I'm interested in using OCaml for a project, however I'm not sure about where its parallelization capabilities are anymore. Is there a message passing ability in OCaml? Is OCaml able to efficiently use more than 1 CPU?

Most of what I have read on the subject was written in 2002-2006, and I haven't seen anything more recent.

Thanks!

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See also this related question on SO – huitseeker Jul 8 '11 at 12:35
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2 Answers

up vote 9 down vote accepted

This 2009 issue of the Caml weekly news ("CWN", a digest of interesting messages from the caml list) shows that:

  • the official party line on threads and Ocaml hasn't changed. A notable quote:

    (...) in general, the whole standard library is not thread-safe. Probably that should be stated in the documentation for the threads library, but there isn't much point in documenting it per standard library module. -- X. Leroy

    (for how Ocaml threads can still be useful, see a remark by the culprit himself in another question on SO)

  • the most frequently adopted paradigm for parallelism is message-passing, and of note is X. Leroy's OcamlMPI, providing bindings for programming in SPMD style against the MPI standard. The same CWN issue I pointed to above provides references to examples, and numerous other related projects.

  • another message-passing solution is JoCaml, pioneering new style of concurrent communications known as join calculus. Note that it is binary-compatible with OCaml compilers.

  • that did not prevent the confection of a runtime whose GC is ok with parallelism, though: see a discussion of OCAML4MC in this other issue of the CWN.

There is also:

  • Netmulticore - multi-processing sharing ocaml values via mapped shared memory.

  • CamlP3l - compiler for Caml parallel programs.


I haven't followed more recent discussions about Ocaml & parallel programming, though. I'm leaving this CW so that others can update what I mention. It would be great if this question could reach the same level of completeness as the analogous one for Haskell.

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At present, the OCaml runtime does not support running across multiple cores in parallel, so a single OCaml process cannot take advantage of multiple cores. This is unlikely to change directly; the direction the OCaml developers are most interested in taking for increased parallelism seems to be allowing multiple OCaml runtimes to run in parallel in a single process; this will allow for very fast message passing, but will not allow multiple threads to run in parallel in a shared-memory configuration. The major hangup is the garbage collector; some years ago, the team experimented with a concurrent GC, but it introduced unacceptable slowdowns in the single-threaded case.

There are a couple of projects, namely Functory and OCamlnet, which provide multicore-happy parallelism by using multiple processes.

In general, the OCaml community tends to favor message passing approaches, which can be done across process boundaries (like OCamlnet does), over single-process shared-memory multithreading. If your program can be split into multiple processes (many can!), then yes, you can efficiently use multiple CPUs.

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Regarding the concurrent GC experiment: Would it be possible to have different GCs that could be "plugged in"? So out-of-the box OCaml would come with the non-concurrent GC (as it does now), with the option of using a concurrent GC if you needed it - Would that scenario be possible? – aneccodeal Jul 6 '11 at 19:06
@aneccodeal If the different GCs are binary-compatible, it might be possible. It has been discussed; I'm not entirely sure why it hasn't been done, other than that no one has done the work and/or they don't want to maintain multiple runtimes. – Michael Ekstrand Jul 6 '11 at 20:56
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