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Antoine Pitrou64a467d2010-12-12 20:34:49 +00001:mod:`multiprocessing` --- Process-based parallelism
2====================================================
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00003
4.. module:: multiprocessing
Antoine Pitrou64a467d2010-12-12 20:34:49 +00005 :synopsis: Process-based parallelism.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00006
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00007
8Introduction
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +00009------------
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +000010
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +000011:mod:`multiprocessing` is a package that supports spawning processes using an
12API similar to the :mod:`threading` module. The :mod:`multiprocessing` package
13offers both local and remote concurrency, effectively side-stepping the
14:term:`Global Interpreter Lock` by using subprocesses instead of threads. Due
15to this, the :mod:`multiprocessing` module allows the programmer to fully
16leverage multiple processors on a given machine. It runs on both Unix and
17Windows.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +000018
Raymond Hettingerfd151912010-11-04 03:02:56 +000019.. note::
Benjamin Petersone5384b02008-10-04 22:00:42 +000020
21 Some of this package's functionality requires a functioning shared semaphore
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +000022 implementation on the host operating system. Without one, the
23 :mod:`multiprocessing.synchronize` module will be disabled, and attempts to
24 import it will result in an :exc:`ImportError`. See
Benjamin Petersone5384b02008-10-04 22:00:42 +000025 :issue:`3770` for additional information.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +000026
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +000027.. note::
28
Ezio Melotti2ee88352011-04-29 07:10:24 +030029 Functionality within this package requires that the ``__main__`` module be
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +000030 importable by the children. This is covered in :ref:`multiprocessing-programming`
31 however it is worth pointing out here. This means that some examples, such
32 as the :class:`multiprocessing.Pool` examples will not work in the
33 interactive interpreter. For example::
34
35 >>> from multiprocessing import Pool
36 >>> p = Pool(5)
37 >>> def f(x):
Georg Brandla1c6a1c2009-01-03 21:26:05 +000038 ... return x*x
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +000039 ...
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +000040 >>> p.map(f, [1,2,3])
41 Process PoolWorker-1:
42 Process PoolWorker-2:
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +000043 Process PoolWorker-3:
44 Traceback (most recent call last):
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +000045 Traceback (most recent call last):
46 Traceback (most recent call last):
47 AttributeError: 'module' object has no attribute 'f'
48 AttributeError: 'module' object has no attribute 'f'
49 AttributeError: 'module' object has no attribute 'f'
50
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +000051 (If you try this it will actually output three full tracebacks
52 interleaved in a semi-random fashion, and then you may have to
53 stop the master process somehow.)
54
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +000055
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +000056The :class:`Process` class
57~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
58
59In :mod:`multiprocessing`, processes are spawned by creating a :class:`Process`
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +000060object and then calling its :meth:`~Process.start` method. :class:`Process`
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +000061follows the API of :class:`threading.Thread`. A trivial example of a
62multiprocess program is ::
63
Georg Brandlb3959bd2010-04-08 06:33:16 +000064 from multiprocessing import Process
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +000065
66 def f(name):
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +000067 print('hello', name)
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +000068
Georg Brandlb3959bd2010-04-08 06:33:16 +000069 if __name__ == '__main__':
70 p = Process(target=f, args=('bob',))
71 p.start()
72 p.join()
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +000073
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +000074To show the individual process IDs involved, here is an expanded example::
75
76 from multiprocessing import Process
77 import os
78
79 def info(title):
Ezio Melotti985e24d2009-09-13 07:54:02 +000080 print(title)
81 print('module name:', __name__)
82 print('parent process:', os.getppid())
83 print('process id:', os.getpid())
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +000084
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +000085 def f(name):
86 info('function f')
Ezio Melotti985e24d2009-09-13 07:54:02 +000087 print('hello', name)
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +000088
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +000089 if __name__ == '__main__':
90 info('main line')
91 p = Process(target=f, args=('bob',))
92 p.start()
93 p.join()
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +000094
95For an explanation of why (on Windows) the ``if __name__ == '__main__'`` part is
96necessary, see :ref:`multiprocessing-programming`.
97
98
99
100Exchanging objects between processes
101~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
102
103:mod:`multiprocessing` supports two types of communication channel between
104processes:
105
106**Queues**
107
Benjamin Peterson257060a2008-06-28 01:42:41 +0000108 The :class:`Queue` class is a near clone of :class:`queue.Queue`. For
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000109 example::
110
111 from multiprocessing import Process, Queue
112
113 def f(q):
114 q.put([42, None, 'hello'])
115
Georg Brandl1f01deb2009-01-03 22:47:39 +0000116 if __name__ == '__main__':
117 q = Queue()
118 p = Process(target=f, args=(q,))
119 p.start()
120 print(q.get()) # prints "[42, None, 'hello']"
121 p.join()
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000122
Antoine Pitroufc6accc2012-05-18 13:57:04 +0200123 Queues are thread and process safe.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000124
125**Pipes**
126
127 The :func:`Pipe` function returns a pair of connection objects connected by a
128 pipe which by default is duplex (two-way). For example::
129
130 from multiprocessing import Process, Pipe
131
132 def f(conn):
133 conn.send([42, None, 'hello'])
134 conn.close()
135
136 if __name__ == '__main__':
137 parent_conn, child_conn = Pipe()
138 p = Process(target=f, args=(child_conn,))
139 p.start()
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +0000140 print(parent_conn.recv()) # prints "[42, None, 'hello']"
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000141 p.join()
142
143 The two connection objects returned by :func:`Pipe` represent the two ends of
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +0000144 the pipe. Each connection object has :meth:`~Connection.send` and
145 :meth:`~Connection.recv` methods (among others). Note that data in a pipe
146 may become corrupted if two processes (or threads) try to read from or write
147 to the *same* end of the pipe at the same time. Of course there is no risk
148 of corruption from processes using different ends of the pipe at the same
149 time.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000150
151
152Synchronization between processes
153~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
154
155:mod:`multiprocessing` contains equivalents of all the synchronization
156primitives from :mod:`threading`. For instance one can use a lock to ensure
157that only one process prints to standard output at a time::
158
159 from multiprocessing import Process, Lock
160
161 def f(l, i):
162 l.acquire()
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +0000163 print('hello world', i)
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000164 l.release()
165
166 if __name__ == '__main__':
167 lock = Lock()
168
169 for num in range(10):
170 Process(target=f, args=(lock, num)).start()
171
172Without using the lock output from the different processes is liable to get all
173mixed up.
174
175
176Sharing state between processes
177~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
178
179As mentioned above, when doing concurrent programming it is usually best to
180avoid using shared state as far as possible. This is particularly true when
181using multiple processes.
182
183However, if you really do need to use some shared data then
184:mod:`multiprocessing` provides a couple of ways of doing so.
185
186**Shared memory**
187
188 Data can be stored in a shared memory map using :class:`Value` or
189 :class:`Array`. For example, the following code ::
190
191 from multiprocessing import Process, Value, Array
192
193 def f(n, a):
194 n.value = 3.1415927
195 for i in range(len(a)):
196 a[i] = -a[i]
197
198 if __name__ == '__main__':
199 num = Value('d', 0.0)
200 arr = Array('i', range(10))
201
202 p = Process(target=f, args=(num, arr))
203 p.start()
204 p.join()
205
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +0000206 print(num.value)
207 print(arr[:])
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000208
209 will print ::
210
211 3.1415927
212 [0, -1, -2, -3, -4, -5, -6, -7, -8, -9]
213
214 The ``'d'`` and ``'i'`` arguments used when creating ``num`` and ``arr`` are
215 typecodes of the kind used by the :mod:`array` module: ``'d'`` indicates a
Georg Brandl2ee470f2008-07-16 12:55:28 +0000216 double precision float and ``'i'`` indicates a signed integer. These shared
Georg Brandlf285bcc2010-10-19 21:07:16 +0000217 objects will be process and thread-safe.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000218
219 For more flexibility in using shared memory one can use the
220 :mod:`multiprocessing.sharedctypes` module which supports the creation of
221 arbitrary ctypes objects allocated from shared memory.
222
223**Server process**
224
225 A manager object returned by :func:`Manager` controls a server process which
Georg Brandl2ee470f2008-07-16 12:55:28 +0000226 holds Python objects and allows other processes to manipulate them using
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000227 proxies.
228
Richard Oudkerk3730a172012-06-15 18:26:07 +0100229 A manager returned by :func:`Manager` will support types
230 :class:`list`, :class:`dict`, :class:`Namespace`, :class:`Lock`,
231 :class:`RLock`, :class:`Semaphore`, :class:`BoundedSemaphore`,
232 :class:`Condition`, :class:`Event`, :class:`Barrier`,
233 :class:`Queue`, :class:`Value` and :class:`Array`. For example, ::
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000234
235 from multiprocessing import Process, Manager
236
237 def f(d, l):
238 d[1] = '1'
239 d['2'] = 2
240 d[0.25] = None
241 l.reverse()
242
243 if __name__ == '__main__':
244 manager = Manager()
245
246 d = manager.dict()
247 l = manager.list(range(10))
248
249 p = Process(target=f, args=(d, l))
250 p.start()
251 p.join()
252
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +0000253 print(d)
254 print(l)
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000255
256 will print ::
257
258 {0.25: None, 1: '1', '2': 2}
259 [9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, 0]
260
261 Server process managers are more flexible than using shared memory objects
262 because they can be made to support arbitrary object types. Also, a single
263 manager can be shared by processes on different computers over a network.
264 They are, however, slower than using shared memory.
265
266
267Using a pool of workers
268~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
269
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +0000270The :class:`~multiprocessing.pool.Pool` class represents a pool of worker
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000271processes. It has methods which allows tasks to be offloaded to the worker
272processes in a few different ways.
273
274For example::
275
276 from multiprocessing import Pool
277
278 def f(x):
279 return x*x
280
281 if __name__ == '__main__':
Ezio Melotti985e24d2009-09-13 07:54:02 +0000282 pool = Pool(processes=4) # start 4 worker processes
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +0000283 result = pool.apply_async(f, [10]) # evaluate "f(10)" asynchronously
Ezio Melotti985e24d2009-09-13 07:54:02 +0000284 print(result.get(timeout=1)) # prints "100" unless your computer is *very* slow
285 print(pool.map(f, range(10))) # prints "[0, 1, 4,..., 81]"
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000286
287
288Reference
289---------
290
291The :mod:`multiprocessing` package mostly replicates the API of the
292:mod:`threading` module.
293
294
295:class:`Process` and exceptions
296~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
297
Antoine Pitrou0bd4deb2011-02-25 22:07:43 +0000298.. class:: Process([group[, target[, name[, args[, kwargs]]]]], *, daemon=None)
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000299
300 Process objects represent activity that is run in a separate process. The
301 :class:`Process` class has equivalents of all the methods of
302 :class:`threading.Thread`.
303
304 The constructor should always be called with keyword arguments. *group*
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +0000305 should always be ``None``; it exists solely for compatibility with
Benjamin Petersona786b022008-08-25 21:05:21 +0000306 :class:`threading.Thread`. *target* is the callable object to be invoked by
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +0000307 the :meth:`run()` method. It defaults to ``None``, meaning nothing is
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000308 called. *name* is the process name. By default, a unique name is constructed
309 of the form 'Process-N\ :sub:`1`:N\ :sub:`2`:...:N\ :sub:`k`' where N\
310 :sub:`1`,N\ :sub:`2`,...,N\ :sub:`k` is a sequence of integers whose length
311 is determined by the *generation* of the process. *args* is the argument
312 tuple for the target invocation. *kwargs* is a dictionary of keyword
Antoine Pitrou0bd4deb2011-02-25 22:07:43 +0000313 arguments for the target invocation. If provided, the keyword-only *daemon* argument
314 sets the process :attr:`daemon` flag to ``True`` or ``False``. If ``None``
315 (the default), this flag will be inherited from the creating process.
316
317 By default, no arguments are passed to *target*.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000318
319 If a subclass overrides the constructor, it must make sure it invokes the
320 base class constructor (:meth:`Process.__init__`) before doing anything else
321 to the process.
322
Antoine Pitrou0bd4deb2011-02-25 22:07:43 +0000323 .. versionchanged:: 3.3
324 Added the *daemon* argument.
325
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000326 .. method:: run()
327
328 Method representing the process's activity.
329
330 You may override this method in a subclass. The standard :meth:`run`
331 method invokes the callable object passed to the object's constructor as
332 the target argument, if any, with sequential and keyword arguments taken
333 from the *args* and *kwargs* arguments, respectively.
