magics.rst
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MinRK
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r7479 | .. _parallel_magics: | ||
======================= | ||||
Parallel Magic Commands | ||||
======================= | ||||
We provide a few IPython magic commands | ||||
that make it a bit more pleasant to execute Python commands on the engines interactively. | ||||
These are mainly shortcuts to :meth:`.DirectView.execute` | ||||
and :meth:`.AsyncResult.display_outputs` methods repsectively. | ||||
These magics will automatically become available when you create a Client: | ||||
.. sourcecode:: ipython | ||||
In [2]: rc = parallel.Client() | ||||
The initially active View will have attributes ``targets='all', block=True``, | ||||
which is a blocking view of all engines, evaluated at request time | ||||
(adding/removing engines will change where this view's tasks will run). | ||||
The Magics | ||||
========== | ||||
%px | ||||
--- | ||||
The %px magic executes a single Python command on the engines | ||||
specified by the :attr:`targets` attribute of the :class:`DirectView` instance: | ||||
.. sourcecode:: ipython | ||||
# import numpy here and everywhere | ||||
In [25]: with rc[:].sync_imports(): | ||||
....: import numpy | ||||
importing numpy on engine(s) | ||||
In [27]: %px a = numpy.random.rand(2,2) | ||||
Parallel execution on engines: [0, 1, 2, 3] | ||||
In [28]: %px numpy.linalg.eigvals(a) | ||||
Parallel execution on engines: [0, 1, 2, 3] | ||||
Out [0:68]: array([ 0.77120707, -0.19448286]) | ||||
Out [1:68]: array([ 1.10815921, 0.05110369]) | ||||
Out [2:68]: array([ 0.74625527, -0.37475081]) | ||||
Out [3:68]: array([ 0.72931905, 0.07159743]) | ||||
In [29]: %px print 'hi' | ||||
Parallel execution on engine(s): all | ||||
[stdout:0] hi | ||||
[stdout:1] hi | ||||
[stdout:2] hi | ||||
[stdout:3] hi | ||||
Since engines are IPython as well, you can even run magics remotely: | ||||
.. sourcecode:: ipython | ||||
In [28]: %px %pylab inline | ||||
Parallel execution on engine(s): all | ||||
[stdout:0] | ||||
MinRK
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r11797 | Populating the interactive namespace from numpy and matplotlib | ||
MinRK
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r7479 | [stdout:1] | ||
MinRK
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r11797 | Populating the interactive namespace from numpy and matplotlib | ||
MinRK
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r7479 | [stdout:2] | ||
MinRK
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r11797 | Populating the interactive namespace from numpy and matplotlib | ||
MinRK
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r7479 | [stdout:3] | ||
MinRK
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r11797 | Populating the interactive namespace from numpy and matplotlib | ||
MinRK
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r7479 | |||
And once in pylab mode with the inline backend, | ||||
you can make plots and they will be displayed in your frontend | ||||
if it suports the inline figures (e.g. notebook or qtconsole): | ||||
.. sourcecode:: ipython | ||||
In [40]: %px plot(rand(100)) | ||||
Parallel execution on engine(s): all | ||||
<plot0> | ||||
<plot1> | ||||
<plot2> | ||||
<plot3> | ||||
Out[0:79]: [<matplotlib.lines.Line2D at 0x10a6286d0>] | ||||
Out[1:79]: [<matplotlib.lines.Line2D at 0x10b9476d0>] | ||||
Out[2:79]: [<matplotlib.lines.Line2D at 0x110652750>] | ||||
Out[3:79]: [<matplotlib.lines.Line2D at 0x10c6566d0>] | ||||
%%px Cell Magic | ||||
--------------- | ||||
%%px can be used as a Cell Magic, which accepts some arguments for controlling | ||||
the execution. | ||||
Targets and Blocking | ||||
******************** | ||||
%%px accepts ``--targets`` for controlling which engines on which to run, | ||||
and ``--[no]block`` for specifying the blocking behavior of this cell, | ||||
independent of the defaults for the View. | ||||
.. sourcecode:: ipython | ||||
In [6]: %%px --targets ::2 | ||||
...: print "I am even" | ||||
...: | ||||
Parallel execution on engine(s): [0, 2] | ||||
[stdout:0] I am even | ||||
