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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
Antoine Pitrou73dd0302015-01-11 15:05:29 +010019The :mod:`multiprocessing` module also introduces APIs which do not have
20analogs in the :mod:`threading` module. A prime example of this is the
21:class:`~multiprocessing.pool.Pool` object which offers a convenient means of
22parallelizing the execution of a function across multiple input values,
23distributing the input data across processes (data parallelism). The following
24example demonstrates the common practice of defining such functions in a module
25so that child processes can successfully import that module. This basic example
26of data parallelism using :class:`~multiprocessing.pool.Pool`, ::
Benjamin Petersone5384b02008-10-04 22:00:42 +000027
Antoine Pitrou73dd0302015-01-11 15:05:29 +010028 from multiprocessing import Pool
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +000029
Antoine Pitrou73dd0302015-01-11 15:05:29 +010030 def f(x):
31 return x*x
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +000032
Antoine Pitrou73dd0302015-01-11 15:05:29 +010033 if __name__ == '__main__':
34 with Pool(5) as p:
35 print(p.map(f, [1, 2, 3]))
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +000036
Antoine Pitrou73dd0302015-01-11 15:05:29 +010037will print to standard output ::
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +000038
Antoine Pitrou73dd0302015-01-11 15:05:29 +010039 [1, 4, 9]
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +000040
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +000041
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +000042The :class:`Process` class
43~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
44
45In :mod:`multiprocessing`, processes are spawned by creating a :class:`Process`
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +000046object and then calling its :meth:`~Process.start` method. :class:`Process`
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +000047follows the API of :class:`threading.Thread`. A trivial example of a
48multiprocess program is ::
49
Georg Brandlb3959bd2010-04-08 06:33:16 +000050 from multiprocessing import Process
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +000051
52 def f(name):
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +000053 print('hello', name)
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +000054
Georg Brandlb3959bd2010-04-08 06:33:16 +000055 if __name__ == '__main__':
56 p = Process(target=f, args=('bob',))
57 p.start()
58 p.join()
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +000059
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +000060To show the individual process IDs involved, here is an expanded example::
61
62 from multiprocessing import Process
63 import os
64
65 def info(title):
Ezio Melotti985e24d2009-09-13 07:54:02 +000066 print(title)
67 print('module name:', __name__)
Berker Peksag44e4b112015-09-21 06:12:50 +030068 print('parent process:', os.getppid())
Ezio Melotti985e24d2009-09-13 07:54:02 +000069 print('process id:', os.getpid())
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +000070
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +000071 def f(name):
72 info('function f')
Ezio Melotti985e24d2009-09-13 07:54:02 +000073 print('hello', name)
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +000074
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +000075 if __name__ == '__main__':
76 info('main line')
77 p = Process(target=f, args=('bob',))
78 p.start()
79 p.join()
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +000080
Richard Oudkerk84ed9a62013-08-14 15:35:41 +010081For an explanation of why the ``if __name__ == '__main__'`` part is
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +000082necessary, see :ref:`multiprocessing-programming`.
83
84
85
Richard Oudkerkb1694cf2013-10-16 16:41:56 +010086Contexts and start methods
87~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Richard Oudkerk84ed9a62013-08-14 15:35:41 +010088
R David Murrayac186222013-12-20 17:23:57 -050089.. _multiprocessing-start-methods:
90
Richard Oudkerk84ed9a62013-08-14 15:35:41 +010091Depending on the platform, :mod:`multiprocessing` supports three ways
92to start a process. These *start methods* are
93
94 *spawn*
95 The parent process starts a fresh python interpreter process. The
96 child process will only inherit those resources necessary to run
97 the process objects :meth:`~Process.run` method. In particular,
98 unnecessary file descriptors and handles from the parent process
99 will not be inherited. Starting a process using this method is
100 rather slow compared to using *fork* or *forkserver*.
101
102 Available on Unix and Windows. The default on Windows.
103
104 *fork*
105 The parent process uses :func:`os.fork` to fork the Python
106 interpreter. The child process, when it begins, is effectively
107 identical to the parent process. All resources of the parent are
108 inherited by the child process. Note that safely forking a
109 multithreaded process is problematic.
110
111 Available on Unix only. The default on Unix.
112
113 *forkserver*
114 When the program starts and selects the *forkserver* start method,
115 a server process is started. From then on, whenever a new process
Georg Brandl213ef6e2013-10-09 15:51:57 +0200116 is needed, the parent process connects to the server and requests
Richard Oudkerk84ed9a62013-08-14 15:35:41 +0100117 that it fork a new process. The fork server process is single
118 threaded so it is safe for it to use :func:`os.fork`. No
119 unnecessary resources are inherited.
120
121 Available on Unix platforms which support passing file descriptors
Richard Oudkerkb1694cf2013-10-16 16:41:56 +0100122 over Unix pipes.
Richard Oudkerk84ed9a62013-08-14 15:35:41 +0100123
Larry Hastings3732ed22014-03-15 21:13:56 -0700124.. versionchanged:: 3.4
125 *spawn* added on all unix platforms, and *forkserver* added for
Georg Brandldf48b972014-03-24 09:06:18 +0100126 some unix platforms.
Larry Hastings3732ed22014-03-15 21:13:56 -0700127 Child processes no longer inherit all of the parents inheritable
Georg Brandldf48b972014-03-24 09:06:18 +0100128 handles on Windows.
Richard Oudkerk84ed9a62013-08-14 15:35:41 +0100129
130On Unix using the *spawn* or *forkserver* start methods will also
131start a *semaphore tracker* process which tracks the unlinked named
132semaphores created by processes of the program. When all processes
133have exited the semaphore tracker unlinks any remaining semaphores.
134Usually there should be none, but if a process was killed by a signal
135there may some "leaked" semaphores. (Unlinking the named semaphores
136is a serious matter since the system allows only a limited number, and
137they will not be automatically unlinked until the next reboot.)
138
R David Murrayac186222013-12-20 17:23:57 -0500139To select a start method you use the :func:`set_start_method` in
Richard Oudkerk84ed9a62013-08-14 15:35:41 +0100140the ``if __name__ == '__main__'`` clause of the main module. For
141example::
142
143 import multiprocessing as mp
144
Richard Oudkerkb1694cf2013-10-16 16:41:56 +0100145 def foo(q):
146 q.put('hello')
Richard Oudkerk84ed9a62013-08-14 15:35:41 +0100147
148 if __name__ == '__main__':
149 mp.set_start_method('spawn')
Richard Oudkerkb1694cf2013-10-16 16:41:56 +0100150 q = mp.Queue()
151 p = mp.Process(target=foo, args=(q,))
Richard Oudkerk84ed9a62013-08-14 15:35:41 +0100152 p.start()
Richard Oudkerkb1694cf2013-10-16 16:41:56 +0100153 print(q.get())
Richard Oudkerk84ed9a62013-08-14 15:35:41 +0100154 p.join()
155
156:func:`set_start_method` should not be used more than once in the
157program.
158
Richard Oudkerkb1694cf2013-10-16 16:41:56 +0100159Alternatively, you can use :func:`get_context` to obtain a context
160object. Context objects have the same API as the multiprocessing
161module, and allow one to use multiple start methods in the same
162program. ::
163
164 import multiprocessing as mp
165
166 def foo(q):
167 q.put('hello')
168
169 if __name__ == '__main__':
170 ctx = mp.get_context('spawn')
171 q = ctx.Queue()
172 p = ctx.Process(target=foo, args=(q,))
173 p.start()
174 print(q.get())
175 p.join()
176
177Note that objects related to one context may not be compatible with
178processes for a different context. In particular, locks created using
179the *fork* context cannot be passed to a processes started using the
180*spawn* or *forkserver* start methods.
181
182A library which wants to use a particular start method should probably
183use :func:`get_context` to avoid interfering with the choice of the
184library user.
Richard Oudkerk84ed9a62013-08-14 15:35:41 +0100185
186
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000187Exchanging objects between processes
188~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
189
190:mod:`multiprocessing` supports two types of communication channel between
191processes:
192
193**Queues**
194
Benjamin Peterson257060a2008-06-28 01:42:41 +0000195 The :class:`Queue` class is a near clone of :class:`queue.Queue`. For
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000196 example::
197
198 from multiprocessing import Process, Queue
199
200 def f(q):
201 q.put([42, None, 'hello'])
202
Georg Brandl1f01deb2009-01-03 22:47:39 +0000203 if __name__ == '__main__':
204 q = Queue()
205 p = Process(target=f, args=(q,))
206 p.start()
207 print(q.get()) # prints "[42, None, 'hello']"
208 p.join()
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000209
Antoine Pitroufc6accc2012-05-18 13:57:04 +0200210 Queues are thread and process safe.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000211
212**Pipes**
213
214 The :func:`Pipe` function returns a pair of connection objects connected by a
215 pipe which by default is duplex (two-way). For example::
216
217 from multiprocessing import Process, Pipe
218
219 def f(conn):
220 conn.send([42, None, 'hello'])
221 conn.close()
222
223 if __name__ == '__main__':
224 parent_conn, child_conn = Pipe()
225 p = Process(target=f, args=(child_conn,))
226 p.start()
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +0000227 print(parent_conn.recv()) # prints "[42, None, 'hello']"
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000228 p.join()
229
230 The two connection objects returned by :func:`Pipe` represent the two ends of
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +0000231 the pipe. Each connection object has :meth:`~Connection.send` and
232 :meth:`~Connection.recv` methods (among others). Note that data in a pipe
233 may become corrupted if two processes (or threads) try to read from or write
234 to the *same* end of the pipe at the same time. Of course there is no risk
235 of corruption from processes using different ends of the pipe at the same
236 time.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000237
238
239Synchronization between processes
240~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
241
242:mod:`multiprocessing` contains equivalents of all the synchronization
243primitives from :mod:`threading`. For instance one can use a lock to ensure
244that only one process prints to standard output at a time::
245
246 from multiprocessing import Process, Lock
247
248 def f(l, i):
249 l.acquire()
Andrew Svetlovee750d82014-07-02 07:21:03 +0300250 try:
251 print('hello world', i)
252 finally:
253 l.release()
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000254
255 if __name__ == '__main__':
256 lock = Lock()
257
258 for num in range(10):
259 Process(target=f, args=(lock, num)).start()
260
261Without using the lock output from the different processes is liable to get all
262mixed up.
263
264
265Sharing state between processes
266~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
267
268As mentioned above, when doing concurrent programming it is usually best to
269avoid using shared state as far as possible. This is particularly true when
270using multiple processes.
271
272However, if you really do need to use some shared data then
273:mod:`multiprocessing` provides a couple of ways of doing so.
274
275**Shared memory**
276
277 Data can be stored in a shared memory map using :class:`Value` or
278 :class:`Array`. For example, the following code ::
279
280 from multiprocessing import Process, Value, Array
281
282 def f(n, a):
283 n.value = 3.1415927
284 for i in range(len(a)):
285 a[i] = -a[i]
286
287 if __name__ == '__main__':
288 num = Value('d', 0.0)
289 arr = Array('i', range(10))
290
291 p = Process(target=f, args=(num, arr))
292 p.start()
293 p.join()
294
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +0000295 print(num.value)
296 print(arr[:])
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000297
298 will print ::
299
300 3.1415927
301 [0, -1, -2, -3, -4, -5, -6, -7, -8, -9]
302
303 The ``'d'`` and ``'i'`` arguments used when creating ``num`` and ``arr`` are
304 typecodes of the kind used by the :mod:`array` module: ``'d'`` indicates a
Georg Brandl2ee470f2008-07-16 12:55:28 +0000305 double precision float and ``'i'`` indicates a signed integer. These shared
Georg Brandlf285bcc2010-10-19 21:07:16 +0000306 objects will be process and thread-safe.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000307
308 For more flexibility in using shared memory one can use the
309 :mod:`multiprocessing.sharedctypes` module which supports the creation of
310 arbitrary ctypes objects allocated from shared memory.
311
312**Server process**
313
314 A manager object returned by :func:`Manager` controls a server process which
Georg Brandl2ee470f2008-07-16 12:55:28 +0000315 holds Python objects and allows other processes to manipulate them using
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000316 proxies.
317
Richard Oudkerk3730a172012-06-15 18:26:07 +0100318 A manager returned by :func:`Manager` will support types
Senthil Kumaran6a0514e2016-01-20 03:10:13 -0800319 :class:`list`, :class:`dict`, :class:`~managers.Namespace`, :class:`Lock`,
Richard Oudkerk3730a172012-06-15 18:26:07 +0100320 :class:`RLock`, :class:`Semaphore`, :class:`BoundedSemaphore`,
321 :class:`Condition`, :class:`Event`, :class:`Barrier`,
322 :class:`Queue`, :class:`Value` and :class:`Array`. For example, ::
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000323
324 from multiprocessing import Process, Manager
325
326 def f(d, l):
327 d[1] = '1'
328 d['2'] = 2
329 d[0.25] = None
330 l.reverse()
331
332 if __name__ == '__main__':
Richard Oudkerk633c4d92012-06-18 21:29:36 +0100333 with Manager() as manager:
334 d = manager.dict()
335 l = manager.list(range(10))
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000336
Richard Oudkerk633c4d92012-06-18 21:29:36 +0100337 p = Process(target=f, args=(d, l))
338 p.start()
339 p.join()
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000340
Richard Oudkerk633c4d92012-06-18 21:29:36 +0100341 print(d)
342 print(l)
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000343
344 will print ::
345
346 {0.25: None, 1: '1', '2': 2}
347 [9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, 0]
348
349 Server process managers are more flexible than using shared memory objects
350 because they can be made to support arbitrary object types. Also, a single
351 manager can be shared by processes on different computers over a network.
352 They are, however, slower than using shared memory.
353
354
355Using a pool of workers
356~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
357
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +0000358The :class:`~multiprocessing.pool.Pool` class represents a pool of worker
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000359processes. It has methods which allows tasks to be offloaded to the worker
360processes in a few different ways.
361
362For example::
363
Berker Peksag7405c162016-01-21 23:59:49 +0200364 from multiprocessing import Pool, TimeoutError
365 import time
366 import os
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000367
368 def f(x):
369 return x*x
370
371 if __name__ == '__main__':
Richard Oudkerk84ed9a62013-08-14 15:35:41 +0100372 # start 4 worker processes
373 with Pool(processes=4) as pool:
374
375 # print "[0, 1, 4,..., 81]"
376 print(pool.map(f, range(10)))
377
378 # print same numbers in arbitrary order
379 for i in pool.imap_unordered(f, range(10)):
380 print(i)
381
Berker Peksag7405c162016-01-21 23:59:49 +0200382 # evaluate "f(20)" asynchronously
383 res = pool.apply_async(f, (20,)) # runs in *only* one process
384 print(res.get(timeout=1)) # prints "400"
Richard Oudkerk84ed9a62013-08-14 15:35:41 +0100385
Berker Peksag7405c162016-01-21 23:59:49 +0200386 # evaluate "os.getpid()" asynchronously
387 res = pool.apply_async(os.getpid, ()) # runs in *only* one process
388 print(res.get(timeout=1)) # prints the PID of that process
389
390 # launching multiple evaluations asynchronously *may* use more processes
391 multiple_results = [pool.apply_async(os.getpid, ()) for i in range(4)]
392 print([res.get(timeout=1) for res in multiple_results])
393
394 # make a single worker sleep for 10 secs
395 res = pool.apply_async(time.sleep, (10,))
396 try:
397 print(res.get(timeout=1))
398 except TimeoutError:
399 print("We lacked patience and got a multiprocessing.TimeoutError")
400
401 print("For the moment, the pool remains available for more work")
Richard Oudkerk84ed9a62013-08-14 15:35:41 +0100402
403 # exiting the 'with'-block has stopped the pool
Berker Peksag7405c162016-01-21 23:59:49 +0200404 print("Now the pool is closed and no longer available")
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000405
Richard Oudkerkb3c4b982013-07-02 12:32:00 +0100406Note that the methods of a pool should only ever be used by the
407process which created it.
