* [Caml-list] Nproc: process pools for OCaml (request for suggestions)
@ 2011-11-30 2:54 Martin Jambon
2011-11-30 9:35 ` Jerome Vouillon
0 siblings, 1 reply; 3+ messages in thread
From: Martin Jambon @ 2011-11-30 2:54 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: OCaml Mailing List
I would like to publicize Nproc, which is an implementation of process
pools for OCaml based on fork, pipes, Marshal and Lwt:
https://github.com/MyLifeLabs/nproc
Using Nproc involves:
1. Creating a pool of N processes, N being chosen by the user.
2. Running tasks:
a. Submitting a task (f, x) of any type.
b. Defining what to do when the result becomes available.
Possible uses of Nproc include:
- running CPU-intensive tasks on multiple cores
- detaching synchronous operations for which a non-blocking version is
not available
Let me know of your comments, suggestions, questions, etc.
Martin
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread
* Re: [Caml-list] Nproc: process pools for OCaml (request for suggestions)
2011-11-30 2:54 [Caml-list] Nproc: process pools for OCaml (request for suggestions) Martin Jambon
@ 2011-11-30 9:35 ` Jerome Vouillon
2011-11-30 21:32 ` Martin Jambon
0 siblings, 1 reply; 3+ messages in thread
From: Jerome Vouillon @ 2011-11-30 9:35 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Martin Jambon; +Cc: OCaml Mailing List
Hi,
On Tue, Nov 29, 2011 at 06:54:46PM -0800, Martin Jambon wrote:
> I would like to publicize Nproc, which is an implementation of process
> pools for OCaml based on fork, pipes, Marshal and Lwt:
>
> https://github.com/MyLifeLabs/nproc
>
> Using Nproc involves:
>
> 1. Creating a pool of N processes, N being chosen by the user.
> 2. Running tasks:
> a. Submitting a task (f, x) of any type.
> b. Defining what to do when the result becomes available.
Marco Danelutto and Roberto Di Cosmo have written a small library to
perform parallel maps and folds on multi-core machines. This is
complementary to your library. You should look at the implementation:
communication is performed by marshalling to a shared memory area for
better performances, and pipes are used only for synchronization.
https://gitorious.org/parmap/
I have also written a more low-level library, where you can control
which process runs each task. This is useful when the processes have
to work with a lot of data that you don't want to duplicate. You can
get the code with the following command:
darcs clone http://www.pps.jussieu.fr/~vouillon/coinst/darcs/dev/
The file of interest is task.ml.
-- Jerome
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread
* Re: [Caml-list] Nproc: process pools for OCaml (request for suggestions)
2011-11-30 9:35 ` Jerome Vouillon
@ 2011-11-30 21:32 ` Martin Jambon
0 siblings, 0 replies; 3+ messages in thread
From: Martin Jambon @ 2011-11-30 21:32 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Jerome Vouillon; +Cc: OCaml Mailing List
On 11/30/2011 01:35 AM, Jerome Vouillon wrote:
> Hi,
>
> On Tue, Nov 29, 2011 at 06:54:46PM -0800, Martin Jambon wrote:
>> I would like to publicize Nproc, which is an implementation of process
>> pools for OCaml based on fork, pipes, Marshal and Lwt:
>>
>> https://github.com/MyLifeLabs/nproc
>>
>> Using Nproc involves:
>>
>> 1. Creating a pool of N processes, N being chosen by the user.
>> 2. Running tasks:
>> a. Submitting a task (f, x) of any type.
>> b. Defining what to do when the result becomes available.
>
> Marco Danelutto and Roberto Di Cosmo have written a small library to
> perform parallel maps and folds on multi-core machines. This is
> complementary to your library. You should look at the implementation:
> communication is performed by marshalling to a shared memory area for
> better performances, and pipes are used only for synchronization.
>
> https://gitorious.org/parmap/
>
>
Thank you, this is interesting. I hadn't look at the implementation
although I knew about parmap but wanted something with an Lwt-ready
interface. I also wanted something that could handle continuous streams,
without having to create a process for each stream item (assuming fork()
is more expensive than we want).
> I have also written a more low-level library, where you can control
> which process runs each task. This is useful when the processes have
> to work with a lot of data that you don't want to duplicate. You can
> get the code with the following command:
>
> darcs clone http://www.pps.jussieu.fr/~vouillon/coinst/darcs/dev/
>
> The file of interest is task.ml.
I see. Thanks.
Martin
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread
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