The OP mentioned a large number of text files (thousands to millions at a time, up to a couple of MB each). I think that parallelization is better broken down at the file level. Basically, create a list of input files and chunk the list instead. Since the list may range from thousands to millions, go with chunk_size 1 or 2.

Notice that workers are spawned early, before creating a large array. Create the array and pass the array reference to MCE to not make an extra copy. This is how to tackle a big job, keeping overhead low. And then, fasten your seat belt and enjoy parallelization in top or htop.

use strict; use warnings; use MCE; use Time::HiRes 'time'; sub process_file { my ($file) = @_; } my $mce = MCE->new( max_workers => MCE::Util::get_ncpu(), chunk_size => 2, user_func => sub { my ($mce, $chunk_ref, $chunk_id) = @_; process_file($_) for @{ $chunk_ref }; } )->spawn; my @file_list = (1 .. 1_000_000); # simulate a list of 1 million files my $start = time; $mce->process(\@file_list); printf "%0.3f seconds\n", time - $start; $mce->shutdown; # reap workers

Let's find out the IPC overhead. I wonder myself.

chunk_size 1 3.773 seconds 1 million chunks chunk_size 2 1.930 seconds 500 thousand chunks chunk_size 10 0.423 seconds 100 thousand chunks chunk_size 20 0.234 seconds 50 thousand chunks

It is mind-boggling nonetheless, just a fraction of a second for 50 thousand chunks. Moreover, 2 seconds will not be felt when processing 500 thousand files. Nor, 4 seconds handling 1 million files.


In reply to Re^3: Need to speed up many regex substitutions and somehow make them a here-doc list (MCE solution) by marioroy
in thread Need to speed up many regex substitutions and somehow make them a here-doc list by xnous

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