408
Antoine Pitrou73dd0302015-01-11 15:05:29 +0100409.. note::
410
411 Functionality within this package requires that the ``__main__`` module be
412 importable by the children. This is covered in :ref:`multiprocessing-programming`
413 however it is worth pointing out here. This means that some examples, such
414 as the :class:`multiprocessing.pool.Pool` examples will not work in the
415 interactive interpreter. For example::
416
417 >>> from multiprocessing import Pool
418 >>> p = Pool(5)
419 >>> def f(x):
420 ... return x*x
421 ...
422 >>> p.map(f, [1,2,3])
423 Process PoolWorker-1:
424 Process PoolWorker-2:
425 Process PoolWorker-3:
426 Traceback (most recent call last):
427 Traceback (most recent call last):
428 Traceback (most recent call last):
429 AttributeError: 'module' object has no attribute 'f'
430 AttributeError: 'module' object has no attribute 'f'
431 AttributeError: 'module' object has no attribute 'f'
432
433 (If you try this it will actually output three full tracebacks
434 interleaved in a semi-random fashion, and then you may have to
435 stop the master process somehow.)
436
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000437
438Reference
439---------
440
441The :mod:`multiprocessing` package mostly replicates the API of the
442:mod:`threading` module.
443
444
445:class:`Process` and exceptions
446~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
447
Ezio Melotti8429b672012-09-14 06:35:09 +0300448.. class:: Process(group=None, target=None, name=None, args=(), kwargs={}, \
449 *, daemon=None)
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000450
451 Process objects represent activity that is run in a separate process. The
452 :class:`Process` class has equivalents of all the methods of
453 :class:`threading.Thread`.
454
455 The constructor should always be called with keyword arguments. *group*
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +0000456 should always be ``None``; it exists solely for compatibility with
Benjamin Petersona786b022008-08-25 21:05:21 +0000457 :class:`threading.Thread`. *target* is the callable object to be invoked by
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +0000458 the :meth:`run()` method. It defaults to ``None``, meaning nothing is
Eli Benderskyb674dcf2012-07-13 09:45:31 +0300459 called. *name* is the process name (see :attr:`name` for more details).
460 *args* is the argument tuple for the target invocation. *kwargs* is a
461 dictionary of keyword arguments for the target invocation. If provided,
462 the keyword-only *daemon* argument sets the process :attr:`daemon` flag
463 to ``True`` or ``False``. If ``None`` (the default), this flag will be
464 inherited from the creating process.
Antoine Pitrou0bd4deb2011-02-25 22:07:43 +0000465
466 By default, no arguments are passed to *target*.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000467
468 If a subclass overrides the constructor, it must make sure it invokes the
469 base class constructor (:meth:`Process.__init__`) before doing anything else
470 to the process.
471
Antoine Pitrou0bd4deb2011-02-25 22:07:43 +0000472 .. versionchanged:: 3.3
473 Added the *daemon* argument.
474
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000475 .. method:: run()
476
477 Method representing the process's activity.
478
479 You may override this method in a subclass. The standard :meth:`run`
480 method invokes the callable object passed to the object's constructor as
481 the target argument, if any, with sequential and keyword arguments taken
482 from the *args* and *kwargs* arguments, respectively.
483
484 .. method:: start()
485
486 Start the process's activity.
487
488 This must be called at most once per process object. It arranges for the
489 object's :meth:`run` method to be invoked in a separate process.
490
491 .. method:: join([timeout])
492
Charles-François Nataliacd9f7c2011-07-25 18:35:49 +0200493 If the optional argument *timeout* is ``None`` (the default), the method
494 blocks until the process whose :meth:`join` method is called terminates.
495 If *timeout* is a positive number, it blocks at most *timeout* seconds.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000496
497 A process can be joined many times.
498
499 A process cannot join itself because this would cause a deadlock. It is
500 an error to attempt to join a process before it has been started.
501
Benjamin Petersona786b022008-08-25 21:05:21 +0000502 .. attribute:: name
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000503
Eli Benderskyb674dcf2012-07-13 09:45:31 +0300504 The process's name. The name is a string used for identification purposes
505 only. It has no semantics. Multiple processes may be given the same
506 name.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000507
Eli Benderskyb674dcf2012-07-13 09:45:31 +0300508 The initial name is set by the constructor. If no explicit name is
509 provided to the constructor, a name of the form
510 'Process-N\ :sub:`1`:N\ :sub:`2`:...:N\ :sub:`k`' is constructed, where
511 each N\ :sub:`k` is the N-th child of its parent.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000512
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +0000513 .. method:: is_alive
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000514
515 Return whether the process is alive.
516
517 Roughly, a process object is alive from the moment the :meth:`start`
518 method returns until the child process terminates.
519
Benjamin Petersona786b022008-08-25 21:05:21 +0000520 .. attribute:: daemon
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000521
Benjamin Petersonda10d3b2009-01-01 00:23:30 +0000522 The process's daemon flag, a Boolean value. This must be set before
Benjamin Petersona786b022008-08-25 21:05:21 +0000523 :meth:`start` is called.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000524
525 The initial value is inherited from the creating process.
526
527 When a process exits, it attempts to terminate all of its daemonic child
528 processes.
529
530 Note that a daemonic process is not allowed to create child processes.
531 Otherwise a daemonic process would leave its children orphaned if it gets
Alexandre Vassalotti260484d2009-07-17 11:43:26 +0000532 terminated when its parent process exits. Additionally, these are **not**
533 Unix daemons or services, they are normal processes that will be
Georg Brandl6faee4e2010-09-21 14:48:28 +0000534 terminated (and not joined) if non-daemonic processes have exited.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000535
Serhiy Storchaka9e0ae532013-08-24 00:23:38 +0300536 In addition to the :class:`threading.Thread` API, :class:`Process` objects
Benjamin Petersona786b022008-08-25 21:05:21 +0000537 also support the following attributes and methods:
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000538
Benjamin Petersona786b022008-08-25 21:05:21 +0000539 .. attribute:: pid
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000540
541 Return the process ID. Before the process is spawned, this will be
542 ``None``.
543
Benjamin Petersona786b022008-08-25 21:05:21 +0000544 .. attribute:: exitcode
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000545
Benjamin Petersona786b022008-08-25 21:05:21 +0000546 The child's exit code. This will be ``None`` if the process has not yet
547 terminated. A negative value *-N* indicates that the child was terminated
548 by signal *N*.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000549
Benjamin Petersona786b022008-08-25 21:05:21 +0000550 .. attribute:: authkey
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000551
Benjamin Petersona786b022008-08-25 21:05:21 +0000552 The process's authentication key (a byte string).
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000553
554 When :mod:`multiprocessing` is initialized the main process is assigned a
Serhiy Storchaka9e0ae532013-08-24 00:23:38 +0300555 random string using :func:`os.urandom`.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000556
557 When a :class:`Process` object is created, it will inherit the
Benjamin Petersona786b022008-08-25 21:05:21 +0000558 authentication key of its parent process, although this may be changed by
559 setting :attr:`authkey` to another byte string.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000560
561 See :ref:`multiprocessing-auth-keys`.
562
Antoine Pitrou176f07d2011-06-06 19:35:31 +0200563 .. attribute:: sentinel
564
565 A numeric handle of a system object which will become "ready" when
566 the process ends.
567
Antoine Pitroubdb1cf12012-03-05 19:28:37 +0100568 You can use this value if you want to wait on several events at
569 once using :func:`multiprocessing.connection.wait`. Otherwise
570 calling :meth:`join()` is simpler.
571
Antoine Pitrou176f07d2011-06-06 19:35:31 +0200572 On Windows, this is an OS handle usable with the ``WaitForSingleObject``
573 and ``WaitForMultipleObjects`` family of API calls. On Unix, this is
574 a file descriptor usable with primitives from the :mod:`select` module.
575
Antoine Pitrou176f07d2011-06-06 19:35:31 +0200576 .. versionadded:: 3.3
577
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +0000578 .. method:: terminate()
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000579
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +0000580 Terminate the process. On Unix this is done using the ``SIGTERM`` signal;
Georg Brandl60203b42010-10-06 10:11:56 +0000581 on Windows :c:func:`TerminateProcess` is used. Note that exit handlers and
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +0000582 finally clauses, etc., will not be executed.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000583
584 Note that descendant processes of the process will *not* be terminated --
585 they will simply become orphaned.
586
587 .. warning::
588
589 If this method is used when the associated process is using a pipe or
590 queue then the pipe or queue is liable to become corrupted and may
591 become unusable by other process. Similarly, if the process has
592 acquired a lock or semaphore etc. then terminating it is liable to
593 cause other processes to deadlock.
594
Ask Solemff7ffdd2010-11-09 21:52:33 +0000595 Note that the :meth:`start`, :meth:`join`, :meth:`is_alive`,
Richard Oudkerk64c25b42013-06-24 15:42:00 +0100596 :meth:`terminate` and :attr:`exitcode` methods should only be called by
Ask Solemff7ffdd2010-11-09 21:52:33 +0000597 the process that created the process object.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000598
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +0000599 Example usage of some of the methods of :class:`Process`:
600
601 .. doctest::
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000602
Benjamin Peterson206e3072008-10-19 14:07:49 +0000603 >>> import multiprocessing, time, signal
604 >>> p = multiprocessing.Process(target=time.sleep, args=(1000,))
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +0000605 >>> print(p, p.is_alive())
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000606 <Process(Process-1, initial)> False
607 >>> p.start()
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +0000608 >>> print(p, p.is_alive())
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000609 <Process(Process-1, started)> True
610 >>> p.terminate()
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +0000611 >>> time.sleep(0.1)
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +0000612 >>> print(p, p.is_alive())
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000613 <Process(Process-1, stopped[SIGTERM])> False
Benjamin Petersona786b022008-08-25 21:05:21 +0000614 >>> p.exitcode == -signal.SIGTERM
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000615 True
616
Eli Benderskyb674dcf2012-07-13 09:45:31 +0300617.. exception:: ProcessError
618
619 The base class of all :mod:`multiprocessing` exceptions.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000620
621.. exception:: BufferTooShort
622
623 Exception raised by :meth:`Connection.recv_bytes_into()` when the supplied
624 buffer object is too small for the message read.
625
626 If ``e`` is an instance of :exc:`BufferTooShort` then ``e.args[0]`` will give
627 the message as a byte string.
628
Eli Benderskyb674dcf2012-07-13 09:45:31 +0300629.. exception:: AuthenticationError
630
631 Raised when there is an authentication error.
632
633.. exception:: TimeoutError
634
635 Raised by methods with a timeout when the timeout expires.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000636
637Pipes and Queues
638~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
639
640When using multiple processes, one generally uses message passing for
641communication between processes and avoids having to use any synchronization
642primitives like locks.
643
644For passing messages one can use :func:`Pipe` (for a connection between two
645processes) or a queue (which allows multiple producers and consumers).
646
Serhiy Storchaka4ecfa452016-05-16 09:31:54 +0300647The :class:`Queue`, :class:`SimpleQueue` and :class:`JoinableQueue` types
648are multi-producer, multi-consumer :abbr:`FIFO (first-in, first-out)`
649queues modelled on the :class:`queue.Queue` class in the
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000650standard library. They differ in that :class:`Queue` lacks the
Benjamin Peterson257060a2008-06-28 01:42:41 +0000651:meth:`~queue.Queue.task_done` and :meth:`~queue.Queue.join` methods introduced
652into Python 2.5's :class:`queue.Queue` class.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000653
654If you use :class:`JoinableQueue` then you **must** call
655:meth:`JoinableQueue.task_done` for each task removed from the queue or else the
Eli Benderskyd08effe2011-12-31 07:20:26 +0200656semaphore used to count the number of unfinished tasks may eventually overflow,
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000657raising an exception.
658
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +0000659Note that one can also create a shared queue by using a manager object -- see
660:ref:`multiprocessing-managers`.
661
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000662.. note::
663
Benjamin Peterson257060a2008-06-28 01:42:41 +0000664 :mod:`multiprocessing` uses the usual :exc:`queue.Empty` and
665 :exc:`queue.Full` exceptions to signal a timeout. They are not available in
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000666 the :mod:`multiprocessing` namespace so you need to import them from
Benjamin Peterson257060a2008-06-28 01:42:41 +0000667 :mod:`queue`.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000668
Richard Oudkerk95fe1a72013-06-24 14:48:07 +0100669.. note::
670
671 When an object is put on a queue, the object is pickled and a
672 background thread later flushes the pickled data to an underlying
673 pipe. This has some consequences which are a little surprising,
Richard Oudkerk7b69da72013-06-24 18:12:57 +0100674 but should not cause any practical difficulties -- if they really
675 bother you then you can instead use a queue created with a
676 :ref:`manager <multiprocessing-managers>`.
Richard Oudkerk95fe1a72013-06-24 14:48:07 +0100677
678 (1) After putting an object on an empty queue there may be an
Richard Oudkerk2b310dd2013-06-24 20:38:46 +0100679 infinitesimal delay before the queue's :meth:`~Queue.empty`
Richard Oudkerk95fe1a72013-06-24 14:48:07 +0100680 method returns :const:`False` and :meth:`~Queue.get_nowait` can
Serhiy Storchaka9e0ae532013-08-24 00:23:38 +0300681 return without raising :exc:`queue.Empty`.
Richard Oudkerk95fe1a72013-06-24 14:48:07 +0100682
683 (2) If multiple processes are enqueuing objects, it is possible for
684 the objects to be received at the other end out-of-order.
685 However, objects enqueued by the same process will always be in
686 the expected order with respect to each other.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000687
688.. warning::
689
690 If a process is killed using :meth:`Process.terminate` or :func:`os.kill`
691 while it is trying to use a :class:`Queue`, then the data in the queue is
Eli Benderskyd08effe2011-12-31 07:20:26 +0200692 likely to become corrupted. This may cause any other process to get an
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000693 exception when it tries to use the queue later on.
694
695.. warning::
696
697 As mentioned above, if a child process has put items on a queue (and it has
Serhiy Storchaka9e0ae532013-08-24 00:23:38 +0300698 not used :meth:`JoinableQueue.cancel_join_thread
699 <multiprocessing.Queue.cancel_join_thread>`), then that process will
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000700 not terminate until all buffered items have been flushed to the pipe.
701
702 This means that if you try joining that process you may get a deadlock unless
703 you are sure that all items which have been put on the queue have been
704 consumed. Similarly, if the child process is non-daemonic then the parent
Georg Brandl2ee470f2008-07-16 12:55:28 +0000705 process may hang on exit when it tries to join all its non-daemonic children.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000706
707 Note that a queue created using a manager does not have this issue. See
708 :ref:`multiprocessing-programming`.
709
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000710For an example of the usage of queues for interprocess communication see
711:ref:`multiprocessing-examples`.
712
713
714.. function:: Pipe([duplex])
715
716 Returns a pair ``(conn1, conn2)`` of :class:`Connection` objects representing
717 the ends of a pipe.
718
719 If *duplex* is ``True`` (the default) then the pipe is bidirectional. If
720 *duplex* is ``False`` then the pipe is unidirectional: ``conn1`` can only be
721 used for receiving messages and ``conn2`` can only be used for sending
722 messages.
723
724
725.. class:: Queue([maxsize])
726
727 Returns a process shared queue implemented using a pipe and a few
728 locks/semaphores. When a process first puts an item on the queue a feeder
729 thread is started which transfers objects from a buffer into the pipe.
730
Benjamin Peterson257060a2008-06-28 01:42:41 +0000731 The usual :exc:`queue.Empty` and :exc:`queue.Full` exceptions from the
Serhiy Storchaka9e0ae532013-08-24 00:23:38 +0300732 standard library's :mod:`queue` module are raised to signal timeouts.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000733
Benjamin Peterson257060a2008-06-28 01:42:41 +0000734 :class:`Queue` implements all the methods of :class:`queue.Queue` except for
735 :meth:`~queue.Queue.task_done` and :meth:`~queue.Queue.join`.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000736
737 .. method:: qsize()
738
739 Return the approximate size of the queue. Because of
740 multithreading/multiprocessing semantics, this number is not reliable.
