In Go I can create goroutines like this (EDITED as reported by kelu-thatsall's answer):
// test.go
package main
import (
"fmt"
"os"
"strconv"
"sync"
"runtime"
)
func main() {
var wg sync.WaitGroup
if len(os.Args) < 2 {
os.Exit(1)
}
k, ok := strconv.Atoi(os.Args[1])
if ok != nil {
os.Exit(2)
}
wg.Add(k * 1000)
for z := 0; z < k*1000; z++ {
go func(x int) {
defer wg.Done()
fmt.Println(x)
}(z)
if z%k == k-1 {
// @mattn: avoid busy loop, so Go can start processing like BEAM do
runtime.Gosched()
}
}
wg.Wait()
}
The result in Go 1.8.0 (64-bit):
# shell
$ go build test.go ; for k in 5 50 500 5000 50000 500000; do echo -n $k; time ./test $k > /dev/null; done
5
CPU: 0.00s Real: 0.00s RAM: 2080KB
50
CPU: 0.06s Real: 0.01s RAM: 3048KB
500
CPU: 0.61s Real: 0.12s RAM: 7760KB
5000
CPU: 6.02s Real: 1.23s RAM: 17712KB # 17 MB
50000
CPU: 62.30s Real: 12.53s RAM: 207720KB # 207 MB
500000
CPU: 649.47s Real: 131.53s RAM: 3008180KB # 3 GB
What's the equivalent code in Erlang or Elixir? (EDITED as reported by patrick-oscity's comment)
What I've tried so far is the following:
# test.exs
defmodule Recursion do
def print_multiple_times(n) when n <= 1 do
spawn fn -> IO.puts n end
end
def print_multiple_times(n) do
spawn fn -> IO.puts n end
print_multiple_times(n - 1)
end
end
[x]=System.argv()
{k,_}=Integer.parse(x)
k=k*1000
Recursion.print_multiple_times(k)
The result in elixir 1.4.2 (erts-8.2.2):
# shell
$ for k in 5 50 500 5000 50000 ; do echo -n $k; time elixir --erl "+P 90000000" test.exs $k > /dev/null; done
5
CPU: 0.53s Real: 0.50s RAM: 842384KB # 842 MB
50
CPU: 1.50s Real: 0.62s RAM: 934276KB # 934 MB
500
CPU: 11.92s Real: 2.53s RAM: 1675872KB # 1.6 GB
5000
CPU: 122.65s Real: 20.20s RAM: 4336116KB # 4.3 GB
50000
CPU: 1288.65s Real: 209.66s RAM: 6573560KB # 6.5 GB
But I'm not sure if the two are equivalent. Are they ?
EDIT Shortened version as mudasobwa's comment does not give correct output
# test2.exs
[x]=System.argv()
{k,_}=Integer.parse(x)
k=k*1000
1..k |> Enum.each(fn n -> spawn fn -> IO.puts n end end)
The result for k in 5 50 500 5000 50000 ; do echo -n $k; time elixir --erl "+P 90000000" test.exs $k | wc -l ; done
:
5
CPU: 0.35s Real: 0.41s RAM: 1623344KB # 1.6 GB
2826 # does not complete, this should be 5000
50
CPU: 1.08s Real: 0.53s RAM: 1691060KB # 1.6 GB
35062
500
CPU: 8.69s Real: 1.70s RAM: 2340200KB # 2.3 GB
373193
5000
CPU: 109.95s Real: 18.49s RAM: 4980500KB # 4.9 GB
4487475
50000
erl_child_setup closed
Crash dump is being written to: erl_crash.dump...Command terminated by signal 9
CPU: 891.35s Real: 157.52s RAM: 24361288KB # 24.3 GB
Not testing 500m for elixir because it took too long and +P 500000000
argument is bad number of processes
IO.puts
from Elixir completely, it's still only 30% faster than the current one, and way slower than the Go numbers you've posted.1..k |> Enum.each(fn n -> spawn fn - > IO.puts n end end)
. Tail recursion should matter.