334
335 .. method:: start()
336
337 Start the process's activity.
338
339 This must be called at most once per process object. It arranges for the
340 object's :meth:`run` method to be invoked in a separate process.
341
342 .. method:: join([timeout])
343
Charles-François Nataliacd9f7c2011-07-25 18:35:49 +0200344 If the optional argument *timeout* is ``None`` (the default), the method
345 blocks until the process whose :meth:`join` method is called terminates.
346 If *timeout* is a positive number, it blocks at most *timeout* seconds.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000347
348 A process can be joined many times.
349
350 A process cannot join itself because this would cause a deadlock. It is
351 an error to attempt to join a process before it has been started.
352
Benjamin Petersona786b022008-08-25 21:05:21 +0000353 .. attribute:: name
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000354
Benjamin Petersona786b022008-08-25 21:05:21 +0000355 The process's name.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000356
357 The name is a string used for identification purposes only. It has no
358 semantics. Multiple processes may be given the same name. The initial
359 name is set by the constructor.
360
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +0000361 .. method:: is_alive
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000362
363 Return whether the process is alive.
364
365 Roughly, a process object is alive from the moment the :meth:`start`
366 method returns until the child process terminates.
367
Benjamin Petersona786b022008-08-25 21:05:21 +0000368 .. attribute:: daemon
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000369
Benjamin Petersonda10d3b2009-01-01 00:23:30 +0000370 The process's daemon flag, a Boolean value. This must be set before
Benjamin Petersona786b022008-08-25 21:05:21 +0000371 :meth:`start` is called.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000372
373 The initial value is inherited from the creating process.
374
375 When a process exits, it attempts to terminate all of its daemonic child
376 processes.
377
378 Note that a daemonic process is not allowed to create child processes.
379 Otherwise a daemonic process would leave its children orphaned if it gets
Alexandre Vassalotti260484d2009-07-17 11:43:26 +0000380 terminated when its parent process exits. Additionally, these are **not**
381 Unix daemons or services, they are normal processes that will be
Georg Brandl6faee4e2010-09-21 14:48:28 +0000382 terminated (and not joined) if non-daemonic processes have exited.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000383
Benjamin Petersona786b022008-08-25 21:05:21 +0000384 In addition to the :class:`Threading.Thread` API, :class:`Process` objects
385 also support the following attributes and methods:
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000386
Benjamin Petersona786b022008-08-25 21:05:21 +0000387 .. attribute:: pid
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000388
389 Return the process ID. Before the process is spawned, this will be
390 ``None``.
391
Benjamin Petersona786b022008-08-25 21:05:21 +0000392 .. attribute:: exitcode
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000393
Benjamin Petersona786b022008-08-25 21:05:21 +0000394 The child's exit code. This will be ``None`` if the process has not yet
395 terminated. A negative value *-N* indicates that the child was terminated
396 by signal *N*.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000397
Benjamin Petersona786b022008-08-25 21:05:21 +0000398 .. attribute:: authkey
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000399
Benjamin Petersona786b022008-08-25 21:05:21 +0000400 The process's authentication key (a byte string).
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000401
402 When :mod:`multiprocessing` is initialized the main process is assigned a
403 random string using :func:`os.random`.
404
405 When a :class:`Process` object is created, it will inherit the
Benjamin Petersona786b022008-08-25 21:05:21 +0000406 authentication key of its parent process, although this may be changed by
407 setting :attr:`authkey` to another byte string.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000408
409 See :ref:`multiprocessing-auth-keys`.
410
Antoine Pitrou176f07d2011-06-06 19:35:31 +0200411 .. attribute:: sentinel
412
413 A numeric handle of a system object which will become "ready" when
414 the process ends.
415
Antoine Pitroubdb1cf12012-03-05 19:28:37 +0100416 You can use this value if you want to wait on several events at
417 once using :func:`multiprocessing.connection.wait`. Otherwise
418 calling :meth:`join()` is simpler.
419
Antoine Pitrou176f07d2011-06-06 19:35:31 +0200420 On Windows, this is an OS handle usable with the ``WaitForSingleObject``
421 and ``WaitForMultipleObjects`` family of API calls. On Unix, this is
422 a file descriptor usable with primitives from the :mod:`select` module.
423
Antoine Pitrou176f07d2011-06-06 19:35:31 +0200424 .. versionadded:: 3.3
425
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +0000426 .. method:: terminate()
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000427
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +0000428 Terminate the process. On Unix this is done using the ``SIGTERM`` signal;
Georg Brandl60203b42010-10-06 10:11:56 +0000429 on Windows :c:func:`TerminateProcess` is used. Note that exit handlers and
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +0000430 finally clauses, etc., will not be executed.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000431
432 Note that descendant processes of the process will *not* be terminated --
433 they will simply become orphaned.
434
435 .. warning::
436
437 If this method is used when the associated process is using a pipe or
438 queue then the pipe or queue is liable to become corrupted and may
439 become unusable by other process. Similarly, if the process has
440 acquired a lock or semaphore etc. then terminating it is liable to
441 cause other processes to deadlock.
442
Ask Solemff7ffdd2010-11-09 21:52:33 +0000443 Note that the :meth:`start`, :meth:`join`, :meth:`is_alive`,
444 :meth:`terminate` and :attr:`exit_code` methods should only be called by
445 the process that created the process object.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000446
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +0000447 Example usage of some of the methods of :class:`Process`:
448
449 .. doctest::
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000450
Benjamin Peterson206e3072008-10-19 14:07:49 +0000451 >>> import multiprocessing, time, signal
452 >>> p = multiprocessing.Process(target=time.sleep, args=(1000,))
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +0000453 >>> print(p, p.is_alive())
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000454 <Process(Process-1, initial)> False
455 >>> p.start()
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +0000456 >>> print(p, p.is_alive())
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000457 <Process(Process-1, started)> True
458 >>> p.terminate()
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +0000459 >>> time.sleep(0.1)
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +0000460 >>> print(p, p.is_alive())
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000461 <Process(Process-1, stopped[SIGTERM])> False
Benjamin Petersona786b022008-08-25 21:05:21 +0000462 >>> p.exitcode == -signal.SIGTERM
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000463 True
464
465
466.. exception:: BufferTooShort
467
468 Exception raised by :meth:`Connection.recv_bytes_into()` when the supplied
469 buffer object is too small for the message read.
470
471 If ``e`` is an instance of :exc:`BufferTooShort` then ``e.args[0]`` will give
472 the message as a byte string.
473
474
475Pipes and Queues
476~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
477
478When using multiple processes, one generally uses message passing for
479communication between processes and avoids having to use any synchronization
480primitives like locks.
481
482For passing messages one can use :func:`Pipe` (for a connection between two
483processes) or a queue (which allows multiple producers and consumers).
484
Sandro Tosicd778152012-02-15 23:27:00 +0100485The :class:`Queue`, :class:`SimpleQueue` and :class:`JoinableQueue` types are multi-producer,
Benjamin Peterson257060a2008-06-28 01:42:41 +0000486multi-consumer FIFO queues modelled on the :class:`queue.Queue` class in the
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000487standard library. They differ in that :class:`Queue` lacks the
Benjamin Peterson257060a2008-06-28 01:42:41 +0000488:meth:`~queue.Queue.task_done` and :meth:`~queue.Queue.join` methods introduced
489into Python 2.5's :class:`queue.Queue` class.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000490
491If you use :class:`JoinableQueue` then you **must** call
492:meth:`JoinableQueue.task_done` for each task removed from the queue or else the
Eli Benderskyd08effe2011-12-31 07:20:26 +0200493semaphore used to count the number of unfinished tasks may eventually overflow,
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000494raising an exception.
495
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +0000496Note that one can also create a shared queue by using a manager object -- see
497:ref:`multiprocessing-managers`.
498
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000499.. note::
500
Benjamin Peterson257060a2008-06-28 01:42:41 +0000501 :mod:`multiprocessing` uses the usual :exc:`queue.Empty` and
502 :exc:`queue.Full` exceptions to signal a timeout. They are not available in
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000503 the :mod:`multiprocessing` namespace so you need to import them from
Benjamin Peterson257060a2008-06-28 01:42:41 +0000504 :mod:`queue`.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000505
506
507.. warning::
508
509 If a process is killed using :meth:`Process.terminate` or :func:`os.kill`
510 while it is trying to use a :class:`Queue`, then the data in the queue is
Eli Benderskyd08effe2011-12-31 07:20:26 +0200511 likely to become corrupted. This may cause any other process to get an
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000512 exception when it tries to use the queue later on.
513
514.. warning::
515
516 As mentioned above, if a child process has put items on a queue (and it has
517 not used :meth:`JoinableQueue.cancel_join_thread`), then that process will
518 not terminate until all buffered items have been flushed to the pipe.
519
520 This means that if you try joining that process you may get a deadlock unless
521 you are sure that all items which have been put on the queue have been
522 consumed. Similarly, if the child process is non-daemonic then the parent
Georg Brandl2ee470f2008-07-16 12:55:28 +0000523 process may hang on exit when it tries to join all its non-daemonic children.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000524
525 Note that a queue created using a manager does not have this issue. See
526 :ref:`multiprocessing-programming`.
527
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000528For an example of the usage of queues for interprocess communication see
529:ref:`multiprocessing-examples`.
530
531
532.. function:: Pipe([duplex])
533
534 Returns a pair ``(conn1, conn2)`` of :class:`Connection` objects representing
535 the ends of a pipe.
536
537 If *duplex* is ``True`` (the default) then the pipe is bidirectional. If
538 *duplex* is ``False`` then the pipe is unidirectional: ``conn1`` can only be
539 used for receiving messages and ``conn2`` can only be used for sending
540 messages.
541
542
543.. class:: Queue([maxsize])
544
545 Returns a process shared queue implemented using a pipe and a few
546 locks/semaphores. When a process first puts an item on the queue a feeder
547 thread is started which transfers objects from a buffer into the pipe.
548
Benjamin Peterson257060a2008-06-28 01:42:41 +0000549 The usual :exc:`queue.Empty` and :exc:`queue.Full` exceptions from the
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000550 standard library's :mod:`Queue` module are raised to signal timeouts.
551
Benjamin Peterson257060a2008-06-28 01:42:41 +0000552 :class:`Queue` implements all the methods of :class:`queue.Queue` except for
553 :meth:`~queue.Queue.task_done` and :meth:`~queue.Queue.join`.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000554
555 .. method:: qsize()
556
557 Return the approximate size of the queue. Because of
558 multithreading/multiprocessing semantics, this number is not reliable.
559
560 Note that this may raise :exc:`NotImplementedError` on Unix platforms like
Georg Brandlc575c902008-09-13 17:46:05 +0000561 Mac OS X where ``sem_getvalue()`` is not implemented.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000562
563 .. method:: empty()
564
565 Return ``True`` if the queue is empty, ``False`` otherwise. Because of
566 multithreading/multiprocessing semantics, this is not reliable.
567
568 .. method:: full()
569
570 Return ``True`` if the queue is full, ``False`` otherwise. Because of
571 multithreading/multiprocessing semantics, this is not reliable.
572
Senthil Kumarane969a212011-09-06 00:21:30 +0800573 .. method:: put(obj[, block[, timeout]])
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000574
Senthil Kumarane969a212011-09-06 00:21:30 +0800575 Put obj into the queue. If the optional argument *block* is ``True``
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +0000576 (the default) and *timeout* is ``None`` (the default), block if necessary until
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000577 a free slot is available. If *timeout* is a positive number, it blocks at
Benjamin Peterson257060a2008-06-28 01:42:41 +0000578 most *timeout* seconds and raises the :exc:`queue.Full` exception if no
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000579 free slot was available within that time. Otherwise (*block* is
580 ``False``), put an item on the queue if a free slot is immediately
Benjamin Peterson257060a2008-06-28 01:42:41 +0000581 available, else raise the :exc:`queue.Full` exception (*timeout* is
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000582 ignored in that case).
583
Senthil Kumarane969a212011-09-06 00:21:30 +0800584 .. method:: put_nowait(obj)
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000585
Senthil Kumarane969a212011-09-06 00:21:30 +0800586 Equivalent to ``put(obj, False)``.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000587
588 .. method:: get([block[, timeout]])
589
590 Remove and return an item from the queue. If optional args *block* is
591 ``True`` (the default) and *timeout* is ``None`` (the default), block if
592 necessary until an item is available. If *timeout* is a positive number,
Benjamin Peterson257060a2008-06-28 01:42:41 +0000593 it blocks at most *timeout* seconds and raises the :exc:`queue.Empty`
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000594 exception if no item was available within that time. Otherwise (block is
595 ``False``), return an item if one is immediately available, else raise the
Benjamin Peterson257060a2008-06-28 01:42:41 +0000596 :exc:`queue.Empty` exception (*timeout* is ignored in that case).
