Whats the best command to write to file inside parfor loop?
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Chris
el 22 de Mzo. de 2012
Editada: Walter Roberson
el 1 de Ag. de 2022
I want to write results to a file within a parfor loop and ideally append the results. What is the best command that can handle multiple writes potentially at the same time?
2 comentarios
Respuesta aceptada
Edric Ellis
el 23 de Mzo. de 2012
Inside PARFOR, you can still access the current task, and get its ID - that will be unique. My "Worker Object Wrapper" has an example how you could use that to open a file on each worker with a persistent file handle so that each worker can write its own file when executing a PARFOR loop.
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TOSA2016
el 10 de Jul. de 2019
Editada: TOSA2016
el 10 de Jul. de 2019
Thanks Edric for your resposne. I am just going to add some extra lines to it. In the new releases, worker object wrapper can be used by parallel.pool.Constant(). This is the code I used from mathwork web site (please click here ) to print line by line in parfor.
clc
clear
c = parallel.pool.Constant(@() fopen(tempname(pwd),'wt'),@fclose);
spmd
A=(fopen(c.Value));
end
parfor idx = 1:1000
fprintf(c.Value,'Iteration: %d\n',idx);
end
clear c; % Closes the temporary files.
With this, you will ended up with several, depending on the number of workers, txt files with tempprary names that matlab chooses for them. Now, you would probably want to make them a single txt file. This is what I did inpired by the code posted (please click here).
for i = 1: length(A)
a= char(A(1,i));
NAMES(i,:) = a(1, length(pwd)+2:length(a));
movefile(NAMES(i,:),sprintf('%d.txt',i));
end
fileout='OneFatFile.txt';
fout=fopen(fileout,'w');
for cntfiles=1:length(A)
fin=fopen(sprintf('%d.txt', cntfiles));
while ~feof(fin)
fprintf(fout,'%s \n',fgetl(fin));
end
fclose(fin);
end
fclose(fout);
% you can then delete the unnecesary files by the following loop
fclose('all');
for i = 1:length(A)
delete(sprintf('%d.txt',i))
end
For combining the txt files, I did not use the recommendations posted (please click here) since I faced several issues running the code on our cluster. It would be appreciated if someone can suggest a way to get rid of the while loop in the posted code.
Peng Li
el 2 de Jun. de 2020
You may take advantage of spmd block to merge these temporal files as well. The variable A (a composite) stores the information. For example:
spmd
tblLab = readtable(A, 'ReadVariableNames', 0);
end
tbl = vertcat(tblLab{:});
writetable(tbl, 'OneFatFile.txt');
you can delete temporal files as well within the spmd block, if you want.
Más respuestas (4)
Jason Ross
el 22 de Mzo. de 2012
Multiple writes to the same file are a quick route to a corrupt file. You need to come up with a plan to assemble the file where only one write is done at a time. For example, you could write a collection of small files that are independently named and then have code that concatenates the data into the one result file.
The tempname function can return you a unique name, and then you can combine it with other information, such as hostname, lab index, time opened, etc to build up the filename.
When you are dealing with files you also need to make sure to pay attention to the return codes of fopen, fclose, etc. Duplicate filenames, read-only filesystems and full filesystems happen, and you should think about how you will handle these conditions when they occur.
2 comentarios
Jeremy
el 18 de Jul. de 2014
I know this is an old thread...
Why couldn't I do something like
FileIDResults = -1;
while FileIDResults == -1
FileIDResults = fopen('projects_results.txt', 'a');
end
fprintf(FileIDResults,....)
fclose(FileIDResults)
Wouldn't each worker then loop until it grabbed access to the file, lock the others out while it did it's fprintf, then free the file back up when it closed?
Edric Ellis
el 21 de Jul. de 2014
While that might work, you're somewhat at the mercy of the operating system as to whether it gives you exclusive write access; plus your results will come out in a non-deterministic order.
Jill Reese
el 22 de Mzo. de 2012
If you are able to run your code inside an spmd block instead of via parfor, then you will be able to use the labindex variable to create a unique file name for each worker to write to. That is the best option.
0 comentarios
Konrad Malkowski
el 22 de Mzo. de 2012
Are you planning on writing data from multiple workers to a single file within PARFOR? If so, then there are no commands that will allow you to do it.
1 comentario
Fernando García-García
el 6 de Dic. de 2014
Editada: Fernando García-García
el 6 de Dic. de 2014
Sorry, comment removed. Please see my post below.
Fernando García-García
el 6 de Dic. de 2014
Editada: Fernando García-García
el 6 de Dic. de 2014
Hello everyone,
Well, I'm planning to do what you said, Konrad. What if I do the following?
filename='myfile.txt';
parfor i=1:N
% do something very time-comsuming, like hours or so
while checkIfOpen(filename)
pause(1); % i don't mind waiting for just 1 second
end
fileID=fopen(filename,'a+');
fprintf(fileID,...); % write whatever, very quick as it's not much data
fclose(fileID);
end
function isOpen=checkIfOpen(filename)
isOpen=false;
openIDs=fopen('all');
for j=1:numel(openIDs)
filenameTEMP=fopen(openIDs(j),'r');
idxStrFind=strfind(filenameTEMP,filename);
if ~isempty(idxStrFind) % non empty
if idxStrFind(end)==size(filenameTEMP)-size(filename)+1
% found at the end of the entire path
isOpen = true;
break;
end
end
end
Note 1: I don't mind if the writing is not in deterministic order.
Note 2: I would have never expected that, being such a long processing time for the task (and this time varying randomly from iteration to iteration somewhere in the range of minutes) compared to the very brief write operation (milliseconds)... that there was the enormous coincidence of two workers trying to write to file at the same time, but it did occur! Should have bought lottery, hehehe.
Note 3: Code corrected.
Note 4: I'm not sure how to actually check if this code behaves as expected.
7 comentarios
Edric Ellis
el 1 de Ag. de 2022
@Paul Safier a couple of things to note: if you're interested in the WorkerObjectWrapper - this ended up in the product as parallel.pool.Constant. Also of interest might be parallel.pool.DataQueue which lets you send data from workers back to the client, and let the client amalgamate / write to a file / whatever.
Bruno Luong
el 1 de Ag. de 2022
Edric, what is the advantage/disadvantage of using DataQueue/AfterEach vs fetchNext?
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