I have a file with 100 lines of text.
paulk@node013:test_parallel$ for i in {1..100}; do echo "trash" >> infile.txt; done
I want several processes to read this file in parallel.
#!/usr/bin/env python
import multiprocessing
def f( in_file, out_file ):
for row in in_file:
print >> out_file, row.strip()
# out_file.seek( 0 ) # interesting line
return
f1 = open( 'infile.txt' )
f2 = open( 'infile.txt' )
g1 = open( 'outfile1.txt', 'w' )
g2 = open( 'outfile2.txt', 'w' )
p1 = multiprocessing.Process( target=f, args=( f1, g1, ) )
p1.start()
p2 = multiprocessing.Process( target=f, args=( f2, g2, ) )
p2.start()
p1.join()
p2.join()
f1.close()
f2.close()
g1.close()
g2.close()
Without the line marked 'interesting' nothing is written to the output files:
paulk@node013:test_parallel$ wc -l *file*.txt
100 infile.txt
0 outfile1.txt
0 outfile2.txt
100 total
Including it works:
paulk@node013:test_parallel$ wc -l *file*.txt
100 infile.txt
100 outfile1.txt
100 outfile2.txt
300 total
Can someone please provide an explanation on why the seek()
method works? Could it be that it implicitly calls the 'right' method to make sure the data is written to the files? I'm confused.
I'm using Python 2.7.
Thanks.
Paul