The Ensembl Analysis Pipeline

Simon Potter(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Laura Clarke(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Val Curwen(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Stephen Keenan(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Emmanuel Mongin(European Bioinformatics Institute), Stephen M. J. Searle(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Arne Stabenau(European Bioinformatics Institute), Roy Storey(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Michèle Clamp(Broad Institute)
Genome Research
May 1, 2004
Cited by 119Open Access
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Abstract

The Ensembl pipeline is an extension to the Ensembl system which allows automated annotation of genomic sequence. The software comprises two parts. First, there is a set of Perl modules ("Runnables" and "RunnableDBs") which are 'wrappers' for a variety of commonly used analysis tools. These retrieve sequence data from a relational database, run the analysis, and write the results back to the database. They inherit from a common interface, which simplifies the writing of new wrapper modules. On top of this sits a job submission system (the "RuleManager") which allows efficient and reliable submission of large numbers of jobs to a compute farm. Here we describe the fundamental software components of the pipeline, and we also highlight some features of the Sanger installation which were necessary to enable the pipeline to scale to whole-genome analysis.


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