view OPPL/oppl_query.xml @ 17:c9e01f86b07c draft

New tool added for merging imported ontologies (GalaxyOWLAPI and README changed and test ontologies added accordingly). Memory settings changed in all the tools XML files
author Mikel Egana Aranguren <mikel-egana-aranguren@toolshed.g2.bx.psu.edu>
date Mon, 20 Aug 2012 11:39:56 +0200
parents 622cde484f4c
children d3616fac4ca5
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<tool id="oppl_query" name="Perform an OPPL query against an ontology" version="1.0.1">
	<description>It performs a query, expressed in OPPL Syntax, against an OWL ontology</description>
	
	<!-- Galaxy is not happy with OPPL throwing info into stderr, and I have redirected stderr to /dev/null, which is a bad solution since OPPL galaxy does not inform properly when it fails -->
	<!-- More info on the stderr issue: http://wiki.g2.bx.psu.edu/Future/Job%20Failure%20When%20stderr -->
	<!-- Testing with wrapper.sh but no success so far -->

	<!-- DEFAULT SETTINGS -->
	
	<!-- For big ontologies I use -Xmx3000M -Xms250M -DentityExpansionLimit=1000000000 If that's too much for your machine simply delete or modify at will, but since Galaxy is usually used in a server setting it makes sense to use a big chunk of memory -->

	<command>
		java -Xmx3000M -Xms250M -DentityExpansionLimit=1000000000 -jar ${__tool_data_path__}/shared/jars/oppl_query.jar $ontology $reasoner $answer_format "$query" > $output 2>/dev/null
	</command>
	
	<!-- FACT++ -->
	
	<!-- If you are planning to use FaCT++ you have to uncomment bellow (And comment the default settings above) and replace the -Djava.library.path with the appropiate JNI library path for your platform:FaCT++-linux-v1.5.2/64bit, FaCT++-linux-v1.5.2/32bit, FaCT++-OSX-v1.5.2/64bit, ...... -->
	<!-- Using this setting doesn't upset the rest of the reasoners so you may as well leave it on if you plan to switch between FaCT++, Pellet and HermiT -->
	
	<!--<command>
		java -Djava.library.path=${__tool_data_path__}/shared/jars/FaCT++-linux-v1.5.2/64bit -Xmx3000M -Xms250M -DentityExpansionLimit=1000000000 -jar ${__tool_data_path__}/shared/jars/oppl_query.jar $ontology $reasoner $answer_format "$query" > $output 2>/dev/null
	</commadn>-->
	

	<inputs>
		<param name="ontology" type="data" label="Input ontology file"/>
		<param name="query" type="text" size="100" value="" label="OPPL Query" />
		<param name="reasoner" type="select" label="Choose reasoner">
			<option value="Pellet" selected="true">Pellet</option>
			<option value="HermiT">HermiT</option>
			<option value="FaCTPlusPlus">FaCT++</option>
		</param>
		<param name="answer_format" type="select" label="Choose how to render the retrieved entities">
			<option value="URI" selected="true">URI</option>
			<option value="URIfragment">URI fragment</option>
			<option value="URIfragment2OBO">OBO type URI fragment (e.g. GO_0000022 to GO:0000022)</option>
		</param>
	</inputs>
	<outputs>
		<data type="data" format="text" name="output" />
	</outputs>
	<!--<tests>
		<test>
			<param name="input" value="test.owl"/>
			<param name="query" value="?p:OBJECTPROPERTY SELECT Transitive ?p "/>
			<param name="reasoner" value="Pellet"/>
			<param name="answer_format" value="URIfragment"/>
			<output name="out_file" file="query_result"/>	
		</test>
	</tests>-->
	<help>

**About OPPL-Query-Galaxy**

  OPPL-Query-Galaxy can be used to execute an OPPL query against an OWL ontology (?whole:CLASS, ?part:CLASS SELECT ?part SubClassOf part_of some ?whole WHERE ?part != Nothing). The result is a two column table with the entities that have been bound by the variables. 
  
**Formats**

  OPPL-Query-Galaxy uses the OWL API, and therefore it can load any ontology format that such API is able to load: OBO flat file, OWL (RDF/XML, OWL/XML, Functional, Manchester), turtle, and KRSS. The output is a list of terms.

**Contact**

  Please send any request or comment to mikel.egana.aranguren@gmail.com.

	</help>

</tool>