741
742 Note that this may raise :exc:`NotImplementedError` on Unix platforms like
Georg Brandlc575c902008-09-13 17:46:05 +0000743 Mac OS X where ``sem_getvalue()`` is not implemented.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000744
745 .. method:: empty()
746
747 Return ``True`` if the queue is empty, ``False`` otherwise. Because of
748 multithreading/multiprocessing semantics, this is not reliable.
749
750 .. method:: full()
751
752 Return ``True`` if the queue is full, ``False`` otherwise. Because of
753 multithreading/multiprocessing semantics, this is not reliable.
754
Senthil Kumarane969a212011-09-06 00:21:30 +0800755 .. method:: put(obj[, block[, timeout]])
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000756
Senthil Kumarane969a212011-09-06 00:21:30 +0800757 Put obj into the queue. If the optional argument *block* is ``True``
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +0000758 (the default) and *timeout* is ``None`` (the default), block if necessary until
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000759 a free slot is available. If *timeout* is a positive number, it blocks at
Benjamin Peterson257060a2008-06-28 01:42:41 +0000760 most *timeout* seconds and raises the :exc:`queue.Full` exception if no
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000761 free slot was available within that time. Otherwise (*block* is
762 ``False``), put an item on the queue if a free slot is immediately
Benjamin Peterson257060a2008-06-28 01:42:41 +0000763 available, else raise the :exc:`queue.Full` exception (*timeout* is
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000764 ignored in that case).
765
Senthil Kumarane969a212011-09-06 00:21:30 +0800766 .. method:: put_nowait(obj)
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000767
Senthil Kumarane969a212011-09-06 00:21:30 +0800768 Equivalent to ``put(obj, False)``.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000769
770 .. method:: get([block[, timeout]])
771
772 Remove and return an item from the queue. If optional args *block* is
773 ``True`` (the default) and *timeout* is ``None`` (the default), block if
774 necessary until an item is available. If *timeout* is a positive number,
Benjamin Peterson257060a2008-06-28 01:42:41 +0000775 it blocks at most *timeout* seconds and raises the :exc:`queue.Empty`
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000776 exception if no item was available within that time. Otherwise (block is
777 ``False``), return an item if one is immediately available, else raise the
Benjamin Peterson257060a2008-06-28 01:42:41 +0000778 :exc:`queue.Empty` exception (*timeout* is ignored in that case).
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000779
780 .. method:: get_nowait()
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000781
782 Equivalent to ``get(False)``.
783
784 :class:`multiprocessing.Queue` has a few additional methods not found in
Georg Brandl2ee470f2008-07-16 12:55:28 +0000785 :class:`queue.Queue`. These methods are usually unnecessary for most
786 code:
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000787
788 .. method:: close()
789
790 Indicate that no more data will be put on this queue by the current
791 process. The background thread will quit once it has flushed all buffered
792 data to the pipe. This is called automatically when the queue is garbage
793 collected.
794
795 .. method:: join_thread()
796
797 Join the background thread. This can only be used after :meth:`close` has
798 been called. It blocks until the background thread exits, ensuring that
799 all data in the buffer has been flushed to the pipe.
800
801 By default if a process is not the creator of the queue then on exit it
802 will attempt to join the queue's background thread. The process can call
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +0000803 :meth:`cancel_join_thread` to make :meth:`join_thread` do nothing.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000804
805 .. method:: cancel_join_thread()
806
807 Prevent :meth:`join_thread` from blocking. In particular, this prevents
808 the background thread from being joined automatically when the process
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +0000809 exits -- see :meth:`join_thread`.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000810
Richard Oudkerkd7d3f372013-07-02 12:59:55 +0100811 A better name for this method might be
812 ``allow_exit_without_flush()``. It is likely to cause enqueued
813 data to lost, and you almost certainly will not need to use it.
814 It is really only there if you need the current process to exit
815 immediately without waiting to flush enqueued data to the
816 underlying pipe, and you don't care about lost data.
817
Berker Peksag7ecfc822015-04-08 17:56:30 +0300818 .. note::
819
820 This class's functionality requires a functioning shared semaphore
821 implementation on the host operating system. Without one, the
822 functionality in this class will be disabled, and attempts to
823 instantiate a :class:`Queue` will result in an :exc:`ImportError`. See
824 :issue:`3770` for additional information. The same holds true for any
825 of the specialized queue types listed below.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000826
Sandro Tosicd778152012-02-15 23:27:00 +0100827.. class:: SimpleQueue()
Sandro Tosi5cb522c2012-02-15 23:14:21 +0100828
829 It is a simplified :class:`Queue` type, very close to a locked :class:`Pipe`.
830
831 .. method:: empty()
832
833 Return ``True`` if the queue is empty, ``False`` otherwise.
834
835 .. method:: get()
836
837 Remove and return an item from the queue.
838
839 .. method:: put(item)
840
841 Put *item* into the queue.
842
843
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000844.. class:: JoinableQueue([maxsize])
845
846 :class:`JoinableQueue`, a :class:`Queue` subclass, is a queue which
847 additionally has :meth:`task_done` and :meth:`join` methods.
848
849 .. method:: task_done()
850
Eli Bendersky78da3bc2012-07-13 10:10:05 +0300851 Indicate that a formerly enqueued task is complete. Used by queue
852 consumers. For each :meth:`~Queue.get` used to fetch a task, a subsequent
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +0000853 call to :meth:`task_done` tells the queue that the processing on the task
854 is complete.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000855
Serhiy Storchaka9e0ae532013-08-24 00:23:38 +0300856 If a :meth:`~queue.Queue.join` is currently blocking, it will resume when all
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +0000857 items have been processed (meaning that a :meth:`task_done` call was
858 received for every item that had been :meth:`~Queue.put` into the queue).
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000859
860 Raises a :exc:`ValueError` if called more times than there were items
861 placed in the queue.
862
863
864 .. method:: join()
865
866 Block until all items in the queue have been gotten and processed.
867
868 The count of unfinished tasks goes up whenever an item is added to the
Eli Bendersky78da3bc2012-07-13 10:10:05 +0300869 queue. The count goes down whenever a consumer calls
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000870 :meth:`task_done` to indicate that the item was retrieved and all work on
871 it is complete. When the count of unfinished tasks drops to zero,
Serhiy Storchaka9e0ae532013-08-24 00:23:38 +0300872 :meth:`~queue.Queue.join` unblocks.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000873
874
875Miscellaneous
876~~~~~~~~~~~~~
877
878.. function:: active_children()
879
880 Return list of all live children of the current process.
881
Zachary Ware72805612014-10-03 10:55:12 -0500882 Calling this has the side effect of "joining" any processes which have
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000883 already finished.
884
885.. function:: cpu_count()
886
Charles-François Natalidc87e4b2015-07-13 21:01:39 +0100887 Return the number of CPUs in the system.
888
889 This number is not equivalent to the number of CPUs the current process can
890 use. The number of usable CPUs can be obtained with
891 ``len(os.sched_getaffinity(0))``
892
893 May raise :exc:`NotImplementedError`.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000894
Charles-Francois Natali44feda32013-05-20 14:40:46 +0200895 .. seealso::
896 :func:`os.cpu_count`
897
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000898.. function:: current_process()
899
900 Return the :class:`Process` object corresponding to the current process.
901
902 An analogue of :func:`threading.current_thread`.
903
904.. function:: freeze_support()
905
906 Add support for when a program which uses :mod:`multiprocessing` has been
907 frozen to produce a Windows executable. (Has been tested with **py2exe**,
908 **PyInstaller** and **cx_Freeze**.)
909
910 One needs to call this function straight after the ``if __name__ ==
911 '__main__'`` line of the main module. For example::
912
913 from multiprocessing import Process, freeze_support
914
915 def f():
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +0000916 print('hello world!')
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000917
918 if __name__ == '__main__':
919 freeze_support()
920 Process(target=f).start()
921
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +0000922 If the ``freeze_support()`` line is omitted then trying to run the frozen
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +0000923 executable will raise :exc:`RuntimeError`.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000924
Berker Peksag94541f42016-01-07 18:45:22 +0200925 Calling ``freeze_support()`` has no effect when invoked on any operating
926 system other than Windows. In addition, if the module is being run
927 normally by the Python interpreter on Windows (the program has not been
928 frozen), then ``freeze_support()`` has no effect.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000929
Richard Oudkerk84ed9a62013-08-14 15:35:41 +0100930.. function:: get_all_start_methods()
931
932 Returns a list of the supported start methods, the first of which
933 is the default. The possible start methods are ``'fork'``,
934 ``'spawn'`` and ``'forkserver'``. On Windows only ``'spawn'`` is
935 available. On Unix ``'fork'`` and ``'spawn'`` are always
936 supported, with ``'fork'`` being the default.
937
938 .. versionadded:: 3.4
939
Richard Oudkerkb1694cf2013-10-16 16:41:56 +0100940.. function:: get_context(method=None)
Richard Oudkerk84ed9a62013-08-14 15:35:41 +0100941
Richard Oudkerkb1694cf2013-10-16 16:41:56 +0100942 Return a context object which has the same attributes as the
943 :mod:`multiprocessing` module.
944
945 If *method* is *None* then the default context is returned.
946 Otherwise *method* should be ``'fork'``, ``'spawn'``,
947 ``'forkserver'``. :exc:`ValueError` is raised if the specified
948 start method is not available.
949
950 .. versionadded:: 3.4
951
952.. function:: get_start_method(allow_none=False)
953
954 Return the name of start method used for starting processes.
955
956 If the start method has not been fixed and *allow_none* is false,
957 then the start method is fixed to the default and the name is
958 returned. If the start method has not been fixed and *allow_none*
959 is true then *None* is returned.
960
961 The return value can be ``'fork'``, ``'spawn'``, ``'forkserver'``
962 or *None*. ``'fork'`` is the default on Unix, while ``'spawn'`` is
963 the default on Windows.
Richard Oudkerk84ed9a62013-08-14 15:35:41 +0100964
965 .. versionadded:: 3.4
966
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000967.. function:: set_executable()
968
Ezio Melotti0639d5a2009-12-19 23:26:38 +0000969 Sets the path of the Python interpreter to use when starting a child process.
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +0000970 (By default :data:`sys.executable` is used). Embedders will probably need to
971 do some thing like ::
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000972
Eli Benderskyd08effe2011-12-31 07:20:26 +0200973 set_executable(os.path.join(sys.exec_prefix, 'pythonw.exe'))
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000974
Richard Oudkerk84ed9a62013-08-14 15:35:41 +0100975 before they can create child processes.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000976
Richard Oudkerk84ed9a62013-08-14 15:35:41 +0100977 .. versionchanged:: 3.4
978 Now supported on Unix when the ``'spawn'`` start method is used.
979
980.. function:: set_start_method(method)
981
982 Set the method which should be used to start child processes.
983 *method* can be ``'fork'``, ``'spawn'`` or ``'forkserver'``.
984
985 Note that this should be called at most once, and it should be
986 protected inside the ``if __name__ == '__main__'`` clause of the
987 main module.
988
989 .. versionadded:: 3.4
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +0000990
991.. note::
992
993 :mod:`multiprocessing` contains no analogues of
994 :func:`threading.active_count`, :func:`threading.enumerate`,
995 :func:`threading.settrace`, :func:`threading.setprofile`,
996 :class:`threading.Timer`, or :class:`threading.local`.
997
998
999Connection Objects
1000~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1001
1002Connection objects allow the sending and receiving of picklable objects or
1003strings. They can be thought of as message oriented connected sockets.
1004
Eli Benderskyd08effe2011-12-31 07:20:26 +02001005Connection objects are usually created using :func:`Pipe` -- see also
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001006:ref:`multiprocessing-listeners-clients`.
1007
1008.. class:: Connection
1009
1010 .. method:: send(obj)
1011
1012 Send an object to the other end of the connection which should be read
1013 using :meth:`recv`.
1014
Benjamin Peterson965ce872009-04-05 21:24:58 +00001015 The object must be picklable. Very large pickles (approximately 32 MB+,
1016 though it depends on the OS) may raise a ValueError exception.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001017
1018 .. method:: recv()
1019
1020 Return an object sent from the other end of the connection using
Sandro Tosib52e7a92012-01-07 17:56:58 +01001021 :meth:`send`. Blocks until there its something to receive. Raises
1022 :exc:`EOFError` if there is nothing left to receive
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001023 and the other end was closed.
1024
1025 .. method:: fileno()
1026
Eli Benderskyd08effe2011-12-31 07:20:26 +02001027 Return the file descriptor or handle used by the connection.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001028
1029 .. method:: close()
1030
1031 Close the connection.
1032
1033 This is called automatically when the connection is garbage collected.
1034
1035 .. method:: poll([timeout])
1036
1037 Return whether there is any data available to be read.
1038
1039 If *timeout* is not specified then it will return immediately. If
1040 *timeout* is a number then this specifies the maximum time in seconds to
1041 block. If *timeout* is ``None`` then an infinite timeout is used.
1042
Antoine Pitroubdb1cf12012-03-05 19:28:37 +01001043 Note that multiple connection objects may be polled at once by
1044 using :func:`multiprocessing.connection.wait`.
1045
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001046 .. method:: send_bytes(buffer[, offset[, size]])
1047
Ezio Melottic228e962013-05-04 18:06:34 +03001048 Send byte data from a :term:`bytes-like object` as a complete message.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001049
1050 If *offset* is given then data is read from that position in *buffer*. If
Benjamin Peterson965ce872009-04-05 21:24:58 +00001051 *size* is given then that many bytes will be read from buffer. Very large
1052 buffers (approximately 32 MB+, though it depends on the OS) may raise a
Eli Benderskyd08effe2011-12-31 07:20:26 +02001053 :exc:`ValueError` exception
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001054
1055 .. method:: recv_bytes([maxlength])
1056
1057 Return a complete message of byte data sent from the other end of the
Sandro Tosib52e7a92012-01-07 17:56:58 +01001058 connection as a string. Blocks until there is something to receive.
1059 Raises :exc:`EOFError` if there is nothing left
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001060 to receive and the other end has closed.
1061
1062 If *maxlength* is specified and the message is longer than *maxlength*
Antoine Pitrou62ab10a02011-10-12 20:10:51 +02001063 then :exc:`OSError` is raised and the connection will no longer be
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001064 readable.
1065
Antoine Pitrou62ab10a02011-10-12 20:10:51 +02001066 .. versionchanged:: 3.3
Martin Panter7462b6492015-11-02 03:37:02 +00001067 This function used to raise :exc:`IOError`, which is now an
Antoine Pitrou62ab10a02011-10-12 20:10:51 +02001068 alias of :exc:`OSError`.
1069
1070
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001071 .. method:: recv_bytes_into(buffer[, offset])
1072
1073 Read into *buffer* a complete message of byte data sent from the other end
Sandro Tosib52e7a92012-01-07 17:56:58 +01001074 of the connection and return the number of bytes in the message. Blocks
1075 until there is something to receive. Raises
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001076 :exc:`EOFError` if there is nothing left to receive and the other end was
1077 closed.
1078
Ezio Melottic228e962013-05-04 18:06:34 +03001079 *buffer* must be a writable :term:`bytes-like object`. If
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001080 *offset* is given then the message will be written into the buffer from
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00001081 that position. Offset must be a non-negative integer less than the
1082 length of *buffer* (in bytes).
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001083
1084 If the buffer is too short then a :exc:`BufferTooShort` exception is
1085 raised and the complete message is available as ``e.args[0]`` where ``e``
1086 is the exception instance.
