A tool designed to provide fast all-in-one preprocessing for FastQ files. This tool is developed in C++ with multithreading supported to afford high performance.
- features
- simple usage
- examples of report
- download, compile and install
- input and output
- filtering by quality, length, complexity, etc.
- adapter trimming
- per read cutting by quality score
- base correction for paired end (PE) data
- globa trimming
- polyG tail trimming and polyX tail trimming
- unique molecular identifer (UMI) processing
- output splitting
- overrepresented sequence analysis
- all options
- citation
- comprehensive quality profiling for both before and after filtering data (quality curves, base contents, KMER, Q20/Q30, GC Ratio, duplication, adapter contents...)
- filter out bad reads (too low quality, too short, or too many N...)
- cut low quality bases for per read in its 5' and 3' by evaluating the mean quality from a sliding window (like Trimmomatic but faster).
- trim all reads in front and tail
- cut adapters. Adapter sequences can be automatically detected,which means you don't have to input the adapter sequences to trim them.
- correct mismatched base pairs in overlapped regions of paired end reads, if one base is with high quality while the other is with ultra low quality
- trim polyG in 3' ends, which is commonly seen in NovaSeq/NextSeq data. Trim polyX in 3' ends to remove unwanted polyX tailing (i.e. polyA tailing for mRNA-Seq data)
- preprocess unique molecular identifer (UMI) enabled data, shift UMI to sequence name.
- report JSON format result for further interpreting.
- visualize quality control and filtering results on a single HTML page (like FASTQC but faster and more informative).
- split the output to multiple files (0001.R1.gz, 0002.R1.gz...) to support parallel processing. Two modes can be used, limiting the total split file number, or limitting the lines of each split file.
- support long reads (data from PacBio / Nanopore devices).
- support reading from STDIN and writing to STDOUT
- support interleaved input
- ...
This tool is being intensively developed, and new features can be implemented soon if they are considered useful. If you have any additional requirement for fastp
, please file an issue:https://github.com/OpenGene/fastp/issues/new
- for single end data (not compressed)
fastp -i in.fq -o out.fq
- for paired end data (gzip compressed)
fastp -i in.R1.fq.gz -I in.R2.fq.gz -o out.R1.fq.gz -O out.R2.fq.gz
By default, the HTML report is saved to fastp.html
(can be specified with -h
option), and the JSON report is saved to fastp.json
(can be specified with -j
option).
fastp
creates reports in both HTML and JSON format.
- HTML report: http://opengene.org/fastp/fastp.html
- JSON report: http://opengene.org/fastp/fastp.json
# note: the fastp version in bioconda may be not the latest
conda install -c bioconda fastp
or download binary (only for Linux systems, http://opengene.org/fastp/fastp)
# this binary was compiled on CentOS, and tested on CentOS/Ubuntu
wget http://opengene.org/fastp/fastp
chmod a+x ./fastp
# get source (you can also use browser to download from master or releases)
git clone https://github.com/OpenGene/fastp.git
# build
cd fastp
make
# Install
sudo make install
fastp
only relies on zlib
, which is already available on most Linux-like systems. If you get an error like undefined reference to gzbuffer
when compiling fastp
, you may have to update the zlib
(http://zlib.net)
fastp
supports both single-end (SE) and paired-end (PE) input/output.
- for SE data, you only have to specify read1 input by
-i
or--in1
, and specify read1 output by-o
or--out1
. - for PE data, you should also specify read2 input by
-I
or--in2
, and specify read2 output by-O
or--out2
. - if you don't specify the output file names, no output files will be written, but the QC will still be done for both data before and after filtering.
- the output will be gzip-compressed if its file name ends with
.gz
fastp
supports streaming the passing-filter reads to STDOUT, so that it can be passed to other compressors like bzip2
, or be passed to aligners like bwa
and bowtie2
.
- specify
--stdout
to enable this mode to stream output to STDOUT - for PE data, the output will be interleaved FASTQ, which means the output will contain records like
record1-R1 -> record1-R2 -> record2-R1 -> record2-R2 -> record3-R1 -> record3-R2 ...
