Using the Sharp module, starts with specifying an upper limit of the size of the detail that should be accentuated via the 'Structure Size' parameter. You should only need to change this parameter if you wish very fine control over small details.
After pressing 'Next', a star mask should be created that protects bright stars (and their extending profiles) from being accentuated.
An 'Amount' parameter governs the strength of the overall sharpening.
The 'Scale n' parameters allow you to control which detail sizes are getting enhanced. If you wish to keep small details from being enhanced set 'Scale 1' to 0%, similarly if you wish to keep the very largest structures from being enhanced, set 'Scale 5' to 0%.
The 'Dark/Light Enhance' parameter gives you control over whether only bright or dark (or both) detail should be introduced.
The two 'Size Bias' parameters controls the detail size that should prevail if two scales are 'fighting' over enhancing the same pixel. A higher value gives more priority to finer detail, whereas a lower value gives more priority to larger scale structures. It is this ability of the Sharp modules, to dynamically switch between large and small detail enhancement that makes every combination of settings look coherent without 'overcooking' the image; the adage is that if you try to make everything (every scale) stand out, nothing stands out. And this is precisely what the Sharp module was designed for to avoid. Inherent to this approach is also the lack of ringing artefacts around sharp edges, even though the module does not employ a (less-ideal) multi-scale median transform to try to circumvent this. This combines the benefits of the response of a pure Gaussian transform (such as precise band delineation in an astrophotographical optical train, as well as noise modelling) with ringing artefact-free detail enhancement.
Two version of the 'Size Bias' parameter exist; the 'High SNR Size Bias' parameter and the 'Low SNR Size Bias' parameter. The distinction lies in a further refinement of where and how detail enhancement should be applied. The 'High SNR Size Bias' parameter controls the size priority for areas with a high signal-to-noise ratio (good signal), whereas the 'Low SNR Size Bias' controls the size priority for areas with a low signal-to-noise ratio (poor signal).
When Tracking is on, the Tracking feature tends help the Sharp module do a very precise job in making sure that noise is not exacerbated - you may find that the distinction is not needed for most datasets with signal of reasonable quality. However when Tracking is off, these parameters use local luminosity as a proxy for signal quality and the distinction between Low and High SNR will be much more important.
Finally, the 'Mask Fuzz' parameter increasingly smoothens the area over which the set mask goes from fully in effect, to not in effect.
Masks in the Sharp module are primarily used to indicate to the module where stars - and their halos - are located. However, even when masked out, these areas still get processed, though in a subtly different way; only dark detail is emphasised, but not light detail. This avoids accentuating of halos and star "bloating", yet still digs out detail that a stellar halo might be obscuring.
And all this is just what Tracking does for the deconvolution module.
The Filter module allows for the modification of features in the image by their colour by simply clicking on them.
The 'Context Size' parameter controls the upper size of the detail/structures that may provide context for smaller detail.
It is important to understand that the signal as show during this first stage, is merely signal that is up for consideration by the second stage.
You can convert everything you see to a format you find convenient. Give it a try!