Jump to content

GNU parallel

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Brunoff (talk | contribs) at 17:07, 13 May 2021 (last release update). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Parallel
Developer(s)GNU Project
Stable release
20210422[1] / 22 April 2021; 3 years ago (2021-04-22)
Repository
Written inPerl
Operating systemGNU
TypeUtility
LicenseGPLv3
Websitewww.gnu.org/software/parallel/ Edit this on Wikidata

GNU parallel is a command-line driven utility for Linux and other Unix-like operating systems which allows the user to execute shell scripts or commands in parallel. GNU parallel is free software, written by Ole Tange in Perl. It is available under the terms of GPLv3.[2]

Usage

Introduction video, Part 1
Introduction video, Part 2

The most common usage is to replace the shell loop, for example

while read x; do 
    do_something "$x"
done < list | process_output

to the form of

< list parallel do_something | process_output

where the file list contains arguments for do_something and where process_output may be empty.

Scripts using parallel are often easier to read than scripts using pexec.

The program parallel features also

  • grouping of standard output and standard error so the output of the parallel running jobs do not run together;
  • retaining the order of output to remain the same order as input;
  • dealing nicely with filenames containing special characters such as space, single quote, double quote, ampersand, and UTF-8 encoded characters;

By default, parallel runs as many jobs in parallel as there are CPU cores.

Examples

find . -name "*.foo" | parallel grep bar

The above is the parallel equivalent to:

find . -name "*.foo" -exec grep bar {} +

This searches in all files in the current directory and its subdirectories whose name end in .foo for occurrences of the string bar. The parallel command will work as expected unless a file name contains a newline. In order to avoid this limitation one may use:

find . -name "*.foo" -print0 | parallel -0 grep bar

The above command uses the null character to delimit file names.

find . -name "*.foo" | parallel -X mv {} /tmp/trash

The above command expands {} with as many arguments as the command line length permits, distributing them evenly among parallel jobs if required. This can lower process overhead for short-lived commands that take less time to finish than they do to launch.

find . -maxdepth 1 -type f -name "*.ogg" | parallel -X -r cp -v -p {} /home/media

The command above does the same as:

cp -v -p *.ogg /home/media

However, the former command which uses find/parallel/cp is more resource efficient and will not halt with an error if the expansion of *.ogg is too large for the shell.

See also

References

  1. ^ Tange, Ole (22 Apr 2021). "GNU Parallel 20210422 ('Ever Given') released [stable]". parallel (Mailing list).
  2. ^ "GNU Parallel". GNU.org.