1087
Antoine Pitrou5438ed12012-04-24 22:56:57 +02001088 .. versionchanged:: 3.3
1089 Connection objects themselves can now be transferred between processes
1090 using :meth:`Connection.send` and :meth:`Connection.recv`.
1091
Richard Oudkerkd69cfe82012-06-18 17:47:52 +01001092 .. versionadded:: 3.3
Serhiy Storchaka14867992014-09-10 23:43:41 +03001093 Connection objects now support the context management protocol -- see
Serhiy Storchaka9e0ae532013-08-24 00:23:38 +03001094 :ref:`typecontextmanager`. :meth:`~contextmanager.__enter__` returns the
1095 connection object, and :meth:`~contextmanager.__exit__` calls :meth:`close`.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001096
1097For example:
1098
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00001099.. doctest::
1100
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001101 >>> from multiprocessing import Pipe
1102 >>> a, b = Pipe()
1103 >>> a.send([1, 'hello', None])
1104 >>> b.recv()
1105 [1, 'hello', None]
Georg Brandl30176892010-10-29 05:22:17 +00001106 >>> b.send_bytes(b'thank you')
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001107 >>> a.recv_bytes()
Georg Brandl30176892010-10-29 05:22:17 +00001108 b'thank you'
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001109 >>> import array
1110 >>> arr1 = array.array('i', range(5))
1111 >>> arr2 = array.array('i', [0] * 10)
1112 >>> a.send_bytes(arr1)
1113 >>> count = b.recv_bytes_into(arr2)
1114 >>> assert count == len(arr1) * arr1.itemsize
1115 >>> arr2
1116 array('i', [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0])
1117
1118
1119.. warning::
1120
1121 The :meth:`Connection.recv` method automatically unpickles the data it
1122 receives, which can be a security risk unless you can trust the process
1123 which sent the message.
1124
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00001125 Therefore, unless the connection object was produced using :func:`Pipe` you
1126 should only use the :meth:`~Connection.recv` and :meth:`~Connection.send`
1127 methods after performing some sort of authentication. See
1128 :ref:`multiprocessing-auth-keys`.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001129
1130.. warning::
1131
1132 If a process is killed while it is trying to read or write to a pipe then
1133 the data in the pipe is likely to become corrupted, because it may become
1134 impossible to be sure where the message boundaries lie.
1135
1136
1137Synchronization primitives
1138~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1139
1140Generally synchronization primitives are not as necessary in a multiprocess
Georg Brandl2ee470f2008-07-16 12:55:28 +00001141program as they are in a multithreaded program. See the documentation for
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00001142:mod:`threading` module.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001143
1144Note that one can also create synchronization primitives by using a manager
1145object -- see :ref:`multiprocessing-managers`.
1146
Richard Oudkerk3730a172012-06-15 18:26:07 +01001147.. class:: Barrier(parties[, action[, timeout]])
1148
1149 A barrier object: a clone of :class:`threading.Barrier`.
1150
1151 .. versionadded:: 3.3
1152
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001153.. class:: BoundedSemaphore([value])
1154
Berker Peksag407c4972015-09-21 06:50:55 +03001155 A bounded semaphore object: a close analog of
1156 :class:`threading.BoundedSemaphore`.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001157
Berker Peksag407c4972015-09-21 06:50:55 +03001158 A solitary difference from its close analog exists: its ``acquire`` method's
1159 first argument is named *block*, as is consistent with :meth:`Lock.acquire`.
1160
1161 .. note::
1162 On Mac OS X, this is indistinguishable from :class:`Semaphore` because
1163 ``sem_getvalue()`` is not implemented on that platform.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001164
1165.. class:: Condition([lock])
1166
R David Murrayef4d2862012-10-06 14:35:35 -04001167 A condition variable: an alias for :class:`threading.Condition`.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001168
1169 If *lock* is specified then it should be a :class:`Lock` or :class:`RLock`
1170 object from :mod:`multiprocessing`.
1171
Charles-François Natalic8ce7152012-04-17 18:45:57 +02001172 .. versionchanged:: 3.3
Serhiy Storchaka9e0ae532013-08-24 00:23:38 +03001173 The :meth:`~threading.Condition.wait_for` method was added.
Charles-François Natalic8ce7152012-04-17 18:45:57 +02001174
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001175.. class:: Event()
1176
1177 A clone of :class:`threading.Event`.
1178
Berker Peksag407c4972015-09-21 06:50:55 +03001179
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001180.. class:: Lock()
1181
Berker Peksag407c4972015-09-21 06:50:55 +03001182 A non-recursive lock object: a close analog of :class:`threading.Lock`.
1183 Once a process or thread has acquired a lock, subsequent attempts to
1184 acquire it from any process or thread will block until it is released;
1185 any process or thread may release it. The concepts and behaviors of
1186 :class:`threading.Lock` as it applies to threads are replicated here in
1187 :class:`multiprocessing.Lock` as it applies to either processes or threads,
1188 except as noted.
1189
1190 Note that :class:`Lock` is actually a factory function which returns an
1191 instance of ``multiprocessing.synchronize.Lock`` initialized with a
1192 default context.
1193
1194 :class:`Lock` supports the :term:`context manager` protocol and thus may be
1195 used in :keyword:`with` statements.
1196
1197 .. method:: acquire(block=True, timeout=None)
1198
1199 Acquire a lock, blocking or non-blocking.
1200
1201 With the *block* argument set to ``True`` (the default), the method call
1202 will block until the lock is in an unlocked state, then set it to locked
1203 and return ``True``. Note that the name of this first argument differs
1204 from that in :meth:`threading.Lock.acquire`.
1205
1206 With the *block* argument set to ``False``, the method call does not
1207 block. If the lock is currently in a locked state, return ``False``;
1208 otherwise set the lock to a locked state and return ``True``.
1209
1210 When invoked with a positive, floating-point value for *timeout*, block
1211 for at most the number of seconds specified by *timeout* as long as
1212 the lock can not be acquired. Invocations with a negative value for
1213 *timeout* are equivalent to a *timeout* of zero. Invocations with a
1214 *timeout* value of ``None`` (the default) set the timeout period to
1215 infinite. Note that the treatment of negative or ``None`` values for
1216 *timeout* differs from the implemented behavior in
1217 :meth:`threading.Lock.acquire`. The *timeout* argument has no practical
1218 implications if the *block* argument is set to ``False`` and is thus
1219 ignored. Returns ``True`` if the lock has been acquired or ``False`` if
1220 the timeout period has elapsed.
1221
1222
1223 .. method:: release()
1224
1225 Release a lock. This can be called from any process or thread, not only
1226 the process or thread which originally acquired the lock.
1227
1228 Behavior is the same as in :meth:`threading.Lock.release` except that
1229 when invoked on an unlocked lock, a :exc:`ValueError` is raised.
1230
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001231
1232.. class:: RLock()
1233
Berker Peksag407c4972015-09-21 06:50:55 +03001234 A recursive lock object: a close analog of :class:`threading.RLock`. A
1235 recursive lock must be released by the process or thread that acquired it.
1236 Once a process or thread has acquired a recursive lock, the same process
1237 or thread may acquire it again without blocking; that process or thread
1238 must release it once for each time it has been acquired.
1239
1240 Note that :class:`RLock` is actually a factory function which returns an
1241 instance of ``multiprocessing.synchronize.RLock`` initialized with a
1242 default context.
1243
1244 :class:`RLock` supports the :term:`context manager` protocol and thus may be
1245 used in :keyword:`with` statements.
1246
1247
1248 .. method:: acquire(block=True, timeout=None)
1249
1250 Acquire a lock, blocking or non-blocking.
1251
1252 When invoked with the *block* argument set to ``True``, block until the
1253 lock is in an unlocked state (not owned by any process or thread) unless
1254 the lock is already owned by the current process or thread. The current
1255 process or thread then takes ownership of the lock (if it does not
1256 already have ownership) and the recursion level inside the lock increments
1257 by one, resulting in a return value of ``True``. Note that there are
1258 several differences in this first argument's behavior compared to the
1259 implementation of :meth:`threading.RLock.acquire`, starting with the name
1260 of the argument itself.
1261
1262 When invoked with the *block* argument set to ``False``, do not block.
1263 If the lock has already been acquired (and thus is owned) by another
1264 process or thread, the current process or thread does not take ownership
1265 and the recursion level within the lock is not changed, resulting in
1266 a return value of ``False``. If the lock is in an unlocked state, the
1267 current process or thread takes ownership and the recursion level is
1268 incremented, resulting in a return value of ``True``.
1269
1270 Use and behaviors of the *timeout* argument are the same as in
1271 :meth:`Lock.acquire`. Note that some of these behaviors of *timeout*
1272 differ from the implemented behaviors in :meth:`threading.RLock.acquire`.
1273
1274
1275 .. method:: release()
1276
1277 Release a lock, decrementing the recursion level. If after the
1278 decrement the recursion level is zero, reset the lock to unlocked (not
1279 owned by any process or thread) and if any other processes or threads
1280 are blocked waiting for the lock to become unlocked, allow exactly one
1281 of them to proceed. If after the decrement the recursion level is still
1282 nonzero, the lock remains locked and owned by the calling process or
1283 thread.
1284
1285 Only call this method when the calling process or thread owns the lock.
1286 An :exc:`AssertionError` is raised if this method is called by a process
1287 or thread other than the owner or if the lock is in an unlocked (unowned)
1288 state. Note that the type of exception raised in this situation
1289 differs from the implemented behavior in :meth:`threading.RLock.release`.
1290
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001291
1292.. class:: Semaphore([value])
1293
Berker Peksag407c4972015-09-21 06:50:55 +03001294 A semaphore object: a close analog of :class:`threading.Semaphore`.
1295
1296 A solitary difference from its close analog exists: its ``acquire`` method's
1297 first argument is named *block*, as is consistent with :meth:`Lock.acquire`.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001298
1299.. note::
1300
Georg Brandl592296e2010-05-21 21:48:27 +00001301 On Mac OS X, ``sem_timedwait`` is unsupported, so calling ``acquire()`` with
1302 a timeout will emulate that function's behavior using a sleeping loop.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001303
1304.. note::
1305
Serhiy Storchaka0424eaf2015-09-12 17:45:25 +03001306 If the SIGINT signal generated by :kbd:`Ctrl-C` arrives while the main thread is
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001307 blocked by a call to :meth:`BoundedSemaphore.acquire`, :meth:`Lock.acquire`,
1308 :meth:`RLock.acquire`, :meth:`Semaphore.acquire`, :meth:`Condition.acquire`
1309 or :meth:`Condition.wait` then the call will be immediately interrupted and
1310 :exc:`KeyboardInterrupt` will be raised.
1311
1312 This differs from the behaviour of :mod:`threading` where SIGINT will be
1313 ignored while the equivalent blocking calls are in progress.
1314
Berker Peksag7ecfc822015-04-08 17:56:30 +03001315.. note::
1316
1317 Some of this package's functionality requires a functioning shared semaphore
1318 implementation on the host operating system. Without one, the
1319 :mod:`multiprocessing.synchronize` module will be disabled, and attempts to
1320 import it will result in an :exc:`ImportError`. See
1321 :issue:`3770` for additional information.
1322
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001323
1324Shared :mod:`ctypes` Objects
1325~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1326
1327It is possible to create shared objects using shared memory which can be
1328inherited by child processes.
1329
Richard Oudkerk87ea7802012-05-29 12:01:47 +01001330.. function:: Value(typecode_or_type, *args, lock=True)
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001331
1332 Return a :mod:`ctypes` object allocated from shared memory. By default the
Eli Bendersky78da3bc2012-07-13 10:10:05 +03001333 return value is actually a synchronized wrapper for the object. The object
1334 itself can be accessed via the *value* attribute of a :class:`Value`.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001335
1336 *typecode_or_type* determines the type of the returned object: it is either a
1337 ctypes type or a one character typecode of the kind used by the :mod:`array`
1338 module. *\*args* is passed on to the constructor for the type.
1339
Richard Oudkerkedcf8da2013-11-17 17:00:38 +00001340 If *lock* is ``True`` (the default) then a new recursive lock
1341 object is created to synchronize access to the value. If *lock* is
1342 a :class:`Lock` or :class:`RLock` object then that will be used to
1343 synchronize access to the value. If *lock* is ``False`` then
1344 access to the returned object will not be automatically protected
1345 by a lock, so it will not necessarily be "process-safe".
1346
1347 Operations like ``+=`` which involve a read and write are not
1348 atomic. So if, for instance, you want to atomically increment a
1349 shared value it is insufficient to just do ::
1350
1351 counter.value += 1
1352
1353 Assuming the associated lock is recursive (which it is by default)
1354 you can instead do ::
1355
1356 with counter.get_lock():
1357 counter.value += 1
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001358
1359 Note that *lock* is a keyword-only argument.
1360
1361.. function:: Array(typecode_or_type, size_or_initializer, *, lock=True)
1362
1363 Return a ctypes array allocated from shared memory. By default the return
1364 value is actually a synchronized wrapper for the array.
1365
1366 *typecode_or_type* determines the type of the elements of the returned array:
1367 it is either a ctypes type or a one character typecode of the kind used by
1368 the :mod:`array` module. If *size_or_initializer* is an integer, then it
1369 determines the length of the array, and the array will be initially zeroed.
1370 Otherwise, *size_or_initializer* is a sequence which is used to initialize
1371 the array and whose length determines the length of the array.
1372
1373 If *lock* is ``True`` (the default) then a new lock object is created to
1374 synchronize access to the value. If *lock* is a :class:`Lock` or
1375 :class:`RLock` object then that will be used to synchronize access to the
1376 value. If *lock* is ``False`` then access to the returned object will not be
1377 automatically protected by a lock, so it will not necessarily be
1378 "process-safe".
1379
1380 Note that *lock* is a keyword only argument.
1381
Amaury Forgeot d'Arcb0c29162008-11-22 22:18:04 +00001382 Note that an array of :data:`ctypes.c_char` has *value* and *raw*
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001383 attributes which allow one to use it to store and retrieve strings.
1384
1385
1386The :mod:`multiprocessing.sharedctypes` module
1387>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
1388
1389.. module:: multiprocessing.sharedctypes
1390 :synopsis: Allocate ctypes objects from shared memory.
1391
1392The :mod:`multiprocessing.sharedctypes` module provides functions for allocating
1393:mod:`ctypes` objects from shared memory which can be inherited by child
1394processes.
1395
1396.. note::
1397
Georg Brandl2ee470f2008-07-16 12:55:28 +00001398 Although it is possible to store a pointer in shared memory remember that
1399 this will refer to a location in the address space of a specific process.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001400 However, the pointer is quite likely to be invalid in the context of a second
1401 process and trying to dereference the pointer from the second process may
1402 cause a crash.
1403
1404.. function:: RawArray(typecode_or_type, size_or_initializer)
1405
1406 Return a ctypes array allocated from shared memory.
1407
1408 *typecode_or_type* determines the type of the elements of the returned array:
1409 it is either a ctypes type or a one character typecode of the kind used by
1410 the :mod:`array` module. If *size_or_initializer* is an integer then it
1411 determines the length of the array, and the array will be initially zeroed.
1412 Otherwise *size_or_initializer* is a sequence which is used to initialize the
1413 array and whose length determines the length of the array.
1414
1415 Note that setting and getting an element is potentially non-atomic -- use
1416 :func:`Array` instead to make sure that access is automatically synchronized
1417 using a lock.
1418
1419.. function:: RawValue(typecode_or_type, *args)
1420
1421 Return a ctypes object allocated from shared memory.
1422
1423 *typecode_or_type* determines the type of the returned object: it is either a
1424 ctypes type or a one character typecode of the kind used by the :mod:`array`
Jesse Nollerb0516a62009-01-18 03:11:38 +00001425 module. *\*args* is passed on to the constructor for the type.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001426
1427 Note that setting and getting the value is potentially non-atomic -- use
1428 :func:`Value` instead to make sure that access is automatically synchronized
1429 using a lock.