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000597
598 .. method:: get_nowait()
599 get_no_wait()
600
601 Equivalent to ``get(False)``.
602
603 :class:`multiprocessing.Queue` has a few additional methods not found in
Georg Brandl2ee470f2008-07-16 12:55:28 +0000604 :class:`queue.Queue`. These methods are usually unnecessary for most
605 code:
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000606
607 .. method:: close()
608
609 Indicate that no more data will be put on this queue by the current
610 process. The background thread will quit once it has flushed all buffered
611 data to the pipe. This is called automatically when the queue is garbage
612 collected.
613
614 .. method:: join_thread()
615
616 Join the background thread. This can only be used after :meth:`close` has
617 been called. It blocks until the background thread exits, ensuring that
618 all data in the buffer has been flushed to the pipe.
619
620 By default if a process is not the creator of the queue then on exit it
621 will attempt to join the queue's background thread. The process can call
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +0000622 :meth:`cancel_join_thread` to make :meth:`join_thread` do nothing.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000623
624 .. method:: cancel_join_thread()
625
626 Prevent :meth:`join_thread` from blocking. In particular, this prevents
627 the background thread from being joined automatically when the process
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +0000628 exits -- see :meth:`join_thread`.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000629
630
Sandro Tosicd778152012-02-15 23:27:00 +0100631.. class:: SimpleQueue()
Sandro Tosi5cb522c2012-02-15 23:14:21 +0100632
633 It is a simplified :class:`Queue` type, very close to a locked :class:`Pipe`.
634
635 .. method:: empty()
636
637 Return ``True`` if the queue is empty, ``False`` otherwise.
638
639 .. method:: get()
640
641 Remove and return an item from the queue.
642
643 .. method:: put(item)
644
645 Put *item* into the queue.
646
647
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000648.. class:: JoinableQueue([maxsize])
649
650 :class:`JoinableQueue`, a :class:`Queue` subclass, is a queue which
651 additionally has :meth:`task_done` and :meth:`join` methods.
652
653 .. method:: task_done()
654
655 Indicate that a formerly enqueued task is complete. Used by queue consumer
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +0000656 threads. For each :meth:`~Queue.get` used to fetch a task, a subsequent
657 call to :meth:`task_done` tells the queue that the processing on the task
658 is complete.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000659
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +0000660 If a :meth:`~Queue.join` is currently blocking, it will resume when all
661 items have been processed (meaning that a :meth:`task_done` call was
662 received for every item that had been :meth:`~Queue.put` into the queue).
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000663
664 Raises a :exc:`ValueError` if called more times than there were items
665 placed in the queue.
666
667
668 .. method:: join()
669
670 Block until all items in the queue have been gotten and processed.
671
672 The count of unfinished tasks goes up whenever an item is added to the
673 queue. The count goes down whenever a consumer thread calls
674 :meth:`task_done` to indicate that the item was retrieved and all work on
675 it is complete. When the count of unfinished tasks drops to zero,
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +0000676 :meth:`~Queue.join` unblocks.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000677
678
679Miscellaneous
680~~~~~~~~~~~~~
681
682.. function:: active_children()
683
684 Return list of all live children of the current process.
685
686 Calling this has the side affect of "joining" any processes which have
687 already finished.
688
689.. function:: cpu_count()
690
691 Return the number of CPUs in the system. May raise
692 :exc:`NotImplementedError`.
693
694.. function:: current_process()
695
696 Return the :class:`Process` object corresponding to the current process.
697
698 An analogue of :func:`threading.current_thread`.
699
700.. function:: freeze_support()
701
702 Add support for when a program which uses :mod:`multiprocessing` has been
703 frozen to produce a Windows executable. (Has been tested with **py2exe**,
704 **PyInstaller** and **cx_Freeze**.)
705
706 One needs to call this function straight after the ``if __name__ ==
707 '__main__'`` line of the main module. For example::
708
709 from multiprocessing import Process, freeze_support
710
711 def f():
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +0000712 print('hello world!')
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000713
714 if __name__ == '__main__':
715 freeze_support()
716 Process(target=f).start()
717
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +0000718 If the ``freeze_support()`` line is omitted then trying to run the frozen
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +0000719 executable will raise :exc:`RuntimeError`.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000720
721 If the module is being run normally by the Python interpreter then
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +0000722 :func:`freeze_support` has no effect.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000723
724.. function:: set_executable()
725
Ezio Melotti0639d5a2009-12-19 23:26:38 +0000726 Sets the path of the Python interpreter to use when starting a child process.
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +0000727 (By default :data:`sys.executable` is used). Embedders will probably need to
728 do some thing like ::
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000729
Eli Benderskyd08effe2011-12-31 07:20:26 +0200730 set_executable(os.path.join(sys.exec_prefix, 'pythonw.exe'))
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000731
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +0000732 before they can create child processes. (Windows only)
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000733
734
735.. note::
736
737 :mod:`multiprocessing` contains no analogues of
738 :func:`threading.active_count`, :func:`threading.enumerate`,
739 :func:`threading.settrace`, :func:`threading.setprofile`,
740 :class:`threading.Timer`, or :class:`threading.local`.
741
742
743Connection Objects
744~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
745
746Connection objects allow the sending and receiving of picklable objects or
747strings. They can be thought of as message oriented connected sockets.
748
Eli Benderskyd08effe2011-12-31 07:20:26 +0200749Connection objects are usually created using :func:`Pipe` -- see also
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000750:ref:`multiprocessing-listeners-clients`.
751
752.. class:: Connection
753
754 .. method:: send(obj)
755
756 Send an object to the other end of the connection which should be read
757 using :meth:`recv`.
758
Benjamin Peterson965ce872009-04-05 21:24:58 +0000759 The object must be picklable. Very large pickles (approximately 32 MB+,
760 though it depends on the OS) may raise a ValueError exception.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000761
762 .. method:: recv()
763
764 Return an object sent from the other end of the connection using
Sandro Tosib52e7a92012-01-07 17:56:58 +0100765 :meth:`send`. Blocks until there its something to receive. Raises
766 :exc:`EOFError` if there is nothing left to receive
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000767 and the other end was closed.
768
769 .. method:: fileno()
770
Eli Benderskyd08effe2011-12-31 07:20:26 +0200771 Return the file descriptor or handle used by the connection.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000772
773 .. method:: close()
774
775 Close the connection.
776
777 This is called automatically when the connection is garbage collected.
778
779 .. method:: poll([timeout])
780
781 Return whether there is any data available to be read.
782
783 If *timeout* is not specified then it will return immediately. If
784 *timeout* is a number then this specifies the maximum time in seconds to
785 block. If *timeout* is ``None`` then an infinite timeout is used.
786
Antoine Pitroubdb1cf12012-03-05 19:28:37 +0100787 Note that multiple connection objects may be polled at once by
788 using :func:`multiprocessing.connection.wait`.
789
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000790 .. method:: send_bytes(buffer[, offset[, size]])
791
792 Send byte data from an object supporting the buffer interface as a
793 complete message.
794
795 If *offset* is given then data is read from that position in *buffer*. If
Benjamin Peterson965ce872009-04-05 21:24:58 +0000796 *size* is given then that many bytes will be read from buffer. Very large
797 buffers (approximately 32 MB+, though it depends on the OS) may raise a
Eli Benderskyd08effe2011-12-31 07:20:26 +0200798 :exc:`ValueError` exception
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000799
800 .. method:: recv_bytes([maxlength])
801
802 Return a complete message of byte data sent from the other end of the
Sandro Tosib52e7a92012-01-07 17:56:58 +0100803 connection as a string. Blocks until there is something to receive.
804 Raises :exc:`EOFError` if there is nothing left
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000805 to receive and the other end has closed.
806
807 If *maxlength* is specified and the message is longer than *maxlength*
Antoine Pitrou62ab10a2011-10-12 20:10:51 +0200808 then :exc:`OSError` is raised and the connection will no longer be
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000809 readable.
810
Antoine Pitrou62ab10a2011-10-12 20:10:51 +0200811 .. versionchanged:: 3.3
812 This function used to raise a :exc:`IOError`, which is now an
813 alias of :exc:`OSError`.
814
815
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000816 .. method:: recv_bytes_into(buffer[, offset])
817
818 Read into *buffer* a complete message of byte data sent from the other end
Sandro Tosib52e7a92012-01-07 17:56:58 +0100819 of the connection and return the number of bytes in the message. Blocks
820 until there is something to receive. Raises
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000821 :exc:`EOFError` if there is nothing left to receive and the other end was
822 closed.
823
824 *buffer* must be an object satisfying the writable buffer interface. If
825 *offset* is given then the message will be written into the buffer from
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +0000826 that position. Offset must be a non-negative integer less than the
827 length of *buffer* (in bytes).
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000828
829 If the buffer is too short then a :exc:`BufferTooShort` exception is
830 raised and the complete message is available as ``e.args[0]`` where ``e``
831 is the exception instance.
832
Antoine Pitrou5438ed12012-04-24 22:56:57 +0200833 .. versionchanged:: 3.3
834 Connection objects themselves can now be transferred between processes
835 using :meth:`Connection.send` and :meth:`Connection.recv`.
836
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000837
838For example:
839
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +0000840.. doctest::
841
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000842 >>> from multiprocessing import Pipe
843 >>> a, b = Pipe()
844 >>> a.send([1, 'hello', None])
845 >>> b.recv()
846 [1, 'hello', None]
Georg Brandl30176892010-10-29 05:22:17 +0000847 >>> b.send_bytes(b'thank you')
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000848 >>> a.recv_bytes()
Georg Brandl30176892010-10-29 05:22:17 +0000849 b'thank you'
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000850 >>> import array
851 >>> arr1 = array.array('i', range(5))
852 >>> arr2 = array.array('i', [0] * 10)
853 >>> a.send_bytes(arr1)
854 >>> count = b.recv_bytes_into(arr2)
855 >>> assert count == len(arr1) * arr1.itemsize
856 >>> arr2
857 array('i', [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0])
858
859
860.. warning::
861
862 The :meth:`Connection.recv` method automatically unpickles the data it
863 receives, which can be a security risk unless you can trust the process
864 which sent the message.
865
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +0000866 Therefore, unless the connection object was produced using :func:`Pipe` you
867 should only use the :meth:`~Connection.recv` and :meth:`~Connection.send`
868 methods after performing some sort of authentication. See
869 :ref:`multiprocessing-auth-keys`.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000870
871.. warning::
872
873 If a process is killed while it is trying to read or write to a pipe then
874 the data in the pipe is likely to become corrupted, because it may become
875 impossible to be sure where the message boundaries lie.
876
877
878Synchronization primitives
879~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
880
881Generally synchronization primitives are not as necessary in a multiprocess
Georg Brandl2ee470f2008-07-16 12:55:28 +0000882program as they are in a multithreaded program. See the documentation for
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +0000883:mod:`threading` module.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000884
885Note that one can also create synchronization primitives by using a manager
886object -- see :ref:`multiprocessing-managers`.
887
Richard Oudkerk3730a172012-06-15 18:26:07 +0100888.. class:: Barrier(parties[, action[, timeout]])
889
890 A barrier object: a clone of :class:`threading.Barrier`.
891
892 .. versionadded:: 3.3
893
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000894.. class:: BoundedSemaphore([value])
895
896 A bounded semaphore object: a clone of :class:`threading.BoundedSemaphore`.
897
Georg Brandl592296e2010-05-21 21:48:27 +0000898 (On Mac OS X, this is indistinguishable from :class:`Semaphore` because
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000899 ``sem_getvalue()`` is not implemented on that platform).
900
901.. class:: Condition([lock])
902
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +0000903 A condition variable: a clone of :class:`threading.Condition`.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000904
905 If *lock* is specified then it should be a :class:`Lock` or :class:`RLock`
906 object from :mod:`multiprocessing`.
907
Charles-François Natalic8ce7152012-04-17 18:45:57 +0200908 .. versionchanged:: 3.3
909 The :meth:`wait_for` method was added.
910
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000911.. class:: Event()
912
913 A clone of :class:`threading.Event`.
Benjamin Peterson965ce872009-04-05 21:24:58 +0000914 This method returns the state of the internal semaphore on exit, so it
915 will always return ``True`` except if a timeout is given and the operation
916 times out.