- specify
--stdin
if you want to read the STDIN for processing. - if the STDIN is an interleaved paired-end stream, specify
--interleaved_in
to indicate that.
If you don't want to process all the data, you can specify --reads_to_process
to limit the reads to be processed. This is useful if you want to have a fast preview of the data quality, or you want to create a subset of the filtered data.
You can enable the option --dont_overwrite
to protect the existing files not to be overwritten by fastp
. In this case, fastp
will report an error and quit if it finds any of the output files (read1, read2, json report, html report) already exists before.
See output splitting
Multiple filters have been implemented.
Quality filtering is enabled by default, but you can disable it by -Q
or disable_quality_filtering
. Currently it supports filtering by limiting the N base number (-n, --n_base_limit
), and the percentage of unqualified bases.
To filter reads by its percentage of unqualified bases, two options should be provided:
-q, --qualified_quality_phred
the quality value that a base is qualified. Default 15 means phred quality >=Q15 is qualified.-u, --unqualified_percent_limit
how many percents of bases are allowed to be unqualified (0~100). Default 40 means 40%
Length filtering is enabled by default, but you can disable it by -L
or --disable_length_filtering
. The minimum length requirement is specified with -l
or --length_required
.
For some applications like small RNA sequencing, you may want to discard the long reads. You can specify --length_limit
to discard the reads longer than length_limit
. The default value 0 means no limitation.
Low complexity filter is disabled by default, and you can enable it by -y
or --low_complexity_filter
. The complexity is defined as the percentage of base that is different from its next base (base[i] != base[i+1]). For example:
# a 51-bp sequence, with 3 bases that is different from its next base
seq = 'AAAATTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGCCCC'
complexity = 3/(51-1) = 6%
The threshold for low complexity filter can be specified by -Y
or --complexity_threshold
. It's range should be 0~100
, and its default value is 30, which means 30% complexity is required.
New filters are being implemented. If you have a new idea or new request, please file an issue.
Adapter trimming is enabled by default, but you can disable it by -A
or --disable_adapter_trimming
. Adapter sequences can be automatically detected for both PE/SE data.
- For SE data, the adapters are evaluated by analyzing the tails of first ~1M reads. This evaluation may be inacurrate, and you can specify the adapter sequence by
-a
or--adapter_sequence
option. If adapter sequence is specified, the auto detection for SE data will be disabled. - For PE data, the adapters can be detected by per-read overlap analysis, which seeks for the overlap of each pair of reads. This method is robust and fast, so normally you don't have to input the adapter sequence even you know it. But you can still specify the adapter sequences for read1 by
--adapter_sequence
, and for read2 by--adapter_sequence_r2
. Iffastp
fails to find an overlap (i.e. due to low quality bases), it will use these sequences to trim adapters for read1 and read2 respectively. - For PE data, the adapter sequence auto-detection is disabled by default since the adapters can be trimmed by overlap analysis. However, you can specify
--detect_adapter_for_pe
to enable it. - For PE data,
fastp
will run a little slower if you specify the sequence adapters or enable adapter auto-detection, but usually result in a slightly cleaner output, since the overlap analysis may fail due to sequencing errors or adapter dimers. - The most widely used adapter is the Illumina TruSeq adapters. If your data is from the TruSeq library, you can add
--adapter_sequence=AGATCGGAAGAGCACACGTCTGAACTCCAGTCA --adapter_sequence_r2=AGATCGGAAGAGCGTCGTGTAGGGAAAGAGTGT
to your command lines, or enable auto detection for PE data by specifingdetect_adapter_for_pe
. fastp
contains some built-in known adapter sequences for better auto-detection. If you want to make some adapters to be a part of the built-in adapters, please file an issue.
The sequence distribution of trimmed adapters can be found at the HTML/JSON reports.
fastp
supports per read sliding window cutting by evaluate the mean quality scores in the sliding window, which is similar with how Trimmomatic
does, but fastp
is much faster. This function is disabled by default, to enable it, you can specify either or both of:
-5, --cut_by_quality5
enable per read cutting by quality in front (5'), and trim leading N bases.-3, --cut_by_quality3
enable per read cutting by quality in tail (3'), and trim trailing N bases.