1430
Amaury Forgeot d'Arcb0c29162008-11-22 22:18:04 +00001431 Note that an array of :data:`ctypes.c_char` has ``value`` and ``raw``
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001432 attributes which allow one to use it to store and retrieve strings -- see
1433 documentation for :mod:`ctypes`.
1434
Richard Oudkerk87ea7802012-05-29 12:01:47 +01001435.. function:: Array(typecode_or_type, size_or_initializer, *, lock=True)
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001436
1437 The same as :func:`RawArray` except that depending on the value of *lock* a
1438 process-safe synchronization wrapper may be returned instead of a raw ctypes
1439 array.
1440
1441 If *lock* is ``True`` (the default) then a new lock object is created to
Serhiy Storchaka9e0ae532013-08-24 00:23:38 +03001442 synchronize access to the value. If *lock* is a
1443 :class:`~multiprocessing.Lock` or :class:`~multiprocessing.RLock` object
1444 then that will be used to synchronize access to the
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001445 value. If *lock* is ``False`` then access to the returned object will not be
1446 automatically protected by a lock, so it will not necessarily be
1447 "process-safe".
1448
1449 Note that *lock* is a keyword-only argument.
1450
Richard Oudkerk87ea7802012-05-29 12:01:47 +01001451.. function:: Value(typecode_or_type, *args, lock=True)
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001452
1453 The same as :func:`RawValue` except that depending on the value of *lock* a
1454 process-safe synchronization wrapper may be returned instead of a raw ctypes
1455 object.
1456
1457 If *lock* is ``True`` (the default) then a new lock object is created to
Serhiy Storchaka9e0ae532013-08-24 00:23:38 +03001458 synchronize access to the value. If *lock* is a :class:`~multiprocessing.Lock` or
1459 :class:`~multiprocessing.RLock` object then that will be used to synchronize access to the
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001460 value. If *lock* is ``False`` then access to the returned object will not be
1461 automatically protected by a lock, so it will not necessarily be
1462 "process-safe".
1463
1464 Note that *lock* is a keyword-only argument.
1465
1466.. function:: copy(obj)
1467
1468 Return a ctypes object allocated from shared memory which is a copy of the
1469 ctypes object *obj*.
1470
1471.. function:: synchronized(obj[, lock])
1472
1473 Return a process-safe wrapper object for a ctypes object which uses *lock* to
1474 synchronize access. If *lock* is ``None`` (the default) then a
1475 :class:`multiprocessing.RLock` object is created automatically.
1476
1477 A synchronized wrapper will have two methods in addition to those of the
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00001478 object it wraps: :meth:`get_obj` returns the wrapped object and
1479 :meth:`get_lock` returns the lock object used for synchronization.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001480
1481 Note that accessing the ctypes object through the wrapper can be a lot slower
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00001482 than accessing the raw ctypes object.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001483
Charles-François Natalia924fc72014-05-25 14:12:12 +01001484 .. versionchanged:: 3.5
1485 Synchronized objects support the :term:`context manager` protocol.
1486
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001487
1488The table below compares the syntax for creating shared ctypes objects from
1489shared memory with the normal ctypes syntax. (In the table ``MyStruct`` is some
1490subclass of :class:`ctypes.Structure`.)
1491
1492==================== ========================== ===========================
1493ctypes sharedctypes using type sharedctypes using typecode
1494==================== ========================== ===========================
1495c_double(2.4) RawValue(c_double, 2.4) RawValue('d', 2.4)
1496MyStruct(4, 6) RawValue(MyStruct, 4, 6)
1497(c_short * 7)() RawArray(c_short, 7) RawArray('h', 7)
1498(c_int * 3)(9, 2, 8) RawArray(c_int, (9, 2, 8)) RawArray('i', (9, 2, 8))
1499==================== ========================== ===========================
1500
1501
1502Below is an example where a number of ctypes objects are modified by a child
1503process::
1504
1505 from multiprocessing import Process, Lock
1506 from multiprocessing.sharedctypes import Value, Array
1507 from ctypes import Structure, c_double
1508
1509 class Point(Structure):
1510 _fields_ = [('x', c_double), ('y', c_double)]
1511
1512 def modify(n, x, s, A):
1513 n.value **= 2
1514 x.value **= 2
1515 s.value = s.value.upper()
1516 for a in A:
1517 a.x **= 2
1518 a.y **= 2
1519
1520 if __name__ == '__main__':
1521 lock = Lock()
1522
1523 n = Value('i', 7)
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00001524 x = Value(c_double, 1.0/3.0, lock=False)
Richard Oudkerkb5175962012-09-10 13:00:33 +01001525 s = Array('c', b'hello world', lock=lock)
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001526 A = Array(Point, [(1.875,-6.25), (-5.75,2.0), (2.375,9.5)], lock=lock)
1527
1528 p = Process(target=modify, args=(n, x, s, A))
1529 p.start()
1530 p.join()
1531
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +00001532 print(n.value)
1533 print(x.value)
1534 print(s.value)
1535 print([(a.x, a.y) for a in A])
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001536
1537
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +00001538.. highlight:: none
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001539
1540The results printed are ::
1541
1542 49
1543 0.1111111111111111
1544 HELLO WORLD
1545 [(3.515625, 39.0625), (33.0625, 4.0), (5.640625, 90.25)]
1546
Ezio Melottif86b28e2012-04-13 20:50:48 -06001547.. highlight:: python3
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001548
1549
1550.. _multiprocessing-managers:
1551
1552Managers
1553~~~~~~~~
1554
1555Managers provide a way to create data which can be shared between different
Eli Bendersky78da3bc2012-07-13 10:10:05 +03001556processes, including sharing over a network between processes running on
1557different machines. A manager object controls a server process which manages
1558*shared objects*. Other processes can access the shared objects by using
1559proxies.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001560
1561.. function:: multiprocessing.Manager()
1562
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00001563 Returns a started :class:`~multiprocessing.managers.SyncManager` object which
1564 can be used for sharing objects between processes. The returned manager
1565 object corresponds to a spawned child process and has methods which will
1566 create shared objects and return corresponding proxies.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001567
1568.. module:: multiprocessing.managers
1569 :synopsis: Share data between process with shared objects.
1570
1571Manager processes will be shutdown as soon as they are garbage collected or
1572their parent process exits. The manager classes are defined in the
1573:mod:`multiprocessing.managers` module:
1574
1575.. class:: BaseManager([address[, authkey]])
1576
1577 Create a BaseManager object.
1578
Benjamin Peterson21896a32010-03-21 22:03:03 +00001579 Once created one should call :meth:`start` or ``get_server().serve_forever()`` to ensure
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001580 that the manager object refers to a started manager process.
1581
1582 *address* is the address on which the manager process listens for new
1583 connections. If *address* is ``None`` then an arbitrary one is chosen.
1584
Richard Oudkerk264e9ac2012-08-17 14:39:18 +01001585 *authkey* is the authentication key which will be used to check the
1586 validity of incoming connections to the server process. If
1587 *authkey* is ``None`` then ``current_process().authkey`` is used.
1588 Otherwise *authkey* is used and it must be a byte string.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001589
Benjamin Petersonf47ed4a2009-04-11 20:45:40 +00001590 .. method:: start([initializer[, initargs]])
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001591
Benjamin Petersonf47ed4a2009-04-11 20:45:40 +00001592 Start a subprocess to start the manager. If *initializer* is not ``None``
1593 then the subprocess will call ``initializer(*initargs)`` when it starts.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001594
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +00001595 .. method:: get_server()
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +00001596
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +00001597 Returns a :class:`Server` object which represents the actual server under
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +00001598 the control of the Manager. The :class:`Server` object supports the
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00001599 :meth:`serve_forever` method::
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +00001600
Georg Brandl1f01deb2009-01-03 22:47:39 +00001601 >>> from multiprocessing.managers import BaseManager
Richard Oudkerk264e9ac2012-08-17 14:39:18 +01001602 >>> manager = BaseManager(address=('', 50000), authkey=b'abc')
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00001603 >>> server = manager.get_server()
1604 >>> server.serve_forever()
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +00001605
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00001606 :class:`Server` additionally has an :attr:`address` attribute.
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +00001607
1608 .. method:: connect()
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +00001609
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00001610 Connect a local manager object to a remote manager process::
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +00001611
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +00001612 >>> from multiprocessing.managers import BaseManager
Richard Oudkerk264e9ac2012-08-17 14:39:18 +01001613 >>> m = BaseManager(address=('127.0.0.1', 5000), authkey=b'abc')
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +00001614 >>> m.connect()
1615
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001616 .. method:: shutdown()
1617
1618 Stop the process used by the manager. This is only available if
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00001619 :meth:`start` has been used to start the server process.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001620
1621 This can be called multiple times.
1622
1623 .. method:: register(typeid[, callable[, proxytype[, exposed[, method_to_typeid[, create_method]]]]])
1624
1625 A classmethod which can be used for registering a type or callable with
1626 the manager class.
1627
1628 *typeid* is a "type identifier" which is used to identify a particular
1629 type of shared object. This must be a string.
1630
1631 *callable* is a callable used for creating objects for this type
Richard Oudkerkf0604fd2012-06-11 17:56:08 +01001632 identifier. If a manager instance will be connected to the
1633 server using the :meth:`connect` method, or if the
1634 *create_method* argument is ``False`` then this can be left as
1635 ``None``.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001636
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00001637 *proxytype* is a subclass of :class:`BaseProxy` which is used to create
1638 proxies for shared objects with this *typeid*. If ``None`` then a proxy
1639 class is created automatically.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001640
1641 *exposed* is used to specify a sequence of method names which proxies for
1642 this typeid should be allowed to access using
Larry Hastings3732ed22014-03-15 21:13:56 -07001643 :meth:`BaseProxy._callmethod`. (If *exposed* is ``None`` then
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001644 :attr:`proxytype._exposed_` is used instead if it exists.) In the case
1645 where no exposed list is specified, all "public methods" of the shared
1646 object will be accessible. (Here a "public method" means any attribute
Serhiy Storchaka9e0ae532013-08-24 00:23:38 +03001647 which has a :meth:`~object.__call__` method and whose name does not begin
1648 with ``'_'``.)
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001649
1650 *method_to_typeid* is a mapping used to specify the return type of those
1651 exposed methods which should return a proxy. It maps method names to
1652 typeid strings. (If *method_to_typeid* is ``None`` then
1653 :attr:`proxytype._method_to_typeid_` is used instead if it exists.) If a
1654 method's name is not a key of this mapping or if the mapping is ``None``
1655 then the object returned by the method will be copied by value.
1656
1657 *create_method* determines whether a method should be created with name
1658 *typeid* which can be used to tell the server process to create a new
1659 shared object and return a proxy for it. By default it is ``True``.
1660
1661 :class:`BaseManager` instances also have one read-only property:
1662
1663 .. attribute:: address
1664
1665 The address used by the manager.
1666
Richard Oudkerkac385712012-06-18 21:29:30 +01001667 .. versionchanged:: 3.3
Serhiy Storchaka14867992014-09-10 23:43:41 +03001668 Manager objects support the context management protocol -- see
Serhiy Storchaka9e0ae532013-08-24 00:23:38 +03001669 :ref:`typecontextmanager`. :meth:`~contextmanager.__enter__` starts the
1670 server process (if it has not already started) and then returns the
1671 manager object. :meth:`~contextmanager.__exit__` calls :meth:`shutdown`.
Richard Oudkerkac385712012-06-18 21:29:30 +01001672
Serhiy Storchaka9e0ae532013-08-24 00:23:38 +03001673 In previous versions :meth:`~contextmanager.__enter__` did not start the
Richard Oudkerkac385712012-06-18 21:29:30 +01001674 manager's server process if it was not already started.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001675
1676.. class:: SyncManager
1677
1678 A subclass of :class:`BaseManager` which can be used for the synchronization
1679 of processes. Objects of this type are returned by
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00001680 :func:`multiprocessing.Manager`.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001681
1682 It also supports creation of shared lists and dictionaries.
1683
Richard Oudkerk3730a172012-06-15 18:26:07 +01001684 .. method:: Barrier(parties[, action[, timeout]])
1685
1686 Create a shared :class:`threading.Barrier` object and return a
1687 proxy for it.
1688
1689 .. versionadded:: 3.3
1690
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001691 .. method:: BoundedSemaphore([value])
1692
1693 Create a shared :class:`threading.BoundedSemaphore` object and return a
1694 proxy for it.
1695
1696 .. method:: Condition([lock])
1697
1698 Create a shared :class:`threading.Condition` object and return a proxy for
1699 it.
1700
1701 If *lock* is supplied then it should be a proxy for a
1702 :class:`threading.Lock` or :class:`threading.RLock` object.
1703
Charles-François Natalic8ce7152012-04-17 18:45:57 +02001704 .. versionchanged:: 3.3
Serhiy Storchaka9e0ae532013-08-24 00:23:38 +03001705 The :meth:`~threading.Condition.wait_for` method was added.
Charles-François Natalic8ce7152012-04-17 18:45:57 +02001706
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001707 .. method:: Event()
1708
1709 Create a shared :class:`threading.Event` object and return a proxy for it.
1710
1711 .. method:: Lock()
1712
1713 Create a shared :class:`threading.Lock` object and return a proxy for it.
1714
1715 .. method:: Namespace()
1716
1717 Create a shared :class:`Namespace` object and return a proxy for it.
1718
1719 .. method:: Queue([maxsize])
1720
Benjamin Peterson257060a2008-06-28 01:42:41 +00001721 Create a shared :class:`queue.Queue` object and return a proxy for it.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001722
1723 .. method:: RLock()
1724
1725 Create a shared :class:`threading.RLock` object and return a proxy for it.
1726
1727 .. method:: Semaphore([value])
1728
1729 Create a shared :class:`threading.Semaphore` object and return a proxy for
1730 it.
1731
1732 .. method:: Array(typecode, sequence)
1733
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00001734 Create an array and return a proxy for it.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001735
1736 .. method:: Value(typecode, value)
1737
1738 Create an object with a writable ``value`` attribute and return a proxy
1739 for it.
1740
1741 .. method:: dict()
1742 dict(mapping)
1743 dict(sequence)
1744
1745 Create a shared ``dict`` object and return a proxy for it.
1746
1747 .. method:: list()
1748 list(sequence)
1749
1750 Create a shared ``list`` object and return a proxy for it.
1751
Georg Brandl3ed41142010-10-15 16:19:43 +00001752 .. note::
1753
1754 Modifications to mutable values or items in dict and list proxies will not
1755 be propagated through the manager, because the proxy has no way of knowing
1756 when its values or items are modified. To modify such an item, you can
1757 re-assign the modified object to the container proxy::
1758
1759 # create a list proxy and append a mutable object (a dictionary)
1760 lproxy = manager.list()
1761 lproxy.append({})
1762 # now mutate the dictionary
1763 d = lproxy[0]
1764 d['a'] = 1
1765 d['b'] = 2
1766 # at this point, the changes to d are not yet synced, but by
1767 # reassigning the dictionary, the proxy is notified of the change
1768 lproxy[0] = d
1769
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001770
Senthil Kumaran6a0514e2016-01-20 03:10:13 -08001771.. class:: Namespace
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001772
Senthil Kumaran6a0514e2016-01-20 03:10:13 -08001773 A type that can register with :class:`SyncManager`.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001774
Senthil Kumaran6a0514e2016-01-20 03:10:13 -08001775 A namespace object has no public methods, but does have writable attributes.
