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Introduction

Bioawk is an extension to Brian Kernighan's awk, adding the support of several common biological data formats, including optionally gzip'ed BED, GFF, SAM, VCF, FASTA/Q and TAB-delimited formats with column names. It also adds a few built-in functions and an command line option to use TAB as the input/output delimiter. When the new functionality is not used, bioawk is intended to behave exactly the same as the original BWK awk.

The original awk requires a YACC-compatible parser generator (e.g. Byacc or Bison). Bioawk further depends on zlib so as to work with gzip'd files.

New functionality

Command line option -t

Using this option is equivalent to

bioawk -F'\t' -v OFS="\t"
Command line option -c arg

This option specifies the input format. When this option is in use, bioawk will seamlessly add variables that name the fields, based on either the format or the first line of the input, depending arg. This option also enables bioawk to read gzip'd files. The argument arg may take the following values:

New built-in functions

See awk.1.

Examples

  1. List the supported formats:

     bioawk -c help
    
  2. Extract unmapped reads without header:

     bioawk -c sam 'and($flag,4)' aln.sam.gz
    
  3. Extract mapped reads with header:

     bioawk -Hc sam '!and($flag,4)'
    
  4. Reverse complement FASTA:

     bioawk -c fastx '{print ">"$name;print revcomp($seq)}' seq.fa.gz
    
  5. Create FASTA from SAM (uses revcomp if FLAG & 16)

     samtools view aln.bam | \
         bioawk -c sam '{s=$seq; if(and($flag, 16)) {s=revcomp($seq)} print ">"$qname"\n"s}'
    
  6. Print the genotypes of sample foo and bar from a VCF:

     grep -v ^## in.vcf | bioawk -tc hdr '{print $foo,$bar}'
    

Potential limitations

  1. When option -c is in use, bioawk replaces the line reading module of awk. The new line reading function parses FASTA and FASTQ files and seamlessly reads gzip'ed files. However, the new code does not fully mimic the original code. It may fail in corner cases (though this has not happened yet). Thus when -c is not specified, awk falls back to the original line reading code and does not support gzip'ed input.

  2. When -c is in use, several strings allocated in the new line reading module are not freed in the end. These will be reported by valgrind as "still reachable". To some extent, these are not memory leaks.