[stdout:2] I am even | ||||
In [7]: %%px --targets 1 | ||||
...: print "I am number 1" | ||||
...: | ||||
Parallel execution on engine(s): 1 | ||||
I am number 1 | ||||
In [8]: %%px | ||||
...: print "still 'all' by default" | ||||
...: | ||||
Parallel execution on engine(s): all | ||||
[stdout:0] still 'all' by default | ||||
[stdout:1] still 'all' by default | ||||
[stdout:2] still 'all' by default | ||||
[stdout:3] still 'all' by default | ||||
In [9]: %%px --noblock | ||||
...: import time | ||||
...: time.sleep(1) | ||||
...: time.time() | ||||
...: | ||||
Async parallel execution on engine(s): all | ||||
Out[9]: <AsyncResult: execute> | ||||
In [10]: %pxresult | ||||
Out[0:12]: 1339454561.069116 | ||||
Out[1:10]: 1339454561.076752 | ||||
Out[2:12]: 1339454561.072837 | ||||
Out[3:10]: 1339454561.066665 | ||||
.. seealso:: | ||||
Thomas Kluyver
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r13460 | :ref:`pxconfig` accepts these same arguments for changing the *default* | ||
MinRK
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r7479 | values of targets/blocking for the active View. | ||
Output Display | ||||
************** | ||||
%%px also accepts a ``--group-outputs`` argument, | ||||
which adjusts how the outputs of multiple engines are presented. | ||||
.. seealso:: | ||||
:meth:`.AsyncResult.display_outputs` for the grouping options. | ||||
.. sourcecode:: ipython | ||||
In [50]: %%px --block --group-outputs=engine | ||||
....: import numpy as np | ||||
....: A = np.random.random((2,2)) | ||||
....: ev = numpy.linalg.eigvals(A) | ||||
....: print ev | ||||
....: ev.max() | ||||
....: | ||||
Parallel execution on engine(s): all | ||||
[stdout:0] [ 0.60640442 0.95919621] | ||||
Out [0:73]: 0.9591962130899806 | ||||
[stdout:1] [ 0.38501813 1.29430871] | ||||
Out [1:73]: 1.2943087091452372 | ||||
[stdout:2] [-0.85925141 0.9387692 ] | ||||
Out [2:73]: 0.93876920456230284 | ||||
[stdout:3] [ 0.37998269 1.24218246] | ||||
Out [3:73]: 1.2421824618493817 | ||||
%pxresult | ||||
--------- | ||||
If you are using %px in non-blocking mode, you won't get output. | ||||
You can use %pxresult to display the outputs of the latest command, | ||||
just as is done when %px is blocking: | ||||
.. sourcecode:: ipython | ||||
In [39]: dv.block = False | ||||
In [40]: %px print 'hi' | ||||
Async parallel execution on engine(s): all | ||||
In [41]: %pxresult | ||||
[stdout:0] hi | ||||
[stdout:1] hi | ||||
[stdout:2] hi | ||||
[stdout:3] hi | ||||
%pxresult simply calls :meth:`.AsyncResult.display_outputs` on the most recent request. | ||||
It accepts the same output-grouping arguments as %%px, so you can use it to view | ||||
a result in different ways. | ||||
%autopx | ||||
------- | ||||
The %autopx magic switches to a mode where everything you type is executed | ||||
on the engines until you do %autopx again. | ||||
.. sourcecode:: ipython | ||||
In [30]: dv.block=True | ||||
In [31]: %autopx | ||||
%autopx enabled | ||||
In [32]: max_evals = [] | ||||
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) | ||||
....: | ||||
In [34]: print "Average max eigenvalue is: %f" % (sum(max_evals)/len(max_evals)) | ||||
[stdout:0] Average max eigenvalue is: 10.193101 | ||||
[stdout:1] Average max eigenvalue is: 10.064508 | ||||
[stdout:2] Average max eigenvalue is: 10.055724 | ||||
[stdout:3] Average max eigenvalue is: 10.086876 | ||||
In [35]: %autopx | ||||
Auto Parallel Disabled | ||||
Thomas Kluyver
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r13460 | .. _pxconfig: | ||
MinRK
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r7479 | %pxconfig | ||
--------- | ||||
The default targets and blocking behavior for the magics are governed by the :attr:`block` | ||||
and :attr:`targets` attribute of the active View. If you have a handle for the view, | ||||
you can set these attributes directly, but if you don't, you can change them with | ||||
the %pxconfig magic: | ||||
.. sourcecode:: ipython | ||||
In [3]: %pxconfig --block | ||||
In [5]: %px print 'hi' | ||||
Parallel execution on engine(s): all | ||||
[stdout:0] hi | ||||
[stdout:1] hi | ||||
[stdout:2] hi | ||||
[stdout:3] hi | ||||
