Difference between revisions of "Galaxy"
From Bioinformatics Core Wiki
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− | Galaxy | + | Galaxy ([http://wiki.g2.bx.psu.edu http://wiki.g2.bx.psu.edu]) is an open, web-based platform for accessible, reproducible, and transparent computational biomedical research. |
+ | #Accessible: Users without programming experience can easily specify parameters and run tools and workflows. | ||
+ | #Reproducible: Galaxy captures information so that any user can repeat and understand a complete computational analysis. | ||
+ | #Transparent: Users share and publish analyses via the web and create Pages, interactive, web-based documents that describe a complete analysis. | ||
+ | = CRG local implementation = | ||
− | + | We are currently developing a local implementation of Galaxy including all tools provided by the central Galaxy, plus bioinformatic softwares and scripts develloped in the CRG (Gem, T-Coffee and TrimAl for examples). | |
+ | [[File:CRG-Galaxy-2.png|thumb|snapshot of the CRG-Galaxy welcome page]] | ||
+ | Galaxy will be only available to CRG users from the CRG network as describe in figure. Input/output data are stored on the CRG file servers and all computations run on a cluster of 72 computers. | ||
− | [[File: | + | [[File:HardWare_Schema.png|thumb|Hardware schema of the CRG-Galaxy implementation]] |
Revision as of 11:42, 31 October 2012
Galaxy (http://wiki.g2.bx.psu.edu) is an open, web-based platform for accessible, reproducible, and transparent computational biomedical research.
- Accessible: Users without programming experience can easily specify parameters and run tools and workflows.
- Reproducible: Galaxy captures information so that any user can repeat and understand a complete computational analysis.
- Transparent: Users share and publish analyses via the web and create Pages, interactive, web-based documents that describe a complete analysis.
CRG local implementation
We are currently developing a local implementation of Galaxy including all tools provided by the central Galaxy, plus bioinformatic softwares and scripts develloped in the CRG (Gem, T-Coffee and TrimAl for examples).
Galaxy will be only available to CRG users from the CRG network as describe in figure. Input/output data are stored on the CRG file servers and all computations run on a cluster of 72 computers.