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282 lines
10 KiB
282 lines
10 KiB
import logging
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import multiprocessing
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import multiprocessing.connection
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import os
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import pickle
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import signal
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import sys
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import tempfile
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import time
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import warnings
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from typing import Optional
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from . import _prctl_pr_set_pdeathsig # type: ignore[attr-defined]
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log = logging.getLogger(__name__)
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class ProcessException(Exception):
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__slots__ = ["error_index", "error_pid"]
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def __init__(self, msg: str, error_index: int, pid: int):
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super().__init__(msg)
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self.msg = msg
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self.error_index = error_index
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self.pid = pid
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def __reduce__(self):
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return type(self), (self.msg, self.error_index, self.pid)
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class ProcessRaisedException(ProcessException):
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"""Exception raised when a process failed due to an exception raised by the code."""
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def __init__(
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self,
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msg: str,
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error_index: int,
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error_pid: int,
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):
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super().__init__(msg, error_index, error_pid)
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class ProcessExitedException(ProcessException):
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"""Exception raised when a process failed due to signal or exited with a specific code."""
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__slots__ = ["exit_code"]
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def __init__(
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self,
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msg: str,
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error_index: int,
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error_pid: int,
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exit_code: int,
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signal_name: Optional[str] = None,
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):
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super().__init__(msg, error_index, error_pid)
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self.exit_code = exit_code
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self.signal_name = signal_name
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def __reduce__(self):
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return (
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type(self),
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(self.msg, self.error_index, self.pid, self.exit_code, self.signal_name),
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)
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def _wrap(fn, i, args, error_file):
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# prctl(2) is a Linux specific system call.
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# On other systems the following function call has no effect.
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# This is set to ensure that non-daemonic child processes can
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# terminate if their parent terminates before they do.
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_prctl_pr_set_pdeathsig(signal.SIGINT)
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try:
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fn(i, *args)
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except KeyboardInterrupt:
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pass # SIGINT; Killed by parent, do nothing
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except Exception:
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# Propagate exception to parent process, keeping original traceback
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import traceback
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with open(error_file, "wb") as fh:
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pickle.dump(traceback.format_exc(), fh)
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sys.exit(1)
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class ProcessContext:
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def __init__(self, processes, error_files):
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self.error_files = error_files
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self.processes = processes
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self.sentinels = {
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process.sentinel: index for index, process in enumerate(processes)
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}
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def pids(self):
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return [int(process.pid) for process in self.processes]
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def join(self, timeout=None):
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r"""Join one or more processes within spawn context.
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Attempt to join one or more processes in this spawn context.
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If one of them exited with a non-zero exit status, this function
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kills the remaining processes and raises an exception with the cause
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of the first process exiting.
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Returns ``True`` if all processes have been joined successfully,
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``False`` if there are more processes that need to be joined.
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Args:
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timeout (float): Wait this long before giving up on waiting.
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"""
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# Ensure this function can be called even when we're done.
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if len(self.sentinels) == 0:
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return True
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# Wait for any process to fail or all of them to succeed.
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ready = multiprocessing.connection.wait(
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self.sentinels.keys(),
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timeout=timeout,
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)
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error_index = None
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for sentinel in ready:
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index = self.sentinels.pop(sentinel)
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process = self.processes[index]
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process.join()
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if process.exitcode != 0:
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error_index = index
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break
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# Return if there was no error.
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if error_index is None:
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# Return whether or not all processes have been joined.
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return len(self.sentinels) == 0
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# Assume failure. Terminate processes that are still alive.
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# Try SIGTERM then SIGKILL if the process isn't going down.
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# The reason is related to python signal handling is limited
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# to main thread and if that is in c/c++ land and stuck it won't
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# to handle it. We have seen processes getting stuck not handling
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# SIGTERM for the above reason.
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timeout: int = 30
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for process in self.processes:
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if process.is_alive():
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log.warning("Terminating process %s via signal SIGTERM", process.pid)
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process.terminate()
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end = time.monotonic() + timeout
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for process in self.processes:
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time_to_wait = max(0, end - time.monotonic())
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process.join(time_to_wait)
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for process in self.processes:
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if process.is_alive():
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log.warning(
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"Unable to shutdown process %s via SIGTERM , forcefully exiting via SIGKILL",
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process.pid,
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)
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process.kill()
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process.join()
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# The file will only be created if the process crashed.
