diff --git a/doc/FUTURE_IDEAS b/doc/FUTURE_IDEAS index 8c72af4e..03792f0c 100644 --- a/doc/FUTURE_IDEAS +++ b/doc/FUTURE_IDEAS @@ -1,10 +1,3 @@ -Bug: seq 1 10 | stdout parallel --eta echo - -# Examples of sem - -find . -execdir sem -j100 'sleep 4; echo {}' \; ; sem --wait - - fex syntax for splitting fields http://www.semicomplete.com/projects/fex/ sql :foo 'select * from bar' | parallel --fex '|{1,2}' do_stuff {2} {1} diff --git a/src/parallel b/src/parallel index ae38ab32..8fb4adac 100755 --- a/src/parallel +++ b/src/parallel @@ -1298,6 +1298,39 @@ As there is not a I the option B<--command> is default because the jobs needs to be evaluated by the shell. +=head1 EXAMPLE: Working as mutex and counting semaphore + +The command B is an alias for B. + +A counting semaphore will allow a given number of jobs to be started +in the background. When the number of jobs are running in the +background, GNU B will wait for one of these to complete before +starting another command. B will wait for all jobs to +complete. + +Run 10 jobs in parallel in the background: + + for i in `ls *.log` ; do + echo $i + sem -j10 gzip $i ";" echo done + done + sem --wait + +A mutex is a counting semaphore allowing only one job to run. This +will edit the file I and prepends the file with lines with the +numbers 1 to 3. + + seq 1 3 | parallel sem sed -i -e 'i{}' myfile + +As I can be very big it is important only one process edits +the file at the same time. + +Name the semaphore to have multiple different semaphores active at the +same time: + + seq 1 3 | parallel sem --id mymutex sed -i -e 'i{}' myfile + + =head1 QUOTING For more advanced use quoting may be an issue. The following will