pileup.js is an interactive in-browser track viewer. Try a demo!
It is built from the ground up to take advantage of the modern JavaScript ecosystem, e.g. ES2015, static type analysis, React.js and Promises. Read more about the motivations behind pileup.js in our paper.
Showing a structural variant (large deletion):
To use pileup.js in a project, install it via NPM:
npm install --save pileup
And then source either node_modules/pileup/dist/pileup.min.js
or pileup.js
.
To create a pileup, use pileup.create()
. You specify a container DOM element,
an initial range and a list of tracks:
var div = document.getElementById('your-id');
var p = pileup.create(div, {
range: {contig: 'chr17', start: 7512384, stop: 7512544},
tracks: [
{
viz: pileup.viz.genome(),
isReference: true,
data: pileup.formats.twoBit({
url: 'http://www.biodalliance.org/datasets/hg19.2bit'
}),
name: 'Reference'
},
{
viz: pileup.viz.pileup(),
data: pileup.formats.bam({
url: '/test-data/synth3.normal.17.7500000-7515000.bam',
indexUrl: '/test-data/synth3.normal.17.7500000-7515000.bam.bai'
}),
cssClass: 'normal',
name: 'Alignments'
}
// ...
]
});
Each track has a name, a data source and a visualization. See
/examples/playground.js
for a complete set of
track types.
To style the track viewer, use CSS! pileup.js uses flexbox for track layout. You can view this codepen for a simple demo of the skeleton. For example, to allocate 1/3 of the space to a variant track and 2/3 to a pileup track, you could use this CSS:
.track.variants { flex: 1; }
.track.pileup { flex: 2; }
To style multiple tracks of the same type, you can use the cssClass
property.
The pileup object returned by pileup.create
has these methods:
setRange
: Update the visible range in the pileup. This takes aGenomeRange
object, e.g.{contig: "chr17", start: 123, stop: 456}
. The coordinates are 1-based and the range is inclusive on both ends.getRange
: Returns the currently-visible range. This is aGenomeRange
object (see description insetRange
).destroy
: Tears down the pileup and releases references to allow proper garbage collection.
If you want to change the set of tracks in a pileup, tear it down and create a
new one. The caches are stored on the individual source and visualization
objects so, as long as you reuse these, the destroy
/ create
cycle is
relatively cheap and will not incur extra trips to the network.
git clone https://github.com/hammerlab/pileup.js.git
cd pileup.js
npm install
npm run build
To play with the demo, start an http-server:
npm run http-server
Then open http://localhost:8080/examples/index.html in your browser of choice.
Run the tests from the command line:
npm run test
Run the tests in a real browser:
npm run http-server
open http://localhost:8080/src/test/runner.html
To continuously regenerate the combined pileup and test JS, run:
npm run watch
To run a single test from the command line, use:
npm run test -- --grep=pileuputils
To do the same in the web UI, pass in a ?grep=
URL parameter.
To typecheck the code, run
npm run flow
For best results, use one of the flowtype editor integrations.
See DESIGN.md.
If you're looking for ideas, see ROADMAP.md
To cut a new release:
- Update
version
in bothpackage.json
andpileup.js
. Commit this change. - Run
scripts/publish.sh
- Run
npm publish
- Push to github and tag a release there. Add release notes.
pileup.js is Apache v2 licensed.