I am running a script on a school computer using the multiprocessing
module. I am serializing the data frequently. It can be summarized by the code below:
import multiprocessing as mp
import time, pickle
def simulation(j):
data = []
for k in range(10):
data.append(k)
time.sleep(1)
file = open('data%d.pkl'%j, 'wb')
pickle.dump(data, file)
file.close()
if __name__ == '__main__':
processes = []
processes.append(mp.Process(target = simulation, args = (1,) ))
processes.append(mp.Process(target = simulation, args = (2,) ))
for process in processes:
process.start()
for process in processes:
process.join()
So when I actually run my code for many more simulations and what I imagine to be more intensive varied tasks, I get the following error: IOError: [Errno 5] Input/output error
usually preceded by file.open(...)
or file.close()
.
My questions:
- How do I fix this error in my script?
- What does this error mean for a python newcomer? References appreciated.
Some more notes about my procedure:
- Instead of setting the multiprocess attribute
daemon
to beTrue
, I use screen to run the script and then detach. This allows me also to disconnect without worrying about my script stopping. - This seemed to be a related question about printing using the
subprocess
module. I did not explicitly use daemon as I said, so not sure if this will help. - This usually happens after running for about a day and occurs on different processes at different times.
Your program looks pretty good. In this case
IOError
just means "bad things happened." The entire set of simulated data became to large for the Python process, so it exited with the mysterious message.A couple improvements in the following version:
Once some data has been produced, append it to a data file, then zap it from memory. The program should have roughly the same RAM use over time, rather than using up more and more, then crashing.
Conveniently, if a file is a concatenation of
pickle
objects, we can easily print out each one later for further examination. Example code shown.Have fun!
source
output of "python ./msim.py --show"