - all output files are linked, thumbnails for all the pdfs.
+Ugly but really inexpensive.
+
+Patches and suggestions welcome as bitbucket issues please?
+
+long route to June 2012 product
+derived from an integrated script model
+called rgBaseScriptWrapper.py
+Note to the unwary:
+ This tool allows arbitrary scripting on your Galaxy as the Galaxy user
+ There is nothing stopping a malicious user doing whatever they choose
+ Extremely dangerous!!
+ Totally insecure. So, trusted users only
+
+
+
+
+copyright ross lazarus (ross stop lazarus at gmail stop com) May 2012
+
+all rights reserved
+Licensed under the LGPL if you want to improve it, feel free https://bitbucket.org/fubar/galaxytoolfactory/wiki/Home
+
+Material for our more enthusiastic and voracious readers continues below - we salute you.
+
+**Motivation** Simple transformation, filtering or reporting scripts get written, run and lost every day in most busy labs
+- even ours where Galaxy is in use. This 'dark script matter' is pervasive and generally not reproducible.
+
+**Benefits** For our group, this allows Galaxy to fill that important dark script gap - all those "small" bioinformatics
+tasks. Once a user has a working R (or python or perl) script that does something Galaxy cannot currently do (eg transpose a
+tabular file) and takes parameters the way Galaxy supplies them (see example below), they:
+
+1. Install the tool factory on a personal private instance
+
+2. Upload a small test data set
+
+3. Paste the script into the 'script' text box and iteratively run the insecure tool on test data until it works right -
+there is absolutely no reason to do this anywhere other than on a personal private instance.
+
+4. Once it works right, set the 'Generate toolshed gzip' option and run it again.
+
+5. A toolshed style gzip appears ready to upload and install like any other Toolshed entry.
+
+6. Upload the new tool to the toolshed
+
+7. Ask the local admin to check the new tool to confirm it's not evil and install it in the local production galaxy
+
+**Simple examples on the tool form**
+
+A simple Rscript "filter" showing how the command line parameters can be handled, takes an input file,
+does something (transpose in this case) and writes the results to a new tabular file::
+
+ # transpose a tabular input file and write as a tabular output file
+ ourargs = commandArgs(TRUE)
+ inf = ourargs[1]
+ outf = ourargs[2]
+ inp = read.table(inf,head=F,row.names=NULL,sep='\t')
+ outp = t(inp)
+ write.table(outp,outf, quote=FALSE, sep="\t",row.names=F,col.names=F)
+
+Calculate a multiple test adjusted p value from a column of p values - for this script to be useful,
+it needs the right column for the input to be specified in the code for the
+given input file type(s) specified when the tool is generated ::
+
+ # use p.adjust - assumes a HEADER row and column 1 - please fix for any real use
+ column = 1 # adjust if necessary for some other kind of input
+ fdrmeth = 'BH'
+ ourargs = commandArgs(TRUE)
+ inf = ourargs[1]
+ outf = ourargs[2]
+ inp = read.table(inf,head=T,row.names=NULL,sep='\t')
+ p = inp[,column]
+ q = p.adjust(p,method=fdrmeth)
+ newval = paste(fdrmeth,'p-value',sep='_')
+ q = data.frame(q)
+ names(q) = newval
+ outp = cbind(inp,newval=q)
+ write.table(outp,outf, quote=FALSE, sep="\t",row.names=F,col.names=T)
+
+
+
+Another Rscript example without any input file - generates a random heatmap pdf - you must make sure the option to create an HTML output file is
+turned on for this to work. The heatmap will be presented as a thumbnail linked to the pdf in the resulting HTML page::
+
+ # note this script takes NO input or output because it generates random data
+ foo = data.frame(a=runif(100),b=runif(100),c=runif(100),d=runif(100),e=runif(100),f=runif(100))
+ bar = as.matrix(foo)
+ pdf( "heattest.pdf" )
+ heatmap(bar,main='Random Heatmap')
+ dev.off()
+
+A Python example that reverses each row of a tabular file. You'll need to remove the leading spaces for this to work if cut
+and pasted into the script box. Note that you can already do this in Galaxy by setting up the cut columns tool with the
+correct number of columns in reverse order,but this script will work for any number of columns so is completely generic::
+
+# reverse order of columns in a tabular file
+import sys
+inp = sys.argv[1]
+outp = sys.argv[2]
+i = open(inp,'r')
+o = open(outp,'w')
+for row in i:
+ rs = row.rstrip().split('\t')
+ rs.reverse()
+ o.write('\t'.join(rs))
+ o.write('\n')
+i.close()
+o.close()
+
+
+**Attribution** Copyright Ross Lazarus (ross period lazarus at gmail period com) May 2012
+
+All rights reserved.
+
+Licensed under the LGPL
+
+
+**Obligatory screenshot**
+
+http://bitbucket.org/fubar/galaxytoolmaker/src/fda8032fe989/images/dynamicScriptTool.png
+
diff -r 87613ace5113 -r b55b59435fb1 fubar-galaxytoolfactory-2e68c2a22b43/images/dynamicScriptTool.png
Binary file fubar-galaxytoolfactory-2e68c2a22b43/images/dynamicScriptTool.png has changed
diff -r 87613ace5113 -r b55b59435fb1 fubar-galaxytoolfactory-2e68c2a22b43/rgToolFactory.py
--- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
+++ b/fubar-galaxytoolfactory-2e68c2a22b43/rgToolFactory.py Mon Aug 13 06:27:26 2012 -0400
@@ -0,0 +1,541 @@
+# rgToolFactory.py
+# see https://bitbucket.org/fubar/galaxytoolfactory/wiki/Home
+#
+# copyright ross lazarus (ross stop lazarus at gmail stop com) May 2012
+#
+# all rights reserved
+# Licensed under the LGPL
+# suggestions for improvement and bug fixes welcome at https://bitbucket.org/fubar/galaxytoolfactory/wiki/Home
+
+# August 11 2012
+# changed to use shell=False and cl as a sequence
+
+# This is a Galaxy tool factory for simple scripts in python, R or whatever ails ye.
+# It also serves as the wrapper for the new tool.
+#
+# you paste and run your script
+# Only works for simple scripts that read one input from the history.
+# Optionally can write one new history dataset,
+# and optionally collect any number of outputs into links on an autogenerated HTML page.
+
+# DO NOT install on a public or important site - please.
+
+# installed generated tools are fine if the script is safe.
+# They just run normally and their user cannot do anything unusually insecure
+# but please, practice safe toolshed.
+# Read the fucking code before you install any tool
+# especially this one
+
+# After you get the script working on some test data, you can
+# optionally generate a toolshed compatible gzip file
+# containing your script safely wrapped as an ordinary Galaxy script in your local toolshed for
+# safe and largely automated installation in a production Galaxy.
+
+# If you opt for an HTML output, you get all the script outputs arranged
+# as a single Html history item - all output files are linked, thumbnails for all the pdfs.
+# Ugly but really inexpensive.
+#
+# Patches appreciated please.
+#
+#
+# long route to June 2012 product
+# Behold the awesome power of Galaxy and the toolshed with the tool factory binds to bind them
+# derived from an integrated script model
+# called rgBaseScriptWrapper.py
+# Note to the unwary:
+# This tool allows arbitrary scripting on your Galaxy as the Galaxy user
+# There is nothing stopping a malicious user doing whatever they choose
+# Extremely dangerous!!
+# Totally insecure. So, trusted users only
+#
+# preferred model is a developer using their throw away workstation instance - ie a private site.
+# no real risk. The universe_wsgi.ini admin_users string is checked - only admin users are permitted to run this tool.
+#
+
+#
+# copyright ross lazarus (ross stop lazarus at gmail stop com) May 2012
+#
+# all rights reserved
+# Licensed under the LGPL if you want to improve it, feel free https://bitbucket.org/fubar/galaxytoolfactory/wiki/Home
+
+import sys
+import shutil
+import subprocess
+import os
+import time
+import tempfile
+import optparse
+import tarfile
+import re
+import shutil
+import math
+
+progname = os.path.split(sys.argv[0])[1]
+myversion = 'V000.2 June 2012'
+verbose = False
+debug = False
+toolFactoryURL = 'https://bitbucket.org/fubar/galaxytoolfactory'
+
+def timenow():
+ """return current time as a string
+ """
+ return time.strftime('%d/%m/%Y %H:%M:%S', time.localtime(time.time()))
+
+
+class ScriptRunner:
+ """class is a wrapper for an arbitrary script
+ """
+
+ def __init__(self,opts=None,treatbashSpecial=True):
+ """
+ cleanup inputs, setup some outputs
+
+ """
+ self.treatbashSpecial = treatbashSpecial
+ if opts.output_dir: # simplify for the tool tarball
+ os.chdir(opts.output_dir)
+ self.thumbformat = 'jpg'
+ self.opts = opts
+ self.toolname = re.sub('[^a-zA-Z0-9_]+', '', opts.tool_name) # a sanitizer now does this but..
