We have a new bioinformatic resource that largely replaces the functionality of this project! See our new repository here: https://github.com/nanoporetech/bonito
This repository is now unsupported and we do not recommend its use. Please contact Oxford Nanopore: [email protected] for help with your application if it is not possible to upgrade to our new resources, or we are missing key features.
Taiyaki is research software for training models for basecalling Oxford Nanopore reads.
Oxford Nanopore's devices measure the flow of ions through a nanopore, and detect changes in that flow as molecules pass through the pore. These signals can be highly complex and exhibit long-range dependencies, much like spoken or written language. Taiyaki can be used to train neural networks to understand the complex signal from a nanopore device, using techniques inspired by state-of-the-art language processing.
Taiyaki is used to train the models used to basecall DNA and RNA found in Oxford Nanopore's Guppy basecaller and for modified base detection with megalodon. This includes the flip-flop models, which are trained using a technique inspired by Connectionist Temporal Classification (Graves et al 2006).
Main features:
- Prepare data for training basecallers by remapping signal to reference sequence
- Train neural networks for flip-flop basecalling and squiggle prediction
- Export basecaller models for use in Guppy and megalodon
Taiyaki is built on top of pytorch and is compatible with Python 3.5 or later. It is aimed at advanced users, and it is an actively evolving research project, so expect to get your hands dirty.
- Installing system prerequisites
- Installing Taiyaki
- Tests
- Walk through
- Workflows
* Using the workflow Makefile
* Steps from fast5 files to basecalling
* Preparing a training set
* Basecalling
* Modified bases
* Abinitio training - Guppy compatibility
* Q score calibration
* Standard model parameters - Environment variables
- CUDA
* Troubleshooting - Using multiple GPUs
* How to launch training with multiple GPUs
* Choice of learning rates for multi-GPU training
* Selection of GPUs
* More than one multi-GPU training group on a single machine - Running on SGE
* Installation
* Execution
* Selection of multiple GPUs in SGE - Diagnostics
To install required system packages on ubuntu 16.04:
sudo make deps
Other linux platforms may be compatible, but are untested.
In order to accelerate model training with a GPU you will need to install CUDA (which should install nvcc and add it to your path.) See instructions from NVIDIA and the CUDA section below.
Taiyaki also makes use of the OpenMP extensions for multi-processing. These are supported by the system installed compiler on most modern Linux systems but require a more modern version of the clang/llvm compiler than that installed on MacOS machines. Support for OpenMP was adding in clang/llvm in version 3.7 (see http://llvm.org or use brew). Alternatively you can install GCC on MacOS using homebrew.
Some analysis scripts require a recent version of the BWA aligner.
Windows is not supported.
NOTE If you intend to use Taiyaki with a GPU, make sure you have installed and set up CUDA before proceeding.
We recommend installing Taiyaki in a self-contained virtual environment.
The following command creates a complete environment for developing and testing Taiyaki, in the directory venv:
make install
Taiyaki will be installed in development mode so that you can easily test your changes.
You will need to run source venv/bin/activate
at the start of each session when you want to use this virtual environment.
This is not the recommended installation method: we recommend that you install taiyaki in its own virtual environment if possible.
Taiyaki can be installed from source using either:
python3 setup.py install
python3 setup.py develop #[development mode](http://setuptools.readthedocs.io/en/latest/setuptools.html#development-mode)
Alternatively, you can use pip with either:
pip install path/to/taiyaki/repo
pip install -e path/to/taiyaki/repo #[development mode](http://setuptools.readthedocs.io/en/latest/setuptools.html#development-mode)
Tests can be run as follows, provided that the recommended make install
installation method was used:
source venv/bin/activate # activates taiyaki virtual environment (do this first)
make workflow # runs scripts which carry out the workflow for basecall-network training and for squiggle-predictor training
make acctest # runs acceptance tests
make unittest # runs unit tests
make multiGPU_test # runs multi-GPU test (GPUs 0 and 1 must be available, and CUDA must be installed - see below)
For a walk-through of Taiyaki model training, including how to obtain sample training data, see docs/walkthrough.rst.
