sequences. It stands for Sequence Search and Alignment by Hashing
Algorithm. It achieves its fast search speed by converting sequence
information into a `hash table' data structure, which can then be
searched very rapidly for matches.
WWW: http://www.sanger.ac.uk/Software/analysis/SSAHA/
PR: ports/124525
Submitted by: Fernan Aguero <fernan@iib.unsam.edu.ar>
Approved by: gabor (mentor, implicit)
The affected ports are the ones with gettext as a run-dependency
according to ports/INDEX-7 (5007 of them) and the ones with USE_GETTEXT
in Makefile (29 of them).
PR: ports/124340
Submitted by: edwin@
Approved by: portmgr (pav)
assembly
Consed is a tool for viewing, editing, and finishing sequence
assemblies.
The port is constituted of 4 parts:
biology/phred: base caller with quality evaluation
biology/phrap: sequence assembler for shotgun sequencing
biology/consed: workbench
biology/phd2fasta: small utility
All these can be used separately; however, most function
of consed depends on the others.
Although these programs are licensed freely for academic
and nonprofit purposes, users have to contact the authors
to get the softwares.
Phred (including phd2fasta) and phrap are emailed,
and consed can be downloaded to a restricted IP address.
For commercial users, the licensing fee is ca. $10,000 at
the time of writing.
PR: ports/118548
Submitted by: Motomichi Matsuzaki <mzaki@biol.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
assembly
Consed is a tool for viewing, editing, and finishing sequence
assemblies.
The port is constituted of 4 parts:
biology/phred: base caller with quality evaluation
biology/phrap: sequence assembler for shotgun sequencing
biology/consed: workbench
biology/phd2fasta: small utility
All these can be used separately; however, most function
of consed depends on the others.
Although these programs are licensed freely for academic
and nonprofit purposes, users have to contact the authors
to get the softwares.
Phred (including phd2fasta) and phrap are emailed,
and consed can be downloaded to a restricted IP address.
For commercial users, the licensing fee is ca. $10,000 at
the time of writing.
PR: ports/118548
Submitted by: Motomichi Matsuzaki <mzaki@biol.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
assembly
Consed is a tool for viewing, editing, and finishing sequence
assemblies.
The port is constituted of 4 parts:
biology/phred: base caller with quality evaluation
biology/phrap: sequence assembler for shotgun sequencing
biology/consed: workbench
biology/phd2fasta: small utility
All these can be used separately; however, most function
of consed depends on the others.
Although these programs are licensed freely for academic
and nonprofit purposes, users have to contact the authors
to get the softwares.
Phred (including phd2fasta) and phrap are emailed,
and consed can be downloaded to a restricted IP address.
For commercial users, the licensing fee is ca. $10,000 at
the time of writing.
PR: ports/118548
Submitted by: Motomichi Matsuzaki <mzaki@biol.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
assembly
Consed is a tool for viewing, editing, and finishing sequence assemblies.
The port is constituted of 4 parts:
biology/phred: base caller with quality evaluation
biology/phrap: sequence assembler for shotgun sequencing
biology/consed: workbench
biology/phd2fasta: small utility
All these can be used separately; however, most function
of consed depends on the others.
Although these programs are licensed freely for academic
and nonprofit purposes, users have to contact the authors
to get the softwares.
Phred (including phd2fasta) and phrap are emailed,
and consed can be downloaded to a restricted IP address.
For commercial users, the licensing fee is ca. $10,000 at
the time of writing.
PR: ports/118548
Submitted by: Motomichi Matsuzaki <mzaki@biol.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
in the Newick phylogenetic tree format (e.g., the format used by the PHYLIP
package). NJplot is especially convenient for rooting the unrooted trees
obtained from parsimony, distance or maximum likelihood tree-building methods.
The package contains the following programs:
njplot - draw phylogenetic trees and interactively modify them
newicktops - non-interactive version rendering into a PostScript file
newicktotxt - non-interactive version rendering into a text file
unrooted - draw unrooted circular trees
If you use NJplot in a published work, please cite the following reference:
Perriere, G. and Gouy, M. (1996) WWW-Query: An on-line retrieval system for
biological sequence banks. Biochimie, 78, 364-369.
WWW: http://pbil.univ-lyon1.fr/software/njplot.html
PR: ports/118438
Submitted by: Motomichi Matsuzaki <mzaki@biol.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
The name stands for multiple sequence comparison by log-expectation.
A range of options is provided that give you the choice of optimizing
accuracy, speed, or some compromise between the two. Default parameters are
those that give the best average accuracy in the published tests. MUSCLE
can achieve both better average accuracy and better speed than CLUSTALW or
T-Coffee, depending on the chosen options.
Citation:
Edgar, R. C. (2004) MUSCLE: multiple sequence alignment with high accuracy
and high throughput. Nucleic Acids Research 32(5): 1792-1797.
Edgar, R. C. (2004) MUSCLE: a multiple sequence alignment method with
reduced time and space complexity. BMC Bioinformatics 5(1): 113.