+ self.toolid = self.toolname
+ self.myname = sys.argv[0] # get our name because we write ourselves out as a tool later
+ self.pyfile = self.myname # crude but efficient - the cruft won't hurt much
+ self.xmlfile = '%s.xml' % self.toolname
+ s = open(self.opts.script_path,'r').readlines()
+ s = [x.rstrip() for x in s] # remove pesky dos line endings if needed
+ self.script = '\n'.join(s)
+ fhandle,self.sfile = tempfile.mkstemp(prefix=self.toolname,suffix=opts.interpreter)
+ tscript = open(self.sfile,'w') # use self.sfile as script source for Popen
+ tscript.write(self.script)
+ tscript.close()
+ self.indentedScript = ''.join([' %s' % x for x in s]) # for restructured text in help
+ if opts.output_dir: # may not want these complexities
+ self.tlog = os.path.join(opts.output_dir,"%s_runner.log" % self.toolname)
+ art = '%s.%s' % (self.toolname,opts.interpreter)
+ artpath = os.path.join(self.opts.output_dir,art) # need full path
+ artifact = open(artpath,'w') # use self.sfile as script source for Popen
+ artifact.write(self.script)
+ artifact.close()
+ self.cl = []
+ self.html = []
+ a = self.cl.append
+ a(opts.interpreter)
+ if self.treatbashSpecial and opts.interpreter in ['bash','sh']:
+ a(self.sfile)
+ else:
+ a('-') # stdin
+ a(opts.input_tab)
+ a(opts.output_tab)
+ self.outFormats = 'tabular' # TODO make this an option at tool generation time
+ self.inputFormats = 'tabular' # TODO make this an option at tool generation time
+ self.test1Input = '%s_test1_input.xls' % self.toolname
+ self.test1Output = '%s_test1_output.xls' % self.toolname
+ self.test1HTML = '%s_test1_output.html' % self.toolname
+
+ def makeXML(self):
+ """
+ Create a Galaxy xml tool wrapper for the new script as a string to write out
+ fixme - use templating or something less fugly than this example of what we produce
+
+
+ a tabular file
+
+ reverse.py --script_path "$runMe" --interpreter "python"
+ --tool_name "reverse" --input_tab "$input1" --output_tab "$tab_file"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+**What it Does**
+
+Reverse the columns in a tabular file
+
+
+
+
+
+# reverse order of columns in a tabular file
+import sys
+inp = sys.argv[1]
+outp = sys.argv[2]
+i = open(inp,'r')
+o = open(outp,'w')
+for row in i:
+ rs = row.rstrip().split('\t')
+ rs.reverse()
+ o.write('\t'.join(rs))
+ o.write('\n')
+i.close()
+o.close()
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ """
+ newXML="""
+ %(tooldesc)s
+ %(command)s
+
+ %(inputs)s
+
+
+ %(outputs)s
+
+
+
+ %(script)s
+
+
+ %(tooltests)s
+
+ %(help)s
+
+ """ # needs a dict with toolname, toolid, interpreter, scriptname, command, inputs as a multi line string ready to write, outputs ditto, help ditto
+
+ newCommand="""
+ %(toolname)s.py --script_path "$runMe" --interpreter "%(interpreter)s"
+ --tool_name "%(toolname)s" %(command_inputs)s %(command_outputs)s
+ """ # may NOT be an input or htmlout
+ tooltestsTabOnly = """
+
+
+
+
+ """
+ tooltestsHTMLOnly = """
+
+
+
+
+ """
+ tooltestsBoth = """
+
+
+
+
+
+ """
+ xdict = {}
+ xdict['tool_version'] = self.opts.tool_version
+ xdict['test1Input'] = self.test1Input
+ xdict['test1HTML'] = self.test1HTML
+ xdict['test1Output'] = self.test1Output
+ if self.opts.make_HTML and self.opts.output_tab <> 'None':
+ xdict['tooltests'] = tooltestsBoth % xdict
+ elif self.opts.make_HTML:
+ xdict['tooltests'] = tooltestsHTMLOnly % xdict
+ else:
+ xdict['tooltests'] = tooltestsTabOnly % xdict
+ xdict['script'] = self.script # configfile is least painful way to embed script to avoid external dependencies
+ if self.opts.help_text:
+ xdict['help'] = open(self.opts.help_text,'r').read()
+ else:
+ xdict['help'] = 'Please ask the tool author for help as none was supplied at tool generation'
+ coda = ['**Script**','Pressing execute will run the following code over your input file and generate some outputs in your history::']
+ coda.append(self.indentedScript)
+ coda.append('**Attribution** This Galaxy tool was created by %s at %s\nusing the Galaxy Tool Factory.' % (self.opts.user_email,timenow()))
+ coda.append('See %s for details of that project' % (toolFactoryURL))
+ xdict['help'] = '%s\n%s' % (xdict['help'],'\n'.join(coda))
+ if self.opts.tool_desc:
+ xdict['tooldesc'] = '%s' % self.opts.tool_desc
+ else:
+ xdict['tooldesc'] = ''
+ xdict['command_outputs'] = ''
+ xdict['outputs'] = ''
+ if self.opts.input_tab <> 'None':
+ xdict['command_inputs'] = '--input_tab "$input1" ' # the space may matter a lot if we append something
+ xdict['inputs'] = ' \n' % self.inputFormats
+ else:
+ xdict['command_inputs'] = '' # assume no input - eg a random data generator
+ xdict['inputs'] = ''
+ xdict['inputs'] += ' \n' % self.toolname
+ xdict['toolname'] = self.toolname
+ xdict['toolid'] = self.toolid
+ xdict['interpreter'] = self.opts.interpreter
+ xdict['scriptname'] = self.sfile
+ if self.opts.make_HTML:
+ xdict['command_outputs'] += ' --output_dir "$html_file.files_path" --output_html "$html_file" --make_HTML "yes" '
+ xdict['outputs'] += ' \n'
+ if self.opts.output_tab <> 'None':
+ xdict['command_outputs'] += ' --output_tab "$tab_file"'
+ xdict['outputs'] += ' \n' % self.outFormats
+ xdict['command'] = newCommand % xdict
+ xmls = newXML % xdict
+ xf = open(self.xmlfile,'w')
+ xf.write(xmls)
+ xf.write('\n')
+ xf.close()
+ # ready for the tarball
+
+
+ def makeTooltar(self):
+ """
+ a tool is a gz tarball with eg
+ /toolname/tool.xml /toolname/tool.py /toolname/test-data/test1_in.foo ...
+ """
+ retval = self.run()
+ if retval:
+ print >> sys.stderr,'## Run failed. Cannot build yet. Please fix and retry'
+ sys.exit(1)
+ self.makeXML()
+ tdir = self.toolname
+ os.mkdir(tdir)
+ if self.opts.input_tab <> 'None': # no reproducible test otherwise? TODO: maybe..
