What's the best way to wait (without spinning) until something is available in either one of two (multiprocessing) Queues, where both reside on the same system?
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It doesn't look like there's an official way to handle this yet. Or at least, not based on this: You could try something like what this post is doing -- accessing the underlying pipe filehandles: and then use select. | |||
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Actually you can use multiprocessing.Queue objects in select.select. i.e.
would select que only if it is ready to be read from. No documentation about it though. I was reading the source code of the multiprocessing.queue library (at linux it's usually sth like /usr/lib/python2.6/multiprocessing/queue.py) to find it out. With Queue.Queue I didn't have found any smart way to do this (and I would really love to). | |||
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You could use something like the Observer pattern, wherein Queue subscribers are notified of state changes. In this case, you could have your worker thread designated as a listener on each queue, and whenever it receives a ready signal, it can work on the new item, otherwise sleep. | |||||
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Seems like using threads which forward incoming items to a single Queue which you then wait on is a practical choice when using multiprocessing in a platform independent manner. Avoiding the threads requires either handling low-level pipes/FDs which is both platform specific and not easy to handle consistently with the higher-level API. Or you would need Queues with the ability to set callbacks which i think are the proper higher level interface to go for. I.e. you would write something like: singlequeue = Queue() incoming_queue1.setcallback(singlequeue.put) incoming_queue2.setcallback(singlequeue.put) ... singlequeue.get() Maybe the multiprocessing package could grow this API but it's not there yet. The concept works well with py.execnet which uses the term "channel" instead of "queues", see here http://tinyurl.com/nmtr4w | |||||||
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Not sure how well the select on a multiprocessing queue works on windows. As select on windows listens for sockets and not file handles, I suspect there could be problems. My answer is to make a thread to listen to each queue in a blocking fashion, and to put the results all into a single queue listened to by the main thread, essentially multiplexing the individual queues into a single one. My code for doing this is:
The following test routine shows how to use it:
Hope this helps. Tony Wallace | ||||
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New version of above code... Not sure how well the select on a multiprocessing queue works on windows. As select on windows listens for sockets and not file handles, I suspect there could be problems. My answer is to make a thread to listen to each queue in a blocking fashion, and to put the results all into a single queue listened to by the main thread, essentially multiplexing the individual queues into a single one. My code for doing this is:
The follow code is my test routine to show how it works:
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