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I'm trying to parallelize a function but I seem to be having problems (in Erlang).

I have code similar to this:

-module(examples).
-import(lists, [sublist/2, sublist/3]).

motherFunc(Ls) -> childFunc(Ls, false).

childFunc(Ls, false) ->
    Pid1 = spawn(example, mergesortP, [lists:sublist(Ls, length(Ls) div 2, self()]),
    Pid2 = spawn(example, mergesortP, [lists:sublist(Ls, length(Ls) div 2, self()]),
    FirstHalf = [],
    SecondHalf = [],
    receive
        {Pid1, Msg} -> FirstHalf = Msg;
        {Pid2, Msg} -> SecondHalf = Msg
end,
SecondHalf ++ FirstHalf;
childFunc([], Pid) -> Pid ! {self(), []};
childFunc([L], Pid) -> Pid ! {self(), [L]};
childFunc(Ls, Pid) -> 
    Pid1 = spawn(examples, childFunc, [lists:sublist(Ls, length(Ls) div 2, self()]),
    Pid2 = spawn(examples, childFunc, [lists:sublist(Ls, length(Ls) div 2 + 1, length(Ls) div 2 + 1), self()]),
    FirstHalf = [],
    SecondHalf = [],
    receive
        {Pid1, Msg} -> FirstHalf = Msg;
        {Pid2, Msg} -> SecondHalf = Msg
    end,
    Pid ! {self(), SecondHalf ++ FirstHalf}.

When I run this I'm getting this error message for both threads, and then it does nothing else: Error in process <0.31.0> with exit value: {undef,[{examples,childFunc,[[1,2,3,4],<0.2.0>],[]}]}

4
  • Are you calling the function from within the same module? If not, try adding -export([childFunc/2]). to the top of the file. Jul 19, 2014 at 2:34
  • Yes, but I tried that too.
    – Maria
    Jul 19, 2014 at 2:36
  • How are you calling childFunc/2? Is it only from within the same module or from other modules? Jul 19, 2014 at 2:40
  • From within the same module.
    – Maria
    Jul 19, 2014 at 2:49

1 Answer 1

2

The function spawn/3 with the module and the function name as the first and second argument requires that the function is exported.

In fact, any explicit qualified call:

module:function(...)

or implicit qualified call:

apply(module, function, ...)

requires that the function be exported. Whether it's supposedly from the same module or not is irrelevant (1).

In your code, you should either use spawn/1 or export the function:

-export([childFunc/2, mergesortP/2]).

% ...

spawn(?MODULE, mergesortP, [lists:sublist(Ls, length(Ls) div 2), self()])

or

Self = self(),
spawn(fun() -> mergesortP(lists:sublist(Ls, length(Ls) div 2), Self) end.

Note the difference when passing self(). With spawn/3 invocation, self() is evaluated by the spawning process and therefore is its pid. If you call self() within the anonymous function passed to spawn/1, it will evaluate to the pid of the spawned process. So you need to call it before and pass it in a variable.

Additionally, your code is unlikely to work. Indeed, the following section does not do what you mean:

FirstHalf = [],
SecondHalf = [],
receive
    {Pid1, Msg} -> FirstHalf = Msg;
    {Pid2, Msg} -> SecondHalf = Msg
end,

This will first assign [] to FirstHalf and SecondHalf variables, and then try to match this with the first message that arrived, as variables in Erlang cannot be re-assigned. The second message is ignored as received is only used once. The first result probably isn't an empty list and therefore it will fail with a badmatch error. Instead, it seems you mean to perform parallel execution of the merge an collect the results afterwards. You could write:

FirstHalf = receive {Pid1, Msg1} -> Msg1 end,
SecondHalf = receive {Pid2, Msg2} -> Msg2 end, 

This will collect the first half and then the second half.


(1) Actually, a qualified call can in fact be executed by another module, or more precisely a newer version of the module. Qualifying calls to (a loop) function within the same module is a common method to continue execution in a newer version during code upgrades.

7
  • Okay, I updated my code to try both methods you suggested (with exports and all). The first method is doing the same thing. The second method is saying I have a syntax error on the Self= self(), line. I can post the code if you'd like. Thanks for your answer by the way!
    – Maria
    Jul 19, 2014 at 4:50
  • 1
    Self = self(), is valid, there might be a problem elsewhere in your code. See these results from github: github.com/…
    – Paul Guyot
    Jul 19, 2014 at 5:48
  • I was missing the end after the fun
    – Maria
    Jul 19, 2014 at 5:59
  • 1
    Sorry, I totally missed the mess in the code you posted in your question. I edited the answer accordingly.
    – Paul Guyot
    Jul 19, 2014 at 6:11
  • 1
    You wrote receive {Pid, Msg}. Pid variable is already bound and does not hold the pid of spawned processes. Instead, you need Pid1 and Pid2 and Msg1 and Msg2.
    – Paul Guyot
    Jul 19, 2014 at 8:20

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