Seqanswers Leaderboard Ad

Collapse

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • What would be recommended hardware (computing) for a NGS lab?

    Hi All,

    We are in process of expanding our high-throughput Next Generation Sequencing facility. The sequencer we have. But we are thinking of going for better computing hardware. As far as the budget is concerned we are not running on a 'shoe-string' budget but we will have to justify all the expenses.

    Any pointers to number of nodes, amount of RAM per node, amount of scratch space per node, total storage and any specific pointers are welcome.

    Any suggestions?
    Sameet Mehta (Ph.D.),
    Visiting Fellow,
    National Cancer Insitute,
    Bethesda,
    US.

  • #2
    I think it will help to know how much data you for see generating on a weekly basis? How long will you need to store the data for your users? The amount of memory required by the tools you are using for analysis.

    We are also thinking about setting up hardware and are doing preliminary analysis of our needs (which seems very variable at this point). So, I would like input from the community on this as well.

    Comment


    • #3
      We are looking at about 2 SOLiD runs per week that will generate to the order of 8 TB data per week, but after post-processing it should reduce to about 100 - 200 GB of usable data. Most of the raw (image) data need not be stored for long term, it may be stored for at the most a month after preliminary analysis.

      The tools are basically open source tools like the velvet pipeline and other chip-sep, rna-seq tools that are standard for the SOLiD. The memory requirements are variable, but they require decently high amounts of memory.
      Sameet Mehta (Ph.D.),
      Visiting Fellow,
      National Cancer Insitute,
      Bethesda,
      US.

      Comment


      • #4
        Is SAS hard drive necessary for NGS???

        Is SATA 3Gb/s fast enough for NGS???

        Comment


        • #5
          AFAIK the SAS is preferred because of the sheer size of data that needs to be copied across the compute nodes. I think 3 Gbps is just not enough speed. But as a disclaimer, i am not really an expert and probably experts should comment on this, i am making this comment from some experience.
          Sameet Mehta (Ph.D.),
          Visiting Fellow,
          National Cancer Insitute,
          Bethesda,
          US.

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by sameet View Post
            AFAIK the SAS is preferred because of the sheer size of data that needs to be copied across the compute nodes. I think 3 Gbps is just not enough speed. But as a disclaimer, i am not really an expert and probably experts should comment on this, i am making this comment from some experience.
            What do you think about the Seagate 7200RPM SAS 6Gb/s hard drives? Are they better than their SATA 3Gb/s equivalent?

            Or do you think everything should be 15000RPM SAS 6Gb/s in NGS? No place for slow HDD???

            Comment


            • #7
              Building a computer. Please advise

              Hi I am building a system to do SNP calling from raw data and SNP imputation and maybe GWAS also. This is the system I have in mind:

              2 x Intel Xeon E5520
              2 x Intel BXSTS100C 130W CPU Fan for Xeon 5500s
              Intel S5500HCV Board
              3 x Kingston 8GB DDR3-1333 Registered ECC
              LSI Mega RAID SAS 9260-8i
              OS/Apps Storage (RAID0, 2 stripes)
              2 x OCZ 30GB SATA II 64MB Cache SSD OCZSSD2-1VTX30G
              Main Storage (RAID10, 2 stripes, 2 mirrors)
              4 x Hitachi 1TB HDS721010CLA332 SATA II/32MB HDD
              Swap Drive (RAID0, 2 stripes)
              2 x Hitachi 300GB HUS153030VLS300 15K SAS HDD
              Enermax FMA II 535W EG565P-VE DXX 2.2 ATX
              Chenbro CA-SR20964 4-Bays E-ATX Server Case
              -----------------------------------------------
              Total US$4,800

              Do you think this system is an overkill for my purposes? If you were me, how would you fix it? Thanks in advance!

              Comment


              • #8
                Do people want to keep hardware discussions in this forum? Do we need a hardware/infrastructure subforum?

                Comment


                • #9
                  Merged ymc's separate thread with this. Seems I got an answer to my own question.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    I also would like to set up our own analysis platform.
                    More detailed information about the whole hardware system provided by company is greatly appreciated.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by sameet View Post
                      Hi All, We are in process of expanding our high-throughput Next Generation Sequencing facility. The sequencer we have. But we are thinking of going for better computing hardware. As far as the budget is concerned we are not running on a 'shoe-string' budget but we will have to justify all the expenses. Any pointers to number of nodes, amount of RAM per node, amount of scratch space per node, total storage and any specific pointers are welcome. Any suggestions?
                      As an aside, don't forget that without good staff members to actually analyse the data, a big compute system won't be worth much to you.

                      Comment

                      Latest Articles

                      Collapse

                      • seqadmin
                        Investigating the Gut Microbiome Through Diet and Spatial Biology
                        by seqadmin




                        The human gut contains trillions of microorganisms that impact digestion, immune functions, and overall health1. Despite major breakthroughs, we’re only beginning to understand the full extent of the microbiome’s influence on health and disease. Advances in next-generation sequencing and spatial biology have opened new windows into this complex environment, yet many questions remain. This article highlights two recent studies exploring how diet influences microbial...
                        02-24-2025, 06:31 AM
                      • seqadmin
                        Quality Control Essentials for Next-Generation Sequencing Workflows
                        by seqadmin




                        Like all molecular biology applications, next-generation sequencing (NGS) workflows require diligent quality control (QC) measures to ensure accurate and reproducible results. Proper QC begins at nucleic acid extraction and continues all the way through to data analysis. This article outlines the key QC steps in an NGS workflow, along with the commonly used tools and techniques.

                        Nucleic Acid Quality Control
                        Preparing for NGS starts with isolating the...
                        02-10-2025, 01:58 PM

                      ad_right_rmr

                      Collapse

                      News

                      Collapse

                      Topics Statistics Last Post
                      Started by seqadmin, 03-03-2025, 01:15 PM
                      0 responses
                      149 views
                      0 likes
                      Last Post seqadmin  
                      Started by seqadmin, 02-28-2025, 12:58 PM
                      0 responses
                      223 views
                      0 likes
                      Last Post seqadmin  
                      Started by seqadmin, 02-24-2025, 02:48 PM
                      0 responses
                      590 views
                      0 likes
                      Last Post seqadmin  
                      Started by seqadmin, 02-21-2025, 02:46 PM
                      0 responses
                      259 views
                      0 likes
                      Last Post seqadmin  
                      Working...
                      X