1776 Its representation shows the values of its attributes.
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00001777
Senthil Kumaran6a0514e2016-01-20 03:10:13 -08001778 However, when using a proxy for a namespace object, an attribute beginning
1779 with ``'_'`` will be an attribute of the proxy and not an attribute of the
1780 referent:
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001781
Senthil Kumaran6a0514e2016-01-20 03:10:13 -08001782 .. doctest::
1783
1784 >>> manager = multiprocessing.Manager()
1785 >>> Global = manager.Namespace()
1786 >>> Global.x = 10
1787 >>> Global.y = 'hello'
1788 >>> Global._z = 12.3 # this is an attribute of the proxy
1789 >>> print(Global)
1790 Namespace(x=10, y='hello')
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001791
1792
1793Customized managers
1794>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
1795
1796To create one's own manager, one creates a subclass of :class:`BaseManager` and
Eli Benderskyd08effe2011-12-31 07:20:26 +02001797uses the :meth:`~BaseManager.register` classmethod to register new types or
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00001798callables with the manager class. For example::
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001799
1800 from multiprocessing.managers import BaseManager
1801
Éric Araujo28053fb2010-11-22 03:09:19 +00001802 class MathsClass:
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001803 def add(self, x, y):
1804 return x + y
1805 def mul(self, x, y):
1806 return x * y
1807
1808 class MyManager(BaseManager):
1809 pass
1810
1811 MyManager.register('Maths', MathsClass)
1812
1813 if __name__ == '__main__':
Richard Oudkerk633c4d92012-06-18 21:29:36 +01001814 with MyManager() as manager:
1815 maths = manager.Maths()
1816 print(maths.add(4, 3)) # prints 7
1817 print(maths.mul(7, 8)) # prints 56
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001818
1819
1820Using a remote manager
1821>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
1822
1823It is possible to run a manager server on one machine and have clients use it
1824from other machines (assuming that the firewalls involved allow it).
1825
1826Running the following commands creates a server for a single shared queue which
1827remote clients can access::
1828
1829 >>> from multiprocessing.managers import BaseManager
Benjamin Peterson257060a2008-06-28 01:42:41 +00001830 >>> import queue
1831 >>> queue = queue.Queue()
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001832 >>> class QueueManager(BaseManager): pass
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +00001833 >>> QueueManager.register('get_queue', callable=lambda:queue)
Richard Oudkerk264e9ac2012-08-17 14:39:18 +01001834 >>> m = QueueManager(address=('', 50000), authkey=b'abracadabra')
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +00001835 >>> s = m.get_server()
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00001836 >>> s.serve_forever()
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001837
1838One client can access the server as follows::
1839
1840 >>> from multiprocessing.managers import BaseManager
1841 >>> class QueueManager(BaseManager): pass
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +00001842 >>> QueueManager.register('get_queue')
Richard Oudkerk264e9ac2012-08-17 14:39:18 +01001843 >>> m = QueueManager(address=('foo.bar.org', 50000), authkey=b'abracadabra')
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +00001844 >>> m.connect()
1845 >>> queue = m.get_queue()
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001846 >>> queue.put('hello')
1847
1848Another client can also use it::
1849
1850 >>> from multiprocessing.managers import BaseManager
1851 >>> class QueueManager(BaseManager): pass
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00001852 >>> QueueManager.register('get_queue')
Richard Oudkerk264e9ac2012-08-17 14:39:18 +01001853 >>> m = QueueManager(address=('foo.bar.org', 50000), authkey=b'abracadabra')
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00001854 >>> m.connect()
1855 >>> queue = m.get_queue()
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001856 >>> queue.get()
1857 'hello'
1858
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +00001859Local processes can also access that queue, using the code from above on the
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +00001860client to access it remotely::
1861
1862 >>> from multiprocessing import Process, Queue
1863 >>> from multiprocessing.managers import BaseManager
1864 >>> class Worker(Process):
1865 ... def __init__(self, q):
1866 ... self.q = q
1867 ... super(Worker, self).__init__()
1868 ... def run(self):
1869 ... self.q.put('local hello')
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +00001870 ...
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +00001871 >>> queue = Queue()
1872 >>> w = Worker(queue)
1873 >>> w.start()
1874 >>> class QueueManager(BaseManager): pass
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +00001875 ...
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +00001876 >>> QueueManager.register('get_queue', callable=lambda: queue)
Richard Oudkerk264e9ac2012-08-17 14:39:18 +01001877 >>> m = QueueManager(address=('', 50000), authkey=b'abracadabra')
Jesse Noller45239682008-11-28 18:46:19 +00001878 >>> s = m.get_server()
1879 >>> s.serve_forever()
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001880
1881Proxy Objects
1882~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1883
1884A proxy is an object which *refers* to a shared object which lives (presumably)
1885in a different process. The shared object is said to be the *referent* of the
1886proxy. Multiple proxy objects may have the same referent.
1887
1888A proxy object has methods which invoke corresponding methods of its referent
1889(although not every method of the referent will necessarily be available through
1890the proxy). A proxy can usually be used in most of the same ways that its
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00001891referent can:
1892
1893.. doctest::
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001894
1895 >>> from multiprocessing import Manager
1896 >>> manager = Manager()
1897 >>> l = manager.list([i*i for i in range(10)])
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +00001898 >>> print(l)
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001899 [0, 1, 4, 9, 16, 25, 36, 49, 64, 81]
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +00001900 >>> print(repr(l))
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00001901 <ListProxy object, typeid 'list' at 0x...>
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001902 >>> l[4]
1903 16
1904 >>> l[2:5]
1905 [4, 9, 16]
1906
1907Notice that applying :func:`str` to a proxy will return the representation of
1908the referent, whereas applying :func:`repr` will return the representation of
1909the proxy.
1910
1911An important feature of proxy objects is that they are picklable so they can be
1912passed between processes. Note, however, that if a proxy is sent to the
1913corresponding manager's process then unpickling it will produce the referent
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00001914itself. This means, for example, that one shared object can contain a second:
1915
1916.. doctest::
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001917
1918 >>> a = manager.list()
1919 >>> b = manager.list()
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00001920 >>> a.append(b) # referent of a now contains referent of b
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +00001921 >>> print(a, b)
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001922 [[]] []
1923 >>> b.append('hello')
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +00001924 >>> print(a, b)
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001925 [['hello']] ['hello']
1926
1927.. note::
1928
1929 The proxy types in :mod:`multiprocessing` do nothing to support comparisons
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00001930 by value. So, for instance, we have:
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001931
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00001932 .. doctest::
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001933
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00001934 >>> manager.list([1,2,3]) == [1,2,3]
1935 False
1936
1937 One should just use a copy of the referent instead when making comparisons.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001938
1939.. class:: BaseProxy
1940
1941 Proxy objects are instances of subclasses of :class:`BaseProxy`.
1942
Benjamin Peterson6ebe78f2008-12-21 00:06:59 +00001943 .. method:: _callmethod(methodname[, args[, kwds]])
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001944
1945 Call and return the result of a method of the proxy's referent.
1946
1947 If ``proxy`` is a proxy whose referent is ``obj`` then the expression ::
1948
Benjamin Peterson6ebe78f2008-12-21 00:06:59 +00001949 proxy._callmethod(methodname, args, kwds)
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001950
1951 will evaluate the expression ::
1952
1953 getattr(obj, methodname)(*args, **kwds)
1954
1955 in the manager's process.
1956
1957 The returned value will be a copy of the result of the call or a proxy to
1958 a new shared object -- see documentation for the *method_to_typeid*
1959 argument of :meth:`BaseManager.register`.
1960
Ezio Melottie130a522011-10-19 10:58:56 +03001961 If an exception is raised by the call, then is re-raised by
Benjamin Peterson6ebe78f2008-12-21 00:06:59 +00001962 :meth:`_callmethod`. If some other exception is raised in the manager's
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001963 process then this is converted into a :exc:`RemoteError` exception and is
Benjamin Peterson6ebe78f2008-12-21 00:06:59 +00001964 raised by :meth:`_callmethod`.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001965
1966 Note in particular that an exception will be raised if *methodname* has
Martin Panterd21e0b52015-10-10 10:36:22 +00001967 not been *exposed*.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001968
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00001969 An example of the usage of :meth:`_callmethod`:
1970
1971 .. doctest::
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001972
1973 >>> l = manager.list(range(10))
Benjamin Peterson6ebe78f2008-12-21 00:06:59 +00001974 >>> l._callmethod('__len__')
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001975 10
Larry Hastingsb2c2dc32015-03-29 15:32:55 -07001976 >>> l._callmethod('__getitem__', (slice(2, 7),)) # equivalent to l[2:7]
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001977 [2, 3, 4, 5, 6]
Larry Hastingsb2c2dc32015-03-29 15:32:55 -07001978 >>> l._callmethod('__getitem__', (20,)) # equivalent to l[20]
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001979 Traceback (most recent call last):
1980 ...
1981 IndexError: list index out of range
1982
Benjamin Peterson6ebe78f2008-12-21 00:06:59 +00001983 .. method:: _getvalue()
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00001984
1985 Return a copy of the referent.
1986
1987 If the referent is unpicklable then this will raise an exception.
1988
1989 .. method:: __repr__
1990
1991 Return a representation of the proxy object.
1992
1993 .. method:: __str__
1994
1995 Return the representation of the referent.
1996
1997
1998Cleanup
1999>>>>>>>
2000
2001A proxy object uses a weakref callback so that when it gets garbage collected it
2002deregisters itself from the manager which owns its referent.
2003
2004A shared object gets deleted from the manager process when there are no longer
2005any proxies referring to it.
2006
2007
2008Process Pools
2009~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2010
2011.. module:: multiprocessing.pool
2012 :synopsis: Create pools of processes.
2013
2014One can create a pool of processes which will carry out tasks submitted to it
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00002015with the :class:`Pool` class.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002016
Richard Oudkerkb1694cf2013-10-16 16:41:56 +01002017.. class:: Pool([processes[, initializer[, initargs[, maxtasksperchild [, context]]]]])
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002018
2019 A process pool object which controls a pool of worker processes to which jobs
2020 can be submitted. It supports asynchronous results with timeouts and
2021 callbacks and has a parallel map implementation.
2022
2023 *processes* is the number of worker processes to use. If *processes* is
Larry Hastings3732ed22014-03-15 21:13:56 -07002024 ``None`` then the number returned by :func:`os.cpu_count` is used.
2025
2026 If *initializer* is not ``None`` then each worker process will call
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002027 ``initializer(*initargs)`` when it starts.
2028
Larry Hastings3732ed22014-03-15 21:13:56 -07002029 *maxtasksperchild* is the number of tasks a worker process can complete
2030 before it will exit and be replaced with a fresh worker process, to enable
2031 unused resources to be freed. The default *maxtasksperchild* is None, which
2032 means worker processes will live as long as the pool.
2033
2034 *context* can be used to specify the context used for starting
2035 the worker processes. Usually a pool is created using the
2036 function :func:`multiprocessing.Pool` or the :meth:`Pool` method
2037 of a context object. In both cases *context* is set
2038 appropriately.
2039
Richard Oudkerkb3c4b982013-07-02 12:32:00 +01002040 Note that the methods of the pool object should only be called by
2041 the process which created the pool.
2042
Georg Brandl17ef0d52010-10-17 06:21:59 +00002043 .. versionadded:: 3.2
Larry Hastings3732ed22014-03-15 21:13:56 -07002044 *maxtasksperchild*
Jesse Noller1f0b6582010-01-27 03:36:01 +00002045
Richard Oudkerkb1694cf2013-10-16 16:41:56 +01002046 .. versionadded:: 3.4
Larry Hastings3732ed22014-03-15 21:13:56 -07002047 *context*
Richard Oudkerkb1694cf2013-10-16 16:41:56 +01002048
Jesse Noller1f0b6582010-01-27 03:36:01 +00002049 .. note::
2050
Georg Brandl17ef0d52010-10-17 06:21:59 +00002051 Worker processes within a :class:`Pool` typically live for the complete
2052 duration of the Pool's work queue. A frequent pattern found in other
2053 systems (such as Apache, mod_wsgi, etc) to free resources held by
2054 workers is to allow a worker within a pool to complete only a set
2055 amount of work before being exiting, being cleaned up and a new
2056 process spawned to replace the old one. The *maxtasksperchild*
2057 argument to the :class:`Pool` exposes this ability to the end user.
Jesse Noller1f0b6582010-01-27 03:36:01 +00002058
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002059 .. method:: apply(func[, args[, kwds]])
2060
Benjamin Peterson37d2fe02008-10-24 22:28:58 +00002061 Call *func* with arguments *args* and keyword arguments *kwds*. It blocks
Eli Benderskyd08effe2011-12-31 07:20:26 +02002062 until the result is ready. Given this blocks, :meth:`apply_async` is
2063 better suited for performing work in parallel. Additionally, *func*
2064 is only executed in one of the workers of the pool.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002065
Ask Solem1d3b8932010-11-09 21:36:56 +00002066 .. method:: apply_async(func[, args[, kwds[, callback[, error_callback]]]])
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002067
2068 A variant of the :meth:`apply` method which returns a result object.
2069
2070 If *callback* is specified then it should be a callable which accepts a
2071 single argument. When the result becomes ready *callback* is applied to
Ask Solem1d3b8932010-11-09 21:36:56 +00002072 it, that is unless the call failed, in which case the *error_callback*
Martin Panterd21e0b52015-10-10 10:36:22 +00002073 is applied instead.
Ask Solem1d3b8932010-11-09 21:36:56 +00002074
2075 If *error_callback* is specified then it should be a callable which
2076 accepts a single argument. If the target function fails, then
2077 the *error_callback* is called with the exception instance.
2078
2079 Callbacks should complete immediately since otherwise the thread which
2080 handles the results will get blocked.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002081
2082 .. method:: map(func, iterable[, chunksize])
2083
Georg Brandl22b34312009-07-26 14:54:51 +00002084 A parallel equivalent of the :func:`map` built-in function (it supports only
Eli Benderskyd08effe2011-12-31 07:20:26 +02002085 one *iterable* argument though). It blocks until the result is ready.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002086
2087 This method chops the iterable into a number of chunks which it submits to
2088 the process pool as separate tasks. The (approximate) size of these
2089 chunks can be specified by setting *chunksize* to a positive integer.
2090
Sandro Tosidb79e952011-08-08 16:38:13 +02002091 .. method:: map_async(func, iterable[, chunksize[, callback[, error_callback]]])
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002092
Georg Brandl502d9a52009-07-26 15:02:41 +00002093 A variant of the :meth:`.map` method which returns a result object.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002094
2095 If *callback* is specified then it should be a callable which accepts a
2096 single argument. When the result becomes ready *callback* is applied to
Ask Solem1d3b8932010-11-09 21:36:56 +00002097 it, that is unless the call failed, in which case the *error_callback*
Martin Panterd21e0b52015-10-10 10:36:22 +00002098 is applied instead.
Ask Solem1d3b8932010-11-09 21:36:56 +00002099
2100 If *error_callback* is specified then it should be a callable which
2101 accepts a single argument. If the target function fails, then
2102 the *error_callback* is called with the exception instance.
2103
2104 Callbacks should complete immediately since otherwise the thread which
2105 handles the results will get blocked.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002106
2107 .. method:: imap(func, iterable[, chunksize])
2108
Georg Brandl92905032008-11-22 08:51:39 +00002109 A lazier version of :meth:`map`.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002110
2111 The *chunksize* argument is the same as the one used by the :meth:`.map`
2112 method. For very long iterables using a large value for *chunksize* can
Ezio Melottie130a522011-10-19 10:58:56 +03002113 make the job complete **much** faster than using the default value of
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002114 ``1``.
2115
Georg Brandl502d9a52009-07-26 15:02:41 +00002116 Also if *chunksize* is ``1`` then the :meth:`!next` method of the iterator
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002117 returned by the :meth:`imap` method has an optional *timeout* parameter:
2118 ``next(timeout)`` will raise :exc:`multiprocessing.TimeoutError` if the
2119 result cannot be returned within *timeout* seconds.
2120
2121 .. method:: imap_unordered(func, iterable[, chunksize])
2122
2123 The same as :meth:`imap` except that the ordering of the results from the
2124 returned iterator should be considered arbitrary. (Only when there is
2125 only one worker process is the order guaranteed to be "correct".)