+ testdir = os.path.join(tdir,'test-data')
+ os.mkdir(testdir) # make tests directory
+ shutil.copyfile(self.opts.input_tab,os.path.join(testdir,self.test1Input))
+ if self.opts.output_tab <> 'None':
+ shutil.copyfile(self.opts.output_tab,os.path.join(testdir,self.test1Output))
+ if self.opts.make_HTML:
+ shutil.copyfile(self.opts.output_html,os.path.join(testdir,self.test1HTML))
+ if self.opts.output_dir:
+ shutil.copyfile(self.tlog,os.path.join(testdir,'test1_out.log'))
+ op = '%s.py' % self.toolname # new name
+ outpiname = os.path.join(tdir,op) # path for the tool tarball
+ pyin = os.path.basename(self.pyfile) # our name - we rewrite ourselves (TM)
+ notes = ['# %s - a self annotated version of %s generated by running %s\n' % (op,pyin,pyin),]
+ notes.append('# to make a new Galaxy tool called %s\n' % self.toolname)
+ notes.append('# User %s at %s\n' % (self.opts.user_email,timenow()))
+ pi = open(self.pyfile,'r').readlines() # our code becomes new tool wrapper (!) - first Galaxy worm
+ notes += pi
+ outpi = open(outpiname,'w')
+ outpi.write(''.join(notes))
+ outpi.write('\n')
+ outpi.close()
+ shutil.copyfile(self.sfile,os.path.join(tdir,self.sfile))
+ shutil.copyfile(self.xmlfile,os.path.join(tdir,self.xmlfile))
+ tarpath = "%s.gz" % self.toolname
+ tar = tarfile.open(tarpath, "w:gz")
+ tar.add(tdir,arcname=self.toolname)
+ tar.close()
+ shutil.copyfile(tarpath,self.opts.new_tool)
+ shutil.rmtree(tdir)
+ ## TODO: replace with optional direct upload to local toolshed?
+ return retval
+
+ def compressPDF(self,inpdf=None,thumbformat='png'):
+ """need absolute path to pdf
+ """
+ assert os.path.isfile(inpdf), "## Input %s supplied to %s compressPDF not found" % (inpdf,self.myName)
+ hf,hlog = tempfile.mkstemp(suffix="%s.log" % self.toolname)
+ sto = open(hlog,'w')
+ outpdf = '%s_compressed' % inpdf
+ cl = ["gs", "-sDEVICE=pdfwrite", "-dNOPAUSE", "-dBATCH", "-sOutputFile=%s" % outpdf,inpdf]
+ x = subprocess.Popen(cl,stdout=sto,stderr=sto,cwd=self.opts.output_dir)
+ retval1 = x.wait()
+ if retval1 == 0:
+ os.unlink(inpdf)
+ shutil.move(outpdf,inpdf)
+ outpng = '%s.%s' % (os.path.splitext(inpdf)[0],thumbformat)
+ cl2 = ['convert', inpdf, outpng]
+ x = subprocess.Popen(cl2,stdout=sto,stderr=sto,cwd=self.opts.output_dir)
+ retval2 = x.wait()
+ sto.close()
+ retval = retval1 or retval2
+ return retval
+
+
+ def getfSize(self,fpath,outpath):
+ """
+ format a nice file size string
+ """
+ size = ''
+ fp = os.path.join(outpath,fpath)
+ if os.path.isfile(fp):
+ size = '0 B'
+ n = float(os.path.getsize(fp))
+ if n > 2**20:
+ size = '%1.1f MB' % (n/2**20)
+ elif n > 2**10:
+ size = '%1.1f KB)' % (n/2**10)
+ elif n > 0:
+ size = '%d B' % (int(n))
+ return size
+
+ def makeHtml(self):
+ """ Create an HTML file content to list all the artifacts found in the output_dir
+ """
+
+ galhtmlprefix = """
+
+
\n"""
+
+ flist = os.listdir(self.opts.output_dir)
+ flist = [x for x in flist if x <> 'Rplots.pdf']
+ flist.sort()
+ html = []
+ html.append(galhtmlprefix % progname)
+ html.append('
Galaxy Tool "%s" run at %s
' % (self.toolname,timenow()))
+ fhtml = []
+ if len(flist) > 0:
+ pdflist = []
+ npdf = len([x for x in flist if os.path.splitext(x)[-1].lower() == '.pdf'])
+ nacross = 1
+ if npdf > 0:
+ nacross = int(round(math.log(npdf,2)))
+ nacross = max(1,nacross)
+ width = min(400,int(1200/nacross))
+ for rownum,fname in enumerate(flist):
+ dname,e = os.path.splitext(fname)
+ sfsize = self.getfSize(fname,self.opts.output_dir)
+ if e.lower() == '.pdf' : # compress and make a thumbnail
+ thumb = '%s.%s' % (dname,self.thumbformat)
+ pdff = os.path.join(self.opts.output_dir,fname)
+ retval = self.compressPDF(inpdf=pdff,thumbformat=self.thumbformat)
+ if retval == 0:
+ pdflist.append((fname,thumb))
+ if (rownum+1) % 2 == 0:
+ fhtml.append('
\n')
+ else:
+ if ntogo > 0: # pad
+ html.append('
'*ntogo)
+ html.append('\n')
+ if len(fhtml) > 0:
+ fhtml.insert(0,'
Output File Name (click to view)
Size
\n')
+ fhtml.append('
')
+ html += fhtml # add all non-pdf files to the end of the display
+ else:
+ html.append('
### Error - %s returned no files - please confirm that parameters are sane
' % self.opts.interpreter)
+ rlog = open(self.tlog,'r').readlines()
+ rlog = [x for x in rlog if x.strip() > '']
+ if len(rlog) > 1:
+ html.append('
%s log
\n' % self.opts.interpreter)
+ html += rlog
+ html.append('
\n')
+ html.append(galhtmlattr % (self.toolname))
+ html.append(galhtmlpostfix)
+ htmlf = file(self.opts.output_html,'w')
+ htmlf.write('\n'.join(html))
+ htmlf.write('\n')
+ htmlf.close()
+ self.html = html
+
+
+ def run(self):
+ """
+ scripts must be small enough not to fill the pipe!
+ """
+ if self.treatbashSpecial and self.opts.interpreter in ['bash','sh']:
+ retval = self.runBash()
+ else:
+ if self.opts.output_dir:
+ sto = open(self.tlog,'w')
+ sto.write('## Toolfactory generated command line = %s\n' % ' '.join(self.cl))
+ sto.flush()
+ p = subprocess.Popen(self.cl,shell=False,stdout=sto,stderr=sto,stdin=subprocess.PIPE,cwd=self.opts.output_dir)
+ else:
+ p = subprocess.Popen(self.cl,shell=False,stdin=subprocess.PIPE)
+ p.stdin.write(self.script)
+ p.stdin.close()
+ retval = p.wait()
+ if self.opts.output_dir:
+ sto.close()
+ if self.opts.make_HTML:
+ self.makeHtml()
+ os.unlink(self.sfile)
+ return retval
+
+ def runBash(self):
+ """
+ cannot use - for bash so use self.sfile
+ """
+ if self.opts.output_dir:
+ s = '## Toolfactory generated command line = %s\n' % ' '.join(self.cl)
+ sto = open(self.tlog,'w')
+ sto.write(s)
+ sto.flush()
+ p = subprocess.Popen(self.cl,shell=False,stdout=sto,stderr=sto,cwd=self.opts.output_dir)
+ else:
+ p = subprocess.Popen(self.cl,shell=False)
+ retval = p.wait()
+ if self.opts.output_dir:
+ sto.close()
+ if self.opts.make_HTML:
+ self.makeHtml()
+ return retval
+
+
+def main():
+ u = """
+ This is a Galaxy wrapper. It expects to be called by a special purpose tool.xml as:
+ rgBaseScriptWrapper.py --script_path "$scriptPath" --tool_name "foo" --interpreter "Rscript"
+
+ """
+ op = optparse.OptionParser()
+ a = op.add_option
+ a('--script_path',default=None)
+ a('--tool_name',default=None)
+ a('--interpreter',default=None)
+ a('--output_dir',default=None)
+ a('--output_html',default=None)
+ a('--input_tab',default="None")
+ a('--output_tab',default="None")
+ a('--user_email',default='Unknown')
+ a('--bad_user',default=None)
+ a('--make_Tool',default=None)
+ a('--make_HTML',default=None)
+ a('--help_text',default=None)
+ a('--tool_desc',default=None)
+ a('--new_tool',default=None)
+ a('--tool_version',default=None)
+ opts, args = op.parse_args()
+ assert not opts.bad_user,'UNAUTHORISED: %s is NOT authorized to use this tool until Galaxy admin adds %s to admin_users in universe_wsgi.ini' % (opts.bad_user,opts.bad_user)
+ assert opts.tool_name,'## Tool Factory expects a tool name - eg --tool_name=DESeq'
+ assert opts.interpreter,'## Tool Factory wrapper expects an interpreter - eg --interpreter=Rscript'
+ assert os.path.isfile(opts.script_path),'## Tool Factory wrapper expects a script path - eg --script_path=foo.R'
+ if opts.output_dir:
+ try:
+ os.makedirs(opts.output_dir)
+ except:
+ pass
+ r = ScriptRunner(opts)
+ if opts.make_Tool:
+ retcode = r.makeTooltar()
+ else:
+ retcode = r.run()
+ if retcode:
+ sys.exit(retcode) # indicate failure to job runner
+
+
+if __name__ == "__main__":
+ main()
+
+
diff -r 87613ace5113 -r b55b59435fb1 fubar-galaxytoolfactory-2e68c2a22b43/rgToolFactory.xml
--- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
+++ b/fubar-galaxytoolfactory-2e68c2a22b43/rgToolFactory.xml Mon Aug 13 06:27:26 2012 -0400
@@ -0,0 +1,233 @@
+
+ Makes scripts into tools
+
+#if ( $__user_email__ not in $__admin_users__ ):
+ rgToolFactory.py --bad_user $__user_email__
+ #else:
+ rgToolFactory.py --script_path "$runme" --interpreter "$interpreter"
+ --tool_name "$tool_name" --user_email "$__user_email__"
+ #if $make_TAB.value=="yes":
+ --output_tab "$tab_file"
+ #end if
+ #if $makeMode.make_Tool=="yes":
+ --make_Tool "$makeMode.make_Tool"
+ --tool_desc "$makeMode.tool_desc"
+ --tool_version "$makeMode.tool_version"
+ --new_tool "$new_tool"
+ --help_text "$helpme"
+ #end if
+ #if $make_HTML.value=="yes":
+ --output_dir "$html_file.files_path" --output_html "$html_file" --make_HTML "yes"
+ #end if
+ #if $input1 != 'None':
+ --input_tab "$input1"
+ #end if
+#end if
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ make_TAB=="yes"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ make_HTML == "yes"
+
+
+ makeMode['make_Tool'] == "yes"
+
+
+
+$dynScript
+
+#if $makeMode.make_Tool == "yes":
+${makeMode.help_text}
+#end if
+
+
+
+
+.. class:: warningmark
+
+**Local Admins ONLY** Only users whose IDs found in the local admin_user configuration setting in universe_wsgi.ini can run this tool.
