Continuing our series on understanding Nextflow resume, we wanted to delve deeper to show how you can report which tasks contribute to a given workflow output.
When provided with a run name or session ID, the log command can return useful information about a pipeline execution. This can be composed to track the provenance of a workflow result.
When supplying a run name or session ID, the log command lists all the work directories used to compute the final result. For example:
$ nextflow log tiny_fermat
/data/.../work/7b/3753ff13b1fa5348d2d9b6f512153a
/data/.../work/c1/56a36d8f498c99ac6cba31e85b3e0c
/data/.../work/f7/659c65ef60582d9713252bcfbcc310
/data/.../work/82/ba67e3175bd9e6479d4310e5a92f99
/data/.../work/e5/2816b9d4e7b402bfdd6597c2c2403d
/data/.../work/3b/3485d00b0115f89e4c202eacf82eba
Using the option -f
(fields) it’s possible to specify which metadata should be printed by the log command. For example:
$ nextflow log tiny_fermat -f 'process,exit,hash,duration'
index 0 7b/3753ff 2s
fastqc 0 c1/56a36d 9.3s
fastqc 0 f7/659c65 9.1s
quant 0 82/ba67e3 2.7s
quant 0 e5/2816b9 3.2s
multiqc 0 3b/3485d0 6.3s
The complete list of available fields can be retrieved with the command:
$ nextflow log -l
The option -F
allows the specification of filtering criteria to print only a subset of tasks. For example:
$ nextflow log tiny_fermat -F 'process =~ /fastqc/'
/data/.../work/c1/56a36d8f498c99ac6cba31e85b3e0c
/data/.../work/f7/659c65ef60582d9713252bcfbcc310
This can be useful to locate specific tasks work directories.
Finally, the -t
option allows for the creation of a basic custom HTML provenance report that can be generated by providing a template file, in any format of your choice. For example:
<div>
<h2>${name}</h2>
<div>
Script:
<pre>${script}</pre>
</div>
<ul>
<li>Exit: ${exit}</li>
<li>Status: ${status}</li>
<li>Work dir: ${workdir}</li>
<li>Container: ${container}</li>
</ul>
</div>
By saving the above snippet in a file named template.html, you can run the following command:
$ nextflow log tiny_fermat -t template.html > provenance.html
Open it in your browser, et voilà!
This post introduces a little know Nextflow feature and it’s intended to show how it can be used to produce a custom execution report reporting some - basic - provenance information.
In future releases we plan to support a more formal provenance specification and execution tracking features.