May 2010 archive
06/01/10
Here are a few more times, this time with all bin and data files on the
/tmp/
folder with times calculated from
/usr/bin/time
.
Using commit
5a82392eeeb5653d1b75b7a8dd7ccdd499605cfa
and
saligner
, with the
125000
readset (real time)
Using BWA with flags
-l 99 -k 2
outputting to SAM:
Using readaligner with flags
-k 2 --sam --fastq
:
Bowtie with version info:
64-bit
Built on sycamore.umiacs.umd.edu
Sat Apr 24 15:56:29 EDT 2010
Compiler: gcc version 4.1.2 20080704 (Red Hat 4.1.2-46)
Options: -O3 -m64 -Wl,--hash-style=both
Sizeof {int, long, long long, void*, size_t, off_t}: {4, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8}
Mode |
Flags |
Mapped |
Unmapped |
Search Time (s) |
Average Search Time (s) |
0-Mismatch |
-v 0 |
105606 |
19394 |
1.310 |
0.00001048 |
1-Mismatch |
-v 1 |
115631 |
9369 |
1.850 |
0.0000148 |
2/3-Mismatch |
-v 2 |
118356 |
6644 |
1.878 |
0.000015024 |
2/3 Mismatch |
-v 3 |
119430 |
5570 |
3.441 |
0.000027528 |
Seeded Quality |
-n 0 |
112317 |
12683 |
1.478 |
0.000011824 |
Seeded Quality |
-n 1 |
117659 |
7341 |
1.679 |
0.000013432 |
Seeded Quality |
-n 2 |
118356 |
6644 |
1.974 |
0.000015792 |
Seeded Quality |
-n 3 |
118330 |
6670 |
2.560 |
0.00002048 |
Also had a meeting with Chris today, where he clarified some of his previous communications. Our first priority should now be to compare Bowtie exact matching functions to saligner or readaligner exact matching. Daniel took on a job of writing a better locate function for exact matches. I will be looking for more areas to optimize and also fix some bugs and write a better saligner wrapper that actually takes in arguments. Also, since mismatches in cigars are recorded no differently from matches, both mismatch and exact can have their own defined cigar (e.g. 35M), instead of having to compare reads to references to generate our own cigar.
To do:
- In Exact and MismatchMappers, just make a cigar on the fly instead of passing stuff to SamEntry.
- More low level optimizations.
- Make a better saligner wrapper.
- Fix a bug in cigar generation (ticket 53df76)
06/02/10
I did a bunch of minor changes to the IO files to optimize them a little further. Most of the changes were just reserving space for strings/vectors beforehand, fixing a few unneeded lines, etc. I also looked into ticket 53df76 (buggy CIGAR output on indels), and found that it's not really a bug with the CIGAR generator. The bug actually comes from using the
LocalAligner
after a gap alignment to generate the "dashes" that the CIGAR generator needs. However, the behaviour for
LocalAligner
is unpredictable when used in this context; sometimes it will clip the start or end of the read and throw in mismatches instead of just inserting the gaps (which is actually what it's supposed to do, given it's local). So, there actually aren't bugs in either the CIGAR generator or the
LocalAligner
. Unfortunately, we can't really fix the bug given the current situation, because there's no other way to put dashes into the aligned ref/reads. The only solution is to either figure out how
IndelQuery
does its CIGAR generation or write our own
IndelQuery
(which we might just do anyway). Since the indel support is lower priority, I'm going to table this bug for later.
Another optimization I did today was make a convenience method in
SamEntry
to generate an entry representing an exact match (as per Chris' suggestion yesterday). Because exact matches are so predictable, it saves us having to generate the CIGAR, and a bunch of the tags. We also don't need to extract the original reference from the index, since it's not really needed. Mismatches should also be similar, since mismatches aren't represented differently from matches in CIGARs. However, we do have an
MD:Z
tag that supports mismatches (like BWA), but I'm not sure whether this is needed at all.
Finally, I added support for arguments in saligner, where we can specify reference, reads and output for convenience, so we don't have to recompile every time we need to use a different read file.
Anyways, I decided to run some tests on my newest changes using the 2622382 reads file just for completeness and for more accuracy, since I didn't do any tests on that file yesterday, either.
Under commit
c6f55e33aa732c8952d1f56fa4c1fe6aa3875677
, with the 2822382 reads file and Release build:
And with Bowtie (same version info as above):
To do:
- Do some profiling again...I haven't done that in a while and there's been a lot of changes to the code.
- Start reading up on FM index.
06/03/10
Worked on more optimizations, this time guided by Valgrind. From KCacheGrind, I found that about 10-15% of our cycles were being used up in IO, especially making/writing SAM entries. So I went in and did a few more minor optimizations, such as using
ostringstream
instead of
stringstream
. Preliminary results (tested on my machine) shows it runs something like 10% faster now.
