schema_lint
PipelineLint.schema_lint()
Pipeline schema syntax
Pipelines should have a nextflow_schema.json file that describes the different
pipeline parameters (eg. params.something, --something).
Note
Reminder: you should generally never need to edit this JSON file by hand.
The nf-core schema build command can create and edit the file for you
to keep it up to date, with a friendly user-interface for customisation.
The lint test checks the schema for the following:
- Schema should be a valid JSON file
- Schema should adhere to JSONSchema, Draft 7.
- Parameters can be described in two places:
- As
propertiesin the top-level schema object - As
propertieswithin subschemas listed in a top-leveldefinitionsobjects
- As
- The schema must describe at least one parameter
- There must be no duplicate parameter IDs across the schema and definition subschema
- All subschema in
definitionsmust be referenced in the top-levelallOfkey - The top-level
allOfkey must not describe any non-existent definitions - Default parameters in the schema must be valid
- Core top-level schema attributes should exist and be set as follows:
$schema:https://json-schema.org/draft-07/schema$id: URL to the raw schema file, eg.https://raw.githubusercontent.com/YOURPIPELINE/master/nextflow_schema.jsontitle:YOURPIPELINE pipeline parametersdescription: The pipeline configmanifest.description
For example, an extremely minimal schema could look like this:
{
"$schema": "https://json-schema.org/draft-07/schema",
"$id": "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/YOURPIPELINE/master/nextflow_schema.json",
"title": "YOURPIPELINE pipeline parameters",
"description": "This pipeline is for testing",
"properties": {
"first_param": { "type": "string" }
},
"definitions": {
"my_first_group": {
"properties": {
"second_param": { "type": "string" }
}
}
},
"allOf": [{ "$ref": "#/definitions/my_first_group" }]
}Note
You can check your pipeline schema without having to run the entire pipeline lint
by running nf-core schema lint instead of nf-core lint