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Updated the multiengine and task interface documentation....
Updated the multiengine and task interface documentation. The multiengine interface documentation is in very good condition. The task interface documentation is in OK condition. The main problem is that the task documentation had fallen very out of date. Rather than trying to update all of it, I moved the old task documentation to a file (docs/source/parallel/parallel_task_old.txt) and started a new shorter task documentation that is fully up to date. This should get user's started with the new stuff. But, we do need to write more complete task interface docs.

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/ docs / source / parallel / parallel_multiengine.txt
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r1256 .. _parallelmultiengine:
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r1678 ===============================
IPython's multiengine interface
===============================
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.. contents::
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r1678 The multiengine interface represents one possible way of working with a set of
IPython engines. The basic idea behind the multiengine interface is that the
capabilities of each engine are directly and explicitly exposed to the user.
Thus, in the multiengine interface, each engine is given an id that is used to
identify the engine and give it work to do. This interface is very intuitive
and is designed with interactive usage in mind, and is thus the best place for
new users of IPython to begin.
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Starting the IPython controller and engines
===========================================
To follow along with this tutorial, you will need to start the IPython
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r1678 controller and four IPython engines. The simplest way of doing this is to use
the :command:`ipcluster` command::
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$ ipcluster -n 4
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r1678 For more detailed information about starting the controller and engines, see
our :ref:`introduction <ip1par>` to using IPython for parallel computing.
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Creating a ``MultiEngineClient`` instance
=========================================
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r1678 The first step is to import the IPython :mod:`IPython.kernel.client` module
and then create a :class:`MultiEngineClient` instance::
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r1338 In [1]: from IPython.kernel import client
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In [2]: mec = client.MultiEngineClient()
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r1678 This form assumes that the :file:`ipcontroller-mec.furl` is in the
:file:`~./ipython/security` directory on the client's host. If not, the
location of the ``.furl`` file must be given as an argument to the
constructor::
In[2]: mec = client.MultiEngineClient('/path/to/my/ipcontroller-mec.furl')
To make sure there are engines connected to the controller, use can get a list
of engine ids::
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In [3]: mec.get_ids()
Out[3]: [0, 1, 2, 3]
Here we see that there are four engines ready to do work for us.
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r1678 Quick and easy parallelism
==========================
In many cases, you simply want to apply a Python function to a sequence of objects, but *in parallel*. The multiengine interface provides two simple ways of accomplishing this: a parallel version of :func:`map` and ``@parallel`` function decorator.
Parallel map
------------
Python's builtin :func:`map` functions allows a function to be applied to a
sequence element-by-element. This type of code is typically trivial to
parallelize. In fact, the multiengine interface in IPython already has a
parallel version of :meth:`map` that works just like its serial counterpart::
In [63]: serial_result = map(lambda x:x**10, range(32))
In [64]: parallel_result = mec.map(lambda x:x**10, range(32))
In [65]: serial_result==parallel_result
Out[65]: True
.. note::
The multiengine interface version of :meth:`map` does not do any load
balancing. For a load balanced version, see the task interface.
.. seealso::
The :meth:`map` method has a number of options that can be controlled by
the :meth:`mapper` method. See its docstring for more information.
Parallel function decorator
---------------------------
Parallel functions are just like normal function, but they can be called on sequences and *in parallel*. The multiengine interface provides a decorator that turns any Python function into a parallel function::
In [10]: @mec.parallel()
....: def f(x):
....: return 10.0*x**4
....:
In [11]: f(range(32)) # this is done in parallel
Out[11]:
[0.0,10.0,160.0,...]
See the docstring for the :meth:`parallel` decorator for options.
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r1256 Running Python commands
=======================
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r1678 The most basic type of operation that can be performed on the engines is to
execute Python code. Executing Python code can be done in blocking or
non-blocking mode (blocking is default) using the :meth:`execute` method.
