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Forkner helps you manage multiple child processes and getting data back from them when they finish.
Consider a situation in which you need to run a bunch of parallel processes, but no more than five at a time. You might do that like this:
require 'forkner'
Forkner.container(5) do |forkner|
100.times do
forkner.child do
# do stuff in the child process
end
end
end
# we won't get to this point until all child processes are done
First we load the forkner
gem. Then we call Forkner's container method
. All
child processes within container
will completed before the method is done.
container
yields a Forkner object.
Inside the container
block we run whatever commands are necessary to set up
for running the child processes. In this simple example we simply loop 100
times.
Inside the loop, we use the forkner object to fork off into a child process.
Everything in child
is run within the child process. At the end of that block
the child processes exits.
When the loop gets around and calls child
again, another child process is only
run when there are fewer than five (the number we passed into container
) child
processes. child
pauses until there is a slot available.
At the bottom of the container
block, Forkner waits until any remaining
child processes have finished.
Forkner allows you to communicate information form the child process back to the parent process. Doing so requires two steps. First, set up a block that processes information returned from child processes. Second, in the child processes, finish the block with a value that can be stored as JSON.
Consider this example:
Forkner.container(5) do |forkner|
forkner.reaper() do |rv|
puts '-----'
puts rv['myrand']
puts rv['timestamp']
end
10.times do
forkner.child do
myrand = rand()
timestamp = Time.now
{'myrand'=>myrand, 'timestamp'=>timestamp}
end
end
end
In this example, inside the container
block we call the Forkner object's
reaper
method with a block. In that block we get a single parameter which
contains information from the child process. In this case we know it's a hash
and we output two of its values.
Inside the child
block, the child generates a random value and a timestamp. The
last line in the block is a hash of those values.
Behind the scenes, that hash is converted to JSON and stored in a temporary
file. When the reaper
method is called, the hash is reconstituted from the
JSON file and returned to the reaper
block. That's why it's important that the
child block end with a value that can be stored as JSON.
If you prefer to get a little closer to the metal, you can directly create a
Forkner object and call its child
method. Just be sure to call the wait_all
method after all the child processes have been called. The following code does
exactly the same thing as the previous example.
forkner = Forkner.new(5)
forkner.reaper() do |rv|
puts '-----'
puts rv['myrand']
puts rv['timestamp']
end
10.times do
forkner.child do
myrand = rand()
timestamp = Time.now
{'myrand'=>myrand, 'timestamp'=>timestamp}
end
end
forkner.wait_all
gem install forkner
Mike O'Sullivan mike@idocs.com
version | date | notes |
---|---|---|
1.0 | Jan 7, 2020 | Initial upload. |
1.1 | Jan 7, 2020 | Fixed some typos. No changes to functionality. |
1.2 | Jan 19, 2020 | Fixed other documentation problems. No changes to functionality. |
FAQs
Unknown package
We found that forkner demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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