+
+**What it does** This tool enables a user to paste and submit an arbitrary R/python/perl script to Galaxy.
+
+**Input options** This version is limited to simple transformation or reporting requiring only a single input file selected from the history.
+
+**Output options** Optional script outputs include one single new history tabular file, or for scripts that create multiple outputs,
+a new HTML report linking all the files and images created by the script can be automatically generated.
+
+**Tool Generation option** Once the script is working with test data, this tool will optionally generate a new Galaxy tool in a gzip file
+ready to upload to your local toolshed for sharing and installation. Provide a small sample input when you run generate the tool because
+it will become the input for the generated functional test.
+
+.. class:: warningmark
+
+**Note to system administrators** This tool offers *NO* built in protection against malicious scripts. It should only be installed on private/personnal Galaxy instances.
+Admin_users will have the power to do anything they want as the Galaxy user if you install this tool.
+
+.. class:: warningmark
+
+**Use on public servers** is STRONGLY discouraged for obvious reasons
+
+The tools generated by this tool will run just as securely as any other normal installed Galaxy tool but like any other new tools, should always be checked carefully before installation.
+We recommend that you follow the good code hygiene practices associated with safe toolshed.
+
+**Scripting conventions** The pasted script will be executed with the path to the (optional) input tabular data file path or NONE if you do not select one, and the path to the optional
+output file or None if none is wanted, as the first and second command line parameters. The script must deal appropriately with these - see Rscript examples below.
+Note that if an optional HTML output is selected, all the output files created by the script will be nicely presented as links, with pdf images linked as thumbnails in that output.
+This can be handy for complex scripts creating lots of output.
+
+**Simple examples**
+
+A simple Rscript "filter" showing how the command line parameters can be handled, takes an input file, does something (transpose in this case) and writes the results to a new tabular file::
+
+ # transpose a tabular input file and write as a tabular output file
+ ourargs = commandArgs(TRUE)
+ inf = ourargs[1]
+ outf = ourargs[2]
+ inp = read.table(inf,head=F,row.names=NULL,sep='\t')
+ outp = t(inp)
+ write.table(outp,outf, quote=FALSE, sep="\t",row.names=F,col.names=F)
+
+Calculate a multiple test adjusted p value from a column of p values - for this script to be useful, it needs the right column for the input to be specified in the code for the
+given input file type(s) specified when the tool is generated ::
+
+ # use p.adjust - assumes a HEADER row and column 1 - please fix for any real use
+ column = 1 # adjust if necessary for some other kind of input
+ ourargs = commandArgs(TRUE)
+ inf = ourargs[1]
+ outf = ourargs[2]
+ inp = read.table(inf,head=T,row.names=NULL,sep='\t')
+ p = inp[,column]
+ q = p.adjust(p,method='BH')
+ outp = cbind(inp,'BH Adjusted p-value'=q)
+ write.table(outp,outf, quote=FALSE, sep="\t",row.names=F,col.names=T)
+
+
+A demonstration Rscript example takes no input file but generates some random data based pdf images
+You must make sure the option to create an HTML output file is
+turned on for this to work. Images (pdf) are linked via thumbnails and
+all files have a link on the resulting HTML page::
+
+ # note this script takes NO input or output because it generates random data
+ foo = data.frame(a=runif(100),b=runif(100),c=runif(100),d=runif(100),e=runif(100),f=runif(100))
+ bar = as.matrix(foo)
+ pdf( "heattest.pdf" )
+ heatmap(bar,main='Random Heatmap')
+ dev.off()
+ for (i in 1:49) {
+ foo = runif(100)
+ bar = rnorm(100)
+ pdf(paste('yet',i,"anotherplot.pdf",sep='_'))
+ plot(foo,bar,main=paste("Foo by Bar plot #",i),col="maroon", pch=3,cex=0.6)
+ dev.off()
+ }
+
+A Python example that reverses each row of a tabular file (you'll need to remove the leading spaces
+for this to work if cut and pasted into the script box)::
+
+ # reverse order of columns in a tabular file
+ import sys
+ inp = sys.argv[1]
+ outp = sys.argv[2]
+ i = open(inp,'r')
+ o = open(outp,'w')
+ for row in i:
+ rs = row.rstrip().split('\t')
+ rs.reverse()
+ o.write('\t'.join(rs))
+ o.write('\n')
+ i.close()
+ o.close()
+
+A trivial shell script example to show that it works::
+
+ #!/bin/bash
+ INF=$1
+ OUTF=$2
+ cut -c2,4,6,8,10,12 $INF >$OUTF
+
+
+**Attribution** Copyright Ross Lazarus (ross period lazarus at gmail period com) May 2012
+
+All rights reserved.
+
+Licensed under the LGPL_
+
+.. _LGPL: http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/lesser.html
+
+
+
+
+
+
diff -r 87613ace5113 -r b55b59435fb1 fubar-galaxytoolfactory-cfcf6c9df5b7/README.txt
--- a/fubar-galaxytoolfactory-cfcf6c9df5b7/README.txt Sat Aug 11 02:41:28 2012 -0400
+++ /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
@@ -1,233 +0,0 @@
-# WARNING before you start
-# Install on a private Galaxy ONLY
-# Please NEVER on a public or production instance
-
-*Short Story*
-This is an unusual Galaxy tool that generates very simple but potentially
-very useful local Galaxy tools that run the user supplied script (R, python, perl...) over a single input file.
-Whenever you run this tool, the ToolFactory, you should have prepared a script to paste into a text box,
-and a small test input example ready to select from your history to test your new script
-
-If the script runs sucessfully, a new Galaxy tool that runs your script can be generated.
-The new tool is in the form of a special new Galaxy datatype - toolshed.gz - as the name suggests,
-it's an archive ready to upload to a Galaxy ToolShed as a new tool repository.
-
-Once it's in a ToolShed, it can be installed into any local Galaxy server from
-the server administrative interface.
-
-Once your new tool is installed, local users can run it - each time, the script that was supplied
-when it was built will be executed with the input chosen from the user's history. In other words,
-the tools you generate with the ToolFactory run just like any other Galaxy tool,
-but run your script every time.