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Blocking execution
------------------
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r1678 In blocking mode, the :class:`MultiEngineClient` object (called ``mec`` in
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r1256 these examples) submits the command to the controller, which places the
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r1678 command in the engines' queues for execution. The :meth:`execute` call then
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r1256 blocks until the engines are done executing the command::
# The default is to run on all engines
In [4]: mec.execute('a=5')
Out[4]:
<Results List>
[0] In [1]: a=5
[1] In [1]: a=5
[2] In [1]: a=5
[3] In [1]: a=5
In [5]: mec.execute('b=10')
Out[5]:
<Results List>
[0] In [2]: b=10
[1] In [2]: b=10
[2] In [2]: b=10
[3] In [2]: b=10
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r1678 Python commands can be executed on specific engines by calling execute using
the ``targets`` keyword argument::
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In [6]: mec.execute('c=a+b',targets=[0,2])
Out[6]:
<Results List>
[0] In [3]: c=a+b
[2] In [3]: c=a+b
In [7]: mec.execute('c=a-b',targets=[1,3])
Out[7]:
<Results List>
[1] In [3]: c=a-b
[3] In [3]: c=a-b
In [8]: mec.execute('print c')
Out[8]:
<Results List>
[0] In [4]: print c
[0] Out[4]: 15
[1] In [4]: print c
[1] Out[4]: -5
[2] In [4]: print c
[2] Out[4]: 15
[3] In [4]: print c
[3] Out[4]: -5
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r1678 This example also shows one of the most important things about the IPython
engines: they have a persistent user namespaces. The :meth:`execute` method
returns a Python ``dict`` that contains useful information::
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In [9]: result_dict = mec.execute('d=10; print d')
In [10]: for r in result_dict:
....: print r
....:
....:
{'input': {'translated': 'd=10; print d', 'raw': 'd=10; print d'}, 'number': 5, 'id': 0, 'stdout': '10\n'}
{'input': {'translated': 'd=10; print d', 'raw': 'd=10; print d'}, 'number': 5, 'id': 1, 'stdout': '10\n'}
{'input': {'translated': 'd=10; print d', 'raw': 'd=10; print d'}, 'number': 5, 'id': 2, 'stdout': '10\n'}
{'input': {'translated': 'd=10; print d', 'raw': 'd=10; print d'}, 'number': 5, 'id': 3, 'stdout': '10\n'}
Non-blocking execution
----------------------
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r1678 In non-blocking mode, :meth:`execute` submits the command to be executed and
then returns a :class:`PendingResult` object immediately. The
:class:`PendingResult` object gives you a way of getting a result at a later
time through its :meth:`get_result` method or :attr:`r` attribute. This allows
you to quickly submit long running commands without blocking your local
Python/IPython session::
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# In blocking mode
In [6]: mec.execute('import time')
Out[6]:
<Results List>
[0] In [1]: import time
[1] In [1]: import time
[2] In [1]: import time
[3] In [1]: import time
# In non-blocking mode
In [7]: pr = mec.execute('time.sleep(10)',block=False)
# Now block for the result
In [8]: pr.get_result()
Out[8]:
<Results List>
[0] In [2]: time.sleep(10)
[1] In [2]: time.sleep(10)
[2] In [2]: time.sleep(10)
[3] In [2]: time.sleep(10)
# Again in non-blocking mode
In [9]: pr = mec.execute('time.sleep(10)',block=False)
# Poll to see if the result is ready
In [10]: pr.get_result(block=False)
# A shorthand for get_result(block=True)
In [11]: pr.r
Out[11]:
<Results List>
[0] In [3]: time.sleep(10)
[1] In [3]: time.sleep(10)
[2] In [3]: time.sleep(10)
[3] In [3]: time.sleep(10)
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r1678 Often, it is desirable to wait until a set of :class:`PendingResult` objects
are done. For this, there is a the method :meth:`barrier`. This method takes a
tuple of :class:`PendingResult` objects and blocks until all of the associated
results are ready::
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In [72]: mec.block=False
# A trivial list of PendingResults objects
In [73]: pr_list = [mec.execute('time.sleep(3)') for i in range(10)]
# Wait until all of them are done
In [74]: mec.barrier(pr_list)
# Then, their results are ready using get_result or the r attribute
In [75]: pr_list[0].r
Out[75]:
<Results List>
[0] In [20]: time.sleep(3)
[1] In [19]: time.sleep(3)
[2] In [20]: time.sleep(3)
[3] In [19]: time.sleep(3)
The ``block`` and ``targets`` keyword arguments and attributes
--------------------------------------------------------------
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r1678 Most methods in the multiengine interface (like :meth:`execute`) accept
``block`` and ``targets`` as keyword arguments. As we have seen above, these
keyword arguments control the blocking mode and which engines the command is
applied to. The :class:`MultiEngineClient` class also has :attr:`block` and
:attr:`targets` attributes that control the default behavior when the keyword
arguments are not provided. Thus the following logic is used for :attr:`block`
and :attr:`targets`:
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r1678 * If no keyword argument is provided, the instance attributes are used.