917
Raymond Hettinger35a88362009-04-09 00:08:24 +0000918 .. versionchanged:: 3.1
Benjamin Peterson965ce872009-04-05 21:24:58 +0000919 Previously, the method always returned ``None``.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000920
921.. class:: Lock()
922
923 A non-recursive lock object: a clone of :class:`threading.Lock`.
924
925.. class:: RLock()
926
927 A recursive lock object: a clone of :class:`threading.RLock`.
928
929.. class:: Semaphore([value])
930
Ross Lagerwall8fea2e62011-03-14 10:40:15 +0200931 A semaphore object: a clone of :class:`threading.Semaphore`.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000932
933.. note::
934
Richard Oudkerk59d54042012-05-10 16:11:12 +0100935 The :meth:`acquire` and :meth:`wait` methods of each of these types
936 treat negative timeouts as zero timeouts. This differs from
937 :mod:`threading` where, since version 3.2, the equivalent
938 :meth:`acquire` methods treat negative timeouts as infinite
939 timeouts.
940
Georg Brandl592296e2010-05-21 21:48:27 +0000941 On Mac OS X, ``sem_timedwait`` is unsupported, so calling ``acquire()`` with
942 a timeout will emulate that function's behavior using a sleeping loop.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000943
944.. note::
945
946 If the SIGINT signal generated by Ctrl-C arrives while the main thread is
947 blocked by a call to :meth:`BoundedSemaphore.acquire`, :meth:`Lock.acquire`,
948 :meth:`RLock.acquire`, :meth:`Semaphore.acquire`, :meth:`Condition.acquire`
949 or :meth:`Condition.wait` then the call will be immediately interrupted and
950 :exc:`KeyboardInterrupt` will be raised.
951
952 This differs from the behaviour of :mod:`threading` where SIGINT will be
953 ignored while the equivalent blocking calls are in progress.
954
955
956Shared :mod:`ctypes` Objects
957~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
958
959It is possible to create shared objects using shared memory which can be
960inherited by child processes.
961
Richard Oudkerk87ea7802012-05-29 12:01:47 +0100962.. function:: Value(typecode_or_type, *args, lock=True)
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000963
964 Return a :mod:`ctypes` object allocated from shared memory. By default the
965 return value is actually a synchronized wrapper for the object.
966
967 *typecode_or_type* determines the type of the returned object: it is either a
968 ctypes type or a one character typecode of the kind used by the :mod:`array`
969 module. *\*args* is passed on to the constructor for the type.
970
971 If *lock* is ``True`` (the default) then a new lock object is created to
972 synchronize access to the value. If *lock* is a :class:`Lock` or
973 :class:`RLock` object then that will be used to synchronize access to the
974 value. If *lock* is ``False`` then access to the returned object will not be
975 automatically protected by a lock, so it will not necessarily be
976 "process-safe".
977
978 Note that *lock* is a keyword-only argument.
979
980.. function:: Array(typecode_or_type, size_or_initializer, *, lock=True)
981
982 Return a ctypes array allocated from shared memory. By default the return
983 value is actually a synchronized wrapper for the array.
984
985 *typecode_or_type* determines the type of the elements of the returned array:
986 it is either a ctypes type or a one character typecode of the kind used by
987 the :mod:`array` module. If *size_or_initializer* is an integer, then it
988 determines the length of the array, and the array will be initially zeroed.
989 Otherwise, *size_or_initializer* is a sequence which is used to initialize
990 the array and whose length determines the length of the array.
991
992 If *lock* is ``True`` (the default) then a new lock object is created to
993 synchronize access to the value. If *lock* is a :class:`Lock` or
994 :class:`RLock` object then that will be used to synchronize access to the
995 value. If *lock* is ``False`` then access to the returned object will not be
996 automatically protected by a lock, so it will not necessarily be
997 "process-safe".
998
999 Note that *lock* is a keyword only argument.
1000
Amaury Forgeot d'Arcb0c29162008-11-22 22:18:04 +00001001 Note that an array of :data:`ctypes.c_char` has *value* and *raw*
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001002 attributes which allow one to use it to store and retrieve strings.
1003
1004
1005The :mod:`multiprocessing.sharedctypes` module
1006>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
1007
1008.. module:: multiprocessing.sharedctypes
1009 :synopsis: Allocate ctypes objects from shared memory.
1010
1011The :mod:`multiprocessing.sharedctypes` module provides functions for allocating
1012:mod:`ctypes` objects from shared memory which can be inherited by child
1013processes.
1014
1015.. note::
1016
Georg Brandl2ee470f2008-07-16 12:55:28 +00001017 Although it is possible to store a pointer in shared memory remember that
1018 this will refer to a location in the address space of a specific process.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001019 However, the pointer is quite likely to be invalid in the context of a second
1020 process and trying to dereference the pointer from the second process may
1021 cause a crash.
1022
1023.. function:: RawArray(typecode_or_type, size_or_initializer)
1024
1025 Return a ctypes array allocated from shared memory.
1026
1027 *typecode_or_type* determines the type of the elements of the returned array:
1028 it is either a ctypes type or a one character typecode of the kind used by
1029 the :mod:`array` module. If *size_or_initializer* is an integer then it
1030 determines the length of the array, and the array will be initially zeroed.
1031 Otherwise *size_or_initializer* is a sequence which is used to initialize the
1032 array and whose length determines the length of the array.
1033
1034 Note that setting and getting an element is potentially non-atomic -- use
1035 :func:`Array` instead to make sure that access is automatically synchronized
1036 using a lock.
1037
1038.. function:: RawValue(typecode_or_type, *args)
1039
1040 Return a ctypes object allocated from shared memory.
1041
1042 *typecode_or_type* determines the type of the returned object: it is either a
1043 ctypes type or a one character typecode of the kind used by the :mod:`array`
Jesse Nollerb0516a62009-01-18 03:11:38 +00001044 module. *\*args* is passed on to the constructor for the type.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001045
1046 Note that setting and getting the value is potentially non-atomic -- use
1047 :func:`Value` instead to make sure that access is automatically synchronized
1048 using a lock.
1049
Amaury Forgeot d'Arcb0c29162008-11-22 22:18:04 +00001050 Note that an array of :data:`ctypes.c_char` has ``value`` and ``raw``
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001051 attributes which allow one to use it to store and retrieve strings -- see
1052 documentation for :mod:`ctypes`.
1053
Richard Oudkerk87ea7802012-05-29 12:01:47 +01001054.. function:: Array(typecode_or_type, size_or_initializer, *, lock=True)
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001055
1056 The same as :func:`RawArray` except that depending on the value of *lock* a
1057 process-safe synchronization wrapper may be returned instead of a raw ctypes
1058 array.
1059
1060 If *lock* is ``True`` (the default) then a new lock object is created to
1061 synchronize access to the value. If *lock* is a :class:`Lock` or
1062 :class:`RLock` object then that will be used to synchronize access to the
1063 value. If *lock* is ``False`` then access to the returned object will not be
1064 automatically protected by a lock, so it will not necessarily be
1065 "process-safe".
1066
1067 Note that *lock* is a keyword-only argument.
1068
Richard Oudkerk87ea7802012-05-29 12:01:47 +01001069.. function:: Value(typecode_or_type, *args, lock=True)
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001070
1071 The same as :func:`RawValue` except that depending on the value of *lock* a
1072 process-safe synchronization wrapper may be returned instead of a raw ctypes
1073 object.
1074
1075 If *lock* is ``True`` (the default) then a new lock object is created to
1076 synchronize access to the value. If *lock* is a :class:`Lock` or
1077 :class:`RLock` object then that will be used to synchronize access to the
1078 value. If *lock* is ``False`` then access to the returned object will not be
1079 automatically protected by a lock, so it will not necessarily be
1080 "process-safe".
1081
1082 Note that *lock* is a keyword-only argument.
1083
1084.. function:: copy(obj)
1085
1086 Return a ctypes object allocated from shared memory which is a copy of the
1087 ctypes object *obj*.
1088
1089.. function:: synchronized(obj[, lock])
1090
1091 Return a process-safe wrapper object for a ctypes object which uses *lock* to
1092 synchronize access. If *lock* is ``None`` (the default) then a
1093 :class:`multiprocessing.RLock` object is created automatically.
1094
1095 A synchronized wrapper will have two methods in addition to those of the
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00001096 object it wraps: :meth:`get_obj` returns the wrapped object and
1097 :meth:`get_lock` returns the lock object used for synchronization.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001098
1099 Note that accessing the ctypes object through the wrapper can be a lot slower
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00001100 than accessing the raw ctypes object.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001101
1102
1103The table below compares the syntax for creating shared ctypes objects from
1104shared memory with the normal ctypes syntax. (In the table ``MyStruct`` is some
1105subclass of :class:`ctypes.Structure`.)
1106
1107==================== ========================== ===========================
1108ctypes sharedctypes using type sharedctypes using typecode
1109==================== ========================== ===========================
1110c_double(2.4) RawValue(c_double, 2.4) RawValue('d', 2.4)
1111MyStruct(4, 6) RawValue(MyStruct, 4, 6)
1112(c_short * 7)() RawArray(c_short, 7) RawArray('h', 7)
1113(c_int * 3)(9, 2, 8) RawArray(c_int, (9, 2, 8)) RawArray('i', (9, 2, 8))
1114==================== ========================== ===========================
1115
1116
1117Below is an example where a number of ctypes objects are modified by a child
1118process::
1119
1120 from multiprocessing import Process, Lock
1121 from multiprocessing.sharedctypes import Value, Array
1122 from ctypes import Structure, c_double
1123
1124 class Point(Structure):
1125 _fields_ = [('x', c_double), ('y', c_double)]
1126
1127 def modify(n, x, s, A):
1128 n.value **= 2
1129 x.value **= 2
1130 s.value = s.value.upper()
1131 for a in A:
1132 a.x **= 2
1133 a.y **= 2
1134
1135 if __name__ == '__main__':
1136 lock = Lock()
1137
1138 n = Value('i', 7)
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00001139 x = Value(c_double, 1.0/3.0, lock=False)
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001140 s = Array('c', 'hello world', lock=lock)
1141 A = Array(Point, [(1.875,-6.25), (-5.75,2.0), (2.375,9.5)], lock=lock)
1142
1143 p = Process(target=modify, args=(n, x, s, A))
1144 p.start()
1145 p.join()
1146
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +00001147 print(n.value)
1148 print(x.value)
1149 print(s.value)
1150 print([(a.x, a.y) for a in A])
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001151
1152
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +00001153.. highlight:: none
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001154
1155The results printed are ::
1156
1157 49
1158 0.1111111111111111
1159 HELLO WORLD
1160 [(3.515625, 39.0625), (33.0625, 4.0), (5.640625, 90.25)]
1161
Ezio Melottif86b28e2012-04-13 20:50:48 -06001162.. highlight:: python3
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001163
1164
1165.. _multiprocessing-managers:
1166
1167Managers
1168~~~~~~~~
1169
1170Managers provide a way to create data which can be shared between different
1171processes. A manager object controls a server process which manages *shared
1172objects*. Other processes can access the shared objects by using proxies.
1173
1174.. function:: multiprocessing.Manager()
1175
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00001176 Returns a started :class:`~multiprocessing.managers.SyncManager` object which
1177 can be used for sharing objects between processes. The returned manager
1178 object corresponds to a spawned child process and has methods which will
1179 create shared objects and return corresponding proxies.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001180
1181.. module:: multiprocessing.managers
1182 :synopsis: Share data between process with shared objects.
1183
1184Manager processes will be shutdown as soon as they are garbage collected or
1185their parent process exits. The manager classes are defined in the
1186:mod:`multiprocessing.managers` module:
1187
1188.. class:: BaseManager([address[, authkey]])
1189
1190 Create a BaseManager object.
1191
Benjamin Peterson21896a32010-03-21 22:03:03 +00001192 Once created one should call :meth:`start` or ``get_server().serve_forever()`` to ensure
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001193 that the manager object refers to a started manager process.
1194
1195 *address* is the address on which the manager process listens for new
1196 connections. If *address* is ``None`` then an arbitrary one is chosen.
1197
1198 *authkey* is the authentication key which will be used to check the validity
1199 of incoming connections to the server process. If *authkey* is ``None`` then
Benjamin Petersona786b022008-08-25 21:05:21 +00001200 ``current_process().authkey``. Otherwise *authkey* is used and it
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001201 must be a string.
