this program is inspired by the functionality of GNU parallel, but tries to keep low overhead and follow the UNIX philosophy of doing one thing well.
basically, it works by processing stdin, launching one process per line. the actual line can be passed to the started program as an argv. this allows for easy parallelization of standard unix tasks.
it is possible to save the current processed line, so when the task is killed it can be continued later.
you have a list of things, and a tool that processes a single thing.
cat things.list | jobflow -threads=8 -exec ./mytask {}
seq 100 | jobflow -threads=100 -exec echo {}
cat urls.txt | jobflow -threads=32 -exec wget {}
find . -name '*.bmp' | jobflow -threads=8 -exec bmp2jpeg {.}.bmp {.}.jpg
run jobflow without arguments to see a list of possible command line options, and argument permutations.
starting from version 1.3.1, jobflow can also be used to extract a range of lines, e.g.:
seq 100 | jobflow -skip 10 -count 10 # print lines 11 to 20
GNU parallel is written in perl, which has the following disadvantages:
- requires a perl installation even though most people already have perl installed anyway, installing it just for this purpose requires up to 50 MB storage (and potentially up to several hours of time to compile it from source on slow devices)
- requires a lot of time on startup (parsing sources, etc)
- requires a lot of memory (typically between 5-60 MB)
jobflow OTOH is written in C, which has numerous advantages.
- once compiled to a tiny static binary, can be used without 3rd party stuff
- very little and constant memory usage (typically a few KB)
- no startup overhead
- much higher execution speed
apart from the chosen language and related performance differences, the following other differences exist between GNU parallel and jobflow:
- supports rlimits passed to started processes
- doesn't support ssh (usage of remote cpus)
- doesn't support all kinds of argument permutations: while GNU parallel has a rich set of options to permute the input, this doesn't adhere to the UNIX philosophy. jobflow can achieve the same result by passing the unmodified input to a user-created script that does the required permutations with other standard tools.
-skip N -threads N -resume -statefile=/tmp/state -delayedflush
-delayedspinup N -buffered -joinoutput -limits mem=16M,cpu=10
-eof=XXX
-exec ./mycommand {}
-skip N
N=number of entries to skip
-count N
N=only process count lines (after skipping)
-threads N (alternative: -j N)
N=number of parallel processes to spawn
-resume
resume from last jobnumber stored in statefile
-eof XXX
use XXX as the EOF marker on stdin
if the marker is encountered, behave as if stdin was closed
not compatible with pipe/bulk mode
-statefile XXX
XXX=filename
saves last launched jobnumber into a file
-delayedflush
only write to statefile whenever all processes are busy,
and at program end
-delayedspinup N
N=maximum amount of milliseconds
...to wait when spinning up a fresh set of processes
a random value between 0 and the chosen amount is used to delay initial
spinup.
this can be handy to circumvent an I/O lockdown because of a burst of
activity on program startup
-buffered
store the stdout and stderr of launched processes into a temporary file
which will be printed after a process has finished.
this prevents mixing up of output of different processes.
-joinoutput
if -buffered, write both stdout and stderr into the same file.
this saves the chronological order of the output, and the combined output
will only be printed to stdout.
-bulk N
do bulk copies with a buffer of N bytes. only usable in pipe mode.
this passes (almost) the entire buffer to the next scheduled job.
the passed buffer will be truncated to the last line break boundary,
so jobs always get entire lines to work with.
this option is useful when you have huge input files and relatively short
task runtimes. by using it, syscall overhead can be reduced to a minimum.
N must be a multiple of 4KB. the suffixes G/M/K are detected.
actual memory allocation will be twice the amount passed.
note that pipe buffer size is limited to 64K on linux, so anything higher
than that probably doesn't make sense.
-limits [mem=N,cpu=N,stack=N,fsize=N,nofiles=N]
sets the rlimit of the new created processes.
see "man setrlimit" for an explanation. the suffixes G/M/K are detected.
-exec command with args
everything past -exec is treated as the command to execute on each line of
stdin received. the line can be passed as an argument using {}.
{.} passes everything before the last dot in a line as an argument.
it is possible to use multiple substitutions inside a single argument,
but currently only of one type.
if -exec is omitted, input will merely be dumped to stdout (like cat).
just run make
.
you may override variables used in the Makefile and set optimization
CFLAGS and similar thing using a file called config.mak
, e.g.:
echo "CFLAGS=-O2 -g" > config.mak
make -j2