2126
Antoine Pitroude911b22011-12-21 11:03:24 +01002127 .. method:: starmap(func, iterable[, chunksize])
2128
Georg Brandl93a56cd2014-10-30 22:25:41 +01002129 Like :meth:`map` except that the elements of the *iterable* are expected
Antoine Pitroude911b22011-12-21 11:03:24 +01002130 to be iterables that are unpacked as arguments.
2131
Georg Brandl93a56cd2014-10-30 22:25:41 +01002132 Hence an *iterable* of ``[(1,2), (3, 4)]`` results in ``[func(1,2),
2133 func(3,4)]``.
Antoine Pitroude911b22011-12-21 11:03:24 +01002134
2135 .. versionadded:: 3.3
2136
2137 .. method:: starmap_async(func, iterable[, chunksize[, callback[, error_back]]])
2138
2139 A combination of :meth:`starmap` and :meth:`map_async` that iterates over
Georg Brandl93a56cd2014-10-30 22:25:41 +01002140 *iterable* of iterables and calls *func* with the iterables unpacked.
Antoine Pitroude911b22011-12-21 11:03:24 +01002141 Returns a result object.
2142
2143 .. versionadded:: 3.3
2144
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002145 .. method:: close()
2146
2147 Prevents any more tasks from being submitted to the pool. Once all the
2148 tasks have been completed the worker processes will exit.
2149
2150 .. method:: terminate()
2151
2152 Stops the worker processes immediately without completing outstanding
2153 work. When the pool object is garbage collected :meth:`terminate` will be
2154 called immediately.
2155
2156 .. method:: join()
2157
2158 Wait for the worker processes to exit. One must call :meth:`close` or
2159 :meth:`terminate` before using :meth:`join`.
2160
Richard Oudkerkd69cfe82012-06-18 17:47:52 +01002161 .. versionadded:: 3.3
Serhiy Storchaka14867992014-09-10 23:43:41 +03002162 Pool objects now support the context management protocol -- see
Serhiy Storchaka9e0ae532013-08-24 00:23:38 +03002163 :ref:`typecontextmanager`. :meth:`~contextmanager.__enter__` returns the
Georg Brandl325a1c22013-10-27 09:16:01 +01002164 pool object, and :meth:`~contextmanager.__exit__` calls :meth:`terminate`.
Richard Oudkerkd69cfe82012-06-18 17:47:52 +01002165
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002166
2167.. class:: AsyncResult
2168
2169 The class of the result returned by :meth:`Pool.apply_async` and
2170 :meth:`Pool.map_async`.
2171
Georg Brandle3d70ae2008-11-22 08:54:21 +00002172 .. method:: get([timeout])
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002173
2174 Return the result when it arrives. If *timeout* is not ``None`` and the
2175 result does not arrive within *timeout* seconds then
2176 :exc:`multiprocessing.TimeoutError` is raised. If the remote call raised
2177 an exception then that exception will be reraised by :meth:`get`.
2178
2179 .. method:: wait([timeout])
2180
2181 Wait until the result is available or until *timeout* seconds pass.
2182
2183 .. method:: ready()
2184
2185 Return whether the call has completed.
2186
2187 .. method:: successful()
2188
2189 Return whether the call completed without raising an exception. Will
2190 raise :exc:`AssertionError` if the result is not ready.
2191
2192The following example demonstrates the use of a pool::
2193
2194 from multiprocessing import Pool
Berker Peksag7405c162016-01-21 23:59:49 +02002195 import time
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002196
2197 def f(x):
2198 return x*x
2199
2200 if __name__ == '__main__':
Richard Oudkerk633c4d92012-06-18 21:29:36 +01002201 with Pool(processes=4) as pool: # start 4 worker processes
Berker Peksag7405c162016-01-21 23:59:49 +02002202 result = pool.apply_async(f, (10,)) # evaluate "f(10)" asynchronously in a single process
Richard Oudkerk633c4d92012-06-18 21:29:36 +01002203 print(result.get(timeout=1)) # prints "100" unless your computer is *very* slow
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002204
Richard Oudkerk633c4d92012-06-18 21:29:36 +01002205 print(pool.map(f, range(10))) # prints "[0, 1, 4,..., 81]"
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002206
Richard Oudkerk633c4d92012-06-18 21:29:36 +01002207 it = pool.imap(f, range(10))
2208 print(next(it)) # prints "0"
2209 print(next(it)) # prints "1"
2210 print(it.next(timeout=1)) # prints "4" unless your computer is *very* slow
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002211
Richard Oudkerk633c4d92012-06-18 21:29:36 +01002212 result = pool.apply_async(time.sleep, (10,))
Berker Peksag7405c162016-01-21 23:59:49 +02002213 print(result.get(timeout=1)) # raises multiprocessing.TimeoutError
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002214
2215
2216.. _multiprocessing-listeners-clients:
2217
2218Listeners and Clients
2219~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2220
2221.. module:: multiprocessing.connection
2222 :synopsis: API for dealing with sockets.
2223
2224Usually message passing between processes is done using queues or by using
Serhiy Storchaka9e0ae532013-08-24 00:23:38 +03002225:class:`~multiprocessing.Connection` objects returned by
2226:func:`~multiprocessing.Pipe`.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002227
2228However, the :mod:`multiprocessing.connection` module allows some extra
2229flexibility. It basically gives a high level message oriented API for dealing
Antoine Pitroubdb1cf12012-03-05 19:28:37 +01002230with sockets or Windows named pipes. It also has support for *digest
2231authentication* using the :mod:`hmac` module, and for polling
2232multiple connections at the same time.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002233
2234
2235.. function:: deliver_challenge(connection, authkey)
2236
2237 Send a randomly generated message to the other end of the connection and wait
2238 for a reply.
2239
2240 If the reply matches the digest of the message using *authkey* as the key
2241 then a welcome message is sent to the other end of the connection. Otherwise
Eli Benderskyb674dcf2012-07-13 09:45:31 +03002242 :exc:`~multiprocessing.AuthenticationError` is raised.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002243
Ezio Melottic09959a2013-04-10 17:59:20 +03002244.. function:: answer_challenge(connection, authkey)
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002245
2246 Receive a message, calculate the digest of the message using *authkey* as the
2247 key, and then send the digest back.
2248
Eli Benderskyb674dcf2012-07-13 09:45:31 +03002249 If a welcome message is not received, then
2250 :exc:`~multiprocessing.AuthenticationError` is raised.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002251
2252.. function:: Client(address[, family[, authenticate[, authkey]]])
2253
2254 Attempt to set up a connection to the listener which is using address
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00002255 *address*, returning a :class:`~multiprocessing.Connection`.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002256
2257 The type of the connection is determined by *family* argument, but this can
2258 generally be omitted since it can usually be inferred from the format of
2259 *address*. (See :ref:`multiprocessing-address-formats`)
2260
Richard Oudkerk264e9ac2012-08-17 14:39:18 +01002261 If *authenticate* is ``True`` or *authkey* is a byte string then digest
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002262 authentication is used. The key used for authentication will be either
Richard Oudkerk264e9ac2012-08-17 14:39:18 +01002263 *authkey* or ``current_process().authkey`` if *authkey* is ``None``.
Eli Benderskyb674dcf2012-07-13 09:45:31 +03002264 If authentication fails then
2265 :exc:`~multiprocessing.AuthenticationError` is raised. See
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002266 :ref:`multiprocessing-auth-keys`.
2267
2268.. class:: Listener([address[, family[, backlog[, authenticate[, authkey]]]]])
2269
2270 A wrapper for a bound socket or Windows named pipe which is 'listening' for
2271 connections.
2272
2273 *address* is the address to be used by the bound socket or named pipe of the
2274 listener object.
2275
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +00002276 .. note::
2277
2278 If an address of '0.0.0.0' is used, the address will not be a connectable
2279 end point on Windows. If you require a connectable end-point,
2280 you should use '127.0.0.1'.
2281
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002282 *family* is the type of socket (or named pipe) to use. This can be one of
2283 the strings ``'AF_INET'`` (for a TCP socket), ``'AF_UNIX'`` (for a Unix
2284 domain socket) or ``'AF_PIPE'`` (for a Windows named pipe). Of these only
2285 the first is guaranteed to be available. If *family* is ``None`` then the
2286 family is inferred from the format of *address*. If *address* is also
2287 ``None`` then a default is chosen. This default is the family which is
2288 assumed to be the fastest available. See
2289 :ref:`multiprocessing-address-formats`. Note that if *family* is
2290 ``'AF_UNIX'`` and address is ``None`` then the socket will be created in a
2291 private temporary directory created using :func:`tempfile.mkstemp`.
2292
2293 If the listener object uses a socket then *backlog* (1 by default) is passed
Serhiy Storchaka9e0ae532013-08-24 00:23:38 +03002294 to the :meth:`~socket.socket.listen` method of the socket once it has been
2295 bound.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002296
2297 If *authenticate* is ``True`` (``False`` by default) or *authkey* is not
2298 ``None`` then digest authentication is used.
2299
Richard Oudkerk264e9ac2012-08-17 14:39:18 +01002300 If *authkey* is a byte string then it will be used as the
2301 authentication key; otherwise it must be *None*.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002302
2303 If *authkey* is ``None`` and *authenticate* is ``True`` then
Benjamin Petersona786b022008-08-25 21:05:21 +00002304 ``current_process().authkey`` is used as the authentication key. If
Alexandre Vassalottic57a84f2009-07-17 12:07:01 +00002305 *authkey* is ``None`` and *authenticate* is ``False`` then no
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002306 authentication is done. If authentication fails then
Eli Benderskyb674dcf2012-07-13 09:45:31 +03002307 :exc:`~multiprocessing.AuthenticationError` is raised.
2308 See :ref:`multiprocessing-auth-keys`.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002309
2310 .. method:: accept()
2311
2312 Accept a connection on the bound socket or named pipe of the listener
Serhiy Storchaka9e0ae532013-08-24 00:23:38 +03002313 object and return a :class:`~multiprocessing.Connection` object. If
2314 authentication is attempted and fails, then
Eli Benderskyb674dcf2012-07-13 09:45:31 +03002315 :exc:`~multiprocessing.AuthenticationError` is raised.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002316
2317 .. method:: close()
2318
2319 Close the bound socket or named pipe of the listener object. This is
2320 called automatically when the listener is garbage collected. However it
2321 is advisable to call it explicitly.
2322
2323 Listener objects have the following read-only properties:
2324
2325 .. attribute:: address
2326
2327 The address which is being used by the Listener object.
2328
2329 .. attribute:: last_accepted
2330
2331 The address from which the last accepted connection came. If this is
2332 unavailable then it is ``None``.
2333
Richard Oudkerkd69cfe82012-06-18 17:47:52 +01002334 .. versionadded:: 3.3
Serhiy Storchaka14867992014-09-10 23:43:41 +03002335 Listener objects now support the context management protocol -- see
Serhiy Storchaka9e0ae532013-08-24 00:23:38 +03002336 :ref:`typecontextmanager`. :meth:`~contextmanager.__enter__` returns the
Georg Brandl325a1c22013-10-27 09:16:01 +01002337 listener object, and :meth:`~contextmanager.__exit__` calls :meth:`close`.
Richard Oudkerkd69cfe82012-06-18 17:47:52 +01002338
Antoine Pitroubdb1cf12012-03-05 19:28:37 +01002339.. function:: wait(object_list, timeout=None)
2340
2341 Wait till an object in *object_list* is ready. Returns the list of
2342 those objects in *object_list* which are ready. If *timeout* is a
2343 float then the call blocks for at most that many seconds. If
2344 *timeout* is ``None`` then it will block for an unlimited period.
Richard Oudkerk59d54042012-05-10 16:11:12 +01002345 A negative timeout is equivalent to a zero timeout.
Antoine Pitroubdb1cf12012-03-05 19:28:37 +01002346
2347 For both Unix and Windows, an object can appear in *object_list* if
2348 it is
2349
2350 * a readable :class:`~multiprocessing.Connection` object;
2351 * a connected and readable :class:`socket.socket` object; or
2352 * the :attr:`~multiprocessing.Process.sentinel` attribute of a
2353 :class:`~multiprocessing.Process` object.
2354
2355 A connection or socket object is ready when there is data available
2356 to be read from it, or the other end has been closed.
2357
2358 **Unix**: ``wait(object_list, timeout)`` almost equivalent
2359 ``select.select(object_list, [], [], timeout)``. The difference is
2360 that, if :func:`select.select` is interrupted by a signal, it can
2361 raise :exc:`OSError` with an error number of ``EINTR``, whereas
2362 :func:`wait` will not.
2363
2364 **Windows**: An item in *object_list* must either be an integer
2365 handle which is waitable (according to the definition used by the
2366 documentation of the Win32 function ``WaitForMultipleObjects()``)
2367 or it can be an object with a :meth:`fileno` method which returns a
2368 socket handle or pipe handle. (Note that pipe handles and socket
2369 handles are **not** waitable handles.)
2370
2371 .. versionadded:: 3.3
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002372
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002373
2374**Examples**
2375
2376The following server code creates a listener which uses ``'secret password'`` as
2377an authentication key. It then waits for a connection and sends some data to
2378the client::
2379
2380 from multiprocessing.connection import Listener
2381 from array import array
2382
2383 address = ('localhost', 6000) # family is deduced to be 'AF_INET'
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002384
Richard Oudkerk633c4d92012-06-18 21:29:36 +01002385 with Listener(address, authkey=b'secret password') as listener:
2386 with listener.accept() as conn:
2387 print('connection accepted from', listener.last_accepted)
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002388
Richard Oudkerk633c4d92012-06-18 21:29:36 +01002389 conn.send([2.25, None, 'junk', float])
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002390
Richard Oudkerk633c4d92012-06-18 21:29:36 +01002391 conn.send_bytes(b'hello')
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002392
Richard Oudkerk633c4d92012-06-18 21:29:36 +01002393 conn.send_bytes(array('i', [42, 1729]))
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002394
2395The following code connects to the server and receives some data from the
2396server::
2397
2398 from multiprocessing.connection import Client
2399 from array import array
2400
2401 address = ('localhost', 6000)
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002402
Richard Oudkerk633c4d92012-06-18 21:29:36 +01002403 with Client(address, authkey=b'secret password') as conn:
2404 print(conn.recv()) # => [2.25, None, 'junk', float]
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002405
Richard Oudkerk633c4d92012-06-18 21:29:36 +01002406 print(conn.recv_bytes()) # => 'hello'
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002407
Richard Oudkerk633c4d92012-06-18 21:29:36 +01002408 arr = array('i', [0, 0, 0, 0, 0])
2409 print(conn.recv_bytes_into(arr)) # => 8
2410 print(arr) # => array('i', [42, 1729, 0, 0, 0])
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002411
Antoine Pitroubdb1cf12012-03-05 19:28:37 +01002412The following code uses :func:`~multiprocessing.connection.wait` to
2413wait for messages from multiple processes at once::
2414
2415 import time, random
2416 from multiprocessing import Process, Pipe, current_process
2417 from multiprocessing.connection import wait
2418
2419 def foo(w):
2420 for i in range(10):
2421 w.send((i, current_process().name))
2422 w.close()
2423
2424 if __name__ == '__main__':
2425 readers = []
2426
2427 for i in range(4):
2428 r, w = Pipe(duplex=False)
2429 readers.append(r)
2430 p = Process(target=foo, args=(w,))
2431 p.start()
2432 # We close the writable end of the pipe now to be sure that
2433 # p is the only process which owns a handle for it. This
2434 # ensures that when p closes its handle for the writable end,
2435 # wait() will promptly report the readable end as being ready.
2436 w.close()
2437
2438 while readers:
2439 for r in wait(readers):
2440 try:
2441 msg = r.recv()
2442 except EOFError:
2443 readers.remove(r)
2444 else:
2445 print(msg)
2446
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002447
2448.. _multiprocessing-address-formats:
2449
2450Address Formats
2451>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
2452
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00002453* An ``'AF_INET'`` address is a tuple of the form ``(hostname, port)`` where
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002454 *hostname* is a string and *port* is an integer.