1202
Benjamin Petersonf47ed4a2009-04-11 20:45:40 +00001203 .. method:: start([initializer[, initargs]])
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001204
Benjamin Petersonf47ed4a2009-04-11 20:45:40 +00001205 Start a subprocess to start the manager. If *initializer* is not ``None``
1206 then the subprocess will call ``initializer(*initargs)`` when it starts.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001207
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +00001208 .. method:: get_server()
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +00001209
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +00001210 Returns a :class:`Server` object which represents the actual server under
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +00001211 the control of the Manager. The :class:`Server` object supports the
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00001212 :meth:`serve_forever` method::
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +00001213
Georg Brandl1f01deb2009-01-03 22:47:39 +00001214 >>> from multiprocessing.managers import BaseManager
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00001215 >>> manager = BaseManager(address=('', 50000), authkey='abc')
1216 >>> server = manager.get_server()
1217 >>> server.serve_forever()
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +00001218
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00001219 :class:`Server` additionally has an :attr:`address` attribute.
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +00001220
1221 .. method:: connect()
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +00001222
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00001223 Connect a local manager object to a remote manager process::
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +00001224
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +00001225 >>> from multiprocessing.managers import BaseManager
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00001226 >>> m = BaseManager(address=('127.0.0.1', 5000), authkey='abc')
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +00001227 >>> m.connect()
1228
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001229 .. method:: shutdown()
1230
1231 Stop the process used by the manager. This is only available if
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00001232 :meth:`start` has been used to start the server process.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001233
1234 This can be called multiple times.
1235
1236 .. method:: register(typeid[, callable[, proxytype[, exposed[, method_to_typeid[, create_method]]]]])
1237
1238 A classmethod which can be used for registering a type or callable with
1239 the manager class.
1240
1241 *typeid* is a "type identifier" which is used to identify a particular
1242 type of shared object. This must be a string.
1243
1244 *callable* is a callable used for creating objects for this type
Richard Oudkerkf0604fd2012-06-11 17:56:08 +01001245 identifier. If a manager instance will be connected to the
1246 server using the :meth:`connect` method, or if the
1247 *create_method* argument is ``False`` then this can be left as
1248 ``None``.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001249
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00001250 *proxytype* is a subclass of :class:`BaseProxy` which is used to create
1251 proxies for shared objects with this *typeid*. If ``None`` then a proxy
1252 class is created automatically.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001253
1254 *exposed* is used to specify a sequence of method names which proxies for
1255 this typeid should be allowed to access using
1256 :meth:`BaseProxy._callMethod`. (If *exposed* is ``None`` then
1257 :attr:`proxytype._exposed_` is used instead if it exists.) In the case
1258 where no exposed list is specified, all "public methods" of the shared
1259 object will be accessible. (Here a "public method" means any attribute
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00001260 which has a :meth:`__call__` method and whose name does not begin with
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001261 ``'_'``.)
1262
1263 *method_to_typeid* is a mapping used to specify the return type of those
1264 exposed methods which should return a proxy. It maps method names to
1265 typeid strings. (If *method_to_typeid* is ``None`` then
1266 :attr:`proxytype._method_to_typeid_` is used instead if it exists.) If a
1267 method's name is not a key of this mapping or if the mapping is ``None``
1268 then the object returned by the method will be copied by value.
1269
1270 *create_method* determines whether a method should be created with name
1271 *typeid* which can be used to tell the server process to create a new
1272 shared object and return a proxy for it. By default it is ``True``.
1273
1274 :class:`BaseManager` instances also have one read-only property:
1275
1276 .. attribute:: address
1277
1278 The address used by the manager.
1279
1280
1281.. class:: SyncManager
1282
1283 A subclass of :class:`BaseManager` which can be used for the synchronization
1284 of processes. Objects of this type are returned by
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00001285 :func:`multiprocessing.Manager`.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001286
1287 It also supports creation of shared lists and dictionaries.
1288
Richard Oudkerk3730a172012-06-15 18:26:07 +01001289 .. method:: Barrier(parties[, action[, timeout]])
1290
1291 Create a shared :class:`threading.Barrier` object and return a
1292 proxy for it.
1293
1294 .. versionadded:: 3.3
1295
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001296 .. method:: BoundedSemaphore([value])
1297
1298 Create a shared :class:`threading.BoundedSemaphore` object and return a
1299 proxy for it.
1300
1301 .. method:: Condition([lock])
1302
1303 Create a shared :class:`threading.Condition` object and return a proxy for
1304 it.
1305
1306 If *lock* is supplied then it should be a proxy for a
1307 :class:`threading.Lock` or :class:`threading.RLock` object.
1308
Charles-François Natalic8ce7152012-04-17 18:45:57 +02001309 .. versionchanged:: 3.3
1310 The :meth:`wait_for` method was added.
1311
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001312 .. method:: Event()
1313
1314 Create a shared :class:`threading.Event` object and return a proxy for it.
1315
1316 .. method:: Lock()
1317
1318 Create a shared :class:`threading.Lock` object and return a proxy for it.
1319
1320 .. method:: Namespace()
1321
1322 Create a shared :class:`Namespace` object and return a proxy for it.
1323
1324 .. method:: Queue([maxsize])
1325
Benjamin Peterson257060a2008-06-28 01:42:41 +00001326 Create a shared :class:`queue.Queue` object and return a proxy for it.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001327
1328 .. method:: RLock()
1329
1330 Create a shared :class:`threading.RLock` object and return a proxy for it.
1331
1332 .. method:: Semaphore([value])
1333
1334 Create a shared :class:`threading.Semaphore` object and return a proxy for
1335 it.
1336
1337 .. method:: Array(typecode, sequence)
1338
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00001339 Create an array and return a proxy for it.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001340
1341 .. method:: Value(typecode, value)
1342
1343 Create an object with a writable ``value`` attribute and return a proxy
1344 for it.
1345
1346 .. method:: dict()
1347 dict(mapping)
1348 dict(sequence)
1349
1350 Create a shared ``dict`` object and return a proxy for it.
1351
1352 .. method:: list()
1353 list(sequence)
1354
1355 Create a shared ``list`` object and return a proxy for it.
1356
Georg Brandl3ed41142010-10-15 16:19:43 +00001357 .. note::
1358
1359 Modifications to mutable values or items in dict and list proxies will not
1360 be propagated through the manager, because the proxy has no way of knowing
1361 when its values or items are modified. To modify such an item, you can
1362 re-assign the modified object to the container proxy::
1363
1364 # create a list proxy and append a mutable object (a dictionary)
1365 lproxy = manager.list()
1366 lproxy.append({})
1367 # now mutate the dictionary
1368 d = lproxy[0]
1369 d['a'] = 1
1370 d['b'] = 2
1371 # at this point, the changes to d are not yet synced, but by
1372 # reassigning the dictionary, the proxy is notified of the change
1373 lproxy[0] = d
1374
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001375
1376Namespace objects
1377>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
1378
1379A namespace object has no public methods, but does have writable attributes.
1380Its representation shows the values of its attributes.
1381
1382However, when using a proxy for a namespace object, an attribute beginning with
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00001383``'_'`` will be an attribute of the proxy and not an attribute of the referent:
1384
1385.. doctest::
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001386
1387 >>> manager = multiprocessing.Manager()
1388 >>> Global = manager.Namespace()
1389 >>> Global.x = 10
1390 >>> Global.y = 'hello'
1391 >>> Global._z = 12.3 # this is an attribute of the proxy
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +00001392 >>> print(Global)
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001393 Namespace(x=10, y='hello')
1394
1395
1396Customized managers
1397>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
1398
1399To create one's own manager, one creates a subclass of :class:`BaseManager` and
Eli Benderskyd08effe2011-12-31 07:20:26 +02001400uses the :meth:`~BaseManager.register` classmethod to register new types or
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00001401callables with the manager class. For example::
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001402
1403 from multiprocessing.managers import BaseManager
1404
Éric Araujo28053fb2010-11-22 03:09:19 +00001405 class MathsClass:
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001406 def add(self, x, y):
1407 return x + y
1408 def mul(self, x, y):
1409 return x * y
1410
1411 class MyManager(BaseManager):
1412 pass
1413
1414 MyManager.register('Maths', MathsClass)
1415
1416 if __name__ == '__main__':
1417 manager = MyManager()
1418 manager.start()
1419 maths = manager.Maths()
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +00001420 print(maths.add(4, 3)) # prints 7
1421 print(maths.mul(7, 8)) # prints 56
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001422
1423
1424Using a remote manager
1425>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
1426
1427It is possible to run a manager server on one machine and have clients use it
1428from other machines (assuming that the firewalls involved allow it).
1429
1430Running the following commands creates a server for a single shared queue which
1431remote clients can access::
1432
1433 >>> from multiprocessing.managers import BaseManager
Benjamin Peterson257060a2008-06-28 01:42:41 +00001434 >>> import queue
1435 >>> queue = queue.Queue()
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001436 >>> class QueueManager(BaseManager): pass
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +00001437 >>> QueueManager.register('get_queue', callable=lambda:queue)
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001438 >>> m = QueueManager(address=('', 50000), authkey='abracadabra')
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +00001439 >>> s = m.get_server()
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00001440 >>> s.serve_forever()
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001441
1442One client can access the server as follows::
1443
1444 >>> from multiprocessing.managers import BaseManager
1445 >>> class QueueManager(BaseManager): pass
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +00001446 >>> QueueManager.register('get_queue')
1447 >>> m = QueueManager(address=('foo.bar.org', 50000), authkey='abracadabra')
1448 >>> m.connect()
1449 >>> queue = m.get_queue()
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001450 >>> queue.put('hello')
1451
1452Another client can also use it::
1453
1454 >>> from multiprocessing.managers import BaseManager
1455 >>> class QueueManager(BaseManager): pass
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00001456 >>> QueueManager.register('get_queue')
1457 >>> m = QueueManager(address=('foo.bar.org', 50000), authkey='abracadabra')
1458 >>> m.connect()
1459 >>> queue = m.get_queue()
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001460 >>> queue.get()
1461 'hello'
1462
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +00001463Local processes can also access that queue, using the code from above on the
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +00001464client to access it remotely::
1465
1466 >>> from multiprocessing import Process, Queue
1467 >>> from multiprocessing.managers import BaseManager
1468 >>> class Worker(Process):
1469 ... def __init__(self, q):
1470 ... self.q = q
1471 ... super(Worker, self).__init__()
1472 ... def run(self):
1473 ... self.q.put('local hello')
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +00001474 ...
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +00001475 >>> queue = Queue()
1476 >>> w = Worker(queue)
1477 >>> w.start()
1478 >>> class QueueManager(BaseManager): pass
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +00001479 ...
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +00001480 >>> QueueManager.register('get_queue', callable=lambda: queue)
1481 >>> m = QueueManager(address=('', 50000), authkey='abracadabra')
1482 >>> s = m.get_server()
1483 >>> s.serve_forever()
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001484
1485Proxy Objects
1486~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1487
1488A proxy is an object which *refers* to a shared object which lives (presumably)
1489in a different process. The shared object is said to be the *referent* of the
1490proxy. Multiple proxy objects may have the same referent.
1491
1492A proxy object has methods which invoke corresponding methods of its referent
1493(although not every method of the referent will necessarily be available through
1494the proxy). A proxy can usually be used in most of the same ways that its
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00001495referent can:
1496
1497.. doctest::
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001498
1499 >>> from multiprocessing import Manager
1500 >>> manager = Manager()
1501 >>> l = manager.list([i*i for i in range(10)])
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +00001502 >>> print(l)
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001503 [0, 1, 4, 9, 16, 25, 36, 49, 64, 81]
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +00001504 >>> print(repr(l))
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00001505 <ListProxy object, typeid 'list' at 0x...>
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001506 >>> l[4]
1507 16
1508 >>> l[2:5]
1509 [4, 9, 16]
1510
1511Notice that applying :func:`str` to a proxy will return the representation of
1512the referent, whereas applying :func:`repr` will return the representation of
1513the proxy.