Up until now, I've really only been testing exact matches with saligner over the 125,000 reads file. I was doing one final test on the 2M read file (to verify output and to do a preliminary speed test), I noticed a lot of disk activity after about 40k reads! I'm guessing this is what cache misses look like (it could just be it reading from the reads file, I'm not really sure on this, have to confirm), so I'm going to have to do some more profiling with Callgrind. Granted, my system doesn't have as much memory as
skorpios
, but this might be one of the areas we can improve on.
Other than that, I think it might be a good idea to start reading up on FM indexes, because I really can't do much else without knowing how the aligner works. So tomorrow, I might start on my reading (probably following in Daniel's footsteps).
To do:
- Check if we're really getting lots of cache misses.
- Start on my reading!
Update: Ran a cachegrind over 2M reads, and didn't get very many cache misses (something like <1%), so I guess it was actually reading from input? I'll have to check out the log a bit more tomorrow. On a side note, the profiling took about 2.5 hours with 2M reads on my machine (don't even know the time because the built-in timer went negative), so it's not a very practical thing to do...
06/04/10
I feel like I've done all the minor optimizations on the I/O classes at this point, and probably won't be improving speeds much. So I spent the day reading up on
FM indexes
using the same paper Daniel listed a while back. I now know how the BWT works and how
count
functions work on the index. I haven't really gotten through
locate
yet, but it shouldn't be too bad.
With my new-found knowledge, I took another look at the exact matching implementation in readaligner and now I feel like I get it a bit more. I tried to look up some papers on wavelet trees (I
think that's what
wv_tree
stands for) and the rank functions, since that's pretty much the bottleneck but I couldn't really find much stuff on it (not that I tried that hard).
So for later:
- Find some literature on wavelet trees and take a look at the rank function some more
- Do some more reading...
06/07/10
Chris suggested finding the ratios between locating with 1 mismatch vs doing an exact locate for both bowtie and saligner. So here it is:
Run on
skorpios
with saligner commit
5f7f77021a321eab0019825bec36969209e707b6
and using the
time
command.
Note: readaligner returns 1 max result, I believe.
Afternoon update: Well, I managed to shave another 5 or so seconds off saligner. Doing a brief benchmark, with same conditions as above:
saligner, max_results = 1: 73.58s for exact alignment.
It's a lot closer to readaligner now. I ended up changing all the
osstreams
and
ofstreams
to
sprintf
and
fprintf
, which made it quite a bit faster. I'm debating whether I should change the reading code to
cstdio
as well, but it might get a bit more complicated, since I don't know the actual size of each line and the C input functions all require a
char
array buffer. Our saligner also does a bit more than readaligner. For example, our FASTQ file processing is much more robust and follows the FASTQ spec better.
Chris also mentioned that something else I can do is to replace the
rank
structure. He mentioned Daniel was looking at a 64-bit implementation, so that might be something to look at? I'll need to get more details later.
For tomorrow:
- A few more minor optimizations.
- Take a look at bowtie source code, maybe?
06/08/10
Decided to do one last benchmark with 32-bit bowtie instead of 64-bit bowtie, which might be a more accurate comparison, given that readaligner doesn't really take advantage of 64-bit registers (I don't think...). Anyways, here are the results:
Also had a meeting with Daniel and Chris today (see Daniel's journal, June 8 entry for details).
After the meeting, I did a bit of tinkering with the FASTQ reader. After some discussion with Daniel, we decided it might be better to trade robustness for speed in the reader, as most FASTQ output these days are more standardized (for example, no wrap-around for sequence or quality strings). So by taking all those checks out, I was able to get another roughly 10-15% increase in speed. I also started doing some work on converting our C++-style strings to C-strings. I started with the FASTQ reader again, but it's going to end up being a huge change that'll effect almost all of our classes. At the same time, I think I should also start looking into using regular arrays instead of vectors where applicable.
To do:
- Pretty much refactoring (converting C++ strings to C strings).
06/09/10
Experimented a bunch with
char
arrays vs C++ strings. I did a quick and dirty replacement of strings with
char
arrays in the
FastqEntry
and
FastqFile
classes, and then fixed all the compile errors that came with it, but there actually wasn't too big a difference. In fact, I couldn't really see a difference at all. Granted, I did do a pretty poor job of doing the replacement (just wanted results), so it might not have been as optimized as it could be, but it seems that changing over wouldn't make that much of a difference.
I also benchmarked my changes from yesterday (swapping out the Fastq read function). It seems saligner is now faster than readaligner (at least in exact matching). Anyways, here are the times:
The mismatch:exact ratio is still a bit off from bowtie's and readaligner's, but that might also be because mismatches still unecessarily go through the CIGAR generator (which I should fix sometime).
There was quite a bit of discussion on some points discussed yesterday, detailed in Daniel's journal, June 10 entry.
Finally, spent the rest of my time conerting strings to char arrays, though I'm still not sure if it's doing anything. Regardless, it should be more future-proof.