Please be noted that --cut_by_quality5
will interfere deduplication for both PE/SE data, and --cut_by_quality3
will interfere deduplication for SE data, since the deduplication algorithms rely on the exact matchment of coordination regions of the grouped reads/pairs.
The size of sliding window can be specified with -W, --cut_window_size
, and the mean quality requirement can be specified with -M, --cut_mean_quality
.
fastp
perform overlap analysis
for PE data, which try to find an overlap of each pair of reads. If an proper overlap is found, it can correct mismatched base pairs in overlapped regions of paired end reads, if one base is with high quality while the other is with ultra low quality. If a base is corrected, the quality of its paired base will be assigned to it so that they will share the same quality.
This function is not enabled by default, specify -c
or --correction
to enable it.
fastp
supports global trimming, which means trim all reads in the front or the tail. This function is useful since sometimes you want to drop some cycles of a sequencing run.
For example, the last cycle of Illumina sequencing is uaually with low quality, and it can be dropped with -t 1
or --trim_tail1=1
option.
- For read1 or SE data, the front/tail trimming settings are given with
-f, --trim_front1
and-t, --trim_tail1
. - For read2 of PE data, the front/tail trimming settings are given with
-F, --trim_front2
and-T, --trim_tail2
. But if these options are not specified, they will be as same as read1 options, which meanstrim_front2 = trim_front1
andtrim_tail2 = trim_tail1
. - If you want to trim the reads to maximum length, you can specify
-b, --max_len1
for read1, and-B, --max_len2
for read2. If--max_len1
is specified but--max_len2
is not,--max_len2
will be same as--max_len1
. For example, if--max_len1
is specified and read1 is longer than--max_len1
,fastp
will trim read1 at its tail to make it as long as--max_len1
.
Please note that the trimming for --max_len
limitation will be applied at the last step. Following are fastp's processing steps that may orderly affect the read lengthes:
1, UMI preprocessing (--umi)
2, global trimming at front (--trim_front)
3, global trimming at tail (--trim_tail)
4, quality pruning at 5' (--cut_by_quality5)
5, quality pruning at 3' (--cut_by_quality3)
6, trim polyG (--trim_poly_g, enabled by default for NovaSeq/NextSeq data)
7, trim polyX (--trim_poly_x)
8, trim adapter by overlap analysis (enabled by default for PE data)
9, trim adapter by adapter sequence (--adapter_sequence, --adapter_sequence_r2. For PE data, this step is skipped if last step succeeded)
10, trim to max length (---max_len)
For Illumina NextSeq/NovaSeq data, polyG
can happen in read tails since G
means no signal in the Illumina two-color systems. fastp
can detect the polyG in read tails and trim them. This feature is enabled for NextSeq/NovaSeq data by default, and you can specify -g
or --trim_poly_g
to enable it for any data, or specify -G
or --disable_trim_poly_g
to disable it. NextSeq/NovaSeq data is detected by the machine ID in the FASTQ records.
A minimum length can be set with <poly_g_min_len>
for fastp
to detect polyG. This value is 10 by default.
This feature is similar as polyG tail trimming, but is disabled by default. Use -x
or --polyX
to enable it. A minimum length can be set with <poly_x_min_len>
for fastp
to detect polyX. This value is 10 by default.
When polyG tail trimming
and polyX tail trimming
are both enabled, fastp will perform polyG trimming
first, then perform polyX trimming
. This setting is useful for trimming the tails having polyX (i.e. polyA)
before polyG
. polyG
is usually caused by sequencing artifacts, while polyA
can be commonly found from the tails of mRNA-Seq reads.
UMI is useful for duplication elimination and error correction based on generating consensus of reads originated from a same DNA fragment. It's usually used in deep sequencing applications like ctDNA sequencing. Commonly for Illumina platforms, UMIs can be integrated in two different places: index
or head of read
.