1514
1515An important feature of proxy objects is that they are picklable so they can be
1516passed between processes. Note, however, that if a proxy is sent to the
1517corresponding manager's process then unpickling it will produce the referent
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00001518itself. This means, for example, that one shared object can contain a second:
1519
1520.. doctest::
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001521
1522 >>> a = manager.list()
1523 >>> b = manager.list()
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00001524 >>> a.append(b) # referent of a now contains referent of b
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +00001525 >>> print(a, b)
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001526 [[]] []
1527 >>> b.append('hello')
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +00001528 >>> print(a, b)
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001529 [['hello']] ['hello']
1530
1531.. note::
1532
1533 The proxy types in :mod:`multiprocessing` do nothing to support comparisons
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00001534 by value. So, for instance, we have:
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001535
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00001536 .. doctest::
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001537
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00001538 >>> manager.list([1,2,3]) == [1,2,3]
1539 False
1540
1541 One should just use a copy of the referent instead when making comparisons.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001542
1543.. class:: BaseProxy
1544
1545 Proxy objects are instances of subclasses of :class:`BaseProxy`.
1546
Benjamin Peterson6ebe78f2008-12-21 00:06:59 +00001547 .. method:: _callmethod(methodname[, args[, kwds]])
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001548
1549 Call and return the result of a method of the proxy's referent.
1550
1551 If ``proxy`` is a proxy whose referent is ``obj`` then the expression ::
1552
Benjamin Peterson6ebe78f2008-12-21 00:06:59 +00001553 proxy._callmethod(methodname, args, kwds)
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001554
1555 will evaluate the expression ::
1556
1557 getattr(obj, methodname)(*args, **kwds)
1558
1559 in the manager's process.
1560
1561 The returned value will be a copy of the result of the call or a proxy to
1562 a new shared object -- see documentation for the *method_to_typeid*
1563 argument of :meth:`BaseManager.register`.
1564
Ezio Melottie130a522011-10-19 10:58:56 +03001565 If an exception is raised by the call, then is re-raised by
Benjamin Peterson6ebe78f2008-12-21 00:06:59 +00001566 :meth:`_callmethod`. If some other exception is raised in the manager's
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001567 process then this is converted into a :exc:`RemoteError` exception and is
Benjamin Peterson6ebe78f2008-12-21 00:06:59 +00001568 raised by :meth:`_callmethod`.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001569
1570 Note in particular that an exception will be raised if *methodname* has
1571 not been *exposed*
1572
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00001573 An example of the usage of :meth:`_callmethod`:
1574
1575 .. doctest::
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001576
1577 >>> l = manager.list(range(10))
Benjamin Peterson6ebe78f2008-12-21 00:06:59 +00001578 >>> l._callmethod('__len__')
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001579 10
Benjamin Peterson6ebe78f2008-12-21 00:06:59 +00001580 >>> l._callmethod('__getslice__', (2, 7)) # equiv to `l[2:7]`
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001581 [2, 3, 4, 5, 6]
Benjamin Peterson6ebe78f2008-12-21 00:06:59 +00001582 >>> l._callmethod('__getitem__', (20,)) # equiv to `l[20]`
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001583 Traceback (most recent call last):
1584 ...
1585 IndexError: list index out of range
1586
Benjamin Peterson6ebe78f2008-12-21 00:06:59 +00001587 .. method:: _getvalue()
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001588
1589 Return a copy of the referent.
1590
1591 If the referent is unpicklable then this will raise an exception.
1592
1593 .. method:: __repr__
1594
1595 Return a representation of the proxy object.
1596
1597 .. method:: __str__
1598
1599 Return the representation of the referent.
1600
1601
1602Cleanup
1603>>>>>>>
1604
1605A proxy object uses a weakref callback so that when it gets garbage collected it
1606deregisters itself from the manager which owns its referent.
1607
1608A shared object gets deleted from the manager process when there are no longer
1609any proxies referring to it.
1610
1611
1612Process Pools
1613~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1614
1615.. module:: multiprocessing.pool
1616 :synopsis: Create pools of processes.
1617
1618One can create a pool of processes which will carry out tasks submitted to it
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00001619with the :class:`Pool` class.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001620
Jesse Noller1f0b6582010-01-27 03:36:01 +00001621.. class:: multiprocessing.Pool([processes[, initializer[, initargs[, maxtasksperchild]]]])
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001622
1623 A process pool object which controls a pool of worker processes to which jobs
1624 can be submitted. It supports asynchronous results with timeouts and
1625 callbacks and has a parallel map implementation.
1626
1627 *processes* is the number of worker processes to use. If *processes* is
1628 ``None`` then the number returned by :func:`cpu_count` is used. If
1629 *initializer* is not ``None`` then each worker process will call
1630 ``initializer(*initargs)`` when it starts.
1631
Georg Brandl17ef0d52010-10-17 06:21:59 +00001632 .. versionadded:: 3.2
1633 *maxtasksperchild* is the number of tasks a worker process can complete
1634 before it will exit and be replaced with a fresh worker process, to enable
1635 unused resources to be freed. The default *maxtasksperchild* is None, which
1636 means worker processes will live as long as the pool.
Jesse Noller1f0b6582010-01-27 03:36:01 +00001637
1638 .. note::
1639
Georg Brandl17ef0d52010-10-17 06:21:59 +00001640 Worker processes within a :class:`Pool` typically live for the complete
1641 duration of the Pool's work queue. A frequent pattern found in other
1642 systems (such as Apache, mod_wsgi, etc) to free resources held by
1643 workers is to allow a worker within a pool to complete only a set
1644 amount of work before being exiting, being cleaned up and a new
1645 process spawned to replace the old one. The *maxtasksperchild*
1646 argument to the :class:`Pool` exposes this ability to the end user.
Jesse Noller1f0b6582010-01-27 03:36:01 +00001647
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001648 .. method:: apply(func[, args[, kwds]])
1649
Benjamin Peterson37d2fe02008-10-24 22:28:58 +00001650 Call *func* with arguments *args* and keyword arguments *kwds*. It blocks
Eli Benderskyd08effe2011-12-31 07:20:26 +02001651 until the result is ready. Given this blocks, :meth:`apply_async` is
1652 better suited for performing work in parallel. Additionally, *func*
1653 is only executed in one of the workers of the pool.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001654
Ask Solem1d3b8932010-11-09 21:36:56 +00001655 .. method:: apply_async(func[, args[, kwds[, callback[, error_callback]]]])
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001656
1657 A variant of the :meth:`apply` method which returns a result object.
1658
1659 If *callback* is specified then it should be a callable which accepts a
1660 single argument. When the result becomes ready *callback* is applied to
Ask Solem1d3b8932010-11-09 21:36:56 +00001661 it, that is unless the call failed, in which case the *error_callback*
1662 is applied instead
1663
1664 If *error_callback* is specified then it should be a callable which
1665 accepts a single argument. If the target function fails, then
1666 the *error_callback* is called with the exception instance.
1667
1668 Callbacks should complete immediately since otherwise the thread which
1669 handles the results will get blocked.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001670
1671 .. method:: map(func, iterable[, chunksize])
1672
Georg Brandl22b34312009-07-26 14:54:51 +00001673 A parallel equivalent of the :func:`map` built-in function (it supports only
Eli Benderskyd08effe2011-12-31 07:20:26 +02001674 one *iterable* argument though). It blocks until the result is ready.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001675
1676 This method chops the iterable into a number of chunks which it submits to
1677 the process pool as separate tasks. The (approximate) size of these
1678 chunks can be specified by setting *chunksize* to a positive integer.
1679
Sandro Tosidb79e952011-08-08 16:38:13 +02001680 .. method:: map_async(func, iterable[, chunksize[, callback[, error_callback]]])
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001681
Georg Brandl502d9a52009-07-26 15:02:41 +00001682 A variant of the :meth:`.map` method which returns a result object.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001683
1684 If *callback* is specified then it should be a callable which accepts a
1685 single argument. When the result becomes ready *callback* is applied to
Ask Solem1d3b8932010-11-09 21:36:56 +00001686 it, that is unless the call failed, in which case the *error_callback*
1687 is applied instead
1688
1689 If *error_callback* is specified then it should be a callable which
1690 accepts a single argument. If the target function fails, then
1691 the *error_callback* is called with the exception instance.
1692
1693 Callbacks should complete immediately since otherwise the thread which
1694 handles the results will get blocked.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001695
1696 .. method:: imap(func, iterable[, chunksize])
1697
Georg Brandl92905032008-11-22 08:51:39 +00001698 A lazier version of :meth:`map`.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001699
1700 The *chunksize* argument is the same as the one used by the :meth:`.map`
1701 method. For very long iterables using a large value for *chunksize* can
Ezio Melottie130a522011-10-19 10:58:56 +03001702 make the job complete **much** faster than using the default value of
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001703 ``1``.
1704
Georg Brandl502d9a52009-07-26 15:02:41 +00001705 Also if *chunksize* is ``1`` then the :meth:`!next` method of the iterator
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001706 returned by the :meth:`imap` method has an optional *timeout* parameter:
1707 ``next(timeout)`` will raise :exc:`multiprocessing.TimeoutError` if the
1708 result cannot be returned within *timeout* seconds.
1709
1710 .. method:: imap_unordered(func, iterable[, chunksize])
1711
1712 The same as :meth:`imap` except that the ordering of the results from the
1713 returned iterator should be considered arbitrary. (Only when there is
1714 only one worker process is the order guaranteed to be "correct".)
1715
Antoine Pitroude911b22011-12-21 11:03:24 +01001716 .. method:: starmap(func, iterable[, chunksize])
1717
1718 Like :meth:`map` except that the elements of the `iterable` are expected
1719 to be iterables that are unpacked as arguments.
1720
1721 Hence an `iterable` of `[(1,2), (3, 4)]` results in `[func(1,2),
1722 func(3,4)]`.
1723
1724 .. versionadded:: 3.3
1725
1726 .. method:: starmap_async(func, iterable[, chunksize[, callback[, error_back]]])
1727
1728 A combination of :meth:`starmap` and :meth:`map_async` that iterates over
1729 `iterable` of iterables and calls `func` with the iterables unpacked.
1730 Returns a result object.
1731
1732 .. versionadded:: 3.3
1733
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001734 .. method:: close()
1735
1736 Prevents any more tasks from being submitted to the pool. Once all the
1737 tasks have been completed the worker processes will exit.
1738
1739 .. method:: terminate()
1740
1741 Stops the worker processes immediately without completing outstanding
1742 work. When the pool object is garbage collected :meth:`terminate` will be
1743 called immediately.
1744
1745 .. method:: join()
1746
1747 Wait for the worker processes to exit. One must call :meth:`close` or
1748 :meth:`terminate` before using :meth:`join`.
1749
1750
1751.. class:: AsyncResult
1752
1753 The class of the result returned by :meth:`Pool.apply_async` and
1754 :meth:`Pool.map_async`.
1755
Georg Brandle3d70ae2008-11-22 08:54:21 +00001756 .. method:: get([timeout])
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001757
1758 Return the result when it arrives. If *timeout* is not ``None`` and the
1759 result does not arrive within *timeout* seconds then
1760 :exc:`multiprocessing.TimeoutError` is raised. If the remote call raised
1761 an exception then that exception will be reraised by :meth:`get`.
1762
1763 .. method:: wait([timeout])
1764
1765 Wait until the result is available or until *timeout* seconds pass.
1766
1767 .. method:: ready()
1768
1769 Return whether the call has completed.
1770
1771 .. method:: successful()
1772
1773 Return whether the call completed without raising an exception. Will
1774 raise :exc:`AssertionError` if the result is not ready.
1775
1776The following example demonstrates the use of a pool::
1777
1778 from multiprocessing import Pool
1779
1780 def f(x):
1781 return x*x
1782
1783 if __name__ == '__main__':
1784 pool = Pool(processes=4) # start 4 worker processes
1785
Georg Brandle3d70ae2008-11-22 08:54:21 +00001786 result = pool.apply_async(f, (10,)) # evaluate "f(10)" asynchronously
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +00001787 print(result.get(timeout=1)) # prints "100" unless your computer is *very* slow
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001788
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +00001789 print(pool.map(f, range(10))) # prints "[0, 1, 4,..., 81]"
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001790
1791 it = pool.imap(f, range(10))
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +00001792 print(next(it)) # prints "0"
1793 print(next(it)) # prints "1"
1794 print(it.next(timeout=1)) # prints "4" unless your computer is *very* slow
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001795
1796 import time
Georg Brandle3d70ae2008-11-22 08:54:21 +00001797 result = pool.apply_async(time.sleep, (10,))
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +00001798 print(result.get(timeout=1)) # raises TimeoutError
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001799
1800
1801.. _multiprocessing-listeners-clients:
1802
1803Listeners and Clients
1804~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1805
1806.. module:: multiprocessing.connection
1807 :synopsis: API for dealing with sockets.
1808
1809Usually message passing between processes is done using queues or by using
1810:class:`Connection` objects returned by :func:`Pipe`.