For an example of training a modifed base model, see docs/modbase.rst.
The file at workflow/Makefile can be used to direct the process of generating ingredients for training and then running the training itself.
For example, if we have a directory read_dir containing fast5 files, and a fasta file refs.fa containing a ground-truth reference sequence for each read, we can (from the Taiyaki root directory) use the command line
make -f workflow/Makefile MAXREADS=1000 \
READDIR=read_dir USER_PER_READ_REFERENCE_FILE=refs.fa \
DEVICE=3 train_remapuser_ref
This will place the training ingredients in a directory RESULTS/training_ingredients and the training output (including logs and trained models) in RESULTS/remap_training, using GPU 3 and only reading the first 1000 reads in the directory. The fast5 files may be single or multi-read.
Using command line options to make, it is possible to change various other options, including the directory where the results go. Read the Makefile to find out about these options. The Makefile can also be used to follow a squiggle-mapping workflow.
The paragraph below describes the steps in the workflow in more detail.
The script bin/prepare_mapped_reads.py prepares a file containing mapped signals. This file is the main ingredient used to train a basecalling model.
The simplest workflow looks like this. The flow runs from top to bottom and lines show the inputs required for each stage. The scripts in the Taiyaki package are shown, as are the files they work with.
fast5 files
/ \
/ \
/ \
/ generate_per_read_params.py
| |
| | fasta with reference
| per-read-params file sequence for each read
| (tsv, contains shift, (produced with get_refs_from_sam.py
| scale, trim for each read) or some other method)
\ | /
\ | /
\ | /
\ | /
\ | /
\ | /
prepare_mapped_reads.py
(also uses remapping flip-flop
model from models/)
|
|
mapped-signal-file (hdf5)
|
|
train_flipflop.py
(also uses definition
of model to be trained)
|
|
trained flip-flop model
|
|
dump_json.py
|
|
json model definition
(suitable for use by Guppy)
Each script in bin/ has lots of options, which you can find out about by reading the scripts. Basic usage is as follows:
bin/generate_per_read_params.py <directory containing fast5 files> --output <name of output per_read_tsv file>
bin/get_refs_from_sam.py <genomic references fasta> <one or more SAM/BAM files> --output <name of output reference_fasta>
bin/prepare_mapped_reads.py <directory containing fast5 files> <per_read_tsv> <output mapped_signal_file> <file containing model for remapping> <reference_fasta>
bin/train_flipflop.py --device <digit specifying GPU> <pytorch model definition> <mapped-signal files to train with>
Some scripts mentioned also have a useful option --limit which limits the number of reads to be used. This allows a quick test of a workflow.
The prepare_mapped_reads.py
script prepares a data set to use to train a new basecaller. Each member of this data set contains:
- The raw signal for a complete nanopore read (lifted from a fast5 file)
- A reference sequence that is the "ground truth" for the that read
- An alignment between the signal and the reference
As input to this script, we need a directory containing fast5 files (either single-read or multi-read) and a fasta file that contains the ground-truth reference for each read. In order to match the raw signal to the correct ground-truth sequence, the IDs in the fasta file should be the unique read ID assigned by MinKnow (these are the same IDs that Guppy uses in its fastq output). For example, a record in the fasta file might look like:
>17296436-f2f1-4713-adaf-169ed9cf6aa6
TATGATGTGAGCTTATATTATTAATTTTGTATCAATCTTATTTTCTAATGTATGCATTTTAATGCTATAAATTTCCTTCTAAGCACTAC...
The recommended way to produce this fasta file is as follows:
- Align Guppy fastq basecalls to a reference genome using Guppy Aligner or Minimap. This will produce one or more SAM files.
- Use the
get_refs_from_sam.py
script to extract a snippet of the reference for each mapped read. You can filter reads by coverage.
