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  • 454newbie
    Member
    • Jun 2009
    • 17

    Idiots guide to setting up Amazon instance for sequence analysis

    Does anyone know of a good "how-to" on setting up an Amazon instance for sequence analysis? IN an ideal world, this would not be targeted at the uber-expert user, more at someone with middling unix skills, and some experience of common tools (e.g. bowtie, MAQ, samtools, GATK).

    Also-can someone point me to a list of the available resources (e.g. reference sequences, Hapmap data, RNA-seq sets) that can be accessed through such an instance. Conversely, what would you recommend should be loaded and stored "locally"?

    I have already investigated DNAnexus, Galaxy and geschicten, each of which has a lot to offer, bu this would be more for smaller jobs that require non-routine use and custom scripting of standard tools.
  • afgane
    Junior Member
    • Mar 2010
    • 1

    #2
    Did you try Cloudman from Galaxy? It is a web-based manager for cloud resources that provisions and manages all of the components required to run Galaxy and requires no command line manipulations. Instructions and a video are available here usegalaxy.org/cloud.

    Comment

    • Dannon
      Junior Member
      • Dec 2010
      • 5

      #3
      One small addition regarding CloudMan-- though it doesn't require any command line manipulation out of the box to use the included Galaxy instance, you could certainly ssh in and do all of the custom work you wanted, and still get the benefits of being able to scale up/down a cluster to handle the load, use Galaxy for certain tasks, etc.

      Comment

      • krobison
        Senior Member
        • Nov 2007
        • 734

        #4
        I don't know of a good how-to, but have some notes I should probably distill & put in my blog (and will try to do so this week). My word of encouragement is that if I can do it, so can you; I am notoriously all thumbs at installs and sys admin.

        The default EC2 instance is not a bad place to start, though you will have to install plenty and it is a Red Hat type Linux, which I find more difficult than ubuntu. It is quite bare bones; for example, I needed to install emacs (emacs!). The two key skills you will need is creating, mounting and unmounting volumes and how to use the package manager (yum).

        There are instances configured for bioinformatics, such as bioperl-max.


        As far as installing software, I tend to grab most stand-alone bioinformatics tools from their home site and compile them locally. There are a few which are challenging (Cufflinks requires Boost, which I've sometimes found troublesome; dindel has given me trouble but I need to check my notes as to why) but most compile straight out. Extensions to languages such as R and Perl can generally be done within that language; the
        Code:
        Bio::DB::Sam
        package for reading SAM/BAM in Perl is a notable exception.

        Comment

        • cariaso
          Member
          • Jan 2008
          • 31

          #5
          cloudman makes it easy



          makes it even easier.

          Comment

          • cwhelan
            Member
            • Nov 2010
            • 23

            #6
            You might also want to check out CloudBioLinux:

            BDSLOT88 menjadi salah satu pusat pelatihan resmi bagi para Aquarian Teacher dengan layanan tercepat 24 jam nonstop sehingga dapat membantu jika mengalami kendala.


            which is an EC2 AMI that has many commonly used bioinformatics tools and data sets preinstalled. I've used it for small jobs that sound like what you might be talking about.

            Comment

            • cariaso
              Member
              • Jan 2008
              • 31

              #7
              turtles all the way down

              FWIW

              runblast is built on top of cloudman

              cloudman is built on top of cloudbiolinux

              Comment

              • kopi-o
                Senior Member
                • Feb 2008
                • 319

                #8
                I have to say RunBlast is pretty slick. I tried it yesterday. The only thing you need to do, really, is find your AWS access keys and RunBlast takes care of everything else.

                Comment

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