Multiprocessing - Pipe vs Queue
One additional feature of Queue()
that is worth noting is the feeder thread. This section notes "When a process first puts an item on the queue a feeder thread is started which transfers objects from a buffer into the pipe." An infinite number of (or maxsize) items can be inserted into Queue()
without any calls to queue.put()
blocking. This allows you to store multiple items in a Queue()
, until your program is ready to process them.
Pipe()
, on the other hand, has a finite amount of storage for items that have been sent to one connection, but have not been received from the other connection. After this storage is used up, calls to connection.send()
will block until there is space to write the entire item. This will stall the thread doing the writing until some other thread reads from the pipe. Connection
objects give you access to the underlying file descriptor. On *nix systems, you can prevent connection.send()
calls from blocking using the os.set_blocking()
function. However, this will cause problems if you try to send a single item that does not fit in the pipe's file. Recent versions of Linux allow you to increase the size of a file, but the maximum size allowed varies based on system configurations. You should therefore never rely on Pipe()
to buffer data. Calls to connection.send
could block until data gets read from the pipe somehwere else.
In conclusion, Queue is a better choice than pipe when you need to buffer data. Even when you only need to communicate between two points.
A
Pipe()
can only have two endpoints.A
Queue()
can have multiple producers and consumers.
When to use them
If you need more than two points to communicate, use a Queue()
.
If you need absolute performance, a Pipe()
is much faster because Queue()
is built on top of Pipe()
.
Performance Benchmarking
Let's assume you want to spawn two processes and send messages between them as quickly as possible. These are the timing results of a drag race between similar tests using Pipe()
and Queue()
...
FYI, I threw in results for JoinableQueue()
as a bonus; JoinableQueue()
accounts for tasks when queue.task_done()
is called (it doesn't even know about the specific task, it just counts unfinished tasks in the queue), so that queue.join()
knows the work is finished.
The code for each at bottom of this answer...
# This is on a Thinkpad T430, VMWare running Debian 11 VM, and Python 3.7.0
(py37_test) [mpenning@mudslide ~]$ python multi_pipe.py
Sending 10000 numbers to Pipe() took 0.13469791412353516 seconds
Sending 100000 numbers to Pipe() took 1.5587594509124756 seconds
Sending 1000000 numbers to Pipe() took 14.467186689376831 seconds
(py37_test) [mpenning@mudslide ~]$ python multi_queue.py
Sending 10000 numbers to Queue() took 0.1897726058959961 seconds
Sending 100000 numbers to Queue() took 1.7622203826904297 seconds
Sending 1000000 numbers to Queue() took 16.89015531539917 seconds
(py37_test) [mpenning@mudslide ~]$ python multi_joinablequeue.py
Sending 10000 numbers to JoinableQueue() took 0.2238149642944336 seconds
Sending 100000 numbers to JoinableQueue() took 1.4744081497192383 seconds
Sending 1000000 numbers to JoinableQueue() took 15.264554023742676 seconds
# This is on a ThinkpadT61 running Ubuntu 11.10, and Python 2.7.2
mpenning@mpenning-T61:~$ python multi_pipe.py
Sending 10000 numbers to Pipe() took 0.0369849205017 seconds
Sending 100000 numbers to Pipe() took 0.328398942947 seconds
Sending 1000000 numbers to Pipe() took 3.17266988754 seconds
mpenning@mpenning-T61:~$ python multi_queue.py
Sending 10000 numbers to Queue() took 0.105256080627 seconds
Sending 100000 numbers to Queue() took 0.980564117432 seconds
Sending 1000000 numbers to Queue() took 10.1611330509 seconds
mpnening@mpenning-T61:~$ python multi_joinablequeue.py
Sending 10000 numbers to JoinableQueue() took 0.172781944275 seconds
Sending 100000 numbers to JoinableQueue() took 1.5714070797 seconds
Sending 1000000 numbers to JoinableQueue() took 15.8527247906 seconds
mpenning@mpenning-T61:~$
In summary
- Under python 2.7,
Pipe()
is about three times faster than aQueue()
. Don't even think about theJoinableQueue()
unless you really must have the benefits. - Under python 3.7, the differences are not so bad...