The final input required by prepare_mapped_signal.py
is a pre-trained basecaller model, which is used to determine the alignment between raw signal and reference sequence.
An example of such a model (for DNA sequenced with pore r9) is provided at models/mGru256_flipflop_remapping_model_r9_DNA.checkpoint
.
This does make the entire training process somewhat circular: you need a model to train a model.
However, the new training set can be somewhat different from the data that the remapping model was trained on and things still work out.
So, for example, if your samples are a bit weird and whacky, you may be able to improve basecall accuracy by retraining a model with Taiyaki.
Internally, we use Taiyaki to train basecallers after incremental pore updates, and as a research tool into better basecalling methods.
Taiyaki is not intended to enable training basecallers from scratch for novel nanopores.
If it seems like remapping will not work for your data set, then you can use alternative methods
so long as they produce data conformant with this format.
Taiyaki comes with a script to perform flip-flop basecalling using a GPU. This script requires CUDA and cupy to be installed.
Example usage:
bin/basecall.py <directory containing fast5s> <model checkpoint> > <output fasta>
A limited range of models can also be used with Guppy, which will provide better performance and stability. See the section on Guppy compatibility for more details.
Note: due to the RNA motor processing along the strand from 3' to 5', the base caller sees the read reversed relative to the natural orientation. Use bin/basecall.py --reverse
to output the basecall of the read in its natural direction.
With the default settings, the script taiyaki/bin/basecall.py
produces fasta
files rather than fastq
s, so no q-score calibration is needed. However the option --fastq
may be used to generate fastqs instead. Because of a number of small differences between the implementation of basecalling in Guppy and Taiyaki, the q scores generated by the two systems will not be identical. Also see the section on qscore calibration below.
Taiyaki enables the training of modified base basecalling (modbase) models. Modbase models will produce standard canonical basecalls along with the probability that each base is actually a modified alternative (e.g. 5mC, 5hmC, 6mA, etc.).
Modified base training requires the ground truth modified base content of each training read.
This is provided as the input to the prepare_mapped_reads.py
step of the training pipeline.
Alternatively, Megalodon provides options to produce modified base mapped signal file in a single command for certain sample types.
See documentation for these options here.
In either case, the accuracy of this modified base markup is essential to producing a highly accurate modified base model.
Modifed bases in the references FASTA file provided to prepare_mapped_reads.py
are represented by a single letter code.
Each modified base must be annotated with its corresponding canonical base as well as a "long name".
This specification is provided via the --mod
argument to prepare_mapped_reads.py
, which takes 3 arguments
- Single letter modified base code (used in references FASTA file)
- Corresponging single letter canonical base code (
A
,C
,G, or
T`) - Modified base long name (e.g.
5mC
,5hmC
,6mA
, etc.) These values will be stored in the mapped signal file and later the produced model. It is recommended that modified base codes follow specifications from the DNAmod database if possible (though many single letter codes are not defined). For example, to encode 5-methyl-cytosine and 6-methyl-adenosine with the single letter codesm
anda
respectively, the following command line arguments would be added--mod m C 5mC --mod a A 6mA
.
In addition to the modbase training data, a modbase model requires a categorical modifications (cat_mod
) model architecture.
This model replaces the flip-flop layer with a similar layer adding the logic to produce modified base probabilities.
The recommended architecture is found in models/mLstm_cat_mod_flipflop.py
and should be passed to train_flipflop.py
command as first model
argument.
The --mod_factor
argument controls the proportion of the training loss attributed to the modified base output stream in comparison to the canonical base output stream.
The default value of 1
should provide a high quality model in most cases (note this is different from previous recommendations).
Modified base models can be used in Guppy
to call modified base anchored to the basecalls or Megalodon
to call modified bases anchored to a reference.
'Ab initio' is an alternative entry point for Taiyaki that obtains acceptable models with fewer input requirements, particularly it does not require a previously trained model.
