I have a simple python multiprocessing script that sets up a pool of workers that attempt to append work-output to a Manager list. The script has 3 call stacks: - main calls f1 that spawns several worker processes that call another function g1. When one attempts to debug the script (incidentally on Windows 7/64 bit/VS 2010/PyTools) the script runs into a nested process creation loop, spawning an endless number of processes. Can anyone determine why? I'm sure I am missing something very simple. Here's the problematic code: -
import multiprocessing
import logging
manager = multiprocessing.Manager()
results = manager.list()
def g1(x):
y = x*x
print "processing: y = %s" % y
results.append(y)
def f1():
logger = multiprocessing.log_to_stderr()
logger.setLevel(multiprocessing.SUBDEBUG)
pool = multiprocessing.Pool(processes=4)
for (i) in range(0,15):
pool.apply_async(g1, [i])
pool.close()
pool.join()
def main():
f1()
if __name__ == "__main__":
main()
PS: tried adding multiprocessing.freeze_support() to main to no avail.
multiprocess.Managerin the docs creates theManagerin theif __name__ == "__main__":block and passes the managed resources to the workers as explicit parameters. Have you tried doing it that way instead? My gut feeling is that it has something to do with the unpickling process when you have the manager object created in the module scope (something like it spawns a new manager thread every time a new thread is created, including when a new manager thread is created, thus infinite recursion). – sr2222 Aug 13 '12 at 16:19