The NAR paper gives only a brief overview of the algorithm and
implementation details. For a full discussion of the method and many of
the non-default options that it offers, please see the BMC paper.
WWW: http://www.drive5.com/muscle/
PR: ports/118460
Submitted by: Motomichi Matsuzaki <mzaki@biol.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp>
- Remove USE_XLIB/USE_X_PREFIX/USE_XPM in favor of USE_XORG
- Remove X11BASE support in favor of LOCALBASE or PREFIX
- Use USE_LDCONFIG instead of INSTALLS_SHLIB
- Remove unneeded USE_GCC 3.4+
Thanks to all Helpers:
Dmitry Marakasov, Chess Griffin, beech@, dinoex, rafan, gahr,
ehaupt, nox, itetcu, flz, pav
PR: 116263
Tested on: pointyhat
Approved by: portmgr (pav)
linkage maps of markers segregating in experimental crosses. MAPMAKER/EXP
performs full multipoint linkage analysis (simultaneous estimation of all
recombination fractions from the primary data) for dominant, recessive, and co-
dominant (e.g. RFLP-like) markers. MAPMAKER/EXP is an experimental-cross-only
successor to the original MAPMAKER program.
MAPMAKER/QTL is a companion program to MAPMAKER/EXP which allows one to map
genes controlling polygenic quantitative traits in F2 intercrosses and BC1
backcrosses relative to a genetic linkage map. More information on MAPMAKER/QTL
can be found in the technical report (included with MAPMAKER/QTL).
WWW: http://www.broad.mit.edu/ftp/distribution/software/mapmaker3/
PR: ports/122452
Submitted by: Tassilo Philipp <tphilipp at potion-studios.com>
- Switch to .tar.gz distfile so that we don't define our do-extract
- While I'm here, using substitution for version numbers in pkg-plist
for easier upgrade
PR: ports/121690
Submitted by: Wen heping <wenheping at gmail.com>
Approved by: maintainer timeout (2 weeks)
- Add RESTRICTED due to a non-commercial use licence.
PR: ports/121794
Submitted by: KATO Tsuguru <tkato432@yahoo.com>
Approved by: thierry and tabthorpe (mentors)
Bayesian inference of phylogeny is based upon a quantity called the
posterior probability distribution of trees, which is the probability of a
tree conditioned on the observations. The conditioning is accomplished
using Bayes's theorem. The posterior probability distribution of trees is
impossible to calculate analytically; instead, MrBayes uses a simulation
technique called Markov chain Monte Carlo (or MCMC) to approximate the
posterior probabilities of trees.
WWW: http://mrbayes.csit.fsu.edu/
PR: ports/118542
Submitted by: mzaki at biol.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp
or draft sequence. This package provides an efficient suffix tree library,
seed-and-extend alignment, SNP detection, repeat detection, and
visualization tools.
WWW: http://mummer.sourceforge.net/
PR: ports/118142
Submitted by: Tony Maher
(also: update to 5.0.4)
Upon installing FoldingAtHome I ran the software from a
user account only to find that I was stuck in a loop of
trying to enter configuration options. Shortly thereafter
I realized that it was trying to write to
/usr/local/share/foldingathome, and therefore requires being
run as root to write there unless one changes permissions
there. Seing as this isn't installed with a startup script
for daemonization, and running as root seems a little
excessive for this application, should this be adapted to
run from a user account or set up to be able to start at
boot?
And from maintainer:
This diff updates the port to version 5.04, and adds
support to running as normal user using ~/.fah
directory.
PR: ports/113335
Submitted by: James Snyder <jbsnyder@fanplastic.org>
Approved by: maintainer
- Don't install CVS directories which are going to be removed
in next release
PR: ports/113831
Submitted by: Thomas Abthorpe <thomas at goodking.ca>
Approved by: maintainer timeout (20 days)
2007-01-07 biology/coalesce: distfile disappeared from homepage
Actually the software is still available at:
http://evolution.gs.washington.edu/lamarc/coalesce.html, but it is
not supported by the authors. Last version is from 1995 and
biology/fluctuate can be used instead.
. bump PORTREVISION (RUN_DEPENDS changes);
. for converters/konwert:
- introduce PATCHLEVEL to be used instead of PORTREVISION at filenames;
- update to new PATCHLEVEL=11.
PR: 107000 [1], 107046 [2], 107106 [3], 107114 [4]
Submitted by: bsam (me)
Approved by: all maintainers timeout three and a half week:
mij at bitchx.it [1]
j.koopmann at seceidos.de [2]
chuynh at biolateral.com.au [3]
alexs at snark.rinet.ru [4]
support for reading and writing BEAST, Clustal, EMBL, Fasta, GCG-MSF, GDE,
Hennig86, NCBI, NEXUS, NONA, PDB, Phylip, PIR, Plain/Raw, Swiss-Prot and
TNT files by writing only three lines of code.
The framework is written in Cocoa (Objective-C).
WWW: http://bioinformatics.org/biococoa/