The input for ab initio training is a set of signal-sequence pairs:
- Fixed length chunks from reads
- A reference sequence trimmed for each chunk.
The models produced are not as accurate as those produced by the normal training process but can be used to bootstrap it.
The process is described in the abinitio walk-through.
During DNA sequencing, the strands of DNA go through the pore starting at the 5' end of the molecule. In contrast, during direct RNA sequencing the strands go through the pore starting at the 3' end. As a consequence, the per-read reference sequences used for RNA training must be reversed with respect to the genome/exome reference sequence (there is no need to complement the sequences). Basecalls produced with RNA models will then need to be reversed again in order to align them to a reference.
In terms of the workflow described above, the following steps need to be changed:
- If using
get_refs_from_sam.py
to produce per-read references, then add the--reverse
option. - If using the
basecall.py
script in taiyaki, then add the--reverse
option. - If basecalling with Guppy then use an RNA-specific config file (see the Guppy docs for more info).
In order to train a model that is compatible with Guppy (version 2.2 at time of writing), we recommend that you
use the model defined in models/mLstm_flipflop.py
and that you call train_flipflop.py
with:
train_flipflop.py --size 256 --stride 5 --winlen 19 mLstm_flipflop.py <other options...>
You should then be able to export your checkpoint to json (using bin/dump_json.py) that can be used to basecall with Guppy.
See Guppy documentation for more information on how to do this.
Key options include selecting the Guppy config file to be appropriate for your application, and passing the complete path of your .json file.
For example:
guppy_basecaller --input_path /path/to/input_reads --save_path /path/to/save_dir --config dna_r9.4.1_450bps_flipflop.cfg --model path/to/model.json --device cuda:1
Certain other model architectures may also be Guppy-compatible, but it is hard to give an exhaustive list and so we recommend you contact us to get confirmation.
The Guppy config file contains parameters qscore_shift
and qscore_scale
which calibrate the q scores in fastq files. These parameters can also be overridden
by Guppy basecaller command-line options. Since these parameters are specific to a particular model, the calibration will be incorrect for newly-trained models.
The Taiyaki script misc/calibrate_qscores_byread.py
can be used to calculate shift and scale parameters for a new model. The ingredients needed are an
alignment summary (which may be a .txt file generated by the Guppy aligner or a .samacc file generated by taiyaki/misc/align.py
) and the fastq files that go with it.
Because of differences in the chemistry, particularly sequencing speed, and sample rate, the models used in Guppy are trained with different parameters depending on condition. The default parameters for Taiyaki are generally those appropriate for a high accuracy DNA model and should be changed depending on what sample is being trained. The table below describes the parameters currently used to train the production models released as part of Guppy:
Condition | chunk_len_min | chunk_len_max | size | stride | winlen |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
DNA, high accuracy | 3000 | 8000 | 256 | 5 | 19 |
DNA, fast | 2000 | 4000 | 96 | 5 | 19 |
RNA, high accuracy | 10000 | 20000 | 256 | 10 | 31 |
RNA, fast | 10000 | 20000 | 96 | 12 | 31 |
The environment variables OMP_NUM_THREADS
, OMP_PROC_BIND
and OPENBLAS_NUM_THREADS
can have an impact on performance.
The optimal value will depend on your system and on the jobs you are running, so experiment.
As a starting point, we recommend:
OPENBLAS_NUM_THREADS=1
OMP_NUM_THREADS=8
OMP_PROC_BIND=true
Note that when using multiple GPUs as recommended via torch.distributed.launch
, the OMP_PROC_BIND=true
should be omitted.
In order to use a GPU to accelerate model training, you will need to ensure that CUDA is installed (specifically nvcc) and that CUDA-related environment variables are set.
This should be done before running make install
described above. If you forgot to do this, just run make install
again once everything is set up.
The Makefile will try to detect which version of CUDA is present on your system, and install matching versions of pytorch and cupy.
