changeset 11:7939839033ca draft

Uploaded
author kaymccoy
date Sun, 07 Aug 2016 22:31:04 -0400
parents a12f1a455df7
children 9885002db8f8
files bowtie_indices.loc.sample
diffstat 1 files changed, 37 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-) [+]
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--- /dev/null	Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
+++ b/bowtie_indices.loc.sample	Sun Aug 07 22:31:04 2016 -0400
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+#This is a sample file distributed with Galaxy that enables tools
+#to use a directory of Bowtie indexed sequences data files. You will
+#need to create these data files and then create a bowtie_indices.loc
+#file similar to this one (store it in this directory) that points to
+#the directories in which those files are stored. The bowtie_indices.loc
+#file has this format (longer white space characters are TAB characters):
+#
+#<unique_build_id>   <dbkey>   <display_name>   <file_base_path>
+#
+#So, for example, if you had hg18 indexed stored in
+#/depot/data2/galaxy/bowtie/hg18/,
+#then the bowtie_indices.loc entry would look like this:
+#
+#hg18	hg18	hg18	/depot/data2/galaxy/bowtie/hg18/hg18
+#
+#and your /depot/data2/galaxy/bowtie/hg18/ directory
+#would contain hg18.*.ebwt files:
+#
+#-rw-r--r--  1 james    universe 830134 2005-09-13 10:12 hg18.1.ebwt
+#-rw-r--r--  1 james    universe 527388 2005-09-13 10:12 hg18.2.ebwt
+#-rw-r--r--  1 james    universe 269808 2005-09-13 10:12 hg18.3.ebwt
+#...etc...
+#
+#Your bowtie_indices.loc file should include an entry per line for each
+#index set you have stored. The "file" in the path does not actually
+#exist, but it is the prefix for the actual index files. For example:
+#
+#hg18canon			hg18	hg18 Canonical	/depot/data2/galaxy/bowtie/hg18/hg18canon
+#hg18full			hg18	hg18 Full		/depot/data2/galaxy/bowtie/hg18/hg18full
+#/orig/path/hg19	hg19	hg19			/depot/data2/galaxy/bowtie/hg19/hg19
+#...etc...
+#
+#Note that for backwards compatibility with workflows, the unique ID of
+#an entry must be the path that was in the original loc file, because that
+#is the value stored in the workflow for that parameter. That is why the
+#hg19 entry above looks odd. New genomes can be better-looking.
+#