Indeed, your threads rewrite scales linearly and I will adopt it, thank you. However, I'm still intrigued as to why the fork version behaves as such.

My "production" system is a 10-year old, 8-thread i7 but with plenty of RAM (32GB) to handle the task at hand. Initially, the script didn't even have a fork limit neither waitpid() or wait(), except the final one after the regex loop, as I just used the solution presented to me by Marshall on my previous question and it didn't make a difference in performance anyway, as I experimented with various limits ranging from 8 to 512, thinking at first that unconstrained forking was the cause.

I noticed your version only pumps "user" time on my system monitor, while fork shows a significant amount of "system" time, at least 10% of total CPU, whether $maxforks is 8 or unlimited.

All these said, I'd still like to find out why the initial script becomes so slow when the files to process multiply, even when I limit its scope to the first 1000 files. It's almost unreasonable.


In reply to Re^2: Script exponentially slower as number of files to process increases by xnous
in thread Script exponentially slower as number of files to process increases by xnous

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