-
-*Reasons to read further*
-
-If you use Galaxy to support your research;
-
-You and fellow users are sometimes forced to take data out of Galaxy, process it with ugly
-little perl/awk/sed/R... scripts and put it back;
-
-You do this when you can't do some transformation in Galaxy (the 90/10 rule);
-
-You don't have enough developer resources for wrapping dozens of even relatively simple tools;
-
-Your research and your institution would be far better off if those feral scripts were all tucked safely in
-your local toolshed and Galaxy histories.
-
-*The good news* If it can be trivially scripted, it can be running safely in your
-local Galaxy via your own local toolshed in a few minutes - with functional tests.
-
-
-*Value proposition* The ToolFactory allows Galaxy to efficiently take over most of your lab's dark script matter,
-making it reproducible in Galaxy and shareable through the ToolShed.
-
-That's what this tool does. You paste a simple script and the tool returns
-a new, real Galaxy tool, ready to be installed from the local toolshed to local servers.
-Scripts can be wrapped and online literally within minutes.
-
-*To fully and safely exploit the awesome power* of this tool, Galaxy and the ToolShed,
-you should be a developer installing this tool on a private/personal/scratch local instance where you are an admin_user.
-Then, if you break it, you get to keep all the pieces
-see https://bitbucket.org/fubar/galaxytoolfactory/wiki/Home
-
-** Installation **
-This is a Galaxy tool. You can install it most conveniently using the administrative "Search and browse tool sheds" link.
-Find the Galaxy Test toolshed (not main) and search for the toolfactory repository.
-Open it and review the code and select the option to install it.
-
-If you can't get the tool that way, the xml and py files here need to be copied into a new tools subdirectory such as tools/toolfactory
-Your tool_conf.xml needs a new entry pointing to the xml file - something like::
-
-
-
-
-
-If not already there (I just added it to datatypes_conf.xml.sample), please add:
-
-to your local data_types_conf.xml.
-
-Ensure that html sanitization is set to False and uncommented in universe_wsgi.ini
-
-You'll have to restart the server for the new tool to be available.
-
-Of course, R, python, perl etc are needed on your path if you want to test scripts using those interpreters.
-Adding new ones to this tool code should be easy enough. Please make suggestions as bitbucket issues and code.
-The HTML file code automatically shrinks R's bloated pdfs, and depends on ghostscript. The thumbnails require imagemagick .
-
-* Restricted execution *
-The new tool factory tool will then be usable ONLY by admin users - people with IDs in admin_users in universe_wsgi.ini
-**Yes, that's right. ONLY admin_users can run this tool** Think about it for a moment. If allowed to run any
-arbitrary script on your Galaxy server, the only thing that would impede a miscreant bent on destroying all your
-Galaxy data would probably be lack of appropriate technical skills.
-
-*What it does* This is a tool factory for simple scripts in python, R and perl currently.
-Functional tests are automatically generated. How cool is that.
-
-LIMITED to simple scripts that read one input from the history.
-Optionally can write one new history dataset,
-and optionally collect any number of outputs into links on an autogenerated HTML
-index page for the user to navigate - useful if the script writes images and output files - pdf outputs
-are shown as thumbnails and R's bloated pdf's are shrunk with ghostscript so that and imagemagik need to
-be avaailable.
-
-Generated tools can be edited and enhanced like any Galaxy tool, so start small and build up since
-a generated script gets you a serious leg up to a more complex one.
-
-*What you do* You paste and run your script
-you fix the syntax errors and eventually it runs
-You can use the redo button and edit the script before
-trying to rerun it as you debug - it works pretty well.
-
-Once the script works on some test data, you can
-generate a toolshed compatible gzip file
-containing your script ready to run as an ordinary Galaxy tool in a
-repository on your local toolshed. That means safe and largely automated installation in any
-production Galaxy configured to use your toolshed.
-
-*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 fucking code before you install any tool.
-Especially this one - it is really scary.
-
-If you opt for an HTML output, you get all the script outputs arranged
-as a single Html history item - all output files are linked, thumbnails for all the pdfs.
-Ugly but really inexpensive.
-
-Patches and suggestions welcome as bitbucket issues please?
-
-long route to June 2012 product
-derived from an integrated script model
-called rgBaseScriptWrapper.py
-Note to the unwary:
- This tool allows arbitrary scripting on your Galaxy as the Galaxy user
- There is nothing stopping a malicious user doing whatever they choose
- Extremely dangerous!!
- Totally insecure. So, trusted users only
-
-
-
-
-copyright ross lazarus (ross stop lazarus at gmail stop com) May 2012
-
-all rights reserved
-Licensed under the LGPL if you want to improve it, feel free https://bitbucket.org/fubar/galaxytoolfactory/wiki/Home
-
-Material for our more enthusiastic and voracious readers continues below - we salute you.
-
-**Motivation** Simple transformation, filtering or reporting scripts get written, run and lost every day in most busy labs
-- even ours where Galaxy is in use. This 'dark script matter' is pervasive and generally not reproducible.
-
-**Benefits** For our group, this allows Galaxy to fill that important dark script gap - all those "small" bioinformatics
-tasks. Once a user has a working R (or python or perl) script that does something Galaxy cannot currently do (eg transpose a
-tabular file) and takes parameters the way Galaxy supplies them (see example below), they:
-
-1. Install the tool factory on a personal private instance
-
-2. Upload a small test data set
-
-3. Paste the script into the 'script' text box and iteratively run the insecure tool on test data until it works right -
-there is absolutely no reason to do this anywhere other than on a personal private instance.
-
-4. Once it works right, set the 'Generate toolshed gzip' option and run it again.
-
-5. A toolshed style gzip appears ready to upload and install like any other Toolshed entry.
-
-6. Upload the new tool to the toolshed
-
-7. Ask the local admin to check the new tool to confirm it's not evil and install it in the local production galaxy
-
-**Simple examples on the tool form**
-
-A simple Rscript "filter" showing how the command line parameters can be handled, takes an input file,
-does something (transpose in this case) and writes the results to a new tabular file::
-
- # transpose a tabular input file and write as a tabular output file
- ourargs = commandArgs(TRUE)
- inf = ourargs[1]
- outf = ourargs[2]
- inp = read.table(inf,head=F,row.names=NULL,sep='\t')
- outp = t(inp)
- write.table(outp,outf, quote=FALSE, sep="\t",row.names=F,col.names=F)
-
-Calculate a multiple test adjusted p value from a column of p values - for this script to be useful,
-it needs the right column for the input to be specified in the code for the
-given input file type(s) specified when the tool is generated ::
-
- # use p.adjust - assumes a HEADER row and column 1 - please fix for any real use
- column = 1 # adjust if necessary for some other kind of input
- fdrmeth = 'BH'
- ourargs = commandArgs(TRUE)
- inf = ourargs[1]
- outf = ourargs[2]
- inp = read.table(inf,head=T,row.names=NULL,sep='\t')
- p = inp[,column]
- q = p.adjust(p,method=fdrmeth)
- newval = paste(fdrmeth,'p-value',sep='_')
- q = data.frame(q)
- names(q) = newval
- outp = cbind(inp,newval=q)
- write.table(outp,outf, quote=FALSE, sep="\t",row.names=F,col.names=T)
-
-
-
-Another Rscript example without any input file - generates a random heatmap pdf - you must make sure the option to create an HTML output file is
-turned on for this to work. The heatmap will be presented as a thumbnail linked to the pdf in the resulting HTML page::
-
- # note this script takes NO input or output because it generates random data
- foo = data.frame(a=runif(100),b=runif(100),c=runif(100),d=runif(100),e=runif(100),f=runif(100))
- bar = as.matrix(foo)
- pdf( "heattest.pdf" )
- heatmap(bar,main='Random Heatmap')
- dev.off()
-
-A Python example that reverses each row of a tabular file. You'll need to remove the leading spaces for this to work if cut
-and pasted into the script box. Note that you can already do this in Galaxy by setting up the cut columns tool with the
-correct number of columns in reverse order,but this script will work for any number of columns so is completely generic::
-
-# reverse order of columns in a tabular file
-import sys
-inp = sys.argv[1]
-outp = sys.argv[2]
-i = open(inp,'r')
-o = open(outp,'w')
-for row in i:
- rs = row.rstrip().split('\t')
- rs.reverse()
- o.write('\t'.join(rs))
- o.write('\n')
-i.close()
-o.close()
-
-
-**Attribution** Copyright Ross Lazarus (ross period lazarus at gmail period com) May 2012
-
-All rights reserved.