Pipe()
,Queue()
andJoinableQueue()
are roughly the same on my Thinkpad T430
BONUS MATERIAL 2
Multiprocessing introduces subtle changes in information flow that make debugging hard unless you know some shortcuts. For instance, you might have a script that works fine when indexing through a dictionary in under many conditions, but infrequently fails with certain inputs.
Normally we get clues to the failure when the entire python process crashes; however, you don't get unsolicited crash tracebacks printed to the console if the multiprocessing function crashes. Tracking down unknown multiprocessing crashes is hard without a clue to what crashed the process.
The simplest way I have found to track down multiprocessing crash informaiton is to wrap the entire multiprocessing function in a try
/ except
and use traceback.print_exc()
:
import traceback
def run(self, args):
try:
# Insert stuff to be multiprocessed here
return args[0]['that']
except:
print "FATAL: reader({0}) exited while multiprocessing".format(args)
traceback.print_exc()
Now, when you find a crash you see something like:
FATAL: reader([{'crash': 'this'}]) exited while multiprocessing
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "foo.py", line 19, in __init__
self.run(args)
File "foo.py", line 46, in run
KeyError: 'that'
Source Code:
"""
multi_pipe.py
"""
from multiprocessing import Process, Pipe
import time
def reader_proc(pipe):
## Read from the pipe; this will be spawned as a separate Process
p_output, p_input = pipe
p_input.close() # We are only reading
while True:
msg = p_output.recv() # Read from the output pipe and do nothing
if msg=='DONE':
break
def writer(count, p_input):
for ii in range(0, count):
p_input.send(ii) # Write 'count' numbers into the input pipe
p_input.send('DONE')
if __name__=='__main__':
for count in [10**4, 10**5, 10**6]:
# Pipes are unidirectional with two endpoints: p_input ------> p_output
p_output, p_input = Pipe() # writer() writes to p_input from _this_ process
reader_p = Process(target=reader_proc, args=((p_output, p_input),))
reader_p.daemon = True
reader_p.start() # Launch the reader process
p_output.close() # We no longer need this part of the Pipe()
_start = time.time()
writer(count, p_input) # Send a lot of stuff to reader_proc()
p_input.close()
reader_p.join()
print("Sending {0} numbers to Pipe() took {1} seconds".format(count,
(time.time() - _start)))
"""
multi_queue.py
"""
from multiprocessing import Process, Queue
import time
import sys
def reader_proc(queue):
## Read from the queue; this will be spawned as a separate Process
while True:
msg = queue.get() # Read from the queue and do nothing
if (msg == 'DONE'):
break
def writer(count, queue):
## Write to the queue
for ii in range(0, count):
queue.put(ii) # Write 'count' numbers into the queue
queue.put('DONE')
if __name__=='__main__':
pqueue = Queue() # writer() writes to pqueue from _this_ process
for count in [10**4, 10**5, 10**6]:
### reader_proc() reads from pqueue as a separate process
reader_p = Process(target=reader_proc, args=((pqueue),))
reader_p.daemon = True
reader_p.start() # Launch reader_proc() as a separate python process
_start = time.time()
writer(count, pqueue) # Send a lot of stuff to reader()
reader_p.join() # Wait for the reader to finish
print("Sending {0} numbers to Queue() took {1} seconds".format(count,
(time.time() - _start)))
"""
multi_joinablequeue.py
"""
from multiprocessing import Process, JoinableQueue
import time
def reader_proc(queue):
## Read from the queue; this will be spawned as a separate Process
while True:
msg = queue.get() # Read from the queue and do nothing
queue.task_done()
def writer(count, queue):
for ii in range(0, count):
queue.put(ii) # Write 'count' numbers into the queue
if __name__=='__main__':
for count in [10**4, 10**5, 10**6]:
jqueue = JoinableQueue() # writer() writes to jqueue from _this_ process
# reader_proc() reads from jqueue as a different process...
reader_p = Process(target=reader_proc, args=((jqueue),))
reader_p.daemon = True
reader_p.start() # Launch the reader process
_start = time.time()
writer(count, jqueue) # Send a lot of stuff to reader_proc() (in different process)
jqueue.join() # Wait for the reader to finish
print("Sending {0} numbers to JoinableQueue() took {1} seconds".format(count,
(time.time() - _start)))
If - like me - you are wondering whether to use a multiprocessing
construct (Pipe
or Queue
) in your threading
programs for performance, I have adapted Mike Pennington's script to compare against queue.Queue
and queue.SimpleQueue
:
Sending 10000 numbers to mp.Pipe() took 65.051 ms
Sending 10000 numbers to mp.Queue() took 78.977 ms
Sending 10000 numbers to queue.Queue() took 14.781 ms
Sending 10000 numbers to queue.SimpleQueue() took 0.939 ms
Sending 100000 numbers to mp.Pipe() took 449.564 ms
Sending 100000 numbers to mp.Queue() took 811.938 ms
Sending 100000 numbers to queue.Queue() took 149.387 ms
Sending 100000 numbers to queue.SimpleQueue() took 9.264 ms
Sending 1000000 numbers to mp.Pipe() took 4660.451 ms
Sending 1000000 numbers to mp.Queue() took 8499.743 ms
Sending 1000000 numbers to queue.Queue() took 1490.062 ms
Sending 1000000 numbers to queue.SimpleQueue() took 91.238 ms
Sending 10000000 numbers to mp.Pipe() took 45095.935 ms
Sending 10000000 numbers to mp.Queue() took 84829.042 ms
Sending 10000000 numbers to queue.Queue() took 15179.356 ms
Sending 10000000 numbers to queue.SimpleQueue() took 917.562 ms
Unsurprisingly, using the queue
package yields much better results if all you have are threads.
That said, I was surprised how performant queue.SimpleQueue
is.
"""
pipe_performance.py
"""
import threading as td
import queue
import multiprocessing as mp
import multiprocessing.connection as mp_connection
import time
import typing
def reader_pipe(p_out: mp_connection.Connection) -> None:
while True:
msg = p_out.recv()
if msg=='DONE':
break
def reader_queue(p_queue: queue.Queue[typing.Union[str, int]]) -> None:
while True:
msg = p_queue.get()
if msg=='DONE':
break
if __name__=='__main__':
# first: mp.pipe
for count in [10**4, 10**5, 10**6, 10**7]:
p_mppipe_out, p_mppipe_in = mp.Pipe()
reader_p = td.Thread(target=reader_pipe, args=((p_mppipe_out),))
reader_p.start()
_start = time.time()
for ii in range(0, count):
p_mppipe_in.send(ii)
p_mppipe_in.send('DONE')
reader_p.join()
print(f"Sending {count} numbers to mp.Pipe() took {(time.time() - _start)*1e3:.3f} ms")
# second: mp.Queue
p_mpqueue = mp.Queue()
reader_p = td.Thread(target=reader_queue, args=((p_mpqueue),))
reader_p.start()
_start = time.time()
for ii in range(0, count):
p_mpqueue.put(ii)
p_mpqueue.put('DONE')
reader_p.join()
print(f"Sending {count} numbers to mp.Queue() took {(time.time() - _start)*1e3:.3f} ms")
# third: queue.Queue
p_queue = queue.Queue()
reader_p = td.Thread(target=reader_queue, args=((p_queue),))
reader_p.start()
_start = time.time()
for ii in range(0, count):
p_queue.put(ii)
p_queue.put('DONE')
reader_p.join()
print(f"Sending {count} numbers to queue.Queue() took {(time.time() - _start)*1e3:.3f} ms")
# fourth: queue.SimpleQueue
p_squeue = queue.SimpleQueue()
reader_p = td.Thread(target=reader_queue, args=((p_squeue),))
reader_p.start()
_start = time.time()
for ii in range(0, count):
p_squeue.put(ii)
p_squeue.put('DONE')
reader_p.join()
print(f"Sending {count} numbers to queue.SimpleQueue() took {(time.time() - _start)*1e3:.3f} ms")