Crates.io | rust-htslib |
lib.rs | rust-htslib |
version | 0.48.0 |
source | src |
created_at | 2015-03-20 13:46:04.886387 |
updated_at | 2024-11-12 15:09:31.618099 |
description | This library provides HTSlib bindings and a high level Rust API for reading and writing BAM files. |
homepage | |
repository | https://github.com/rust-bio/rust-htslib.git |
max_upload_size | |
id | 1620 |
size | 825,770 |
This library provides HTSlib bindings and a high level Rust API for reading and writing BAM files.
To clone this repository, issue
$ git clone --recursive https://github.com/rust-bio/rust-htslib.git
ensuring that the HTSlib submodule is fetched, too. If you only want to use the library, there is no need to clone the repository. Go on to the Usage section in this case.
rust-htslib comes with pre-built bindings to htslib for Mac and Linux. You will need a C toolchain compatible with the cc
crate. The build script for this crate will automatically build a link htslib.
Add this to your Cargo.toml
:
[dependencies]
rust-htslib = "*"
By default rust-htslib
links to bzip2-sys
and lzma-sys
for full CRAM support. If you do not need CRAM support, or you do need to support CRAM files
with these compression methods, you can deactivate these features to reduce you dependency count:
[dependencies]
rust-htslib = { version = "*", default-features = false }
rust-htslib
has optional support for serde
, to allow (de)serialization of bam::Record
via any serde-supported format.
Http access to files is available with the curl
feature.
Beta-level S3 and Google Cloud Storge support is available with the s3
and gcs
features.
rust-htslib
can optionally use bindgen
to generate bindings to htslib. This can slow down the build substantially. Enabling the bindgen
feature will
cause hts-sys
to use a create a binding file for your architecture. Pre-built bindings are supplied for Mac and Linux. The bindgen
feature on Windows is untested - please file a bug if you need help.
[dependencies]
rust-htslib = { version = "*", features = ["serde_feature"] }
For more information, please see the docs.
There's noodles by Michael Macias which implements a large part of htslib's C functionality in pure Rust (still experimental though).
For other contributors, see here.
Licensed under the MIT license https://opensource.org/licenses/MIT. This project may not be copied, modified, or distributed except according to those terms. Some test files are taken from https://github.com/samtools/htslib.