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469 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
# SPDX-FileCopyrightText: 2021 Ole Tange, http://ole.tange.dk and Free Software and Foundation, Inc.
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# SPDX-License-Identifier: GFDL-1.3-or-later
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# SPDX-License-Identifier: CC-BY-SA-4.0
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=head1 GNU Parallel 10 year anniversery - 2020-04-22
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Git log entry 2010-04-22:
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"""
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Author: Ole Tange <ole@tange.dk>
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Date: Thu Apr 22 01:23:00 2010 +0200
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Name change: Parallel is now GNU Parallel.
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Basic structure for sshlogin and sshloginfile.
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"""
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Wow. It has been 10 years since my parallel program was officially
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renamed GNU Parallel. It has been quite a ride.
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Not all software is maintained for 10 full years, so it is a probably
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a good time to take stock.
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=head2 The design
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The user interface of GNU Parallel has changed very little during the
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last 10 years. In total around 10 things have changed in a way that
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was not backwards compatible - most of them corner cases that very few
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use.
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=head2 Videos
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In 2010 one of the competitors was PPSS. My colleague, Hans Schou,
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saw louwrentius' video showing off PPSS
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(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=32PwsARbePw) and nudged me to make my
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own videos and most of the information in those still applies to the
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newest version.
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=head2 Complete rewrite
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Before GNU Parallel was a GNU tool, it started as a wrapper around
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`make -j`. But GNU Parallel grew, and was no longer just a small
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hack.
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The design goals included not requiring a compiler, compatibility with
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old operating systems, and single file program. This limited the
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languages tremendously.
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Perl and Python were in practice the only possibilities. Python was at
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the time quite slow, ressource hungry, and not as widely installed as
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Perl. So Perl was the choice.
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To make the code easier to maintain it was rewritten to object
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orientation. This would not have been possible if the test suite had
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not been so thorough: It made it much easier to see if a code change
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cause change in behaviour.
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=head2 --tollef
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Tollef's parallel from moreutils was a headache: Before Tollef's
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parallel was adopted by moreutils I tried getting Parallel adopted in
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moreutils. So it was a bit of a disappointment seeing another program
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called exactly the same included some months later.
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--tollef was added to make GNU Parallel compatible with Tollef's
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parallel, so that if you depended on Tollef's parallel, then you could
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drop in GNU Parallel as a replacement.
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I honestly don't think anyone used this. Ever. But it silenced the
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argument that GNU Parallel would break existing usage.
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Unfortunately distributions enabled --tollef by default and did not
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stress this to the user. So users experienced no end of frustration
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when the examples from GNU Parallel's man page did not work.
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moreutils is now generally packaged with Tollef's parallel split off
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into a separate package, and the frustration seems to be lower today.
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=head2 GNU Paralel on NASA Pleiades supercomputer
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In 2013 I stumbled on a happy surprise: NASA seemed to have installed
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GNU Parallel on their Pleiades supercomputer.
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https://web.archive.org/web/20130221072030/https://www.nas.nasa.gov/hecc/support/kb/using-gnu-parallel-to-package-multiple-jobs-in-a-single-pbs-job_303.html
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"""On Pleiades, a copy of GNU parallel is available under /usr/bin."""
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Pleiades was 16th on top500.org in 2013.
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I have the feeling that GNU Parallel is also used on some of the
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bigger supercomputers, but I have found no confirmation of that.
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=head2 GNU Parallel on Termux and OpenWRT
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At the other end of the system size is Termux on Android and OpenWRT
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for accesspoints. GNU Parallel runs on both of them, and while I can
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see why you might run GNU Parallel on an access point I still do not
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know why you would do it on an Android device.
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It is still cool that it can be done at all.
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=head2 Attack on funding
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A sad chapter is the attack on the funding of GNU Parallel.