-
-Licensed under the LGPL
-
-
-**Obligatory screenshot**
-
-http://bitbucket.org/fubar/galaxytoolmaker/src/fda8032fe989/images/dynamicScriptTool.png
-
diff -r 87613ace5113 -r b55b59435fb1 fubar-galaxytoolfactory-cfcf6c9df5b7/images/dynamicScriptTool.png
Binary file fubar-galaxytoolfactory-cfcf6c9df5b7/images/dynamicScriptTool.png has changed
diff -r 87613ace5113 -r b55b59435fb1 fubar-galaxytoolfactory-cfcf6c9df5b7/rgToolFactory.py
--- a/fubar-galaxytoolfactory-cfcf6c9df5b7/rgToolFactory.py Sat Aug 11 02:41:28 2012 -0400
+++ /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
@@ -1,508 +0,0 @@
-# rgToolFactory.py
-# see https://bitbucket.org/fubar/galaxytoolfactory/wiki/Home
-#
-# copyright ross lazarus (ross stop lazarus at gmail stop com) May 2012
-#
-# all rights reserved
-# Licensed under the LGPL
-# suggestions for improvement and bug fixes welcome at https://bitbucket.org/fubar/galaxytoolfactory/wiki/Home
-
-# August 11 2012
-# changed to use shell=False and cl as a sequence
-
-# This is a Galaxy tool factory for simple scripts in python, R or whatever ails ye.
-# It also serves as the wrapper for the new tool.
-#
-# you paste and run your script
-# Only works for simple scripts that read one input from the history.
-# Optionally can write one new history dataset,
-# and optionally collect any number of outputs into links on an autogenerated HTML page.
-
-# DO NOT install on a public or important site - please.
-
-# installed generated tools are fine if the script is safe.
-# They just run normally and their user cannot do anything unusually insecure
-# but please, practice safe toolshed.
-# Read the fucking code before you install any tool
-# especially this one
-
-# After you get the script working on some test data, you can
-# optionally generate a toolshed compatible gzip file
-# containing your script safely wrapped as an ordinary Galaxy script in your local toolshed for
-# safe and largely automated installation in a production Galaxy.
-
-# If you opt for an HTML output, you get all the script outputs arranged
-# as a single Html history item - all output files are linked, thumbnails for all the pdfs.
-# Ugly but really inexpensive.
-#
-# Patches appreciated please.
-#
-#
-# long route to June 2012 product
-# Behold the awesome power of Galaxy and the toolshed with the tool factory binds to bind them
-# derived from an integrated script model
-# called rgBaseScriptWrapper.py
-# Note to the unwary:
-# This tool allows arbitrary scripting on your Galaxy as the Galaxy user
-# There is nothing stopping a malicious user doing whatever they choose
-# Extremely dangerous!!
-# Totally insecure. So, trusted users only
-#
-# preferred model is a developer using their throw away workstation instance - ie a private site.
-# no real risk. The universe_wsgi.ini admin_users string is checked - only admin users are permitted to run this tool.
-#
-
-import sys
-import shutil
-import subprocess
-import os
-import time
-import tempfile
-import optparse
-import tarfile
-import re
-import shutil
-import math
-
-progname = os.path.split(sys.argv[0])[1]
-myversion = 'V000.2 June 2012'
-verbose = False
-debug = False
-toolFactoryURL = 'https://bitbucket.org/fubar/galaxytoolfactory'
-
-def timenow():
- """return current time as a string
- """
- return time.strftime('%d/%m/%Y %H:%M:%S', time.localtime(time.time()))
-
-
-class ScriptRunner:
- """class is a wrapper for an arbitrary script
- """
-
- def __init__(self,opts=None):
- """
- cleanup inputs, setup some outputs
-
- """
- if opts.output_dir: # simplify for the tool tarball
- os.chdir(opts.output_dir)
- self.thumbformat = 'jpg'
- self.opts = opts
- self.toolname = re.sub('[^a-zA-Z0-9_]+', '', opts.tool_name) # a sanitizer now does this but..
- self.toolid = self.toolname
- s = open(self.opts.script_path,'r').readlines()
- self.script = ''.join(s)
- self.indentedScript = ''.join([' %s' % x for x in s]) # for restructured text in help
- self.myname = sys.argv[0] # get our name because we write ourselves out as a tool later
- self.pyfile = self.myname # crude but efficient - the cruft won't hurt much
- self.xmlfile = '%s.xml' % self.toolname
- self.sfile = '%s.%s' % (self.toolname,opts.interpreter)
- if opts.output_dir: # may not want these complexities
- self.tlog = os.path.join(opts.output_dir,"%s_runner.log" % self.toolname)
- artifactpath = os.path.join(opts.output_dir,'%s_run.script' % self.toolname)
- artifact = open(artifactpath,'w')
- artifact.write(self.script)
- artifact.write('\n')
- artifact.close()
- if opts.make_Tool: # need this code and the user script for the tarball
- localscript = open(self.sfile,'w')
- localscript.write(self.script)
- localscript.close()
- self.cl = []
- self.html = []
- a = self.cl.append
- a(opts.interpreter)
- a('-') # use stdin
- a(opts.input_tab)
- a(opts.output_tab)
- self.outFormats = 'tabular' # TODO make this an option at tool generation time
- self.inputFormats = 'tabular' # TODO make this an option at tool generation time
- self.test1Input = '%s_test1_input.xls' % self.toolname
- self.test1Output = '%s_test1_output.xls' % self.toolname
- self.test1HTML = '%s_test1_output.html' % self.toolname
-
- def makeXML(self):
- """
- Create a Galaxy xml tool wrapper for the new script as a string to write out
- fixme - use templating or something less fugly than this example of what we produce
-
-
- a tabular file
-
- reverse.py --script_path "$runMe" --interpreter "python"
- --tool_name "reverse" --input_tab "$input1" --output_tab "$tab_file"
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-**What it Does**
-
-Reverse the columns in a tabular file
-
-
-
-
-
-# reverse order of columns in a tabular file
-import sys
-inp = sys.argv[1]
-outp = sys.argv[2]
-i = open(inp,'r')
-o = open(outp,'w')
-for row in i:
- rs = row.rstrip().split('\t')
- rs.reverse()
- o.write('\t'.join(rs))
- o.write('\n')
-i.close()
-o.close()
-
-
-
-
-
-
- """
- newXML="""
- %(tooldesc)s
- %(command)s
-
- %(inputs)s
-
-
- %(outputs)s
-
-
-
- %(script)s
-
-
- %(tooltests)s
-
- %(help)s
-
- """ # needs a dict with toolname, toolid, interpreter, scriptname, command, inputs as a multi line string ready to write, outputs ditto, help ditto
-
- newCommand="""
- %(toolname)s.py --script_path "$runMe" --interpreter "%(interpreter)s"
- --tool_name "%(toolname)s" %(command_inputs)s %(command_outputs)s
- """ # may NOT be an input or htmlout
- tooltestsTabOnly = """
-
-
-
-
- """
- tooltestsHTMLOnly = """
-
-
-
-
- """
- tooltestsBoth = """
-
-
-
-
-
- """
- xdict = {}
- xdict['tool_version'] = self.opts.tool_version
- xdict['test1Input'] = self.test1Input
- xdict['test1HTML'] = self.test1HTML
- xdict['test1Output'] = self.test1Output
- if self.opts.make_HTML and self.opts.output_tab <> 'None':
- xdict['tooltests'] = tooltestsBoth % xdict
- elif self.opts.make_HTML:
- xdict['tooltests'] = tooltestsHTMLOnly % xdict
- else:
- xdict['tooltests'] = tooltestsTabOnly % xdict
- xdict['script'] = self.script # configfile is least painful way to embed script to avoid external dependencies
- if self.opts.help_text:
- xdict['help'] = open(self.opts.help_text,'r').read()
- else:
- xdict['help'] = 'Please ask the tool author for help as none was supplied at tool generation'
- coda = ['**Script**','Pressing execute will run the following code over your input file and generate some outputs in your history::']
- coda.append(self.indentedScript)
- coda.append('**Attribution** This Galaxy tool was created by %s at %s\nusing the Galaxy Tool Factory.' % (self.opts.user_email,timenow()))
- coda.append('See %s for details of that project' % (toolFactoryURL))
- xdict['help'] = '%s\n%s' % (xdict['help'],'\n'.join(coda))
- if self.opts.tool_desc:
- xdict['tooldesc'] = '%s' % self.opts.tool_desc
- else:
- xdict['tooldesc'] = ''
- xdict['command_outputs'] = ''
- xdict['outputs'] = ''
- if self.opts.input_tab <> 'None':
- xdict['command_inputs'] = '--input_tab "$input1" ' # the space may matter a lot if we append something
- xdict['inputs'] = ' \n' % self.inputFormats
- else:
- xdict['command_inputs'] = '' # assume no input - eg a random data generator
- xdict['inputs'] = ''
- xdict['inputs'] += ' \n' % self.toolname
- xdict['toolname'] = self.toolname
- xdict['toolid'] = self.toolid
- xdict['interpreter'] = self.opts.interpreter
- xdict['scriptname'] = self.sfile
- if self.opts.make_HTML:
- xdict['command_outputs'] += ' --output_dir "$html_file.files_path" --output_html "$html_file" --make_HTML "yes" '
- xdict['outputs'] += ' \n'
- if self.opts.output_tab <> 'None':
- xdict['command_outputs'] += ' --output_tab "$tab_file"'
- xdict['outputs'] += ' \n' % self.outFormats
- xdict['command'] = newCommand % xdict
- xmls = newXML % xdict
- xf = open(self.xmlfile,'w')
- xf.write(xmls)
- xf.write('\n')
- xf.close()
- # ready for the tarball
-
-
- def makeTooltar(self):
- """
- a tool is a gz tarball with eg
- /toolname/tool.xml /toolname/tool.py /toolname/test-data/test1_in.foo ...
