dazzdb 1.0+git20230919.414ad05-2build1 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

dazzdb (1.0+git20230919.414ad05-2build1) noble; urgency=medium

  * No-change rebuild for CVE-2024-3094

 -- William Grant <email address hidden>  Mon, 01 Apr 2024 16:40:44 +1100

Upload details

Uploaded by:
William Grant
Uploaded to:
Noble
Original maintainer:
Ubuntu Developers
Architectures:
any
Section:
misc
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section
Oracular release universe misc
Noble release universe misc

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
dazzdb_1.0+git20230919.414ad05.orig.tar.xz 96.5 KiB 72fa5d236c5e3e635187b6bb28f3cbea3533e8c67766ac0516caa698ff368e50
dazzdb_1.0+git20230919.414ad05-2build1.debian.tar.xz 6.9 KiB d858dd26ccafa6ff38970373556e64ac178bf67ce002f4bdba9b136593902677
dazzdb_1.0+git20230919.414ad05-2build1.dsc 2.2 KiB e5cabaa4f2d6bb7dfbb251d384cffb0d1fceae1f9830c7fce9d3808d706a97a4

View changes file

Binary packages built by this source

dazzdb: manage nucleotide sequencing read data

 To facilitate the multiple phases of the dazzler assembler, all the read data
 is organized into what is effectively a database of the
 reads and their meta-information. The design goals for this data base
 are as follows:
  * The database stores the source Pacbio read information in such a
    way that it can re-create the original input data, thus permitting
    a user to remove the (effectively redundant) source files. This
    avoids duplicating the same data, once in the source file and once
    in the database.
  * The data base can be built up incrementally, that is new sequence
    data can be added to the data base over time.
  * The data base flexibly allows one to store any meta-data desired for
    reads. This is accomplished with the concept of *tracks* that
    implementors can add as they need them.
  * The data is held in a compressed form equivalent to the .dexta and
    .dexqv files of the data extraction module. Both the .fasta and
    .quiva information for each read is held in the data base and can be
    recreated from it. The .quiva information can be added separately and
    later on if desired.
  * To facilitate job parallel, cluster operation of the phases of the
    assembler, the database has a concept of a *current partitioning* in
    which all the reads that are over a given length and optionally
    unique to a well, are divided up into *blocks* containing roughly a
    given number of bases, except possibly the last block which may have
    a short count. Often programs can be run on blocks or pairs of blocks
    and each such job is reasonably well balanced as the blocks are all
    the same size. One must be careful about changing the partition
    during an assembly as doing so can void the structural validity of
    any interim block-based results.

dazzdb-dbgsym: debug symbols for dazzdb