* Keyword argument, if provided override the instance attributes.
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The following examples demonstrate how to use the instance attributes::
In [16]: mec.targets = [0,2]
In [17]: mec.block = False
In [18]: pr = mec.execute('a=5')
In [19]: pr.r
Out[19]:
<Results List>
[0] In [6]: a=5
[2] In [6]: a=5
# Note targets='all' means all engines
In [20]: mec.targets = 'all'
In [21]: mec.block = True
In [22]: mec.execute('b=10; print b')
Out[22]:
<Results List>
[0] In [7]: b=10; print b
[0] Out[7]: 10
[1] In [6]: b=10; print b
[1] Out[6]: 10
[2] In [7]: b=10; print b
[2] Out[7]: 10
[3] In [6]: b=10; print b
[3] Out[6]: 10
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r1678 The :attr:`block` and :attr:`targets` instance attributes also determine the
behavior of the parallel magic commands.
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Parallel magic commands
-----------------------
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r1678 We provide a few IPython magic commands (``%px``, ``%autopx`` and ``%result``)
that make it more pleasant to execute Python commands on the engines
interactively. These are simply shortcuts to :meth:`execute` and
:meth:`get_result`. The ``%px`` magic executes a single Python command on the
engines specified by the :attr:`targets` attribute of the
:class:`MultiEngineClient` instance (by default this is ``'all'``)::
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# Make this MultiEngineClient active for parallel magic commands
In [23]: mec.activate()
In [24]: mec.block=True
In [25]: import numpy
In [26]: %px import numpy
Executing command on Controller
Out[26]:
<Results List>
[0] In [8]: import numpy
[1] In [7]: import numpy
[2] In [8]: import numpy
[3] In [7]: import numpy
In [27]: %px a = numpy.random.rand(2,2)
Executing command on Controller
Out[27]:
<Results List>
[0] In [9]: a = numpy.random.rand(2,2)
[1] In [8]: a = numpy.random.rand(2,2)
[2] In [9]: a = numpy.random.rand(2,2)
[3] In [8]: a = numpy.random.rand(2,2)
In [28]: %px print numpy.linalg.eigvals(a)
Executing command on Controller
Out[28]:
<Results List>
[0] In [10]: print numpy.linalg.eigvals(a)
[0] Out[10]: [ 1.28167017 0.14197338]
[1] In [9]: print numpy.linalg.eigvals(a)
[1] Out[9]: [-0.14093616 1.27877273]
[2] In [10]: print numpy.linalg.eigvals(a)
[2] Out[10]: [-0.37023573 1.06779409]
[3] In [9]: print numpy.linalg.eigvals(a)
[3] Out[9]: [ 0.83664764 -0.25602658]
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r1678 The ``%result`` magic gets and prints the stdin/stdout/stderr of the last
command executed on each engine. It is simply a shortcut to the
:meth:`get_result` method::
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In [29]: %result
Out[29]:
<Results List>
[0] In [10]: print numpy.linalg.eigvals(a)
[0] Out[10]: [ 1.28167017 0.14197338]
[1] In [9]: print numpy.linalg.eigvals(a)
[1] Out[9]: [-0.14093616 1.27877273]
[2] In [10]: print numpy.linalg.eigvals(a)
[2] Out[10]: [-0.37023573 1.06779409]
[3] In [9]: print numpy.linalg.eigvals(a)
[3] Out[9]: [ 0.83664764 -0.25602658]
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r1678 The ``%autopx`` magic switches to a mode where everything you type is executed
on the engines given by the :attr:`targets` attribute::
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In [30]: mec.block=False
In [31]: %autopx
Auto Parallel Enabled
Type %autopx to disable
In [32]: max_evals = []
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Fixed most of the examples. A few still don't work, but this is a start.
r1338 <IPython.kernel.multiengineclient.PendingResult object at 0x17b8a70>
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In [33]: for i in range(100):
....: a = numpy.random.rand(10,10)
....: a = a+a.transpose()
....: evals = numpy.linalg.eigvals(a)
....: max_evals.append(evals[0].real)
....:
....:
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Fixed most of the examples. A few still don't work, but this is a start.
