Metadata-Version: 1.1
Name: Jug
Version: 0.9.6
Summary: A Task Based Parallelization Framework
Home-page: http://luispedro.org/software/jug
Author: Luis Pedro Coelho
Author-email: luis@luispedro.org
License: MIT
Description: ===========================================
        Jug: A Task-Based Parallelization Framework
        ===========================================
        
        Jug allows you to write code that is broken up into
        tasks and run different tasks on different processors.
        
        It uses the filesystem to communicate between processes and
        works correctly over NFS, so you can coordinate processes on
        different machines.
        
        Jug is a pure Python implementation and should work on any platform.
        
        Python 2.6/2.7 and Python 3.3 are supported.
        
        *Website*: `http://luispedro.org/software/jug <http://luispedro.org/software/jug>`__
        
        *Documentation*: `https://jug.readthedocs.org/ <https://jug.readthedocs.org/>`__
        
        *Video*: On `vimeo <http://vimeo.com/8972696>`__ or `showmedo
        <http://showmedo.com/videotutorials/video?name=9750000;fromSeriesID=975>`__
        
        *Mailing List*: `http://groups.google.com/group/jug-users
        <http://groups.google.com/group/jug-users>`__
        
        Short Example
        -------------
        
        Here is a one minute example. Save the following to a file called ``primes.py``::
        
            from jug import TaskGenerator
            from time import sleep
        
            @TaskGenerator
            def is_prime(n):
                sleep(1.)
                for j in xrange(2,n-1):
                    if (n % j) == 0:
                        return False
                return True
        
            primes100 = map(is_prime, xrange(2,101))
        
        Of course, this is only for didactical purposes, normally you would use a
        better method. Similarly, the ``sleep`` function is so that it does not run too
        fast.
        
        Now type ``jug status primes.py`` to get::
        
            Task name                  Waiting       Ready    Finished     Running
            ----------------------------------------------------------------------
            primes.is_prime                  0          99           0           0
            ......................................................................
            Total:                           0          99           0           0
        
        
        This tells you that you have 99 tasks called ``primes.is_prime`` ready to run.
        So run ``jug execute primes.py &``. You can even run multiple instances in the
        background (if you have multiple cores, for example). After starting 4
        instances and waiting a few seconds, you can check the status again (with ``jug
        status primes.py``)::
        
            Task name                  Waiting       Ready    Finished     Running
            ----------------------------------------------------------------------
            primes.is_prime                  0          63          32           4
            ......................................................................
            Total:                           0          63          32           4
        
        
        Now you have 32 tasks finished, 4 running, and 63 still ready. Eventually, they
        will all finish and you can inspect the results with ``jug shell primes.py``.
        This will give you an ``ipython`` shell. The `primes100` variable is available,
        but it is an ugly list of `jug.Task` objects. To get the actual value, you call
        the `value` function::
        
            In [1]: primes100 = value(primes100)
        
            In [2]: primes100[:10]
            Out[2]: [True, True, False, True, False, True, False, False, False, True]
        
        Travis Build Status
        ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
        
        .. image:: https://travis-ci.org/luispedro/jug.png
               :target: https://travis-ci.org/luispedro/jug
        
        What's New
        ----------
        
        version **0.9.6** (Tue Aug 6 2013)
        - Faster decoding
        - Add jug-execute script
        - Add describe() function
        - Add write_task_out() function
        
        version **0.9.5** (May 27 2013)
        
        - Added debug mode
        - Even better map.reduce.map using blocked access
        - Python 3 support
        - Documentation improvements
        
        version **0.9.4** (Apr 15 2013)
        
        - Add CustomHash wrapper to set __jug_hash__
        - Print traceback on import error
        - Exit when no progress is made even with barrier
        - Use Tasklets for better jug.mapreduce.map
        - Use Ipython debugger if available (patch by Alex Ford)
        - Faster --aggressive-unload
        - Add currymap() function
        
        version **0.9.3** (Dec 2 2012)
        
        - Fix parsing of ports on redis URL (patch by Alcides Viamontes)
        - Make hashing robust to different orders when using randomized hashing
          (patch by Alcides Viamontes)
        - Allow regex in invalidate command (patch by Alcides Viamontes)
        - Add ``--cache --clear`` suboption to status
        - Allow builtin functions for tasks
        - Fix status --cache`` (a general bug which seems to be triggered mainly by
          ``bvalue()`` usage).
        - Fix ``CompoundTask`` (broken by earlier ``__jug_hash__`` hook introduction)
        - Make ``Tasklets`` more flexible by allowing slicing with ``Tasks``
          (previously, slicing with tasks was **not** allowed)
        
        
        version **0.9.2** (Nov 4 2012):
        
        - More flexible mapreduce()/map() functions
        - Make TaskGenerator pickle()able and hash()able
        - Add invalidate() method to Task
        - Add --keep-going option to execute
        - Better help messsage
        
        version **0.9.1** (Jun 11 2012):
        
        - Add --locks-only option to cleanup subcommand
        - Make cache file (for ``status`` subcommand) configurable
        - Add ``webstatus`` subcommand
        - Add bvalue() function
        - Fix bug in ``shell`` subcommand (``value`` was not in global namespace)
        - Improve identity()
        - Fix bug in using Tasklets and --aggressive-unload
        - Fix bug with Tasklets and sleep-until/check
        
        version **0.9**:
        
        - In the presence of a barrier(), rerun the jugfile. This makes barrier much
          easier to use.
        - Add set_jugdir to public API
        - Added CompoundTaskGenerator
        - Support subclassing of Task
        - Avoid creating directories in file backend unless it is necessary
        - Add jug.mapreduce.reduce (which mimicks the builtin reduce)
        
        
        For older version see ``ChangeLog`` file.
        
        Roadmap
        -------
        
        Version 1.0
        ~~~~~~~~~~~
        
        Version 1.0 is just around the corner. After 0.8 is done, there really are not
        that many features left. More flexible configuration, a bit more caching, and
        we are done.
        
        After version 1.0
        ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
        
        I want to start adding bells&whistles through extensions. Things like timing,
        more active monitoring, &c.
        
        
Platform: Any
Classifier: Development Status :: 4 - Beta
Classifier: Environment :: Console
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
Classifier: Operating System :: POSIX
Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python
Classifier: Topic :: Scientific/Engineering
Classifier: Topic :: Software Development
Classifier: Topic :: System :: Distributed Computing
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Science/Research
