DSO is a command line helper for building reproducible data anlaysis projects with ease. It builds on top of dvc for data versioning and provides project templates, linting checks, hierarchical overlay of configuration files and integrates with quarto and jupyter notebooks.
At Boehringer Ingelheim, we introduced DSO to meet the high quality standards required for biomarker analysis in clinical trials. DSO is still under early development and we value community feedback.
DVC is like "git for data". It can version large data files and data directories alongside source code tracked with git. In addition to versioning files, dvc can be used to run analyses in a reproducible way by declaring input and output files as well as commands to be executed in a dvc.yaml
configuration file. After executing an analysis, timestamps and checksums of all input and output files are stored in a lock
file, providing a provenance record. Different analysis tasks are organized in stages. Since input and output files of each stage are declared, dvc can build a dependency graph of the stages to re-execute stages as appropriate if input data or preprocessing steps have been updated.
There are three types of DSO templates: project, folders and stages. A project is the root of your project
and always a git repository at the same time. It can be created using dso init
. A stage is an executable
step of your analysis (usually one script with defined inputs and outputs) organized in a folder. Stages
cannot be nested. A folder is used to organize stages in a hierarchical way within the project.
You can use dso init
to create a new project
$> dso init
Please enter the name of the project, e.g. "single_cell_lung_atlas": my_cool_project
Please add a short description of the project: This analysis solves *all* the problems!
Within a project, you can use dso create
to initalize folders and stages from a predefined template
$> dso create stage
? Choose a template: (Use arrow keys)
bash
» quarto
Please enter the name of the stage, e.g. "01_preprocessing": 02_quality_control
Please add a short description of the stage: Make a PCA to detect outliers
The config files in a project, subfolder or stage are the cornerstone of any reproducable analysis by minimising analysis configuration errors within related scripts. Additionally, config files reduce the time needed to modify your scripts when changing configurations such as p-value cutoffs, excluded samples, output directory, data input, and many more.
A config file of a project, subfolder, or stage contains all necessary parameters that should be consistent across the analyses. Therefore, changing parameters is done within the config files and not individually within an analysis script.
In DSO two parameter files are given called params.yaml
and params.in.yaml
. params.yaml
is an autogenerated YAML containing all the parameters specified in the params.in.yaml and other params.yaml files in its parent directories (see figure below for an example how this behaves in real). params.yaml
will be compiled when running dso compile-config
.
$> dso compile-config
[08/22/24 20:53:43] INFO Detected /home/grst/my_cool_project as project root.
INFO Compiling a total of 2 config files.
INFO Configuration compiled successfully.
Dso provides linting checks that detect common errors in analysis projects. Right now only few checks are implemented, but more will be available in the future.
To run the linting checks manuall, execute
$> dso lint
[08/22/24 20:53:43] INFO Compiled a list of 22 to be linted
However, it is preferable to execute linting checks as pre-commit hooks and/or as continuous integration checks.
A .pre-commit-config.yaml
comes with the DSO project template. Simply activate it using pre-commit install
.
To reproduce/execute all stages within a project, run
$> dso repro
This is a thin wrapper around dvc repro
that compiles all configuration files beforehand.
DVC will only reproduce stages defined in the dvc.yaml where changes have been made. When dependencies have been changed, previous stages will also be re-run.
DSO provides some additional tooling around quarto documents for generating reproducible reports. When you create a
quarto stage via dso create stage --template quarto
you are all set to use this tooling:
- Render quarto stages to html via
dso exec quarto .
- Inherit quarto configuration through the project from the
params.yaml
files. Quarto configuration can be placed indso.quarto
, e.g.dso: quarto: author: - Jane Doe execute: warning: false
- Add a disclaimer box and watermarks to all plots (e.g. to mark them as drafts) by adding additional settings
dso: quarto: watermark: text: DRAFT disclaimer: title: This document is a DRAFT text: Please do not share!
To access stage parameters and resolve file paths relative to the stage directory from within R, we provide the
companion package dso-r
that provides the two functions
read_params(stage_name)
and stage_here(path)
.
DSO requires Python 3.10 or later.
You can install the latest version with pip using
pip install dso-core
Alternatively, you can install the development version from GitHub:
pip install git+https://github.com/Boehringer-Ingelheim/dso.git@main
See the changelog.
dso was initially developed by
DSO depends on many great open source projects, most notably dvc, hiyapyco and jinja2.