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failed_process = self.processes[error_index]
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if not os.access(self.error_files[error_index], os.R_OK):
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exitcode = self.processes[error_index].exitcode
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if exitcode < 0:
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try:
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name = signal.Signals(-exitcode).name
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except ValueError:
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name = f"<Unknown signal {-exitcode}>"
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raise ProcessExitedException(
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"process %d terminated with signal %s" % (error_index, name),
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error_index=error_index,
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error_pid=failed_process.pid,
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exit_code=exitcode,
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signal_name=name,
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)
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else:
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raise ProcessExitedException(
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"process %d terminated with exit code %d" % (error_index, exitcode),
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error_index=error_index,
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error_pid=failed_process.pid,
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exit_code=exitcode,
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)
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with open(self.error_files[error_index], "rb") as fh:
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original_trace = pickle.load(fh)
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msg = "\n\n-- Process %d terminated with the following error:\n" % error_index
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msg += original_trace
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raise ProcessRaisedException(msg, error_index, failed_process.pid)
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class SpawnContext(ProcessContext):
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def __init__(self, processes, error_files):
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warnings.warn("SpawnContext is renamed to ProcessContext since 1.4 release.")
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super().__init__(processes, error_files)
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# Note: [start_processes]
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# mp.start_processes handles both start_method='spawn' and 'fork'. It's supposed to be a
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# more generalized API than mp.spawn. Currently we only document mp.spawn as it's the
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# CUDA compatible start_method. However, in environments like Ipython notebooks, 'fork'
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# works better than 'spawn'. Every helper function we created for mp.spawn is indeed
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# general enough, and backends like XLA can reuse them in Colab notebooks as well.
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# Currently we only add this API first, we can consider adding it to documentation as
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# needed in the future.
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def start_processes(
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fn, args=(), nprocs=1, join=True, daemon=False, start_method="spawn"
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):
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mp = multiprocessing.get_context(start_method)
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error_files = []
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processes = []
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for i in range(nprocs):
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# Each process is assigned a file to write tracebacks to. We
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# use the file being non-empty to indicate an exception
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# occurred (vs an expected shutdown). Note: this previously
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# used a multiprocessing.Queue but that can be prone to
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# deadlocks, so we went with a simpler solution for a one-shot
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# message between processes.
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tf = tempfile.NamedTemporaryFile(
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prefix="pytorch-errorfile-", suffix=".pickle", delete=False
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)
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tf.close()
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os.unlink(tf.name)
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process = mp.Process(
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target=_wrap,
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args=(fn, i, args, tf.name),
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daemon=daemon,
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)
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process.start()
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error_files.append(tf.name)
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processes.append(process)
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context = ProcessContext(processes, error_files)
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if not join:
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return context
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# Loop on join until it returns True or raises an exception.
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while not context.join():
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pass
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def spawn(fn, args=(), nprocs=1, join=True, daemon=False, start_method="spawn"):
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r"""Spawns ``nprocs`` processes that run ``fn`` with ``args``.
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If one of the processes exits with a non-zero exit status, the
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remaining processes are killed and an exception is raised with the
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cause of termination. In the case an exception was caught in the
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child process, it is forwarded and its traceback is included in
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the exception raised in the parent process.
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Args:
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fn (function): Function is called as the entrypoint of the
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spawned process. This function must be defined at the top
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level of a module so it can be pickled and spawned. This
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is a requirement imposed by multiprocessing.
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The function is called as ``fn(i, *args)``, where ``i`` is
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the process index and ``args`` is the passed through tuple
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of arguments.
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args (tuple): Arguments passed to ``fn``.
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nprocs (int): Number of processes to spawn.
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join (bool): Perform a blocking join on all processes.
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daemon (bool): The spawned processes' daemon flag. If set to True,
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daemonic processes will be created.
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start_method (str): (deprecated) this method will always use ``spawn``
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as the start method. To use a different start method
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use ``start_processes()``.
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Returns:
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None if ``join`` is ``True``,
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:class:`~ProcessContext` if ``join`` is ``False``
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"""
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if start_method != "spawn":
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msg = (
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"This method only supports start_method=spawn (got: %s).\n"
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"To use a different start_method use:\n\t\t"
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" torch.multiprocessing.start_processes(...)" % start_method
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)
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warnings.warn(msg)
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return start_processes(fn, args, nprocs, join, daemon, start_method="spawn")
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