- """
- retval = self.run()
- if retval:
- print >> sys.stderr,'## Run failed. Cannot build yet. Please fix and retry'
- sys.exit(1)
- self.makeXML()
- tdir = self.toolname
- os.mkdir(tdir)
- if self.opts.input_tab <> 'None': # no reproducible test otherwise? TODO: maybe..
- testdir = os.path.join(tdir,'test-data')
- os.mkdir(testdir) # make tests directory
- shutil.copyfile(self.opts.input_tab,os.path.join(testdir,self.test1Input))
- if self.opts.output_tab <> 'None':
- shutil.copyfile(self.opts.output_tab,os.path.join(testdir,self.test1Output))
- if self.opts.make_HTML:
- shutil.copyfile(self.opts.output_html,os.path.join(testdir,self.test1HTML))
- if self.opts.output_dir:
- shutil.copyfile(self.tlog,os.path.join(testdir,'test1_out.log'))
- op = '%s.py' % self.toolname # new name
- outpiname = os.path.join(tdir,op) # path for the tool tarball
- pyin = os.path.basename(self.pyfile) # our name - we rewrite ourselves (TM)
- notes = ['# %s - a self annotated version of %s generated by running %s\n' % (op,pyin,pyin),]
- notes.append('# to make a new Galaxy tool called %s\n' % self.toolname)
- notes.append('# User %s at %s\n' % (self.opts.user_email,timenow()))
- pi = open(self.pyfile,'r').readlines() # our code becomes new tool wrapper (!) - first Galaxy worm
- notes += pi
- outpi = open(outpiname,'w')
- outpi.write(''.join(notes))
- outpi.write('\n')
- outpi.close()
- shutil.copyfile(self.sfile,os.path.join(tdir,self.sfile))
- shutil.copyfile(self.xmlfile,os.path.join(tdir,self.xmlfile))
- tarpath = "%s.gz" % self.toolname
- tar = tarfile.open(tarpath, "w:gz")
- tar.add(tdir,arcname=self.toolname)
- tar.close()
- shutil.copyfile(tarpath,self.opts.new_tool)
- shutil.rmtree(tdir)
- ## TODO: replace with optional direct upload to local toolshed?
- return retval
-
- def compressPDF(self,inpdf=None,thumbformat='png'):
- """need absolute path to pdf
- """
- assert os.path.isfile(inpdf), "## Input %s supplied to %s compressPDF not found" % (inpdf,self.myName)
- hf,hlog = tempfile.mkstemp(suffix="%s.log" % self.toolname)
- sto = open(hlog,'w')
- outpdf = '%s_compressed' % inpdf
- cl = ["gs", "-sDEVICE=pdfwrite", "-dNOPAUSE", "-dBATCH", "-sOutputFile=%s" % outpdf,inpdf]
- x = subprocess.Popen(cl,stdout=sto,stderr=sto,cwd=self.opts.output_dir)
- retval1 = x.wait()
- if retval1 == 0:
- os.unlink(inpdf)
- shutil.move(outpdf,inpdf)
- outpng = '%s.%s' % (os.path.splitext(inpdf)[0],thumbformat)
- cl2 = ['convert', inpdf, outpng]
- x = subprocess.Popen(cl2,stdout=sto,stderr=sto,cwd=self.opts.output_dir)
- retval2 = x.wait()
- sto.close()
- retval = retval1 or retval2
- return retval
-
-
- def getfSize(self,fpath,outpath):
- """
- format a nice file size string
- """
- size = ''
- fp = os.path.join(outpath,fpath)
- if os.path.isfile(fp):
- size = '0 B'
- n = float(os.path.getsize(fp))
- if n > 2**20:
- size = '%1.1f MB' % (n/2**20)
- elif n > 2**10:
- size = '%1.1f KB)' % (n/2**10)
- elif n > 0:
- size = '%d B' % (int(n))
- return size
-
- def makeHtml(self):
- """ Create an HTML file content to list all the artefacts found in the output_dir
- """
-
- galhtmlprefix = """
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
\n"""
-
- flist = os.listdir(self.opts.output_dir)
- flist = [x for x in flist if x <> 'Rplots.pdf']
- flist.sort()
- html = []
- html.append(galhtmlprefix % progname)
- html.append('
Galaxy Tool "%s" run at %s
' % (self.toolname,timenow()))
- fhtml = []
- if len(flist) > 0:
- pdflist = []
- npdf = len([x for x in flist if os.path.splitext(x)[-1].lower() == '.pdf'])
- nacross = 1
- if npdf > 0:
- nacross = int(round(math.log(npdf,2)))
- nacross = max(1,nacross)
- width = min(400,int(1200/nacross))
- for rownum,fname in enumerate(flist):
- dname,e = os.path.splitext(fname)
- sfsize = self.getfSize(fname,self.opts.output_dir)
- if e.lower() == '.pdf' : # compress and make a thumbnail
- thumb = '%s.%s' % (dname,self.thumbformat)
- pdff = os.path.join(self.opts.output_dir,fname)
- retval = self.compressPDF(inpdf=pdff,thumbformat=self.thumbformat)
- if retval == 0:
- pdflist.append((fname,thumb))
- if (rownum+1) % 2 == 0:
- fhtml.append('
\n')
- else:
- if ntogo > 0: # pad
- html.append('
'*ntogo)
- html.append('\n')
- if len(fhtml) > 0:
- fhtml.insert(0,'
Output File Name (click to view)
Size
\n')
- fhtml.append('
')
- html += fhtml # add all non-pdf files to the end of the display
- else:
- html.append('
### Error - %s returned no files - please confirm that parameters are sane
' % self.opts.interpreter)
- rlog = open(self.tlog,'r').readlines()
- rlog = [x for x in rlog if x.strip() > '']
- if len(rlog) > 1:
- html.append('
%s log
\n' % self.opts.interpreter)
- html += rlog
- html.append('
\n')
- html.append(galhtmlattr % (self.toolname))
- html.append(galhtmlpostfix)
- htmlf = file(self.opts.output_html,'w')
- htmlf.write('\n'.join(html))
- htmlf.write('\n')
- htmlf.close()
- self.html = html
-
-
- def run(self):
- """
- scripts must be small enough not to fill the pipe!
