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Fast SSE2/SSE3-based code for structural RMSD computation

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IRMSD: Fast structural RMSD computation

IRMSD is a Python library for computing the optimal root-mean-square-deviation between pairs of structures (e.g., protein conformations). It is based on the Theobald QCP method, and because of an efficient matrix multiply routine, is several-fold faster than other RMSD packages using off-the-shelf naive or generic high-performance matrix multiplies. In particular:

  • With one thread, IRMSD is 4x the speed of the original Theobald code and over 3x as fast as Theobald code modified to use GotoBLAS.
  • IRMSD features automatic parallelization over multiple RMSD computations; with four threads, it is twice the speed of similarly parallelized Theobald code using GotoBLAS.
  • IRMSD reaches the machine theoretical peak arithmetic performance when using multiple threads and small structures that fit into L1 cache.
  • IRMSD reaches the machine limit of memory bandwidth when dealing with very large structures that do not fit into cache.

IRMSD also fixes a small numerical instability in the Theobald QCP method that manifests as a lack of convergence in approximately one in 10^9 RMSD computations.

If you use this code in computations that result in publication, please cite our paper: [upcoming].

Installation

IRMSD is distributed as a Python package with a C extension module. Installing it requires a C compiler with C99 support. For parallel RMSD computation, a compiler supporting OpenMP is required. The setup script attempts to automatically detect OpenMP support and all required header directories. To install IRMSD, just run:

python setup.py install

from the python/ directory of the library.

After installation, you may run python/IRMSD/test.py to run the regression test suite.

Note: The version of clang in current versions of OS X does not support OpenMP, so parallel execution will not work on that platform.

Non-Python languages

No wrappers for non-Python languages are currently distributed. However, the computational core of the module is isolated into theobald_rmsd.c, so the library should be usable from C/C++ code, and in principle native wrappers could be written for other languages. rmsdcalc.c wraps theobald_rmsd.c for Python; python/IRMSD/__init__.py provides a convenient object-oriented wrapper around the low-level routines in rmsdcalc.

Usage

The recommended usage of IRMSD routines is through the IRMSD.Conformations class.

Input Data Format

IRMSD supports structural data given in either of two typical orderings, which we denote as "atom" and "axis" major order. If possible, use axis-major ordering, as it performs better for typical structure sizes. However, if your program already has a large amount of atom-major data in memory, IRMSD can compute on it in that layout.

Assume that our structure has two atoms:

    atom1.{x, y, z} = {1, 2, 3}
    atom2.{x, y, z} = {10, 11, 12}

Axis-major ordering has all the x-coordinates, followed by all the y-coordinates, followed by all the z-coordinates; in our example, the linear axis-major ordering would be 1 10 2 11 3 12.

Atom-major ordering has each atom's coordinates in atom order. In the example, linear atom-major ordering would be 1 2 3 10 11 12.

IRMSD requires that the data input be a three-dimensional NumPy array of type float32 (single-precision floating point), in either atom- or axis-major order. The first dimension always corresponds to different structures. The second coordinate is the atom number for atom-major ordering and the axis number (0 for x, 1 for y, 2 for z) for axis-major. The last coordinate is the axis number for atom-major order or the atom number for axis-major.

IRMSD further mandates that each structure be padded out to have a "padded" number of atoms that is a multiple of four, and that all such padding elements be equal to zero. Finally, the array must be aligned to a multiple of 16 bytes in memory.

The final representation for our example structure, in atom-major order, might look like:

[[[1 2 3]
  [10 11 12]
  [0 0 0]
  [0 0 0]]]

Or, in axis-major order:

[[[1 10 0 0]
  [2 11 0 0]
  [3 12 0 0]]]

Note that the array can be interpreted as a vertically-stacked (np.vstack) set of 2-dimensional arrays of structure coordinates.

If your input data do not intrinsically conform to these specifications, the IRMSD.align_array function takes an input 3-d array of coordinates, along with a specified majority, and returns a copy that satifies the alignment and padding requirements for IRMSD. If you would prefer to avoid copies by filling in a properly allocated array in your input routines, IRMSD._allocate_aligned_array takes a desired shape and majority, and returns an array meeting the alignment and padding specifications; padding elements are initialized to zero, but other elements are left uninitialized.

RMSD Computation

Given a properly-formatted input array, first construct an IRMSD.Conformations object.

from IRMSD import align_array
from IRMSD import Conformations
calculator = Conformations(align_array(my_conformations), my_majority)

(Note that the example code performs a data copy, in align_array. This may be undesirable, for very large data sets; in this case, use IRMSD._allocate_aligned_array and store data into the returned array in your input routines.)

Given two Conformations objects C1 and C2, you can compute the RMSDs between all conformations in C1 and a single chosen conformation in C2 in one function call:

# Compute RMSD between every conf in C1 and the first conformation in C2
rmsds = C1.rmsds_to_reference(C2, 0)

# Compute RMSD between every conf in C1 and the tenth conformation in C2
rmsds = C1.rmsds_to_reference(C2, 9)

# Compute RMSD between every conf in C1 and the first conformation in C1
rmsds = C1.rmsds_to_reference(C1, 0)

Note that the special case of computing all RMSDs against one in the same conformation object is supported. Underneath the hood, rmsds_to_reference will automatically center the structures if needed and runs a modified Theobald QCP method to compute RMSDs in single precision. If OpenMP support was available at installation time, the computation is parallelized over all conformations in C1 over all available cores; the number of threads can be adjusted with the OMP_NUM_THREADS environment variable.

RMSDs are returned as a one-dimensional, single-precision NumPy array.

NB: the array passed into the Conformations constructor may be modified by the routines in IRMSD!

Licensing

IRMSD is released under a modified BSD license, as follows:

COPYRIGHT NOTICE

Written by Imran S. Haque

Copyright (c) 2011 Stanford University.
All rights reserved.

Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification,
are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:

    * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice,
      this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
    * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice,
      this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation
      and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
    * Neither the name of Stanford University nor the names of its contributors
      may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software without
      specific prior written permission.

THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND
ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED
WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED.
IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT,
INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT
NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR
PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY,
WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE)
ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE
POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.

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