System for automated Quality Control (SaQC)
Quality Control of numerical data requires a significant amount of domain knowledge and practical experience. Finding a robust setup of quality tests that identifies as many suspicious values as possible, without removing valid data, is usually a time-consuming endeavor, even for experts.
SaQC is both, a Python framework and a command line application, that addresses the exploratory nature of quality control by offering a continuously growing number of quality check routines through a flexible and simple configuration system.
Below its user interface, SaQC is highly customizable and extensible. A modular structure and well-defined interfaces make it easy to extend the system with custom quality checks. Furthermore, even core components like the flagging scheme are exchangeable.
Why?
During the implementation of data workflows in environmental sciences, our experience shows a significant knowledge gap between the people collecting data and those responsible for the processing and the quality-control of these datasets. While the former usually have a solid understanding of the underlying physical properties, measurement principles and the resulting errors, the latter are mostly software developers with expertise in data processing.
The main objective of SaQC is to bridge this gap by allowing both parties to focus on their strengths: The data collector/owner should be able to express his/her ideas in an easy way, while the actual implementation of the algorithms is left to the respective developers.
How?
SaQC
is both a command line application controlled by a text based configuration file and a python
module with a simple API.
While a good (but still growing) number of predefined and highly configurable functions are included and ready to use, SaQC additionally ships with a python based extension language for quality and general purpose data processing.
For a more specific round trip to some of SaQC's possibilities, we refer to our GettingStarted.
SaQC as a command line application
Most of the magic is controlled by a semicolon-separated text file listing the variables of the dataset and the routines to inspect, quality control and/or process them. The content of such a configuration could look like this:
varname ; test
#----------;------------------------------------
SM2 ; shiftToFreq(freq="15Min")
SM2 ; flagMissing(nodata=NAN)
'SM(1|2)+' ; flagRange(min=10, max=60)
SM2 ; flagMad(window="30d", z=3.5)
As soon as the basic inputs, a dataset and the configuration file are prepared, running SaQC is as simple as:
saqc \
--config path_to_configuration.txt \
--data path_to_data.csv \
--outfile path_to_output.csv
SaQC as a python module
The following snippet implements the same configuration given above through the Python-API:
import numpy as np
from saqc import SaQC
saqc = (SaQC(data)
.shiftToFreq("SM2", freq="15Min")
.flagMissing("SM2", nodata=np.nan)
.flagRange("SM(1|2)+", regex=True, min=10, max=60)
.flagMad("SM2", window="30d", z=3.5))
data, flags = saqc.getResult()
Installation
Python Package Index
SaQC is available on the Python Package Index (PyPI) and can be installed using pip:
python -m pip install saqc
For a more detailed installion guide, see GettingStarted.
Anaconda
Currently we don't provide pre-build conda packages but the installing of SaQC
using the conda package manager is
straightforward:
- Create an anaconda environment including all the necessary dependencies with:
conda env create -f environment.yml
- Load the freshly created environment with:
conda activate saqc
Manual installation
The latest development version is directly available from the gitlab server of the Helmholtz Center for Environmental Research. More details on how to install using the gitlab server are available here.
Python version
The minimum Python version required is 3.7.
License
Copyright(c) 2019, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ. All rights reserved.
The "System for Automated Quality Control" is free software. You can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the free Software Foundation either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. See the license for details.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.