4

Example:

image = Image.open('foo.png')
# releases the GIL?
resized = image.resize((800, 600), Image.ANTIALIAS)
# reacquires the GIL?

Obviously the variable assignment needs to hold the GIL, but it's difficult to break that up into two lines. :)

If there are two threads doing image resizes, can those resizes run on two different cores?

2 Answers 2

3

Looking at the source of 1.1.7, it doesn't appear to release the GIL for _resize.

The functions that release the GIL seem to be:

PyImaging_CreateWindowWin32 (createwindow on Win32)
PyImaging_EventLoopWin32 (eventloop on Win32)
pyCMSdoTransform (apply)
_buildTransform (buildTransform)
_buildProofTransform (buildProofTransform)
_encode_to_file (encode_to_file)
1
  • The GIL can also be released by the PyEval_SaveThread() call, which is called by ImagingSectionEnter(), which is called in dozens of places. So the GIL does seem to be released pretty aggressively. (Though apparently not during image load.) May 9, 2015 at 23:35
1

From the Python wiki on the GIL:

Note that potentially blocking or long-running operations, such as I/O, image processing, and NumPy number crunching, happen outside the GIL. Therefore it is only in multithreaded programs that spend a lot of time inside the GIL, interpreting CPython bytecode, that the GIL becomes a bottleneck.

PIL uses C extensions to do most of its heavy lifting. So the actual image resizing should take advantage of multi-threads if applicable.

If you are asking about resizing multiple images concurrently, I recommend looking into using Python's native multiprocessing library. This should achieve the desired effect of using multiple cores.

2
  • gevent doesn't let you use multiple cores.
    – r3m0t
    Nov 6, 2012 at 1:19
  • 11
    Just because C extensions are allowed to release the GIL, that doesn't mean that they always do. The extension developer has to explicitly call Py_BEGIN_ALLOW_THREADS. docs.python.org/2/c-api/…
    – bobpoekert
    Nov 6, 2012 at 1:48

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