Source: diamond-aligner, proteinortho Control: found -1 diamond-aligner/0.9.31-1 Control: found -1 proteinortho/6.0.14+dfsg-1 Severity: serious Tags: sid bullseye X-Debbugs-CC: debian...@lists.debian.org User: debian...@lists.debian.org Usertags: breaks needs-update
Dear maintainer(s), With a recent upload of diamond-aligner the autopkgtest of proteinortho fails on arm64 in testing when that autopkgtest is run with the binary packages of diamond-aligner from unstable. It passes when run with only packages from testing. In tabular form: pass fail diamond-aligner from testing 0.9.31-1 proteinortho from testing 6.0.14+dfsg-1 all others from testing from testing I copied some of the output at the bottom of this report. Currently this regression is blocking the migration of diamond-aligner to testing [1]. Due to the nature of this issue, I filed this bug report against both packages. Can you please investigate the situation and reassign the bug to the right package? More information about this bug and the reason for filing it can be found on https://wiki.debian.org/ContinuousIntegration/RegressionEmailInformation Paul [1] https://qa.debian.org/excuses.php?package=diamond-aligner https://ci.debian.net/data/autopkgtest/testing/arm64/p/proteinortho/5105579/log.gz autopkgtest [14:23:33]: test run-unit-test: [----------------------- ***************************************************************** [1;32mProteinortho[0m with PoFF version 6.0.14 - An orthology detection tool ***************************************************************** Detected 32 available CPU threads (adjust this with -cpus), Detected 'blastp+' version 2.9.0+ Checking input files. Checking test/C.faa... ok Checking test/C2.faa... ok Checking test/E.faa... ok Checking test/L.faa... ok Checking test/M.faa... ok [1;32m**Step 1**[0m Generating indices anyway (forced). Building database for 'test/C.faa' (109 sequences) Building database for 'test/E.faa' (72 sequences) Building database for 'test/L.faa' (40 sequences) Building database for 'test/M.faa' (40 sequences) Building database for 'test/C2.faa' (2 sequences) [1;32m**Step 2**[0m using blastp+ Running blast analysis: 0% (0/10) Running blast analysis: 100% (10/10) Running blast analysis: 80% (8/10) Running blast analysis: 10% (1/10) Running blast analysis: 20% (2/10) Running blast analysis: 30% (3/10) Running blast analysis: 40% (4/10) Running blast analysis: 50% (5/10) Running blast analysis: 60% (6/10) Running blast analysis: 70% (7/10) Running blast analysis: 90% (9/10) Running blast analysis: 100% (10/10) [OUTPUT] -> written to test_blastp.blast-graph [1;32m**Step 3**[0m Clustering by similarity (Proteinortho mode) using up to 96343.5 MB of memory (75% of total memory) and 32 cpu core(s). Adjust this behaviour with the -mem option. Reading test_blastp.blast-graph 5 species 113 paired proteins 148 bidirectional edges Clustering: 85.84% Clustering: 89.38% Clustering: 93.81% Clustering: 95.58% Clustering: 100.00% Done [OUTPUT] -> Orthologous groups are written to test_blastp.proteinortho.tsv You can extract the fasta files of each orthology group with 'proteinortho_grab_proteins.pl -tofiles test_blastp.proteinortho.tsv test/C.faa test/E.faa test/L.faa test/M.faa test/C2.faa' (Careful: This will generate a file foreach line in the file test_blastp.proteinortho.tsv). [OUTPUT] -> Orthologous pairs are written to test_blastp.proteinortho-graph [OUTPUT] -> Summary is written to test_blastp.proteinortho-graph.summary [OUTPUT] -> Orthologous groups are written to test_blastp.proteinortho.html [1;32mAll finished.[0m ***************************************************************** [1;32mProteinortho[0m with PoFF version 6.0.14 - An orthology detection tool ***************************************************************** Detected 32 available CPU threads (adjust this with -cpus), Detected 'blastp+' version 2.9.0+ Checking input files. Checking test/C.faa... test/C.faa 109 genes ok Checking test/C2.faa... test/C2.faa 2 genes ok Checking test/E.faa... test/E.faa 72 genes ok Checking test/L.faa... test/L.faa 40 genes ok Checking test/M.faa... test/M.faa 40 genes ok [1;32m**Step 1**[0m Generating indices anyway (forced). Building database for 'test/C.faa' (109 sequences) Building database for 'test/E.faa' (72 sequences) Building database for 'test/L.faa' (40 sequences) Building database for 'test/M.faa' (40 sequences) Building database for 'test/C2.faa' (2 sequences) [1;32m**Step 2**[0m using blastp+ with : synteny Running blast analysis: 0% (0/10) Running blast analysis: 100% (10/10) Running blast analysis: 80% (8/10) Running blast analysis: 10% (1/10) Running blast analysis: 20% (2/10) Running blast analysis: 30% (3/10) Running blast analysis: 40% (4/10) Running blast analysis: 50% (5/10) Running blast analysis: 90% (9/10) Running blast analysis: 60% (6/10) Running blast analysis: 70% (7/10) Running blast analysis: 100% (10/10) [OUTPUT] -> written to test_synteny.blast-graph [1;32m**Step 3**[0m Clustering by similarity (Proteinortho mode) using up to 96343.5 MB of memory (75% of total memory) and 32 cpu core(s). Adjust this behaviour with the -mem option. Reading test_synteny.blast-graph 5 species 113 paired proteins 148 bidirectional edges Clustering: 85.84% Clustering: 89.38% Clustering: 93.81% Clustering: 95.58% Clustering: 100.00% Done [OUTPUT] -> Orthologous groups are written to test_synteny.proteinortho.tsv You can extract the fasta files of each orthology group with 'proteinortho_grab_proteins.pl -tofiles test_synteny.proteinortho.tsv test/C.faa test/E.faa test/L.faa test/M.faa test/C2.faa' (Careful: This will generate a file foreach line in the file test_synteny.proteinortho.tsv). Adding singles... [OUTPUT] -> Orthologous pairs are written to test_synteny.proteinortho-graph [OUTPUT] -> Summary is written to test_synteny.proteinortho-graph.summary [OUTPUT] -> Orthologous groups are written to test_synteny.proteinortho.html Clustering by gene-order ([1;32mPOFF mode[0m) Reading test_synteny.ffadj-graph 5 species 106 paired proteins 105 bidirectional edges Clustering: 17.92% Clustering: 61.32% Clustering: 81.13% Clustering: 83.02% Clustering: 84.91% Clustering: 86.79% Clustering: 88.68% Clustering: 90.57% Clustering: 92.45% Clustering: 98.11% Clustering: 100.00% Done [OUTPUT] -> Orthologous groups are written to test_synteny.poff.tsv You can extract the fasta files of each orthology group with 'proteinortho_grab_proteins.pl -tofiles test_synteny.poff.tsv test/C.faa test/E.faa test/L.faa test/M.faa test/C2.faa' (Careful: This will generate a file foreach line in the file test_synteny.poff.tsv). Adding singles... [OUTPUT] -> Orthologous pairs written to test_synteny.poff-graph tput: No value for $TERM and no -T specified [STDERR] Error: wrong fromat... Please make sure you only provide *.blast-graph or *.proteinortho-graph files as input... Died at /usr/bin//proteinortho_summary.pl line 117, <$FH> line 2. [OUTPUT] -> Summary is written to test_synteny.poff-graph.summary USAGE: proteinortho2html.pl <myproject.proteinortho> (<fasta1> <fasta2> ...) the first argument points to the proteinortho output (tsv)-file. Any further (optional) files should be fasta files, for conversion of the identifier to a proper gene name/ describtion. The HTML output is printed to stdout, use '>' to write the html output to a file. [OUTPUT] -> Orthologous groups are written to test_synteny.poff.html [1;32mAll finished.[0m ***************************************************************** [1;32mProteinortho[0m with PoFF version 6.0.14 - An orthology detection tool ***************************************************************** Detected 32 available CPU threads (adjust this with -cpus), Detected 'diamond' version 0.9.31 Checking input files. Checking test/C.faa... ok Checking test/C2.faa... ok Checking test/E.faa... ok Checking test/L.faa... ok Checking test/M.faa... ok [1;32m**Step 1**[0m Generating indices anyway (forced). Building database for 'test/C.faa' (109 sequences) Building database for 'test/E.faa' (72 sequences) Building database for 'test/L.faa' (40 sequences) Building database for 'test/M.faa' (40 sequences) Building database for 'test/C2.faa' (2 sequences) [1;32m**Step 2**[0m using diamond Running blast analysis: 0% (0/10) Parameter-vector : (version=6.0.14,step=0,verbose=1,debug=1,exactstep3=0,synteny=0,duplication=2,cs=3,alpha=0.5,connectivity=0.1,cpus=32,evalue=1e-05,purity=1e-07,coverage=50,identity=25,blastmode=diamond,sim=0.95,report=3,keep=0,force=1,selfblast=0,twilight=0,singles=0,clean=0,blastOptions=,nograph=0,xml=0,desc=0,tmp_path=./proteinortho_cache_test_diamond/,blastversion=unknown,binpath=,makedb=diamond makedb --in,blast=,jobs_todo=10,project=test_diamond,po_path=/usr/bin/,run_id=,threads_per_process=3,useMcl=0,freemem=-1) [1;31m[Error][0m [1;33m diamond failed. The most likely errorsources of this are: - no space left on device error. - outdated diamond, please update diamond or consider another -p algorithm. - the databases are missing. Maybe you ran --step=1 and removed the databases afterwards? Please rerun 'proteinortho --step=1 --force /path/to/fastas' - maybe the fasta files are mixed nucleotide and aminoacid sequences or just not suited for diamond? (For example diamond only processes protein sequences) Try 'proteinortho --step=1 --check --force /path/to/fastas'. [0m (If you cannot solve this error, please send a report to incoming+paulklemm-phd-proteinortho-7278443-iss...@incoming.gitlab.com including the parameter-vector above or visit https://gitlab.com/paulklemm_PHD/proteinortho/wikis/Error%20Codes for more help. Further more all mails to lech...@staff.uni-marburg.de are welcome) Perl exited with active threads: 31 running and unjoined 0 finished and unjoined 0 running and detached autopkgtest [14:23:55]: test run-unit-test: -----------------------]
signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature