GNU Parallel: Difference between revisions
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* <code>-j</code> lets you manually specify the number of parallel jobs. | * <code>-j</code> lets you manually specify the number of parallel jobs. | ||
** By default this is the number of CPU cores. | ** By default this is the number of CPU cores. | ||
** You may want to decrease this to reduce memory usage or increase it if you're not CPU | ** You may want to decrease this to reduce memory usage or increase it if you're not CPU bound. | ||
;Progress | ;Progress |
Latest revision as of 17:10, 23 April 2024
GNU Parallel is useful for running multiple processes over an input list, similar to xargs.
Usage
-j
lets you manually specify the number of parallel jobs.- By default this is the number of CPU cores.
- You may want to decrease this to reduce memory usage or increase it if you're not CPU bound.
- Progress
--progress
shows some progress information--bar
shows a progress bar
Replacement strings
Parallel includes a handful of default replacement strings:
--rpl '{} ' --rpl '{#} $_=$job->seq()' --rpl '{%} $_=$job->slot()' --rpl '{/} s:.*/::' --rpl '{//} $Global::use{"File::Basename"} ||= eval "use File::Basename; 1;"; $_ = dirname($_);' --rpl '{/.} s:.*/::; s:\.[^/.]+$::;' --rpl '{.} s:\.[^/.]+$::'
- Parent dirname
--rpl '{//} s:.*/(.*)/[^/]*:\1:;'