r1338 <IPython.kernel.multiengineclient.PendingResult object at 0x17af8f0>
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In [34]: %autopx
Auto Parallel Disabled
In [35]: mec.block=True
In [36]: px print "Average max eigenvalue is: ", sum(max_evals)/len(max_evals)
Executing command on Controller
Out[36]:
<Results List>
[0] In [13]: print "Average max eigenvalue is: ", sum(max_evals)/len(max_evals)
[0] Out[13]: Average max eigenvalue is: 10.1387247332
[1] In [12]: print "Average max eigenvalue is: ", sum(max_evals)/len(max_evals)
[1] Out[12]: Average max eigenvalue is: 10.2076902286
[2] In [13]: print "Average max eigenvalue is: ", sum(max_evals)/len(max_evals)
[2] Out[13]: Average max eigenvalue is: 10.1891484655
[3] In [12]: print "Average max eigenvalue is: ", sum(max_evals)/len(max_evals)
[3] Out[12]: Average max eigenvalue is: 10.1158837784
Brian Granger
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r1678 Moving Python objects around
============================
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r1256
Brian Granger
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r1678 In addition to executing code on engines, you can transfer Python objects to
and from your IPython session and the engines. In IPython, these operations
are called :meth:`push` (sending an object to the engines) and :meth:`pull`
(getting an object from the engines).
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Basic push and pull
-------------------
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r1678 Here are some examples of how you use :meth:`push` and :meth:`pull`::
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In [38]: mec.push(dict(a=1.03234,b=3453))
Out[38]: [None, None, None, None]
In [39]: mec.pull('a')
Out[39]: [1.03234, 1.03234, 1.03234, 1.03234]
In [40]: mec.pull('b',targets=0)
Out[40]: [3453]
In [41]: mec.pull(('a','b'))
Out[41]: [[1.03234, 3453], [1.03234, 3453], [1.03234, 3453], [1.03234, 3453]]
In [42]: mec.zip_pull(('a','b'))
Out[42]: [(1.03234, 1.03234, 1.03234, 1.03234), (3453, 3453, 3453, 3453)]
In [43]: mec.push(dict(c='speed'))
Out[43]: [None, None, None, None]
In [44]: %px print c
Executing command on Controller
Out[44]:
<Results List>
[0] In [14]: print c
[0] Out[14]: speed
[1] In [13]: print c
[1] Out[13]: speed
[2] In [14]: print c
[2] Out[14]: speed
[3] In [13]: print c
[3] Out[13]: speed
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r1678 In non-blocking mode :meth:`push` and :meth:`pull` also return
:class:`PendingResult` objects::
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r1256
In [47]: mec.block=False
In [48]: pr = mec.pull('a')
In [49]: pr.r
Out[49]: [1.03234, 1.03234, 1.03234, 1.03234]
Push and pull for functions
---------------------------
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r1678 Functions can also be pushed and pulled using :meth:`push_function` and
:meth:`pull_function`::
In [52]: mec.block=True
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r1256
In [53]: def f(x):
....: return 2.0*x**4
....:
In [54]: mec.push_function(dict(f=f))
Out[54]: [None, None, None, None]
In [55]: mec.execute('y = f(4.0)')
Out[55]:
<Results List>
[0] In [15]: y = f(4.0)
[1] In [14]: y = f(4.0)
[2] In [15]: y = f(4.0)
[3] In [14]: y = f(4.0)
In [56]: px print y
Executing command on Controller
Out[56]:
<Results List>
[0] In [16]: print y
[0] Out[16]: 512.0
[1] In [15]: print y
[1] Out[15]: 512.0
[2] In [16]: print y
[2] Out[16]: 512.0
[3] In [15]: print y
[3] Out[15]: 512.0
Dictionary interface
--------------------
Brian Granger
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r1678 As a shorthand to :meth:`push` and :meth:`pull`, the
:class:`MultiEngineClient` class implements some of the Python dictionary
interface. This make the remote namespaces of the engines appear as a local
dictionary. Underneath, this uses :meth:`push` and :meth:`pull`::
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In [50]: mec.block=True
In [51]: mec['a']=['foo','bar']
In [52]: mec['a']
Out[52]: [['foo', 'bar'], ['foo', 'bar'], ['foo', 'bar'], ['foo', 'bar']]
Scatter and gather
------------------
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r1678 Sometimes it is useful to partition a sequence and push the partitions to
different engines. In MPI language, this is know as scatter/gather and we
follow that terminology. However, it is important to remember that in
IPython's :class:`MultiEngineClient` class, :meth:`scatter` is from the
interactive IPython session to the engines and :meth:`gather` is from the
