acdvalid |
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Function
Validate an application ACD fileDescription
acdvalid processes an ACD file and reports any errors or warnings caused by incorrect, deprecated or obsolete syntax. The tests go above and beyond those of acdc and acdtrace. It highlights ACD syntax that might cause problems to third-party parsing software which wrap the EMBOSS applications.
acdvalid validates the ACD file, testing many features which will not prevent an application from running, but will create problems for the interfaces, whether on the command-line or some other type.
Usage
Here is a sample session with acdvalid
% acdvalid antigenic |
Command line arguments
The first parameter is the name of the program to compile. All other command line parameters and qualifiers are defined for that program - see the documentation for the program of choice.
Output file format
The output file is empty, but any format available to the specified program can be used.
Data files
Acdvalid will use any data files specified in the ACD file of the specified program, but will ignore any data files that are only used directly by the program's code.EMBOSS data files are distributed with the application and stored in the standard EMBOSS data directory, which is defined by the EMBOSS environment variable EMBOSS_DATA.
To see the available EMBOSS data files, run:
% embossdata -showall
To fetch one of the data files (for example 'Exxx.dat') into your current directory for you to inspect or modify, run:
% embossdata -fetch -file Exxx.dat
Users can provide their own data files in their own directories. Project specific files can be put in the current directory, or for tidier directory listings in a subdirectory called ".embossdata". Files for all EMBOSS runs can be put in the user's home directory, or again in a subdirectory called ".embossdata".
The directories are searched in the following order:
- . (your current directory)
- .embossdata (under your current directory)
- ~/ (your home directory)
- ~/.embossdata
Notes
acdvalid does not have its own options, but takes a single parameter which is the name of the EMBOSS application that is being testsed. It is invoked by specifying the name of the application to be tested along with any command-line options after the name of the utility application itself:
acdvalid ApplicationName Options
acdvalid will run the command line interface of any EMBOSS program by reading its ACD file and processing the command line and user responses in exactly the same way as if the true program itself were running. The application proper is
acdvalid will use any data files specified in the ACD file of the specified program, but will ignore any data files that are only used directly by the program's code. EMBOSS data files are distributed with the application and stored in the standard EMBOSS data directory (see EMBOSS Users Manual for further information).
acdvalid generates both error and warning messages. If the message is an "Error" then the ACD file will not work and requires fixing. Most of the messages from acdvalid are "Warnings" and do not prevent a program from running, however it is still worth trying to fix the problem.
Although the warning messages are only advisory, as many warnings as possible are fixed for any application in the main release. Further validation tests will be added in future releases so it is worth running acdvalid on all local ACD files with each new version of EMBOSS
References
Warnings
None.Diagnostic Error Messages
Exit status
It exits with status 0.Known bugs
None.See also
Program name | Description |
---|---|
acdc | Test an application ACD file |
acdpretty | Correctly reformat an application ACD file |
acdtable | Generate an HTML table of parameters from an application ACD file |
acdtrace | Trace processing of an application ACD file (for testing) |
Author(s)
Peter RiceEuropean Bioinformatics Institute, Wellcome Trust Genome Campus, Hinxton, Cambridge CB10 1SD, UK
Please report all bugs to the EMBOSS bug team (emboss-bug © emboss.open-bio.org) not to the original author.