1811
1812However, the :mod:`multiprocessing.connection` module allows some extra
1813flexibility. It basically gives a high level message oriented API for dealing
Antoine Pitroubdb1cf12012-03-05 19:28:37 +01001814with sockets or Windows named pipes. It also has support for *digest
1815authentication* using the :mod:`hmac` module, and for polling
1816multiple connections at the same time.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001817
1818
1819.. function:: deliver_challenge(connection, authkey)
1820
1821 Send a randomly generated message to the other end of the connection and wait
1822 for a reply.
1823
1824 If the reply matches the digest of the message using *authkey* as the key
1825 then a welcome message is sent to the other end of the connection. Otherwise
1826 :exc:`AuthenticationError` is raised.
1827
1828.. function:: answerChallenge(connection, authkey)
1829
1830 Receive a message, calculate the digest of the message using *authkey* as the
1831 key, and then send the digest back.
1832
1833 If a welcome message is not received, then :exc:`AuthenticationError` is
1834 raised.
1835
1836.. function:: Client(address[, family[, authenticate[, authkey]]])
1837
1838 Attempt to set up a connection to the listener which is using address
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00001839 *address*, returning a :class:`~multiprocessing.Connection`.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001840
1841 The type of the connection is determined by *family* argument, but this can
1842 generally be omitted since it can usually be inferred from the format of
1843 *address*. (See :ref:`multiprocessing-address-formats`)
1844
Alexandre Vassalottic57a84f2009-07-17 12:07:01 +00001845 If *authenticate* is ``True`` or *authkey* is a string then digest
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001846 authentication is used. The key used for authentication will be either
Benjamin Petersona786b022008-08-25 21:05:21 +00001847 *authkey* or ``current_process().authkey)`` if *authkey* is ``None``.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001848 If authentication fails then :exc:`AuthenticationError` is raised. See
1849 :ref:`multiprocessing-auth-keys`.
1850
1851.. class:: Listener([address[, family[, backlog[, authenticate[, authkey]]]]])
1852
1853 A wrapper for a bound socket or Windows named pipe which is 'listening' for
1854 connections.
1855
1856 *address* is the address to be used by the bound socket or named pipe of the
1857 listener object.
1858
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +00001859 .. note::
1860
1861 If an address of '0.0.0.0' is used, the address will not be a connectable
1862 end point on Windows. If you require a connectable end-point,
1863 you should use '127.0.0.1'.
1864
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001865 *family* is the type of socket (or named pipe) to use. This can be one of
1866 the strings ``'AF_INET'`` (for a TCP socket), ``'AF_UNIX'`` (for a Unix
1867 domain socket) or ``'AF_PIPE'`` (for a Windows named pipe). Of these only
1868 the first is guaranteed to be available. If *family* is ``None`` then the
1869 family is inferred from the format of *address*. If *address* is also
1870 ``None`` then a default is chosen. This default is the family which is
1871 assumed to be the fastest available. See
1872 :ref:`multiprocessing-address-formats`. Note that if *family* is
1873 ``'AF_UNIX'`` and address is ``None`` then the socket will be created in a
1874 private temporary directory created using :func:`tempfile.mkstemp`.
1875
1876 If the listener object uses a socket then *backlog* (1 by default) is passed
1877 to the :meth:`listen` method of the socket once it has been bound.
1878
1879 If *authenticate* is ``True`` (``False`` by default) or *authkey* is not
1880 ``None`` then digest authentication is used.
1881
1882 If *authkey* is a string then it will be used as the authentication key;
1883 otherwise it must be *None*.
1884
1885 If *authkey* is ``None`` and *authenticate* is ``True`` then
Benjamin Petersona786b022008-08-25 21:05:21 +00001886 ``current_process().authkey`` is used as the authentication key. If
Alexandre Vassalottic57a84f2009-07-17 12:07:01 +00001887 *authkey* is ``None`` and *authenticate* is ``False`` then no
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001888 authentication is done. If authentication fails then
1889 :exc:`AuthenticationError` is raised. See :ref:`multiprocessing-auth-keys`.
1890
1891 .. method:: accept()
1892
1893 Accept a connection on the bound socket or named pipe of the listener
1894 object and return a :class:`Connection` object. If authentication is
1895 attempted and fails, then :exc:`AuthenticationError` is raised.
1896
1897 .. method:: close()
1898
1899 Close the bound socket or named pipe of the listener object. This is
1900 called automatically when the listener is garbage collected. However it
1901 is advisable to call it explicitly.
1902
1903 Listener objects have the following read-only properties:
1904
1905 .. attribute:: address
1906
1907 The address which is being used by the Listener object.
1908
1909 .. attribute:: last_accepted
1910
1911 The address from which the last accepted connection came. If this is
1912 unavailable then it is ``None``.
1913
Antoine Pitroubdb1cf12012-03-05 19:28:37 +01001914.. function:: wait(object_list, timeout=None)
1915
1916 Wait till an object in *object_list* is ready. Returns the list of
1917 those objects in *object_list* which are ready. If *timeout* is a
1918 float then the call blocks for at most that many seconds. If
1919 *timeout* is ``None`` then it will block for an unlimited period.
Richard Oudkerk59d54042012-05-10 16:11:12 +01001920 A negative timeout is equivalent to a zero timeout.
Antoine Pitroubdb1cf12012-03-05 19:28:37 +01001921
1922 For both Unix and Windows, an object can appear in *object_list* if
1923 it is
1924
1925 * a readable :class:`~multiprocessing.Connection` object;
1926 * a connected and readable :class:`socket.socket` object; or
1927 * the :attr:`~multiprocessing.Process.sentinel` attribute of a
1928 :class:`~multiprocessing.Process` object.
1929
1930 A connection or socket object is ready when there is data available
1931 to be read from it, or the other end has been closed.
1932
1933 **Unix**: ``wait(object_list, timeout)`` almost equivalent
1934 ``select.select(object_list, [], [], timeout)``. The difference is
1935 that, if :func:`select.select` is interrupted by a signal, it can
1936 raise :exc:`OSError` with an error number of ``EINTR``, whereas
1937 :func:`wait` will not.
1938
1939 **Windows**: An item in *object_list* must either be an integer
1940 handle which is waitable (according to the definition used by the
1941 documentation of the Win32 function ``WaitForMultipleObjects()``)
1942 or it can be an object with a :meth:`fileno` method which returns a
1943 socket handle or pipe handle. (Note that pipe handles and socket
1944 handles are **not** waitable handles.)
1945
1946 .. versionadded:: 3.3
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001947
1948The module defines two exceptions:
1949
1950.. exception:: AuthenticationError
1951
1952 Exception raised when there is an authentication error.
1953
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001954
1955**Examples**
1956
1957The following server code creates a listener which uses ``'secret password'`` as
1958an authentication key. It then waits for a connection and sends some data to
1959the client::
1960
1961 from multiprocessing.connection import Listener
1962 from array import array
1963
1964 address = ('localhost', 6000) # family is deduced to be 'AF_INET'
Senthil Kumaran79941b52010-10-10 06:13:49 +00001965 listener = Listener(address, authkey=b'secret password')
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001966
1967 conn = listener.accept()
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +00001968 print('connection accepted from', listener.last_accepted)
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001969
1970 conn.send([2.25, None, 'junk', float])
1971
Senthil Kumaran79941b52010-10-10 06:13:49 +00001972 conn.send_bytes(b'hello')
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001973
1974 conn.send_bytes(array('i', [42, 1729]))
1975
1976 conn.close()
1977 listener.close()
1978
1979The following code connects to the server and receives some data from the
1980server::
1981
1982 from multiprocessing.connection import Client
1983 from array import array
1984
1985 address = ('localhost', 6000)
Senthil Kumaran79941b52010-10-10 06:13:49 +00001986 conn = Client(address, authkey=b'secret password')
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001987
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +00001988 print(conn.recv()) # => [2.25, None, 'junk', float]
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001989
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +00001990 print(conn.recv_bytes()) # => 'hello'
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001991
1992 arr = array('i', [0, 0, 0, 0, 0])
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +00001993 print(conn.recv_bytes_into(arr)) # => 8
1994 print(arr) # => array('i', [42, 1729, 0, 0, 0])
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001995
1996 conn.close()
1997
Antoine Pitroubdb1cf12012-03-05 19:28:37 +01001998The following code uses :func:`~multiprocessing.connection.wait` to
1999wait for messages from multiple processes at once::
2000
2001 import time, random
2002 from multiprocessing import Process, Pipe, current_process
2003 from multiprocessing.connection import wait
2004
2005 def foo(w):
2006 for i in range(10):
2007 w.send((i, current_process().name))
2008 w.close()
2009
2010 if __name__ == '__main__':
2011 readers = []
2012
2013 for i in range(4):
2014 r, w = Pipe(duplex=False)
2015 readers.append(r)
2016 p = Process(target=foo, args=(w,))
2017 p.start()
2018 # We close the writable end of the pipe now to be sure that
2019 # p is the only process which owns a handle for it. This
2020 # ensures that when p closes its handle for the writable end,
2021 # wait() will promptly report the readable end as being ready.
2022 w.close()
2023
2024 while readers:
2025 for r in wait(readers):
2026 try:
2027 msg = r.recv()
2028 except EOFError:
2029 readers.remove(r)
2030 else:
2031 print(msg)
2032
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002033
2034.. _multiprocessing-address-formats:
2035
2036Address Formats
2037>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
2038
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00002039* An ``'AF_INET'`` address is a tuple of the form ``(hostname, port)`` where
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002040 *hostname* is a string and *port* is an integer.
2041
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00002042* An ``'AF_UNIX'`` address is a string representing a filename on the
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002043 filesystem.
2044
2045* An ``'AF_PIPE'`` address is a string of the form
Benjamin Petersonda10d3b2009-01-01 00:23:30 +00002046 :samp:`r'\\\\.\\pipe\\{PipeName}'`. To use :func:`Client` to connect to a named
Georg Brandl1f01deb2009-01-03 22:47:39 +00002047 pipe on a remote computer called *ServerName* one should use an address of the
Benjamin Peterson28d88b42009-01-09 03:03:23 +00002048 form :samp:`r'\\\\{ServerName}\\pipe\\{PipeName}'` instead.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002049
2050Note that any string beginning with two backslashes is assumed by default to be
2051an ``'AF_PIPE'`` address rather than an ``'AF_UNIX'`` address.
2052
2053
2054.. _multiprocessing-auth-keys:
2055
2056Authentication keys
2057~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2058
2059When one uses :meth:`Connection.recv`, the data received is automatically
2060unpickled. Unfortunately unpickling data from an untrusted source is a security
2061risk. Therefore :class:`Listener` and :func:`Client` use the :mod:`hmac` module
2062to provide digest authentication.
2063
2064An authentication key is a string which can be thought of as a password: once a
2065connection is established both ends will demand proof that the other knows the
2066authentication key. (Demonstrating that both ends are using the same key does
2067**not** involve sending the key over the connection.)
2068
2069If authentication is requested but do authentication key is specified then the
Benjamin Petersona786b022008-08-25 21:05:21 +00002070return value of ``current_process().authkey`` is used (see
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00002071:class:`~multiprocessing.Process`). This value will automatically inherited by
2072any :class:`~multiprocessing.Process` object that the current process creates.
2073This means that (by default) all processes of a multi-process program will share
2074a single authentication key which can be used when setting up connections
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +00002075between themselves.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002076
2077Suitable authentication keys can also be generated by using :func:`os.urandom`.
2078
2079
2080Logging
2081~~~~~~~
2082
2083Some support for logging is available. Note, however, that the :mod:`logging`
2084package does not use process shared locks so it is possible (depending on the
2085handler type) for messages from different processes to get mixed up.
2086
2087.. currentmodule:: multiprocessing
2088.. function:: get_logger()
2089
2090 Returns the logger used by :mod:`multiprocessing`. If necessary, a new one
2091 will be created.
2092
Jesse Noller41faa542009-01-25 03:45:53 +00002093 When first created the logger has level :data:`logging.NOTSET` and no
2094 default handler. Messages sent to this logger will not by default propagate
2095 to the root logger.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002096
2097 Note that on Windows child processes will only inherit the level of the
2098 parent process's logger -- any other customization of the logger will not be
2099 inherited.
2100
Jesse Noller41faa542009-01-25 03:45:53 +00002101.. currentmodule:: multiprocessing
2102.. function:: log_to_stderr()
2103
2104 This function performs a call to :func:`get_logger` but in addition to
2105 returning the logger created by get_logger, it adds a handler which sends
2106 output to :data:`sys.stderr` using format
2107 ``'[%(levelname)s/%(processName)s] %(message)s'``.