engines back to the interactive IPython session. For scatter/gather operations
between engines, MPI should be used::
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In [58]: mec.scatter('a',range(16))
Out[58]: [None, None, None, None]
In [59]: px print a
Executing command on Controller
Out[59]:
<Results List>
[0] In [17]: print a
[0] Out[17]: [0, 1, 2, 3]
[1] In [16]: print a
[1] Out[16]: [4, 5, 6, 7]
[2] In [17]: print a
[2] Out[17]: [8, 9, 10, 11]
[3] In [16]: print a
[3] Out[16]: [12, 13, 14, 15]
In [60]: mec.gather('a')
Out[60]: [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15]
Other things to look at
=======================
How to do parallel list comprehensions
--------------------------------------
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r1678 In many cases list comprehensions are nicer than using the map function. While
we don't have fully parallel list comprehensions, it is simple to get the
basic effect using :meth:`scatter` and :meth:`gather`::
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In [66]: mec.scatter('x',range(64))
Out[66]: [None, None, None, None]
In [67]: px y = [i**10 for i in x]
Executing command on Controller
Out[67]:
<Results List>
[0] In [19]: y = [i**10 for i in x]
[1] In [18]: y = [i**10 for i in x]
[2] In [19]: y = [i**10 for i in x]
[3] In [18]: y = [i**10 for i in x]
In [68]: y = mec.gather('y')
In [69]: print y
[0, 1, 1024, 59049, 1048576, 9765625, 60466176, 282475249, 1073741824,...]
Brian Granger
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r1678 Parallel exceptions
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r1256 -------------------
Brian Granger
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r1678 In the multiengine interface, parallel commands can raise Python exceptions,
just like serial commands. But, it is a little subtle, because a single
parallel command can actually raise multiple exceptions (one for each engine
the command was run on). To express this idea, the MultiEngine interface has a
:exc:`CompositeError` exception class that will be raised in most cases. The
:exc:`CompositeError` class is a special type of exception that wraps one or
more other types of exceptions. Here is how it works::
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In [76]: mec.block=True
In [77]: mec.execute('1/0')
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
CompositeError Traceback (most recent call last)
/ipython1-client-r3021/docs/examples/<ipython console> in <module>()
/ipython1-client-r3021/ipython1/kernel/multiengineclient.pyc in execute(self, lines, targets, block)
432 targets, block = self._findTargetsAndBlock(targets, block)
433 result = blockingCallFromThread(self.smultiengine.execute, lines,
--> 434 targets=targets, block=block)
435 if block:
436 result = ResultList(result)
/ipython1-client-r3021/ipython1/kernel/twistedutil.pyc in blockingCallFromThread(f, *a, **kw)
72 result.raiseException()
73 except Exception, e:
---> 74 raise e
75 return result
76
CompositeError: one or more exceptions from call to method: execute
[0:execute]: ZeroDivisionError: integer division or modulo by zero
[1:execute]: ZeroDivisionError: integer division or modulo by zero
[2:execute]: ZeroDivisionError: integer division or modulo by zero
[3:execute]: ZeroDivisionError: integer division or modulo by zero
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r1678 Notice how the error message printed when :exc:`CompositeError` is raised has information about the individual exceptions that were raised on each engine. If you want, you can even raise one of these original exceptions::
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r1256
In [80]: try:
....: mec.execute('1/0')
....: except client.CompositeError, e:
....: e.raise_exception()
....:
....:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ZeroDivisionError Traceback (most recent call last)
/ipython1-client-r3021/docs/examples/<ipython console> in <module>()
/ipython1-client-r3021/ipython1/kernel/error.pyc in raise_exception(self, excid)
156 raise IndexError("an exception with index %i does not exist"%excid)
157 else:
--> 158 raise et, ev, etb
159
160 def collect_exceptions(rlist, method):
ZeroDivisionError: integer division or modulo by zero
Brian Granger
Updated the multiengine and task interface documentation....
r1678 If you are working in IPython, you can simple type ``%debug`` after one of
these :exc:`CompositeError` exceptions is raised, and inspect the exception
instance::
Brian E Granger
Beginning to organize the rst documentation.