There's also one point I'd like to look at in the
ExactMapper
, though I doubt it has too much of a performance impact. When the total results of an alignment is greater than
max_results
, it seems we do a
Locate
on all the results, not only
max_results
. This should be a pretty easy fix.
To do:
- More converting
- Look at fix mentioned above.
06/10/10
Bahhhhh spent all day converting strings to c-strings. I've decided to convert only things having to do with sequences and qualities to c-strings. To make it easier to see, I put up some typedefs:
#define NGSA_READLEN 128
typedef char SequenceBase;
typedef char QualityBase;
typedef SequenceBase SequenceString[NGSA_READLEN+1];
typedef QualityBase QualityString[NGSA_READLEN+1];
I'm about 75% done, I think. I finished the I/O classes and the drivers, as well as half the mappers. Just need to convert the rest, and then start on the pair-end matcher, and some other stuff. Also optimized some of the lower-level algorithms (such as ngsa::ReverseComplement) to make better use of
char
arrays. I hope the end result is a speed up, or at least doesn't result in a speed-down! Some parts still aren't very efficient, because there are other methods that still take in C++ strings, where I end up having to do a conversion (which takes O(n) time). I think
strlen
is also O(n), versus O(1) on
std::string::size
(I
think that's what these are), since
std::string
can just update the size every time the string grows/shrinks, so I should make sure to avoid using
strlen
too often.
To do:
06/11/10
Finally finished converting almost all the NGSA library classes to c-strings, except the local aligners. I'm going to forgo the aligners for now because I'm planning on doing some more optimization on them later, so I'll have to change the code there anyway. I'm still not sure whether all my changes work, though, because I still can't seem to compile! It seems there's a problem with my common header, where I store all the constants and typedefs. For some reason, when it gets to linking all the libraries, it keeps giving me errors in whatever headers
single_end_aligner.cc
includes that also use my typedefs, saying that it can't find the definitions. I spent a long time on Google looking up forward declaring headers and typedefs, etc., but I still can't find a solution...maybe I'll have to ask Chris on Monday or Tuesday.
I also did a few benchmarks on a bunch of string vs char array functions, and I've developed the following guidelines for any future compatability issues or conversions:
- Converting a string to char array using
std::string::c_str()
or std::string::data()
are negligibly fast, so don't worry about doing it!
- There's no difference as far as I can see between
std::string::data()
and std::string::c_str()
in terms of speed.
- Converting a char array to string (using
std::string(const char *)
or std::string::operator=(const char *)
) is very slow (O(n)), avoid as much as possible.
- Using
strncpy
with some pointer math and appending a NULL
is much faster than string::substr
(something like 4-5x faster).
-
std::string::operator[]
is a bit slower than char array's [] operators as well, probably because the string does bounds checking (not sure on this). Even doing std::string::c_str()
, then using the [] operator is faster (though not by much)
- Also, be wary of the string's
operator=(const char *)
assignment, which sometimes masks a char array --> string conversion. Try being as explicit as possible when setting a string equal to a char array (by using the constructor), to avoid confusion
Finally, I think I might take Chris up on his offer for taking a break to study for my MCAT. I'll see how far I get on the weekend, but I might take Monday off for an extra study day. I guess we'll see after the weekend.
To do:
- Finish the conversion by getting stuff to compile! (I really hope saligner ends up being faster).
06/18/10
Back from my MCAT!
Finally got my code to compile for the C string conversion. Now it's off to fix bugs and segmentation faults! I managed to clear up all the segmentation faults during the actual alignment process, but the output's still not quite right. My new build seems miss most of the reads that are alignable from an old build. Also, I get a segmentation fault during the index building process, which is really strange because I haven't even touched the code for that. No new code is even called until
after the index has been built! Maybe I'll have to run the build through the debugger...
I also spent a large portion of the day experimenting with an idea I had last night. When calculating the rank value for a position i, instead of going to the next smallest pre-calculated position and doing
popcounts
up until i is reached, I modified the function so it goes to the
nearest pre-calculated position, and either goes up or down from there. According to callgrind,
popcount
only gets called about 60% as much on the 125000 read dataset (170,862,051 vs the original 254,181,103 calls). Unfortunately, this only results in a very small speed increase, something like 3-5%, which is strange because I expected the gain to be a lot more.
Edit: Just noticed Daniel's started to implement a different rank structure, so my change might not even be relevant :(.
Finally, I noticed Daniel's made a lot of changes...not looking forward to the huge merge later...
To do:
- Fix bugs in the new C string version.
06/22/10
I realized I forgot to make a post yesterday, so here it is:
Worked on moving over from C strings still. I managed to fix all the segmentation faults, even with the index-building step. Also fixed most of the bugs that arose from the conversion. Now, the exact aligner returns exactly the same output. The
OneMismatchMapper
doesn't quite do it, but I'm hoping the merge will take care of that.
Also worked on merging the branches, which might take a bit of time. There's so many new changes!