Run any code in parallel Processes(> use all CPUs) or Threads(> speedup blocking operations).
Best suited for map-reduce or e.g. parallel downloads/uploads.
gem install parallel
# 2 CPUs -> work in 2 processes (a,b + c)
results = Parallel.map(['a','b','c']) do |one_letter|
expensive_calculation(one_letter)
end
# 3 Processes -> finished after 1 run
results = Parallel.map(['a','b','c'], in_processes: 3) { |one_letter| ... }
# 3 Threads -> finished after 1 run
results = Parallel.map(['a','b','c'], in_threads: 3) { |one_letter| ... }
Same can be done with each
Parallel.each(['a','b','c']) { |one_letter| ... }
or each_with_index
or map_with_index
Produce one item at a time with lambda
(anything that responds to .call
) or Queue
.
items = [1,2,3]
Parallel.each( -> { items.pop || Parallel::Stop }) { |number| ... }
You can also call any?
or all?
, which work the same way as Array#any?
and Array#all?
.
Parallel.any?([1,2,3,4,5,6,7]) { |number| number == 4 }
# => true
Parallel.all?([1,2,nil,4,5]) { |number| number != nil }
# => false
Processes/Threads are workers, they grab the next piece of work when they finish.
- Speedup through multiple CPUs
- Speedup for blocking operations
- Variables are protected from change
- Extra memory used
- Child processes are killed when your main process is killed through Ctrl+c or kill -2
- Speedup for blocking operations
- Variables can be shared/modified
- No extra memory used
Try any of those to get working parallel AR
# reproducibly fixes things (spec/cases/map_with_ar.rb)
Parallel.each(User.all, in_processes: 8) do |user|
user.update_attribute(:some_attribute, some_value)
end
User.connection.reconnect!
# maybe helps: explicitly use connection pool
Parallel.each(User.all, in_threads: 8) do |user|
ActiveRecord::Base.connection_pool.with_connection do
user.update_attribute(:some_attribute, some_value)
end
end
# maybe helps: reconnect once inside every fork
Parallel.each(User.all, in_processes: 8) do |user|
@reconnected ||= User.connection.reconnect! || true
user.update_attribute(:some_attribute, some_value)
end
Parallel.map(User.all) do |user|
raise Parallel::Break # -> stops after all current items are finished
end
Only use if whatever is executing in the sub-command is safe to kill at any point
Parallel.map([1,2,3]) do |x|
raise Parallel::Kill if x == 1# -> stop all sub-processes, killing them instantly
sleep 100 # Do stuff
end
# gem install ruby-progressbar
Parallel.map(1..50, progress: "Doing stuff") { sleep 1 }
# Doing stuff | ETA: 00:00:02 | ==================== | Time: 00:00:10
Use :finish
or :start
hook to get progress information.
:start
has item and index:finish
has item, index, result
They are called on the main process and protected with a mutex.
Parallel.map(1..100, finish: -> (item, i, result) { ... do something ... }) { sleep 1 }
Use Parallel.worker_number
to determine the worker slot in which your
task is running.
Parallel.each(1..5, :in_processes => 2) { |i| puts "Item: #{i}, Worker: #{Parallel.worker_number}" }
Item: 1, Worker: 1
Item: 2, Worker: 0
Item: 3, Worker: 1
Item: 4, Worker: 0
Item: 5, Worker: 1
Here are a few notable options.
- [Benchmark/Test] Disable threading/forking with
in_threads: 0
orin_processes: 0
, great to test performance or to debug parallel issues - [Isolation] Do not reuse previous worker processes:
isolation: true
- [Stop all processses with an alternate interrupt signal]
'INT'
(fromctrl+c
) is caught by default. Catch'TERM'
(fromkill
) withinterrupt_signal: 'TERM'
- Replace Signal trapping with simple
rescue Interrupt
handler
- Przemyslaw Wroblewski
- TJ Holowaychuk
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Michael Grosser
[email protected]
License: MIT