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You would think such an attack would come from non-free competitors,
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but this attack was from packagers that packaged GNU Parallel. Didier
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Raboud <odyx@debian.org> (Debian and by inheritance Ubuntu), Andreas
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Stieger <astieger@suse.com> (SuSE) and Johannes Löthberg
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<johannes@kyriasis.com> (Arch). These are all people sitting in jobs,
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where they are paid to use free software, and you would think they
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would understand the importance of getting paid.
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<<Check before sending
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https://www.linkedin.com/in/didierraboud/
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https://www.linkedin.com/in/andreas-stieger-74b68a72/
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https://www.linkedin.com/in/johanneslothberg?originalSubdomain=se
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Maintainer today:
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Jan Engelhardt <jengelh@inai.de>
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<<debian>>
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<johannes@kyriasis.com>
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>>
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GNU Parallel is funded by me having a job. It is easier to get a paid
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job that will allow for maintaining GNU Parallel if GNU Parallel is
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cited, because that proves the tool is useful for serious work. This
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is especially true in academia.
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I saw GNU Parallel being used in scientific articles, which was great,
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but without being cited, which was not ideal. So we discussed on the
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email list how to make users aware that citing is how GNU Parallel is
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financed and why this is important.
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So it was decided to make a notice similar to a do-show-this-again box
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known from e.g. Firefox. The notice could be silenced in less than 10
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seconds.
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Unfortunately in a misguided act of short term gain in popularity
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SuSE, Debian, and Arch did a disservice to free software and disabled
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this notice in the version they currently distribute.
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As GNU Parallel is free software they are allowed to fork the
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software, but only if they make sure the forked version cannot be
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mistaken for GNU Parallel. We have court cases showing this is the
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case, but still Didier Raboud <odyx@debian.org> (Debian and by
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inheritance Ubuntu), Andreas Stieger <astieger@suse.com> (SUSE) and
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Johannes Löthberg <johannes@kyriasis.com> (Arch) refuse to back down,
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so the problem still not resolved.
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If you would like to see GNU Parallel maintained in the future, please
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help by raising this issue with SUSE (current maintainer: Jan
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Engelhardt <jengelh@inai.de>), Debian/Ubuntu (current maintainer:
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<<>>), and Arch (current maintainer: Johannes Löthberg
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<johannes@kyriasis.com>). Their current stance hurts free software by
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making it harder to justify spending time on maintaining GNU
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Parallel. Not having GNU Parallel distributed by Debian/Ubuntu, Arch,
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and SUSE is actually preferable to the current situation, though, the
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best outcome would be if they distributed the non-modified version.
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For users who are unwiling to spend the 10 seconds on silencing the
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notice there is an easy solution: "Don't like it? Don't use it." A
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considerable amount of time has been spent on mapping the
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alternatives, so there is really no excuse. See `man
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parallel_alternatives`.
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=head2 The GNU Parallel 2018 book
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Hans Schou teased me by calling the man page "the book". In 2018 I
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took the consequence of that and wrote a book. The book is available
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online (https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1146014) and in print
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(http://www.lulu.com/shop/ole-tange/gnu-parallel-2018/paperback/product-23558902.html).
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=head2 Cheatsheet
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A lot of hours has been put into documentation, but the problem with
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having a lot of documentation is that is can make some people think
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the program is hard to use giving rise to the myth that "You have to
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read a full book to be able to use GNU Parallel".
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Several people noted that GNU Parallel was missing a cheat sheet. So
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in 2019 a one page cheat sheet was included in the package.
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=head2 Why so many options?
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GNU B<parallel> has a lot of options. A good part of them could be
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written as wrapper scripts.
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Normally it would not be in the UNIX philosophy to merge the wrapper
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scripts into the tool itself. But experience showed that people could
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not write these wrapper scripts without bugs.
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By having them part of GNU B<parallel> the code will be tested by more
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people and will in general be of better quality than code that was
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just thrown together in a couple of hours.