To enable UMI processing, you have to enable -U
or --umi
option in the command line, and specify --umi_loc
to specify the UMI location, it can be one of:
index1
the first index is used as UMI. If the data is PE, this UMI will be used for both read1/read2.index2
the second index is used as UMI. PE data only, this UMI will be used for both read1/read2.read1
the head of read1 is used as UMI. If the data is PE, this UMI will be used for both read1/read2.read2
the head of read2 is used as UMI. PE data only, this UMI will be used for both read1/read2.per_index
index1_index2
is used as UMI for both read1/read2.per_read
defineumi1
as the head of read1, andumi2
as the head of read2.umi1_umi2
is used as UMI for both read1/read2.
If --umi_loc
is specified with read1
, read2
or per_read
, the length of UMI should specified with --umi_len
.
fastp
will extract the UMIs, and append them to the first part of read names, so the UMIs will also be presented in SAM/BAM records. If the UMI is in the reads, then it will be shifted from read so that the read will become shorter. If the UMI is in the index, it will be kept.
A prefix can be specified with --umi_prefix
. If prefix is specified, an underline will be used to connect it and UMI. For example, UMI=AATTCCGG, prefix=UMI, then the final string presented in the name will be UMI_AATTCCGG
.
If the UMI location is read1/read2/per_read, fastp can skip some bases after UMI to trim the UMI separator and A/T tailing. Specify --umi_skip
to enable the number of bases to skip. By default it is not enabled.
The original read:
@NS500713:64:HFKJJBGXY:1:11101:1675:1101 1:N:0:TATAGCCT+GACCCCCA
AAAAAAAAGCTACTTGGAGTACCAATAATAAAGTGAGCCCACCTTCCTGGTACCCAGACATTTCAGGAGGTCGGGAAA
+
6AAAAAEEEEE/E/EA/E/AEA6EE//AEE66/AAE//EEE/E//E/AA/EEE/A/AEE/EEA//EEEEEEEE6EEAA
After it's processed with command: fastp -i R1.fq -o out.R1.fq -U --umi_loc=read1 --umi_len=8
:
@NS500713:64:HFKJJBGXY:1:11101:1675:1101:AAAAAAAA 1:N:0:TATAGCCT+GACCCCCA
GCTACTTGGAGTACCAATAATAAAGTGAGCCCACCTTCCTGGTACCCAGACATTTCAGGAGGTCGGGAAA
+
EEE/E/EA/E/AEA6EE//AEE66/AAE//EEE/E//E/AA/EEE/A/AEE/EEA//EEEEEEEE6EEAA
For parallel processing of FASTQ files (i.e. alignment in parallel), fastp
supports splitting the output into multiple files. The splitting can work with two different modes: by limiting file number
or by limiting lines of each file
. These two modes cannot be enabled together.
The file names of these split files will have a sequential number prefix, adding to the original file name specified by --out1
or --out2
, and the width of the prefix is controlled by the -d
or --split_prefix_digits
option. For example, --split_prefix_digits=4
, --out1=out.fq
, --split=3
, then the output files will be 0001.out.fq
,0002.out.fq
,0003.out.fq
Use -s
or --split
to specify how many files you want to have. fastp
evaluates the read number of a FASTQ by reading its first ~1M reads. This evaluation is not accurate so the file sizes of the last several files can be a little differnt (a bit bigger or smaller). For best performance, it is suggested to specify the file number to be a multiple of the thread number.
Use -S
or --split_by_lines
to limit the lines of each file. The last files may have smaller sizes since usually the input file cannot be perfectly divided. The actual file lines may be a little greater than the value specified by --split_by_lines
since fastp
reads and writes data by blocks (a block = 1000 reads).
Overrepresented sequence analysis is disabled by default, you can specify -p
or --overrepresentation_analysis
to enable it. For consideration of speed and memory, fastp
only counts sequences with length of 10bp, 20bp, 40bp, 100bp or (cycles - 2 ).
