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I have been trying to use GNU parallel for some time, but I have never been able to get it to function at all!

For example, running (in a non-empty directory!):

ls | parallel echo            # Outputs single new line
ls | parallel echo echo echo  # Outputs three new lines.
ls | parallel echo {}         # /bin/bash: {}: command not found
ls | parallel echo '{}'       # /bin/bash: {}: command not found
ls | parallel 'echo {}'       # Outputs: {}
ls | parallel -IMM 'echo MM'  # Outputs: MM

It seems that it is simply executing each argument as a command, which makes no sense.

I have tried bash, zsh, tcsh, csh, and sh, to no avail.

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4 Answers 4

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As I was about to complete writing this question, I ran parallel --version to report the version, only to find:

WARNING: YOU ARE USING --tollef. IF THINGS ARE ACTING WEIRD USE --gnu.

It is not clear to me why that flag is set by default. Needless to say, using --gnu worked!

Thought I would post this to save someone hours of frustration and confusion.

EDIT: To fix this permanently (in Ubuntu at least), delete the --tollef flag in /etc/parallel/config

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  • 22
    --tollef will be retired 20140222 lists.gnu.org/archive/html/parallel/2013-02/msg00018.html It will be helpful if you already now let your frustration be known to your distribution maintainer, so that the default can be changed.
    – Ole Tange
    May 10, 2013 at 11:04
  • 1
    This bit me hard. I'm running Ubuntu, and Ubuntu does this by default to everybody. See Launchpad issue here. Jan 25, 2014 at 2:00
  • 2
    Just so everyone knows, @OleTange (1st comment above) is the author of Parallel! Feb 9, 2014 at 13:32
  • 1
    @ElijahLynn It makes it so much easier to predict stuff, when you can make them happen yourself.
    – Ole Tange
    Feb 9, 2014 at 14:30
  • 2
    The problem exists and this solves the problem in Fedora 20 as well. Not being able to figure this out prevented me from using parallel until now!
    – alfC
    Aug 19, 2014 at 20:37
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Depending on your operating system, you should check whether you're actually running the GNU version.

$ parallel --version
parallel: invalid option -- '-'
parallel [OPTIONS] command -- arguments
    for each argument, run command with argument, in parallel
parallel [OPTIONS] -- commands
    run specified commands in parallel

If this is the case, you're not running the GNU version. Ubuntu 12.04 is like this, and you'll need to manually install GNU parallel to get the functionality you expect.

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    Am using Debian 10 and this is still a problem. You have to manually install parallel, but until you do parallel is linked to some useless command that does nothing Oct 9, 2020 at 17:16
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Had issues running parallel as an external command from FREEMAT (MATLAB lookalike); the argumentFile was not fed to the command properly solved it by:

  • Adding --gnu to options
  • Not using cmdString syntax involving ["]

Code:

cmdString = 'parallel --gnu command ::: ';
    while j<=jLength
        cmdString = [cmdString argumentFilePath(j,:) ' '];
        j=j+1;
    end
    system(cmdString)

Thank you for that :) Im on Ubuntu 12.04 as well.

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For me it was same issue but different problem. Just running parallel command was exiting silently. Also parallel --version was saying invalid option error. In my Path there was just one parallel executable binary but still it was not detecting.

I was able to fix it as below:

  1. Run whereis parallel. This gives all the paths where executables named parallel is present. For my case there was just one path /usr/local/bin/parallel. Running using this path works just fine.
  2. You can add an alias for this in ~/.bashrc or ~/.zshrc file like alias parallel='/usr/local/bin/parallel'

And now parallel works like charm.

dev-dsk % parallel --version         
GNU parallel 20190322
Copyright (C) 2007-2019 Ole Tange and Free Software Foundation, Inc.
License GPLv3+: GNU GPL version 3 or later <http://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>
This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it.
GNU parallel comes with no warranty.

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