2455
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00002456* An ``'AF_UNIX'`` address is a string representing a filename on the
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002457 filesystem.
2458
2459* An ``'AF_PIPE'`` address is a string of the form
Benjamin Petersonda10d3b2009-01-01 00:23:30 +00002460 :samp:`r'\\\\.\\pipe\\{PipeName}'`. To use :func:`Client` to connect to a named
Georg Brandl1f01deb2009-01-03 22:47:39 +00002461 pipe on a remote computer called *ServerName* one should use an address of the
Benjamin Peterson28d88b42009-01-09 03:03:23 +00002462 form :samp:`r'\\\\{ServerName}\\pipe\\{PipeName}'` instead.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002463
2464Note that any string beginning with two backslashes is assumed by default to be
2465an ``'AF_PIPE'`` address rather than an ``'AF_UNIX'`` address.
2466
2467
2468.. _multiprocessing-auth-keys:
2469
2470Authentication keys
2471~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2472
Serhiy Storchaka9e0ae532013-08-24 00:23:38 +03002473When one uses :meth:`Connection.recv <multiprocessing.Connection.recv>`, the
2474data received is automatically
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002475unpickled. Unfortunately unpickling data from an untrusted source is a security
2476risk. Therefore :class:`Listener` and :func:`Client` use the :mod:`hmac` module
2477to provide digest authentication.
2478
Richard Oudkerk264e9ac2012-08-17 14:39:18 +01002479An authentication key is a byte string which can be thought of as a
2480password: once a connection is established both ends will demand proof
2481that the other knows the authentication key. (Demonstrating that both
2482ends are using the same key does **not** involve sending the key over
2483the connection.)
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002484
Richard Oudkerk264e9ac2012-08-17 14:39:18 +01002485If authentication is requested but no authentication key is specified then the
Benjamin Petersona786b022008-08-25 21:05:21 +00002486return value of ``current_process().authkey`` is used (see
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00002487:class:`~multiprocessing.Process`). This value will automatically inherited by
2488any :class:`~multiprocessing.Process` object that the current process creates.
2489This means that (by default) all processes of a multi-process program will share
2490a single authentication key which can be used when setting up connections
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +00002491between themselves.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002492
2493Suitable authentication keys can also be generated by using :func:`os.urandom`.
2494
2495
2496Logging
2497~~~~~~~
2498
2499Some support for logging is available. Note, however, that the :mod:`logging`
2500package does not use process shared locks so it is possible (depending on the
2501handler type) for messages from different processes to get mixed up.
2502
2503.. currentmodule:: multiprocessing
2504.. function:: get_logger()
2505
2506 Returns the logger used by :mod:`multiprocessing`. If necessary, a new one
2507 will be created.
2508
Jesse Noller41faa542009-01-25 03:45:53 +00002509 When first created the logger has level :data:`logging.NOTSET` and no
2510 default handler. Messages sent to this logger will not by default propagate
2511 to the root logger.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002512
2513 Note that on Windows child processes will only inherit the level of the
2514 parent process's logger -- any other customization of the logger will not be
2515 inherited.
2516
Jesse Noller41faa542009-01-25 03:45:53 +00002517.. currentmodule:: multiprocessing
2518.. function:: log_to_stderr()
2519
2520 This function performs a call to :func:`get_logger` but in addition to
2521 returning the logger created by get_logger, it adds a handler which sends
2522 output to :data:`sys.stderr` using format
2523 ``'[%(levelname)s/%(processName)s] %(message)s'``.
2524
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002525Below is an example session with logging turned on::
2526
Benjamin Peterson206e3072008-10-19 14:07:49 +00002527 >>> import multiprocessing, logging
Jesse Noller41faa542009-01-25 03:45:53 +00002528 >>> logger = multiprocessing.log_to_stderr()
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002529 >>> logger.setLevel(logging.INFO)
2530 >>> logger.warning('doomed')
2531 [WARNING/MainProcess] doomed
Benjamin Peterson206e3072008-10-19 14:07:49 +00002532 >>> m = multiprocessing.Manager()
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00002533 [INFO/SyncManager-...] child process calling self.run()
2534 [INFO/SyncManager-...] created temp directory /.../pymp-...
2535 [INFO/SyncManager-...] manager serving at '/.../listener-...'
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002536 >>> del m
2537 [INFO/MainProcess] sending shutdown message to manager
R. David Murray8e8099c2009-04-28 18:02:00 +00002538 [INFO/SyncManager-...] manager exiting with exitcode 0
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002539
Jesse Noller41faa542009-01-25 03:45:53 +00002540For a full table of logging levels, see the :mod:`logging` module.
2541
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002542
2543The :mod:`multiprocessing.dummy` module
2544~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2545
2546.. module:: multiprocessing.dummy
2547 :synopsis: Dumb wrapper around threading.
2548
2549:mod:`multiprocessing.dummy` replicates the API of :mod:`multiprocessing` but is
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00002550no more than a wrapper around the :mod:`threading` module.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002551
2552
2553.. _multiprocessing-programming:
2554
2555Programming guidelines
2556----------------------
2557
2558There are certain guidelines and idioms which should be adhered to when using
2559:mod:`multiprocessing`.
2560
2561
Richard Oudkerk84ed9a62013-08-14 15:35:41 +01002562All start methods
2563~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2564
2565The following applies to all start methods.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002566
2567Avoid shared state
2568
2569 As far as possible one should try to avoid shifting large amounts of data
2570 between processes.
2571
2572 It is probably best to stick to using queues or pipes for communication
2573 between processes rather than using the lower level synchronization
Eli Bendersky78da3bc2012-07-13 10:10:05 +03002574 primitives.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002575
2576Picklability
2577
2578 Ensure that the arguments to the methods of proxies are picklable.
2579
2580Thread safety of proxies
2581
2582 Do not use a proxy object from more than one thread unless you protect it
2583 with a lock.
2584
2585 (There is never a problem with different processes using the *same* proxy.)
2586
2587Joining zombie processes
2588
2589 On Unix when a process finishes but has not been joined it becomes a zombie.
2590 There should never be very many because each time a new process starts (or
Serhiy Storchaka9e0ae532013-08-24 00:23:38 +03002591 :func:`~multiprocessing.active_children` is called) all completed processes
2592 which have not yet been joined will be joined. Also calling a finished
2593 process's :meth:`Process.is_alive <multiprocessing.Process.is_alive>` will
2594 join the process. Even so it is probably good
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002595 practice to explicitly join all the processes that you start.
2596
2597Better to inherit than pickle/unpickle
2598
Richard Oudkerk84ed9a62013-08-14 15:35:41 +01002599 When using the *spawn* or *forkserver* start methods many types
2600 from :mod:`multiprocessing` need to be picklable so that child
2601 processes can use them. However, one should generally avoid
2602 sending shared objects to other processes using pipes or queues.
2603 Instead you should arrange the program so that a process which
2604 needs access to a shared resource created elsewhere can inherit it
2605 from an ancestor process.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002606
2607Avoid terminating processes
2608
Serhiy Storchaka9e0ae532013-08-24 00:23:38 +03002609 Using the :meth:`Process.terminate <multiprocessing.Process.terminate>`
2610 method to stop a process is liable to
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002611 cause any shared resources (such as locks, semaphores, pipes and queues)
2612 currently being used by the process to become broken or unavailable to other
2613 processes.
2614
2615 Therefore it is probably best to only consider using
Serhiy Storchaka9e0ae532013-08-24 00:23:38 +03002616 :meth:`Process.terminate <multiprocessing.Process.terminate>` on processes
2617 which never use any shared resources.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002618
2619Joining processes that use queues
2620
2621 Bear in mind that a process that has put items in a queue will wait before
2622 terminating until all the buffered items are fed by the "feeder" thread to
2623 the underlying pipe. (The child process can call the
Serhiy Storchaka9e0ae532013-08-24 00:23:38 +03002624 :meth:`Queue.cancel_join_thread <multiprocessing.Queue.cancel_join_thread>`
2625 method of the queue to avoid this behaviour.)
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002626
2627 This means that whenever you use a queue you need to make sure that all
2628 items which have been put on the queue will eventually be removed before the
2629 process is joined. Otherwise you cannot be sure that processes which have
2630 put items on the queue will terminate. Remember also that non-daemonic
Zachary Ware72805612014-10-03 10:55:12 -05002631 processes will be joined automatically.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002632
2633 An example which will deadlock is the following::
2634
2635 from multiprocessing import Process, Queue
2636
2637 def f(q):
2638 q.put('X' * 1000000)
2639
2640 if __name__ == '__main__':
2641 queue = Queue()
2642 p = Process(target=f, args=(queue,))
2643 p.start()
2644 p.join() # this deadlocks
2645 obj = queue.get()
2646
Zachary Ware72805612014-10-03 10:55:12 -05002647 A fix here would be to swap the last two lines (or simply remove the
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002648 ``p.join()`` line).
2649
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00002650Explicitly pass resources to child processes
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002651
Richard Oudkerk84ed9a62013-08-14 15:35:41 +01002652 On Unix using the *fork* start method, a child process can make
2653 use of a shared resource created in a parent process using a
2654 global resource. However, it is better to pass the object as an
2655 argument to the constructor for the child process.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002656
Richard Oudkerk84ed9a62013-08-14 15:35:41 +01002657 Apart from making the code (potentially) compatible with Windows
2658 and the other start methods this also ensures that as long as the
2659 child process is still alive the object will not be garbage
2660 collected in the parent process. This might be important if some
2661 resource is freed when the object is garbage collected in the
2662 parent process.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002663
2664 So for instance ::
2665
2666 from multiprocessing import Process, Lock
2667
2668 def f():
2669 ... do something using "lock" ...
2670
2671 if __name__ == '__main__':
Serhiy Storchakadba90392016-05-10 12:01:23 +03002672 lock = Lock()
2673 for i in range(10):
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002674 Process(target=f).start()
2675
2676 should be rewritten as ::
2677
2678 from multiprocessing import Process, Lock
2679
2680 def f(l):
2681 ... do something using "l" ...
2682
2683 if __name__ == '__main__':
Serhiy Storchakadba90392016-05-10 12:01:23 +03002684 lock = Lock()
2685 for i in range(10):
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002686 Process(target=f, args=(lock,)).start()
2687
Eli Benderskyd08effe2011-12-31 07:20:26 +02002688Beware of replacing :data:`sys.stdin` with a "file like object"
Alexandre Vassalottic57a84f2009-07-17 12:07:01 +00002689
2690 :mod:`multiprocessing` originally unconditionally called::
2691
2692 os.close(sys.stdin.fileno())
2693
2694 in the :meth:`multiprocessing.Process._bootstrap` method --- this resulted
2695 in issues with processes-in-processes. This has been changed to::
2696
2697 sys.stdin.close()
Victor Stinnera6d865c2016-03-25 09:29:50 +01002698 sys.stdin = open(os.open(os.devnull, os.O_RDONLY), closefd=False)
Alexandre Vassalottic57a84f2009-07-17 12:07:01 +00002699
2700 Which solves the fundamental issue of processes colliding with each other
2701 resulting in a bad file descriptor error, but introduces a potential danger
2702 to applications which replace :func:`sys.stdin` with a "file-like object"
2703 with output buffering. This danger is that if multiple processes call
Serhiy Storchaka9e0ae532013-08-24 00:23:38 +03002704 :meth:`~io.IOBase.close()` on this file-like object, it could result in the same
Alexandre Vassalottic57a84f2009-07-17 12:07:01 +00002705 data being flushed to the object multiple times, resulting in corruption.
2706
2707 If you write a file-like object and implement your own caching, you can
2708 make it fork-safe by storing the pid whenever you append to the cache,
2709 and discarding the cache when the pid changes. For example::
2710
2711 @property
2712 def cache(self):
2713 pid = os.getpid()
2714 if pid != self._pid:
2715 self._pid = pid
2716 self._cache = []
2717 return self._cache
2718
2719 For more information, see :issue:`5155`, :issue:`5313` and :issue:`5331`
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002720
Richard Oudkerk84ed9a62013-08-14 15:35:41 +01002721The *spawn* and *forkserver* start methods
2722~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002723
Richard Oudkerk84ed9a62013-08-14 15:35:41 +01002724There are a few extra restriction which don't apply to the *fork*
2725start method.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002726
2727More picklability
2728
Richard Oudkerk84ed9a62013-08-14 15:35:41 +01002729 Ensure that all arguments to :meth:`Process.__init__` are
2730 picklable. This means, in particular, that bound or unbound
2731 methods cannot be used directly as the ``target`` (unless you use
2732 the *fork* start method) --- just define a function and use that
2733 instead.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002734
Serhiy Storchaka9e0ae532013-08-24 00:23:38 +03002735 Also, if you subclass :class:`~multiprocessing.Process` then make sure that
2736 instances will be picklable when the :meth:`Process.start
2737 <multiprocessing.Process.start>` method is called.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002738
2739Global variables
2740
2741 Bear in mind that if code run in a child process tries to access a global
2742 variable, then the value it sees (if any) may not be the same as the value
Serhiy Storchaka9e0ae532013-08-24 00:23:38 +03002743 in the parent process at the time that :meth:`Process.start
2744 <multiprocessing.Process.start>` was called.
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002745
2746 However, global variables which are just module level constants cause no
2747 problems.
2748
2749Safe importing of main module
2750
2751 Make sure that the main module can be safely imported by a new Python
2752 interpreter without causing unintended side effects (such a starting a new
2753 process).
2754
Richard Oudkerk84ed9a62013-08-14 15:35:41 +01002755 For example, using the *spawn* or *forkserver* start method
2756 running the following module would fail with a
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002757 :exc:`RuntimeError`::
2758
2759 from multiprocessing import Process
2760
2761 def foo():
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +00002762 print('hello')
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002763
2764 p = Process(target=foo)
2765 p.start()
2766
2767 Instead one should protect the "entry point" of the program by using ``if
2768 __name__ == '__main__':`` as follows::
2769
Richard Oudkerk84ed9a62013-08-14 15:35:41 +01002770 from multiprocessing import Process, freeze_support, set_start_method
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002771
2772 def foo():
Georg Brandl49702152008-09-29 06:43:45 +00002773 print('hello')
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002774
2775 if __name__ == '__main__':
2776 freeze_support()
Richard Oudkerk84ed9a62013-08-14 15:35:41 +01002777 set_start_method('spawn')
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002778 p = Process(target=foo)
2779 p.start()
2780
Benjamin Peterson5289b2b2008-06-28 00:40:54 +00002781 (The ``freeze_support()`` line can be omitted if the program will be run
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002782 normally instead of frozen.)
2783
2784 This allows the newly spawned Python interpreter to safely import the module
2785 and then run the module's ``foo()`` function.
2786
2787 Similar restrictions apply if a pool or manager is created in the main
2788 module.
2789
2790
2791.. _multiprocessing-examples:
2792
2793Examples
2794--------
2795
2796Demonstration of how to create and use customized managers and proxies:
2797
2798.. literalinclude:: ../includes/mp_newtype.py
Ezio Melottif86b28e2012-04-13 20:50:48 -06002799 :language: python3
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002800
2801
Serhiy Storchaka9e0ae532013-08-24 00:23:38 +03002802Using :class:`~multiprocessing.pool.Pool`:
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002803
2804.. literalinclude:: ../includes/mp_pool.py
Ezio Melottif86b28e2012-04-13 20:50:48 -06002805 :language: python3
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002806
2807
Georg Brandl0b37b332010-09-03 22:49:27 +00002808An example showing how to use queues to feed tasks to a collection of worker
Eli Benderskyd08effe2011-12-31 07:20:26 +02002809processes and collect the results:
Benjamin Petersone711caf2008-06-11 16:44:04 +00002810
2811.. literalinclude:: ../includes/mp_workers.py