bitnuc
A library for efficient nucleotide sequence manipulation using 2-bit encoding.
Features
- 2-bit nucleotide encoding (A=00, C=01, G=10, T=11)
- 4-bit nucleotide encoding (A=0000, C=0001, G=0010, T=0011, N=1111)
- Direct bit manipulation functions for custom implementations
- Higher-level sequence type with additional analysis features
Low-Level Packing Functions
For direct bit manipulation, use the as_2bit and from_2bit functions:
use ;
These functions are useful when you need to:
- Implement custom sequence storage
- Manipulate sequences at the bit level
- Integrate with other bioinformatics tools
- Copy sequences more efficiently
- Hash sequences more efficiently
For example, packing multiple short sequences:
use ;
Mid-Level Encoding Functions
For more control over encoding and decoding, use the encode and decode functions:
These will handle sequences of any length, padding the last u64 with zeros if needed.
We'll use the nucgen crate to generate random sequences for testing:
use ;
use Sequence;
let mut rng = thread_rng;
let mut seq = new;
let seq_len = 1000;
// Generate a random sequence
seq.fill_buffer;
// Encode the sequence
let mut ebuf = Vecnew; // Buffer for encoded sequence
encode;
// Decode the sequence
let mut dbuf = Vecnew; // Buffer for decoded sequence
decode;
// Check that the decoded sequence matches the original
assert_eq!;
Note that the encode function will always encode a full u64.
If you have a sequence that is not a multiple of 32 bases, the final u64 will be backed up to the remainder,
and the rest of the bits will be set to zero.
Decoding will ignore these zero bits and return the original sequence.
High-Level Sequence Type
For more complex sequence manipulation, use the [PackedSequence] type:
use ;
Memory Usage
The 2-bit encoding provides significant memory savings:
Standard encoding: 1 byte per base
ACGT = 4 bytes = 32 bits
2-bit encoding: 2 bits per base
ACGT = 8 bits
This means you can store 4 times as many sequences in the same amount of memory.
Error Handling
All operations that could fail return a [Result] with [Error]:
use ;
// Invalid nucleotide
let err = as_2bit.unwrap_err;
assert!;
// Sequence too long
let long_seq = vec!;
let err = as_2bit.unwrap_err;
assert!;
SIMD Acceleration
as_2bit, from_2bit, as_4bit, from_4bit, and both twobit and fourbit encode, and decode are optionally SIMD accelerated depending on the architecture of your system.
By default, SIMD instructions are used, but they can be shut-off using the nosimd feature flag.
For increased performance and to really take advantage of the SIMD I recommend compiling with:
RUSTFLAGS="-C target-cpu=native"
or to add these flags to your project via the cargo build config:
# ./cargo/config.toml
[]
= ["-C", "target-cpu=native"]