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An example of this is B<--nice>: For running local jobs the option is
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not needed, you simply B<nice> everything:
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nice parallel ...
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But as soon as you run composed commands on remote systems,
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it becomes much harder:
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parallel -S .. nice bash -c "'cmd1; cmd2'"
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When you combine that with other wrapper scripts (such as
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B<--return>), it quickly becomes tricky to get right for all cases.
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=head2 Convenience options --nice --basefile --transfer --return
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--cleanup --tmux --group --compress --cat --fifo --workdir --tag
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=head2 The May 1st incident
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I was at a May 1st event for computer professionals where I sat at a
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long table opposite a guy. At some point the discussion turned to
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parallelism.
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"I have found the brilliant program," he said. "It does everything if
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you want to parallelize."
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The more he explained the more certain was I that I knew this program
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quite intimately.
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"And it is written by a Dane," he said excited.
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"Oh. Are you aware that the author is sitting on my side of the
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table?"
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We were the only ones sitting at the table, but we had had a few
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beers, so it took a while before it dawned to him, who I was.
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=head2 Underappreciated functionality
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There is some functionality I am particularly proud of, but which is
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currently not in wide use.
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=head3 env_parallel
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When I was shown you could encode variables into a single variable and
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move that to a remote system I was intrigued. But why stop at
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variables? Why not include aliases, functions, and arrays?
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env_parallel started out as a technical challenge: How much can be
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copied transparently?
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But it quickly got a more practical side: Why should you not be able
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to use the variables, aliases and functions defined on the local
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system just because you want to run jobs on a remote system?
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=head3 parset
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Some of GNU Parallel functionality is inspired by other people
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problems: How could this problem be solved in general?
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B<parset> is one of those. It was inpired by a user who needed the
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output from different jobs to be stored in different variables. The
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jobs were slow and could be run in parallel. So while the running of
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the jobs were clearly a task for GNU Parallel, the storing in
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variables was not so clear.
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It was fairly easy to code something that would work if the output was
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a single line with no spaces, but GNU Parallel tries hard not to set
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artifical limits: It is much preferable to a bit slower if the outcome
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is predictable - whether the output is a single word or some binary
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data.
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=head3 --embed
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Some of the functionality is inspired by other tools. B<--embed> is one
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of those.
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B<--embed> was inspired by Lesser Parallel that in turn was inspired
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by GNU Parallel. The major feature of Lesser Parallel is to be
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embedded in any bash script. The developer will embed the code into
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his own bash script and distribute this script.
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So with B<--embed> the users of the script will not have to install
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GNU Parallel to run it.
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=head3 --pipepart with --fifo
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=head3 --bar
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I see people using B<--bar> too rarely. It is one of the easiest ways
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to get a visual representation of when all the jobs are expected done.
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=head3 Combining ::: with :::+
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=head3 --rpl with dynamic replacement strings
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=head3 --results with replacement strings
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=head3 --tagstring with replacement strings
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=head2 Feedback
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Best ever
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=head2 Vitality
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On average there has been a new release of GNU Parallel every month
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since 2010-04-24.
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In the autumn of 2010 Henrik Sandklef teased me that he knew when the
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next release would be. GNU Parallel just happened to have been
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released twice in the 22nd, so he assumed the next release would also
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be on the 22nd. And why not? A few releases were not in line with this
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rule, but since 2011 there has been a release every month around the
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22nd.
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The fixed release cycle means there has been more than 100 releases
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making GNU Parallel in the top 5 of GNU tools with the most releases.
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=head3 Naming releases
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At the presenatation at FOSDEM (20110205) I found it might be fun to
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give each release code name, so this release was named FOSDEM. After
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the Japan release a naming convention started to emerge. And since
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then each release has had a name related to an event in the past
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month.
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I will be honest: Some releases were easier to name than others.