Taiyaki depends on pytorch version 1.2, which supports CUDA versions 9.2 and 10.0.
To see what version of CUDA will be detected and which torch and cupy packages will be installed you can run:
make show_cuda_version
Expert users can override the detected versions on the command line. For example, you might want to do this if you are building Taiyaki on one machine to run on another.
# Force CUDA version 9.2
CUDA=9.2 make install
# Override torch package, and don't install cupy at all
TORCH=my-special-torch-package CUPY= make install
Users who install Taiyaki system-wide or into an existing activated Python environment will need to make sure CUDA and a corresponding version of PyTorch have been installed.
During training, if this error occurs:
AttributeError: module 'torch._C' has no attribute '_cuda_setDevice'
or any other error related to the device, it suggests that you are trying to use pytorch's CUDA functionality but that CUDA (specifically nvcc) is either not installed or not correctly set up.
If:
nvcc --version
returns
-bash: nvcc: command not found
nvcc is not installed or it is not on your path.
Ensure that you have installed CUDA (check NVIDIA's intructions) and that the CUDA compiler nvcc
is on your path.
To place cuda on your path enter the following:
export PATH=$PATH:/usr/local/cuda/bin
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$LD_LIBRARY_PATH:/usr/local/cuda/lib64
Once CUDA is correctly configured and you are installing Taiyaki in a new virtual environment (as recommended), you may need to run make install
again to ensure that you have the correct pytorch package to match your CUDA version.
The script bin/train_flipflop.py can be used in multi-GPU mode with Pytorch's DistributedDataParallel class. With N GPUs available on a single machine, we can run N processes, each using one of the GPUs and processing different random selections from the same training data. The gradients are synchronised by averaging across the processes. The outcome is that the batch size is larger by a factor N than the batch size in single-GPU mode.
Multi-GPU training runs can be launched using the Pytorch distributed.launch module. For example, in a Taiyaki environment:
python -m torch.distributed.launch --nproc_per_node=4 train_flipflop.py --lr_max 0.004 --lr_min 0.0002 taiyaki/models/mLstm_flipflop.py mapped_reads.hdf5
This command line launches four processes, each using a GPU. Four GPUs numbered 0,1,2,3 must be available.
Note that all command-line options for train_flipflop.py are used in the same way as normal, apart from device.
The script workflow/test_multiGPU.sh provides an example. Note that the line choosing GPUs (export CUDA_VISIBLE_DEVICES...) may need to be edited to specify the GPUs to be used on your system.
A higher learning rate can be used for large-batch or multi-GPU training. As a starting point, with N GPUs we recommend using a learning rate sqrt(N) times higher than used for a single GPU. With these settings we expect to make roughly the same training progress as a single-GPU training run but in N times fewer batches. This will not always be true: as always, experiments are necessary to find the best choice of hyperparameters. In particular, a lower learning rate than suggested by the square-root rule may be necessary in the early stages of training. One way to achieve this is by using the command-line arguments lr_warmup and warmup_batches. Also bear in mind that the timescale for the learning rate schedule, lr_cosine_iters should be changed to take into account the faster progress of training.
The settings above use the first nproc_per_node GPUs available on the machine. For example, with 8 GPUs and nproc_per_node = 4, we will use the GPUs numbered 0,1,2,3. This selection can be altered using the environment variable CUDA_VISIBLE_DEVICES. For example,
export CUDA_VISIBLE_DEVICES="2,4,6,7"
will make the GPUs numbered 2,4,6,7 available to CUDA as if they were numbers 0,1,2,3. If we then launch using the command line above (python -m torch.distributed.launch...), GPUs 2,4,6,7 will be used.
See below for how this applies in a SGE system.
