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author | Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org> | 2012-06-07 04:59:40 +0000 |
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committer | Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org> | 2012-06-07 04:59:40 +0000 |
commit | 92b639b09fbcec5fdc8eb3e42161743485143ad7 (patch) | |
tree | 7193fa77ac2e2b9c83c6e2239e83e2a3e3c75942 /eclass/multiprocessing.eclass | |
parent | allow gtkdoc steps to be skipped if the tools are not installed #419979 -- if... (diff) | |
download | historical-92b639b09fbcec5fdc8eb3e42161743485143ad7.tar.gz historical-92b639b09fbcec5fdc8eb3e42161743485143ad7.tar.bz2 historical-92b639b09fbcec5fdc8eb3e42161743485143ad7.zip |
initial multiprocessing eclass
Diffstat (limited to 'eclass/multiprocessing.eclass')
-rw-r--r-- | eclass/multiprocessing.eclass | 224 |
1 files changed, 224 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/eclass/multiprocessing.eclass b/eclass/multiprocessing.eclass new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..cdf1053cdef8 --- /dev/null +++ b/eclass/multiprocessing.eclass @@ -0,0 +1,224 @@ +# Copyright 1999-2012 Gentoo Foundation +# Distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License v2 +# $Header: /var/cvsroot/gentoo-x86/eclass/multiprocessing.eclass,v 1.1 2012/06/07 04:59:40 vapier Exp $ + +# @ECLASS: multiprocessing.eclass +# @MAINTAINER: +# base-system@gentoo.org +# @AUTHOR: +# Brian Harring <ferringb@gentoo.org> +# Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org> +# @BLURB: parallelization with bash (wtf?) +# @DESCRIPTION: +# The multiprocessing eclass contains a suite of functions that allow ebuilds +# to quickly run things in parallel using shell code. +# +# It has two modes: pre-fork and post-fork. If you don't want to dive into any +# more nuts & bolts, just use the pre-fork mode. For main threads that mostly +# spawn children and then wait for them to finish, use the pre-fork mode. For +# main threads that do a bit of processing themselves, use the post-fork mode. +# You may mix & match them for longer computation loops. +# @EXAMPLE: +# +# @CODE +# # First initialize things: +# multijob_init +# +# # Then hash a bunch of files in parallel: +# for n in {0..20} ; do +# multijob_child_init md5sum data.${n} > data.${n} +# done +# +# # Then wait for all the children to finish: +# multijob_finish +# @CODE + +if [[ ${___ECLASS_ONCE_MULTIPROCESSING} != "recur -_+^+_- spank" ]] ; then +___ECLASS_ONCE_MULTIPROCESSING="recur -_+^+_- spank" + +# @FUNCTION: makeopts_jobs +# @USAGE: [${MAKEOPTS}] +# @DESCRIPTION: +# Searches the arguments (defaults to ${MAKEOPTS}) and extracts the jobs number +# specified therein. Useful for running non-make tools in parallel too. +# i.e. if the user has MAKEOPTS=-j9, this will echo "9" -- we can't return the +# number as bash normalizes it to [0, 255]. If the flags haven't specified a +# -j flag, then "1" is shown as that is the default `make` uses. Since there's +# no way to represent infinity, we return 999 if the user has -j without a number. +makeopts_jobs() { + [[ $# -eq 0 ]] && set -- ${MAKEOPTS} + # This assumes the first .* will be more greedy than the second .* + # since POSIX doesn't specify a non-greedy match (i.e. ".*?"). + local jobs=$(echo " $* " | sed -r -n \ + -e 's:.*[[:space:]](-j|--jobs[=[:space:]])[[:space:]]*([0-9]+).*:\2:p' \ + -e 's:.*[[:space:]](-j|--jobs)[[:space:]].*:999:p') + echo ${jobs:-1} +} + +# @FUNCTION: multijob_init +# @USAGE: [${MAKEOPTS}] +# @DESCRIPTION: +# Setup the environment for executing code in parallel. +# You must call this before any other multijob function. +multijob_init() { + # When something goes wrong, try to wait for all the children so we + # don't leave any zombies around. + has wait ${EBUILD_DEATH_HOOKS} || EBUILD_DEATH_HOOKS+=" wait" + + # Setup a pipe for children to write their pids to when they finish. + local pipe="${T}/multijob.pipe" + mkfifo "${pipe}" + redirect_alloc_fd mj_control_fd "${pipe}" + rm -f "${pipe}" + + # See how many children we can fork based on the user's settings. + mj_max_jobs=$(makeopts_jobs "$@") + mj_num_jobs=0 +} + +# @FUNCTION: multijob_child_init +# @USAGE: [--pre|--post] [command to run in background] +# @DESCRIPTION: +# This function has two forms. You can use it to execute a simple command +# in the background (and it takes care of everything else), or you must +# call this first thing in your forked child process. +# +# The --pre/--post options allow you to select the child generation mode. +# +# @CODE +# # 1st form: pass the command line as arguments: +# multijob_child_init ls /dev +# # Or if you want to use pre/post fork modes: +# multijob_child_init --pre ls /dev +# multijob_child_init --post ls /dev +# +# # 2nd form: execute multiple stuff in the background (post fork): +# ( +# multijob_child_init +# out=`ls` +# if echo "${out}" | grep foo ; then +# echo "YEAH" +# fi +# ) & +# multijob_post_fork +# +# # 2nd form: execute multiple stuff in the background (pre fork): +# multijob_pre_fork +# ( +# multijob_child_init +# out=`ls` +# if echo "${out}" | grep foo ; then +# echo "YEAH" +# fi +# ) & +# @CODE +multijob_child_init() { + local mode="pre" + case $1 in + --pre) mode="pre" ; shift ;; + --post) mode="post"; shift ;; + esac + + if [[ $# -eq 0 ]] ; then + trap 'echo ${BASHPID} $? >&'${mj_control_fd} EXIT + trap 'exit 1' INT TERM + else + local ret + [[ ${mode} == "pre" ]] && { multijob_pre_fork; ret=$?; } + ( multijob_child_init ; "$@" ) & + [[ ${mode} == "post" ]] && { multijob_post_fork; ret=$?; } + return ${ret} + fi +} + +# @FUNCTION: _multijob_fork +# @INTERNAL +# @DESCRIPTION: +# Do the actual book keeping. +_multijob_fork() { + [[ $# -eq 1 ]] || die "incorrect number of arguments" + + local ret=0 + [[ $1 == "post" ]] && : $(( ++mj_num_jobs )) + if [[ ${mj_num_jobs} -ge ${mj_max_jobs} ]] ; then + multijob_finish_one + ret=$? + fi + [[ $1 == "pre" ]] && : $(( ++mj_num_jobs )) + return ${ret} +} + +# @FUNCTION: multijob_pre_fork +# @DESCRIPTION: +# You must call this in the parent process before forking a child process. +# If the parallel limit has been hit, it will wait for one child to finish +# and return its exit status. +multijob_pre_fork() { _multijob_fork pre "$@" ; } + +# @FUNCTION: multijob_post_fork +# @DESCRIPTION: +# You must call this in the parent process after forking a child process. +# If the parallel limit has been hit, it will wait for one child to finish +# and return its exit status. +multijob_post_fork() { _multijob_fork post "$@" ; } + +# @FUNCTION: multijob_finish_one +# @DESCRIPTION: +# Wait for a single process to exit and return its exit code. +multijob_finish_one() { + [[ $# -eq 0 ]] || die "${FUNCNAME} takes no arguments" + + local pid ret + read -r -u ${mj_control_fd} pid ret || die + : $(( --mj_num_jobs )) + return ${ret} +} + +# @FUNCTION: multijob_finish +# @DESCRIPTION: +# Wait for all pending processes to exit and return the bitwise or +# of all their exit codes. +multijob_finish() { + local ret=0 + while [[ ${mj_num_jobs} -gt 0 ]] ; do + multijob_finish_one + : $(( ret |= $? )) + done + # Let bash clean up its internal child tracking state. + wait + + # Do this after reaping all the children. + [[ $# -eq 0 ]] || die "${FUNCNAME} takes no arguments" + + return ${ret} +} + +# @FUNCTION: redirect_alloc_fd +# @USAGE: <var> <file> [redirection] +# @DESCRIPTION: +# Find a free fd and redirect the specified file via it. Store the new +# fd in the specified variable. Useful for the cases where we don't care +# about the exact fd #. +redirect_alloc_fd() { + local var=$1 file=$2 redir=${3:-"<>"} + + if [[ $(( (BASH_VERSINFO[0] << 8) + BASH_VERSINFO[1] )) -ge $(( (4 << 8) + 1 )) ]] ; then + # Newer bash provides this functionality. + eval "exec {${var}}${redir}'${file}'" + else + # Need to provide the functionality ourselves. + local fd=10 + while :; do + # Make sure the fd isn't open. It could be a char device, + # or a symlink (possibly broken) to something else. + if [[ ! -e /dev/fd/${fd} ]] && [[ ! -L /dev/fd/${fd} ]] ; then + eval "exec ${fd}${redir}'${file}'" && break + fi + [[ ${fd} -gt 1024 ]] && die 'could not locate a free temp fd !?' + : $(( ++fd )) + done + : $(( ${var} = fd )) + fi +} + +fi |