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Since the events are not always happy events, the names have now and
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then stirred a bit of controversy. But if you want happier names, go
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make a happier world :)
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=head3 Competitors
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Apart from xargs no competitor has had the strength to live for 10
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years. And even xargs has not had a steady release cycle with a new
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release every month.
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=head2 The next 10 years
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Parallization has come to stay, and there are a lot of competitors to
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GNU Parallel that do specialized tasks better. But I have a feeling
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that there is room for a generalized tool like GNU Parallel also in 10
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years.
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=head1 top photos
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http://www.flickr.com/photos/dexxus/5499821986/in/photostream/
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https://www.google.com/search?lr=&safe=images&hl=en&tbs=sur:fmc&tbm=isch&q=top+nature+photos&revid=600471240&biw=1024&bih=569
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=head1 What is GNU Parallel used for
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Searching for transit planets using data from the Kepler space telescope.
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Searching 1700 genomes for 1000-10000 protein sequences using Amazon
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EC2 compute cloud.
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Processing Earth Observation data from satellites to grep for pieces
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of information.
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Running tons of simulations of granular materials.
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Converting formats of movie frames in the film industry.
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Computational fluid dynamics. Numerical simulation of the compressible
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Navier-Stokes equations.
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Analysing data and running simulations for searching for the Higgs
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boson at the Tevatron.
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=head1 search terms
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run commands in parallel
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Parallel shell loops
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multi threading in bash xargs
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# TAGS: parallel | parallel processing | multicore | multiprocessor | Clustering/Distributed Networks
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# job control | multiple jobs | parallelization | text processing | cluster | filters
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# Clustering Tools | Command Line Tools | Utilities | System Administration
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# Bash parallel
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GNU parallel execution shell bash script simultaneous concurrent linux
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scripting run xargs ppss code.google.com/p/ppss/
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@vvuksan @ychaker @ncb000gt
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xargs can lead to nasty surprises caused by the separator problem
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http://nd.gd/0t GNU Parallel http://nd.gd/0s may be better.
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Comments:
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http://pi.dk/0 https://www.gnu.org/software/parallel/
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http://pi.dk/1 https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL284C9FF2488BC6D1
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http://pi.dk/2 https://savannah.gnu.org/news/?group=parallel
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http://pi.dk/5 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xargs#The_separator_problem
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http://pi.dk/6 https://www.gnu.org/software/parallel/man.html#differences_between_xargs_and_gnu_parallel
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http://pi.dk/7 https://www.gnu.org/software/parallel/man.html#example__distributing_work_to_local_and_remote_computers
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If you like xargs you may love GNU Parallel: http://pi.dk/1
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With GNU Parallel (http://pi.dk/0) you can do:
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ls | grep jpeg | parallel mv {} {.}.jpg
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Watch the intro video for GNU Parallel: http://pi.dk/1
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If your input file names are generated by users, you need to deal with
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surprising file names containing space, ', or " in the filename.
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xargs can give nasty surprises due to the separator problem
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http://pi.dk/5
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@jaylyerly @stevenf xargs will bite you if file names contain
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space http://pi.dk/5. Use GNU Parallel instead: http://pi.dk/0
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Please repay by spreading the word about GNU Parallel to your
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contacts/blog/facebook/linkedin/mailing lists/user group
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Your use of xargs can lead to nasty surprises because of the separator
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problem http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xargs#The_separator_problem
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GNU Parallel http://www.gnu.org/software/parallel/ does not have that
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problem.
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If you have GNU Parallel http://www.gnu.org/software/parallel/ installed you can do this:
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You can install GNU Parallel simply by:
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wget http://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/parallel.git/plain/src/parallel
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chmod 755 parallel
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cp parallel sem
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Watch the intro videos for GNU Parallel to learn more:
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https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL284C9FF2488BC6D1
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GNU Parallel also makes it possible to run small scripts. Try this:
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ls *.zip | parallel 'mkdir {.}; cd {.}; unzip ../{}'
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