Suppose that there are 8 GPUs on your machine and you want to train two models, each using 4 GPUs. Setting CUDA_VISIBLE_DEVICES to "4,5,6,7" for the second training job, you set things off, but find that the second job fails with an error message like this
File "./bin/train_flipflop.py", line 178, in main
torch.distributed.init_process_group(backend='nccl')
File "XXXXXX/taiyaki/venv/lib/python3.5/site-packages/torch/distributed/distributed_c10d.py", line 354, in init_process_group
store, rank, world_size = next(rendezvous(url))
File "XXXXXX/taiyaki/venv/lib/python3.5/site-packages/torch/distributed/rendezvous.py", line 143, in _env_rendezvous_handler
store = TCPStore(master_addr, master_port, start_daemon)
RuntimeError: Address already in use
The reason is that torch.distributed.launch sets up the process group with a fixed default IP address and port for communication between processes (master_addr 127.0.0.1, master_port 29500). The two process groups are trying to use the same port. To fix this, set off your second process group with a different address and port:
python -m torch.distributed.launch --nproc_per_node=4 --master_addr 127.0.0.2 --master_port 29501 train_flipflop.py <command-line-options>
There are two things to get right: installing with the correct CUDA version, and executing with the correct choice of GPU.
It is important that when the package is installed, it knows which version of the CUDA compiler is available on the machine where it will be executed. When running on an SGE cluster we might want to do installation on a different machine from execution. There are two ways of getting around this. You can qlogin to a node which has the same resources as the execution node, and then install using that machine:
qlogin -l h=<nodename>
cd <taiyaki_directory>
make install
...or you can tell Taiyaki at the installation stage which version of CUDA to use. For example
CUDA=9.2 make install
When executing on an SGE cluster you need to make sure you run on a node which has GPUs available, and then tell Taiyaki to use the correct GPU.
You tell the system to wait for a node which has an available GPU by adding the option -l gpu=1 to your qsub command. To find out which GPU has been allocated to your job, you need to look at the environment variable SGE_HGR_gpu. If it has the value cuda0, then use GPU number 0, and if it has the value cuda1, then use GPU 1. The command line option --device (used by train_flipflop.py accepts inputs such as 'cuda0' or 'cuda1' or integers 0 or 1, so SGE_HGR_gpu can be passed straight into the --device option.
The easy way to achieve this is with a Makefile like the one in the directory workflow. This Makefile contains comments which will help users run the package on a UGE system.
When multiple GPUs are available to a SGE job (for example, if we use the command line option -l gpu=4 in qsub to request 4 GPUS), the GPUs allocated are passed to the process in SGE_HGR_gpu. Unfortunately, CUDA_VISIBLE_DEVICES requires a comma-separated list of integers, and the list supplied in SGE_HGR_gpu is space-separated and contains strings like 'cuda0'. To get around this we first convert to a comma-separated list and then remove the word 'cuda'. These lines should be placed in the script before the training script is called.
COMMASEP=${SGE_HGR_gpu// /,}
export CUDA_VISIBLE_DEVICES=${COMMASEP//cuda/}
Also note that on nodes with many GPUs, port clashes may occur (see 'More than one multi-GPU training group on a single machine' above). They can be avoided with clever use of the command-line arguments of torch.distributed.launch.
The misc directory contains several scripts that are useful for working out where things went wrong (or understanding why they went right).
Graphs showing the information in mapped read files can be plotted using the script plot_mapped_signals.py A graph showing the progress of training can be plotted using the script plot_training.py
This is a research release provided under the terms of the Oxford Nanopore Technologies' Public Licence. Research releases are provided as technology demonstrators to provide early access to features or stimulate Community development of tools. Support for this software will be minimal and is only provided directly by the developers. Feature requests, improvements, and discussions are welcome and can be implemented by forking and pull requests. However much as we would like to rectify every issue and piece of feedback users may have, the developers may have limited resource for support of this software. Research releases may be unstable and subject to rapid iteration by Oxford Nanopore Technologies.
© 2019 Oxford Nanopore Technologies Ltd. Taiyaki is distributed under the terms of the Oxford Nanopore Technologies' Public Licence.