In [6]: %pxconfig --targets ::2 | ||||
In [7]: %px print 'hi' | ||||
Parallel execution on engine(s): [0, 2] | ||||
[stdout:0] hi | ||||
[stdout:2] hi | ||||
In [8]: %pxconfig --noblock | ||||
In [9]: %px print 'are you there?' | ||||
Async parallel execution on engine(s): [0, 2] | ||||
Out[9]: <AsyncResult: execute> | ||||
In [10]: %pxresult | ||||
[stdout:0] are you there? | ||||
[stdout:2] are you there? | ||||
Multiple Active Views | ||||
===================== | ||||
The parallel magics are associated with a particular :class:`~.DirectView` object. | ||||
You can change the active view by calling the :meth:`~.DirectView.activate` method | ||||
on any view. | ||||
.. sourcecode:: ipython | ||||
In [11]: even = rc[::2] | ||||
In [12]: even.activate() | ||||
In [13]: %px print 'hi' | ||||
Async parallel execution on engine(s): [0, 2] | ||||
Out[13]: <AsyncResult: execute> | ||||
In [14]: even.block = True | ||||
In [15]: %px print 'hi' | ||||
Parallel execution on engine(s): [0, 2] | ||||
[stdout:0] hi | ||||
[stdout:2] hi | ||||
When activating a View, you can also specify a *suffix*, so that a whole different | ||||
set of magics are associated with that view, without replacing the existing ones. | ||||
.. sourcecode:: ipython | ||||
# restore the original DirecView to the base %px magics | ||||
In [16]: rc.activate() | ||||
Out[16]: <DirectView all> | ||||
In [17]: even.activate('_even') | ||||
In [18]: %px print 'hi all' | ||||
Parallel execution on engine(s): all | ||||
[stdout:0] hi all | ||||
[stdout:1] hi all | ||||
[stdout:2] hi all | ||||
[stdout:3] hi all | ||||
In [19]: %px_even print "We aren't odd!" | ||||
Parallel execution on engine(s): [0, 2] | ||||
[stdout:0] We aren't odd! | ||||
[stdout:2] We aren't odd! | ||||
This suffix is applied to the end of all magics, e.g. %autopx_even, %pxresult_even, etc. | ||||
For convenience, the :class:`~.Client` has a :meth:`~.Client.activate` method as well, | ||||
which creates a DirectView with block=True, activates it, and returns the new View. | ||||
The initial magics registered when you create a client are the result of a call to | ||||
:meth:`rc.activate` with default args. | ||||
Engines as Kernels | ||||
================== | ||||
Engines are really the same object as the Kernels used elsewhere in IPython, | ||||
with the minor exception that engines connect to a controller, while regular kernels | ||||
bind their sockets, listening for connections from a QtConsole or other frontends. | ||||
Sometimes for debugging or inspection purposes, you would like a QtConsole connected | ||||
to an engine for more direct interaction. You can do this by first instructing | ||||
the Engine to *also* bind its kernel, to listen for connections: | ||||
.. sourcecode:: ipython | ||||
In [50]: %px from IPython.parallel import bind_kernel; bind_kernel() | ||||
Then, if your engines are local, you can start a qtconsole right on the engine(s): | ||||
.. sourcecode:: ipython | ||||
In [51]: %px %qtconsole | ||||
Careful with this one, because if your view is of 16 engines it will start 16 QtConsoles! | ||||
Or you can view just the connection info, and work out the right way to connect to the engines, | ||||
depending on where they live and where you are: | ||||
.. sourcecode:: ipython | ||||
In [51]: %px %connect_info | ||||
Parallel execution on engine(s): all | ||||
[stdout:0] | ||||
{ | ||||
"stdin_port": 60387, | ||||
"ip": "127.0.0.1", | ||||
"hb_port": 50835, | ||||
"key": "eee2dd69-7dd3-4340-bf3e-7e2e22a62542", | ||||
"shell_port": 55328, | ||||
"iopub_port": 58264 | ||||
} | ||||
Paste the above JSON into a file, and connect with: | ||||
$> ipython <app> --existing <file> | ||||
or, if you are local, you can connect with just: | ||||
$> ipython <app> --existing kernel-60125.json | ||||
or even just: | ||||
$> ipython <app> --existing | ||||
if this is the most recent IPython session you have started. | ||||
[stdout:1] | ||||
{ | ||||
"stdin_port": 61869, | ||||
... | ||||
.. note:: | ||||
``%qtconsole`` will call :func:`bind_kernel` on an engine if it hasn't been done already, | ||||
so you can often skip that first step. | ||||