2108
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002109Below is an example session with logging turned on::
2110
Benjamin Peterson206e3072008-10-19 14:07:49 +00002111 >>> import multiprocessing, logging
Jesse Noller41faa542009-01-25 03:45:53 +00002112 >>> logger = multiprocessing.log_to_stderr()
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002113 >>> logger.setLevel(logging.INFO)
2114 >>> logger.warning('doomed')
2115 [WARNING/MainProcess] doomed
Benjamin Peterson206e3072008-10-19 14:07:49 +00002116 >>> m = multiprocessing.Manager()
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00002117 [INFO/SyncManager-...] child process calling self.run()
2118 [INFO/SyncManager-...] created temp directory /.../pymp-...
2119 [INFO/SyncManager-...] manager serving at '/.../listener-...'
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002120 >>> del m
2121 [INFO/MainProcess] sending shutdown message to manager
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00002122 [INFO/SyncManager-...] manager exiting with exitcode 0
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002123
Jesse Noller41faa542009-01-25 03:45:53 +00002124In addition to having these two logging functions, the multiprocessing also
2125exposes two additional logging level attributes. These are :const:`SUBWARNING`
2126and :const:`SUBDEBUG`. The table below illustrates where theses fit in the
2127normal level hierarchy.
2128
2129+----------------+----------------+
2130| Level | Numeric value |
2131+================+================+
2132| ``SUBWARNING`` | 25 |
2133+----------------+----------------+
2134| ``SUBDEBUG`` | 5 |
2135+----------------+----------------+
2136
2137For a full table of logging levels, see the :mod:`logging` module.
2138
2139These additional logging levels are used primarily for certain debug messages
2140within the multiprocessing module. Below is the same example as above, except
2141with :const:`SUBDEBUG` enabled::
2142
2143 >>> import multiprocessing, logging
2144 >>> logger = multiprocessing.log_to_stderr()
2145 >>> logger.setLevel(multiprocessing.SUBDEBUG)
2146 >>> logger.warning('doomed')
2147 [WARNING/MainProcess] doomed
2148 >>> m = multiprocessing.Manager()
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00002149 [INFO/SyncManager-...] child process calling self.run()
2150 [INFO/SyncManager-...] created temp directory /.../pymp-...
2151 [INFO/SyncManager-...] manager serving at '/.../pymp-djGBXN/listener-...'
Jesse Noller41faa542009-01-25 03:45:53 +00002152 >>> del m
2153 [SUBDEBUG/MainProcess] finalizer calling ...
2154 [INFO/MainProcess] sending shutdown message to manager
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00002155 [DEBUG/SyncManager-...] manager received shutdown message
2156 [SUBDEBUG/SyncManager-...] calling <Finalize object, callback=unlink, ...
2157 [SUBDEBUG/SyncManager-...] finalizer calling <built-in function unlink> ...
2158 [SUBDEBUG/SyncManager-...] calling <Finalize object, dead>
2159 [SUBDEBUG/SyncManager-...] finalizer calling <function rmtree at 0x5aa730> ...
2160 [INFO/SyncManager-...] manager exiting with exitcode 0
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002161
2162The :mod:`multiprocessing.dummy` module
2163~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2164
2165.. module:: multiprocessing.dummy
2166 :synopsis: Dumb wrapper around threading.
2167
2168:mod:`multiprocessing.dummy` replicates the API of :mod:`multiprocessing` but is
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00002169no more than a wrapper around the :mod:`threading` module.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002170
2171
2172.. _multiprocessing-programming:
2173
2174Programming guidelines
2175----------------------
2176
2177There are certain guidelines and idioms which should be adhered to when using
2178:mod:`multiprocessing`.
2179
2180
2181All platforms
2182~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2183
2184Avoid shared state
2185
2186 As far as possible one should try to avoid shifting large amounts of data
2187 between processes.
2188
2189 It is probably best to stick to using queues or pipes for communication
2190 between processes rather than using the lower level synchronization
2191 primitives from the :mod:`threading` module.
2192
2193Picklability
2194
2195 Ensure that the arguments to the methods of proxies are picklable.
2196
2197Thread safety of proxies
2198
2199 Do not use a proxy object from more than one thread unless you protect it
2200 with a lock.
2201
2202 (There is never a problem with different processes using the *same* proxy.)
2203
2204Joining zombie processes
2205
2206 On Unix when a process finishes but has not been joined it becomes a zombie.
2207 There should never be very many because each time a new process starts (or
2208 :func:`active_children` is called) all completed processes which have not
2209 yet been joined will be joined. Also calling a finished process's
2210 :meth:`Process.is_alive` will join the process. Even so it is probably good
2211 practice to explicitly join all the processes that you start.
2212
2213Better to inherit than pickle/unpickle
2214
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00002215 On Windows many types from :mod:`multiprocessing` need to be picklable so
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002216 that child processes can use them. However, one should generally avoid
2217 sending shared objects to other processes using pipes or queues. Instead
Eli Benderskyd08effe2011-12-31 07:20:26 +02002218 you should arrange the program so that a process which needs access to a
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002219 shared resource created elsewhere can inherit it from an ancestor process.
2220
2221Avoid terminating processes
2222
2223 Using the :meth:`Process.terminate` method to stop a process is liable to
2224 cause any shared resources (such as locks, semaphores, pipes and queues)
2225 currently being used by the process to become broken or unavailable to other
2226 processes.
2227
2228 Therefore it is probably best to only consider using
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00002229 :meth:`Process.terminate` on processes which never use any shared resources.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002230
2231Joining processes that use queues
2232
2233 Bear in mind that a process that has put items in a queue will wait before
2234 terminating until all the buffered items are fed by the "feeder" thread to
2235 the underlying pipe. (The child process can call the
Benjamin Petersonae5360b2008-09-08 23:05:23 +00002236 :meth:`Queue.cancel_join_thread` method of the queue to avoid this behaviour.)
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002237
2238 This means that whenever you use a queue you need to make sure that all
2239 items which have been put on the queue will eventually be removed before the
2240 process is joined. Otherwise you cannot be sure that processes which have
2241 put items on the queue will terminate. Remember also that non-daemonic
2242 processes will be automatically be joined.
2243
2244 An example which will deadlock is the following::
2245
2246 from multiprocessing import Process, Queue
2247
2248 def f(q):
2249 q.put('X' * 1000000)
2250
2251 if __name__ == '__main__':
2252 queue = Queue()
2253 p = Process(target=f, args=(queue,))
2254 p.start()
2255 p.join() # this deadlocks
2256 obj = queue.get()
2257
2258 A fix here would be to swap the last two lines round (or simply remove the
2259 ``p.join()`` line).
2260
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00002261Explicitly pass resources to child processes
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002262
2263 On Unix a child process can make use of a shared resource created in a
2264 parent process using a global resource. However, it is better to pass the
2265 object as an argument to the constructor for the child process.
2266
2267 Apart from making the code (potentially) compatible with Windows this also
2268 ensures that as long as the child process is still alive the object will not
2269 be garbage collected in the parent process. This might be important if some
2270 resource is freed when the object is garbage collected in the parent
2271 process.
2272
2273 So for instance ::
2274
2275 from multiprocessing import Process, Lock
2276
2277 def f():
2278 ... do something using "lock" ...
2279
2280 if __name__ == '__main__':
2281 lock = Lock()
2282 for i in range(10):
2283 Process(target=f).start()
2284
2285 should be rewritten as ::
2286
2287 from multiprocessing import Process, Lock
2288
2289 def f(l):
2290 ... do something using "l" ...
2291
2292 if __name__ == '__main__':
2293 lock = Lock()
2294 for i in range(10):
2295 Process(target=f, args=(lock,)).start()
2296
Eli Benderskyd08effe2011-12-31 07:20:26 +02002297Beware of replacing :data:`sys.stdin` with a "file like object"
Alexandre Vassalottic57a84f2009-07-17 12:07:01 +00002298
2299 :mod:`multiprocessing` originally unconditionally called::
2300
2301 os.close(sys.stdin.fileno())
2302
2303 in the :meth:`multiprocessing.Process._bootstrap` method --- this resulted
2304 in issues with processes-in-processes. This has been changed to::
2305
2306 sys.stdin.close()
2307 sys.stdin = open(os.devnull)
2308
2309 Which solves the fundamental issue of processes colliding with each other
2310 resulting in a bad file descriptor error, but introduces a potential danger
2311 to applications which replace :func:`sys.stdin` with a "file-like object"
2312 with output buffering. This danger is that if multiple processes call
2313 :func:`close()` on this file-like object, it could result in the same
2314 data being flushed to the object multiple times, resulting in corruption.
2315
2316 If you write a file-like object and implement your own caching, you can
2317 make it fork-safe by storing the pid whenever you append to the cache,
2318 and discarding the cache when the pid changes. For example::
2319
2320 @property
2321 def cache(self):
2322 pid = os.getpid()
2323 if pid != self._pid:
2324 self._pid = pid
2325 self._cache = []
2326 return self._cache
2327
2328 For more information, see :issue:`5155`, :issue:`5313` and :issue:`5331`
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002329
2330Windows
2331~~~~~~~
2332
2333Since Windows lacks :func:`os.fork` it has a few extra restrictions:
2334
2335More picklability
2336
2337 Ensure that all arguments to :meth:`Process.__init__` are picklable. This
2338 means, in particular, that bound or unbound methods cannot be used directly
2339 as the ``target`` argument on Windows --- just define a function and use
2340 that instead.
2341
2342 Also, if you subclass :class:`Process` then make sure that instances will be
2343 picklable when the :meth:`Process.start` method is called.
2344
2345Global variables
2346
2347 Bear in mind that if code run in a child process tries to access a global
2348 variable, then the value it sees (if any) may not be the same as the value
2349 in the parent process at the time that :meth:`Process.start` was called.
2350
2351 However, global variables which are just module level constants cause no
2352 problems.
2353
2354Safe importing of main module
2355
2356 Make sure that the main module can be safely imported by a new Python
2357 interpreter without causing unintended side effects (such a starting a new
2358 process).
2359
2360 For example, under Windows running the following module would fail with a
2361 :exc:`RuntimeError`::
2362
2363 from multiprocessing import Process
2364
2365 def foo():
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +00002366 print('hello')
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002367
2368 p = Process(target=foo)
2369 p.start()
2370
2371 Instead one should protect the "entry point" of the program by using ``if
2372 __name__ == '__main__':`` as follows::
2373
2374 from multiprocessing import Process, freeze_support
2375
2376 def foo():
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +00002377 print('hello')
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002378
2379 if __name__ == '__main__':
2380 freeze_support()
2381 p = Process(target=foo)
2382 p.start()
2383
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00002384 (The ``freeze_support()`` line can be omitted if the program will be run
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002385 normally instead of frozen.)
2386
2387 This allows the newly spawned Python interpreter to safely import the module
2388 and then run the module's ``foo()`` function.
2389
2390 Similar restrictions apply if a pool or manager is created in the main
2391 module.
2392
2393
2394.. _multiprocessing-examples:
2395
2396Examples
2397--------
2398
2399Demonstration of how to create and use customized managers and proxies:
2400
2401.. literalinclude:: ../includes/mp_newtype.py
Ezio Melottif86b28e2012-04-13 20:50:48 -06002402 :language: python3
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002403
2404
2405Using :class:`Pool`:
2406
2407.. literalinclude:: ../includes/mp_pool.py
Ezio Melottif86b28e2012-04-13 20:50:48 -06002408 :language: python3
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002409
2410
2411Synchronization types like locks, conditions and queues:
2412
2413.. literalinclude:: ../includes/mp_synchronize.py
Ezio Melottif86b28e2012-04-13 20:50:48 -06002414 :language: python3
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002415
2416
Georg Brandl0b37b332010-09-03 22:49:27 +00002417An example showing how to use queues to feed tasks to a collection of worker
Eli Benderskyd08effe2011-12-31 07:20:26 +02002418processes and collect the results:
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002419
2420.. literalinclude:: ../includes/mp_workers.py
2421
2422
2423An example of how a pool of worker processes can each run a
Georg Brandl47d48bb2010-07-10 11:51:06 +00002424:class:`~http.server.SimpleHTTPRequestHandler` instance while sharing a single
2425listening socket.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002426
2427.. literalinclude:: ../includes/mp_webserver.py
2428
2429
2430Some simple benchmarks comparing :mod:`multiprocessing` with :mod:`threading`:
2431
2432.. literalinclude:: ../includes/mp_benchmarks.py
2433