By default, fastp uses 1/20 reads for sequence counting, and you can change this settings by specifying -P
or --overrepresentation_sampling
option. For example, if you set -P 100
, only 1/100 reads will be used for counting, and if you set -P 1
, all reads will be used but it will be extremely slow. The default value 20 is a balance of speed and accuracy.
fastp
not only gives the counts of overrepresented sequence, but also gives the information that how they distribute over cycles. A figure is provided for each detected overrepresented sequence, from which you can know where this sequence is mostly found.
usage: fastp -i <in1> -o <out1> [-I <in1> -O <out2>] [options...]
options:
# I/O options
-i, --in1 read1 input file name (string)
-o, --out1 read1 output file name (string [=])
-I, --in2 read2 input file name (string [=])
-O, --out2 read2 output file name (string [=])
-6, --phred64 indicate the input is using phred64 scoring (it'll be converted to phred33, so the output will still be phred33)
-z, --compression compression level for gzip output (1 ~ 9). 1 is fastest, 9 is smallest, default is 4. (int [=4])
--stdin input from STDIN. If the STDIN is interleaved paired-end FASTQ, please also add --interleaved_in.
--stdout output passing-filters reads to STDOUT. This option will result in interleaved FASTQ output for paired-end input. Disabled by defaut.
--interleaved_in indicate that <in1> is an interleaved FASTQ which contains both read1 and read2. Disabled by defaut.
--reads_to_process specify how many reads/pairs to be processed. Default 0 means process all reads. (int [=0])
--dont_overwrite don't overwrite existing files. Overwritting is allowed by default.
# adapter trimming options
-A, --disable_adapter_trimming adapter trimming is enabled by default. If this option is specified, adapter trimming is disabled
-a, --adapter_sequence the adapter for read1. For SE data, if not specified, the adapter will be auto-detected. For PE data, this is used if R1/R2 are found not overlapped. (string [=auto])
--adapter_sequence_r2 the adapter for read2 (PE data only). This is used if R1/R2 are found not overlapped. If not specified, it will be the same as <adapter_sequence> (string [=])
--detect_adapter_for_pe by default, the adapter sequence auto-detection is enabled for SE data only, turn on this option to enable it for PE data.
# global trimming options
-f, --trim_front1 trimming how many bases in front for read1, default is 0 (int [=0])
-t, --trim_tail1 trimming how many bases in tail for read1, default is 0 (int [=0])
-b, --max_len1 if read1 is longer than max_len1, then trim read1 at its tail to make it as long as max_len1. Default 0 means no limitation (int [=0])
-F, --trim_front2 trimming how many bases in front for read2. If it's not specified, it will follow read1's settings (int [=0])
-T, --trim_tail2 trimming how many bases in tail for read2. If it's not specified, it will follow read1's settings (int [=0])
-B, --max_len2 if read2 is longer than max_len2, then trim read2 at its tail to make it as long as max_len2. Default 0 means no limitation. If it's not specified, it will follow read1's settings (int [=0])
# polyG tail trimming, useful for NextSeq/NovaSeq data
-g, --trim_poly_g force polyG tail trimming, by default trimming is automatically enabled for Illumina NextSeq/NovaSeq data
--poly_g_min_len the minimum length to detect polyG in the read tail. 10 by default. (int [=10])
-G, --disable_trim_poly_g disable polyG tail trimming, by default trimming is automatically enabled for Illumina NextSeq/NovaSeq data
# polyX tail trimming
-x, --trim_poly_x enable polyX trimming in 3' ends.