r1256
In [81]: mec.execute('1/0')
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
CompositeError Traceback (most recent call last)
/ipython1-client-r3021/docs/examples/<ipython console> in <module>()
/ipython1-client-r3021/ipython1/kernel/multiengineclient.pyc in execute(self, lines, targets, block)
432 targets, block = self._findTargetsAndBlock(targets, block)
433 result = blockingCallFromThread(self.smultiengine.execute, lines,
--> 434 targets=targets, block=block)
435 if block:
436 result = ResultList(result)
/ipython1-client-r3021/ipython1/kernel/twistedutil.pyc in blockingCallFromThread(f, *a, **kw)
72 result.raiseException()
73 except Exception, e:
---> 74 raise e
75 return result
76
CompositeError: one or more exceptions from call to method: execute
[0:execute]: ZeroDivisionError: integer division or modulo by zero
[1:execute]: ZeroDivisionError: integer division or modulo by zero
[2:execute]: ZeroDivisionError: integer division or modulo by zero
[3:execute]: ZeroDivisionError: integer division or modulo by zero
In [82]: %debug
>
/ipython1-client-r3021/ipython1/kernel/twistedutil.py(74)blockingCallFromThread()
73 except Exception, e:
---> 74 raise e
75 return result
# With the debugger running, e is the exceptions instance. We can tab complete
# on it and see the extra methods that are available.
ipdb> e.
e.__class__ e.__getitem__ e.__new__ e.__setstate__ e.args
e.__delattr__ e.__getslice__ e.__reduce__ e.__str__ e.elist
e.__dict__ e.__hash__ e.__reduce_ex__ e.__weakref__ e.message
e.__doc__ e.__init__ e.__repr__ e._get_engine_str e.print_tracebacks
e.__getattribute__ e.__module__ e.__setattr__ e._get_traceback e.raise_exception
ipdb> e.print_tracebacks()
[0:execute]:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ZeroDivisionError Traceback (most recent call last)
/ipython1-client-r3021/docs/examples/<string> in <module>()
ZeroDivisionError: integer division or modulo by zero
[1:execute]:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ZeroDivisionError Traceback (most recent call last)
/ipython1-client-r3021/docs/examples/<string> in <module>()
ZeroDivisionError: integer division or modulo by zero
[2:execute]:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ZeroDivisionError Traceback (most recent call last)
/ipython1-client-r3021/docs/examples/<string> in <module>()
ZeroDivisionError: integer division or modulo by zero
[3:execute]:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ZeroDivisionError Traceback (most recent call last)
/ipython1-client-r3021/docs/examples/<string> in <module>()
ZeroDivisionError: integer division or modulo by zero
Brian Granger
Updated the multiengine and task interface documentation....
r1678 .. note::
The above example appears to be broken right now because of a change in
how we are using Twisted.
Brian E Granger
Beginning to organize the rst documentation.
r1256 All of this same error handling magic even works in non-blocking mode::
In [83]: mec.block=False
In [84]: pr = mec.execute('1/0')
In [85]: pr.r
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
CompositeError Traceback (most recent call last)
/ipython1-client-r3021/docs/examples/<ipython console> in <module>()
/ipython1-client-r3021/ipython1/kernel/multiengineclient.pyc in _get_r(self)
170
171 def _get_r(self):
--> 172 return self.get_result(block=True)
173
174 r = property(_get_r)
/ipython1-client-r3021/ipython1/kernel/multiengineclient.pyc in get_result(self, default, block)
131 return self.result
132 try:
--> 133 result = self.client.get_pending_deferred(self.result_id, block)
134 except error.ResultNotCompleted:
135 return default
/ipython1-client-r3021/ipython1/kernel/multiengineclient.pyc in get_pending_deferred(self, deferredID, block)
385
386 def get_pending_deferred(self, deferredID, block):
--> 387 return blockingCallFromThread(self.smultiengine.get_pending_deferred, deferredID, block)
388
389 def barrier(self, pendingResults):
/ipython1-client-r3021/ipython1/kernel/twistedutil.pyc in blockingCallFromThread(f, *a, **kw)
72 result.raiseException()
73 except Exception, e:
---> 74 raise e
75 return result
76
CompositeError: one or more exceptions from call to method: execute
[0:execute]: ZeroDivisionError: integer division or modulo by zero
[1:execute]: ZeroDivisionError: integer division or modulo by zero
[2:execute]: ZeroDivisionError: integer division or modulo by zero
[3:execute]: ZeroDivisionError: integer division or modulo by zero