0.5.1 • Published 4 years ago

@jkbonfield/htscodecs v0.5.1

Weekly downloads
1
License
BSD
Repository
github
Last release
4 years ago

Reference implementation files

This directory contains javascript implementations of the custom codecs using in CRAM 3.1, capable of being run under node.js.

These is not written for speed, but for clarity and as an exercise in checking the pseudocode in the CRAM specification. It is written as close to this pseudocode as is possible.

Prerequisites: minimist package for command line parsing and bzip2 for part of the arith_gen.js code.

npm install minimist
npm install bzip2

iostream.js

Makes a buffer appear to be a stream with ReadByte, ReadITF8, etc functions.

rans.js

Implements the order-0 and order-1 rans (4x8) decoder as used in CRAM3.0.

main_rans.js

A command line tool to exercise the rans.js code, included for debug purposes.

rans4x16.js, main_rans4x16.js

A 16-bit renormalising variant of rANS above. This also includes transforms for RLE, bit-packing and 4-way interleaving.

arith_sh.js

Arithmetic (range) coding with Schindler carry handling.

byte_model.js

An adaptive model for keeping track of symbol frequencies.

arith_gen.js, main_arith_gen.js

Wrapper around arith_sh.js to perform order-0/1 encoding with RLE and bit-packing. Plus debug command line tool

fqzcomp.js, main_fqzcomp.js

Implements the fqzcomp quality compression codec. Plus debug command line tool.

tok3.js, main_tok3.js

Implements the tokenise_name3 read identifier compression codec. Plus debug command line tool.

Testing

The various main js files can be used for adhoc testing. There is also a Makefile which performs checks against known defined data streams and does round-trip testing in both Javascript and if compiled the C variant. You can set CORPUS make variable to a larger data set such htscodecs-corpus.

eg.

make check CORPUS=../tests/htscodecs-corpus/