--poly_x_min_len the minimum length to detect polyX in the read tail. 10 by default. (int [=10])
# per read cutting by quality options
-5, --cut_by_quality5 enable per read cutting by quality in front (5'), default is disabled (WARNING: this will interfere deduplication for both PE/SE data)
-3, --cut_by_quality3 enable per read cutting by quality in tail (3'), default is disabled (WARNING: this will interfere deduplication for SE data)
-W, --cut_window_size the size of the sliding window for sliding window trimming, default is 4 (int [=4])
-M, --cut_mean_quality the bases in the sliding window with mean quality below cutting_quality will be cut, default is Q20 (int [=20])
# quality filtering options
-Q, --disable_quality_filtering quality filtering is enabled by default. If this option is specified, quality filtering is disabled
-q, --qualified_quality_phred the quality value that a base is qualified. Default 15 means phred quality >=Q15 is qualified. (int [=15])
-u, --unqualified_percent_limit how many percents of bases are allowed to be unqualified (0~100). Default 40 means 40% (int [=40])
-n, --n_base_limit if one read's number of N base is >n_base_limit, then this read/pair is discarded. Default is 5 (int [=5])
# length filtering options
-L, --disable_length_filtering length filtering is enabled by default. If this option is specified, length filtering is disabled
-l, --length_required reads shorter than length_required will be discarded, default is 15. (int [=15])
--length_limit reads longer than length_limit will be discarded, default 0 means no limitation. (int [=0])
# low complexity filtering
-y, --low_complexity_filter enable low complexity filter. The complexity is defined as the percentage of base that is different from its next base (base[i] != base[i+1]).
-Y, --complexity_threshold the threshold for low complexity filter (0~100). Default is 30, which means 30% complexity is required. (int [=30])
# filter reads with unwanted indexes (to remove possible contamination)
--filter_by_index1 specify a file contains a list of barcodes of index1 to be filtered out, one barcode per line (string [=])
--filter_by_index2 specify a file contains a list of barcodes of index2 to be filtered out, one barcode per line (string [=])
--filter_by_index_threshold the allowed difference of index barcode for index filtering, default 0 means completely identical. (int [=0])
# base correction by overlap analysis options
-c, --correction enable base correction in overlapped regions (only for PE data), default is disabled
--overlap_len_require the minimum length of the overlapped region for overlap analysis based adapter trimming and correction. 30 by default. (int [=30])
--overlap_diff_limit the maximum difference of the overlapped region for overlap analysis based adapter trimming and correction. 5 by default. (int [=5])
# UMI processing
-U, --umi enable unique molecular identifer (UMI) preprocessing
--umi_loc specify the location of UMI, can be (index1/index2/read1/read2/per_index/per_read, default is none (string [=])
--umi_len if the UMI is in read1/read2, its length should be provided (int [=0])
--umi_prefix if specified, an underline will be used to connect prefix and UMI (i.e. prefix=UMI, UMI=AATTCG, final=UMI_AATTCG). No prefix by default (string [=])
--umi_skip if the UMI is in read1/read2, fastp can skip several bases following UMI, default is 0 (int [=0])
# overrepresented sequence analysis
-p, --overrepresentation_analysis enable overrepresented sequence analysis.
-P, --overrepresentation_sampling One in (--overrepresentation_sampling) reads will be computed for overrepresentation analysis (1~10000), smaller is slower, default is 20. (int [=20])
# reporting options
-j, --json the json format report file name (string [=fastp.json])
-h, --html the html format report file name (string [=fastp.html])
-R, --report_title should be quoted with ' or ", default is "fastp report" (string [=fastp report])
# threading options
-w, --thread worker thread number, default is 2 (int [=2])
# output splitting options
-s, --split split output by limiting total split file number with this option (2~999), a sequential number prefix will be added to output name ( 0001.out.fq, 0002.out.fq...), disabled by default (int [=0])
-S, --split_by_lines split output by limiting lines of each file with this option(>=1000), a sequential number prefix will be added to output name ( 0001.out.fq, 0002.out.fq...), disabled by default (long [=0])
-d, --split_prefix_digits the digits for the sequential number padding (1~10), default is 4, so the filename will be padded as 0001.xxx, 0 to disable padding (int [=4])
# help
-?, --help print this message
Shifu Chen, Yanqing Zhou, Yaru Chen, Jia Gu; fastp: an ultra-fast all-in-one FASTQ preprocessor, Bioinformatics, Volume 34, Issue 17, 1 September 2018, Pages i884–i890, https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/bty560