- """
- if self.opts.output_dir:
- sto = open(self.tlog,'w')
- sto.write('## FastQC generated command line = %s\n' % ' '.join(self.cl))
- sto.flush()
- p = subprocess.Popen(self.cl,shell=False,stdout=sto,stderr=sto,stdin=subprocess.PIPE,cwd=self.opts.output_dir)
- else:
- p = subprocess.Popen(self.cl,shell=False,stdin=subprocess.PIPE)
- p.stdin.write(self.script)
- p.stdin.close()
- retval = p.wait()
- if self.opts.output_dir:
- sto.close()
- if self.opts.make_HTML:
- self.makeHtml()
- return retval
-
-
-def main():
- u = """
- This is a Galaxy wrapper. It expects to be called by a special purpose tool.xml as:
- rgBaseScriptWrapper.py --script_path "$scriptPath" --tool_name "foo" --interpreter "Rscript"
-
- """
- op = optparse.OptionParser()
- a = op.add_option
- a('--script_path',default=None)
- a('--tool_name',default=None)
- a('--interpreter',default=None)
- a('--output_dir',default=None)
- a('--output_html',default=None)
- a('--input_tab',default="None")
- a('--output_tab',default="None")
- a('--user_email',default='Unknown')
- a('--bad_user',default=None)
- a('--make_Tool',default=None)
- a('--make_HTML',default=None)
- a('--help_text',default=None)
- a('--tool_desc',default=None)
- a('--new_tool',default=None)
- a('--tool_version',default=None)
- opts, args = op.parse_args()
- assert not opts.bad_user,'UNAUTHORISED: %s is NOT authorized to use this tool until Galaxy admin adds %s to admin_users in universe_wsgi.ini' % (opts.bad_user,opts.bad_user)
- assert opts.tool_name,'## Tool Factory expects a tool name - eg --tool_name=DESeq'
- assert opts.interpreter,'## Tool Factory wrapper expects an interpreter - eg --interpreter=Rscript'
- assert os.path.isfile(opts.script_path),'## Tool Factory wrapper expects a script path - eg --script_path=foo.R'
- if opts.output_dir:
- try:
- os.makedirs(opts.output_dir)
- except:
- pass
- r = ScriptRunner(opts)
- if opts.make_Tool:
- retcode = r.makeTooltar()
- else:
- retcode = r.run()
- if retcode:
- sys.exit(retcode) # indicate failure to job runner
-
-
-if __name__ == "__main__":
- main()
-
-
diff -r 87613ace5113 -r b55b59435fb1 fubar-galaxytoolfactory-cfcf6c9df5b7/rgToolFactory.xml
--- a/fubar-galaxytoolfactory-cfcf6c9df5b7/rgToolFactory.xml Sat Aug 11 02:41:28 2012 -0400
+++ /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
@@ -1,228 +0,0 @@
-
- Makes scripts into tools
-
-#if ( $__user_email__ not in $__admin_users__ ):
- rgToolFactory.py --bad_user $__user_email__
- #else:
- rgToolFactory.py --script_path "$runme" --interpreter "$interpreter"
- --tool_name "$tool_name" --user_email "$__user_email__"
- #if $make_TAB.value=="yes":
- --output_tab "$tab_file"
- #end if
- #if $makeMode.make_Tool=="yes":
- --make_Tool "$makeMode.make_Tool"
- --tool_desc "$makeMode.tool_desc"
- --tool_version "$makeMode.tool_version"
- --new_tool "$new_tool"
- --help_text "$helpme"
- #end if
- #if $make_HTML.value=="yes":
- --output_dir "$html_file.files_path" --output_html "$html_file" --make_HTML "yes"
- #end if
- #if $input1 != 'None':
- --input_tab "$input1"
- #end if
-#end if
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- make_TAB=="yes"
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- make_HTML == "yes"
-
-
- makeMode['make_Tool'] == "yes"
-
-
-
-
-$dynScript
-
-
-
-#if $makeMode.make_Tool == "yes":
-${makeMode.help_text}
-#end if
-
-
-
-
-.. class:: warningmark
-
-**Local Admins ONLY** Only users whose IDs found in the local admin_user configuration setting in universe_wsgi.ini can run this tool.
-
-**What it does** This tool enables a user to paste and submit an arbitrary R/python/perl script to Galaxy.
-
-**Input options** This version is limited to simple transformation or reporting requiring only a single input file selected from the history.
-
-**Output options** Optional script outputs include one single new history tabular file, or for scripts that create multiple outputs,
-a new HTML report linking all the files and images created by the script can be automatically generated.
-
-**Tool Generation option** Once the script is working with test data, this tool will optionally generate a new Galaxy tool in a gzip file
-ready to upload to your local toolshed for sharing and installation. Provide a small sample input when you run generate the tool because
-it will become the input for the generated functional test.
-
-.. class:: warningmark
-
-**Note to system administrators** This tool offers *NO* built in protection against malicious scripts. It should only be installed on private/personnal Galaxy instances.
-Admin_users will have the power to do anything they want as the Galaxy user if you install this tool.
-
-The tools generated by this tool will run just as securely as any other normal installed Galaxy tool but like any other new tools, should always be checked carefully before installation.
-We recommend that you follow the good code hygiene practices associated with safe toolshed.
-
-.. class:: warningmark
-
-**Use on public servers** is STRONGLY discouraged for obvious reasons
-
-**Scripting conventions** The pasted script will be executed with the path to the (optional) input tabular data file path or NONE if you do not select one, and the path to the optional
-output file or None if none is wanted, as the first and second command line parameters. The script must deal appropriately with these - see Rscript examples below.
-Note that if an optional HTML output is selected, all the output files created by the script will be nicely presented as links, with pdf images linked as thumbnails in that output.
-This can be handy for complex scripts creating lots of output.
-
-**Simple examples**
-
-A simple Rscript "filter" showing how the command line parameters can be handled, takes an input file, does something (transpose in this case) and writes the results to a new tabular file::
-
- # transpose a tabular input file and write as a tabular output file
- ourargs = commandArgs(TRUE)
- inf = ourargs[1]
- outf = ourargs[2]
- inp = read.table(inf,head=F,row.names=NULL,sep='\t')
- outp = t(inp)
- write.table(outp,outf, quote=FALSE, sep="\t",row.names=F,col.names=F)
-
-Calculate a multiple test adjusted p value from a column of p values - for this script to be useful, it needs the right column for the input to be specified in the code for the
-given input file type(s) specified when the tool is generated ::
-
- # use p.adjust - assumes a HEADER row and column 1 - please fix for any real use
- column = 1 # adjust if necessary for some other kind of input
- ourargs = commandArgs(TRUE)
- inf = ourargs[1]
- outf = ourargs[2]
- inp = read.table(inf,head=T,row.names=NULL,sep='\t')
- p = inp[,column]
- q = p.adjust(p,method='BH')
- outp = cbind(inp,'BH Adjusted p-value'=q)
- write.table(outp,outf, quote=FALSE, sep="\t",row.names=F,col.names=T)
-
-
-A demonstration Rscript example takes no input file but generates some random data based pdf images
-You must make sure the option to create an HTML output file is
-turned on for this to work. Images (pdf) are linked via thumbnails and
-all files have a link on the resulting HTML page::
-
- # note this script takes NO input or output because it generates random data
- foo = data.frame(a=runif(100),b=runif(100),c=runif(100),d=runif(100),e=runif(100),f=runif(100))
- bar = as.matrix(foo)
- pdf( "heattest.pdf" )
- heatmap(bar,main='Random Heatmap')
- dev.off()
- for (i in 1:49) {
- foo = runif(100)
- bar = rnorm(100)
- pdf(paste('yet',i,"anotherplot.pdf",sep='_'))
- plot(foo,bar,main=paste("Foo by Bar plot #",i),col="maroon", pch=3,cex=0.6)
- dev.off()
- }
-
-A Python example that reverses each row of a tabular file (you'll need to remove the leading spaces for this to work if cut and pasted into the script box)::
-
- # reverse order of columns in a tabular file
- import sys
- inp = sys.argv[1]
- outp = sys.argv[2]
- i = open(inp,'r')
- o = open(outp,'w')
- for row in i:
- rs = row.rstrip().split('\t')
- rs.reverse()
- o.write('\t'.join(rs))
- o.write('\n')
- i.close()
- o.close()
-
-
-**Attribution** Copyright Ross Lazarus (ross period lazarus at gmail period com) May 2012
-
-All rights reserved.
-
-Licensed under the LGPL_
-
-.. _LGPL: http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/lesser.html
-
-
-
-
-
-