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I am trying my very first formal python program using Threading and Multiprocessing on a windows machine. I am unable to launch the processes though, with python giving the following message. The thing is, I am not launching my threads in the main module. The threads are handled in a separate module inside a class.
EDIT: By the way this code runs fine on ubuntu. Not quite on windows
RuntimeError:
Attempt to start a new process before the current process
has finished its bootstrapping phase.
This probably means that you are on Windows and you have
forgotten to use the proper idiom in the main module:
if __name__ == '__main__':
freeze_support()
...
The "freeze_support()" line can be omitted if the program
is not going to be frozen to produce a Windows executable.
My original code is pretty long, but I was able to reproduce the error in an abridged version of the code. It is split in two files, the first is the main module and does very little other than import the module which handles processes/threads and calls a method. The second module is where the meat of the code is.
testMain.py:
import parallelTestModule
extractor = parallelTestModule.ParallelExtractor()
extractor.runInParallel(numProcesses=2, numThreads=4)
parallelTestModule.py:
import multiprocessing
from multiprocessing import Process
import threading
class ThreadRunner(threading.Thread):
""" This class represents a single instance of a running thread"""
def __init__(self, name):
threading.Thread.__init__(self)
self.name = name
def run(self):
print self.name,'\n'
class ProcessRunner:
""" This class represents a single instance of a running process """
def runp(self, pid, numThreads):
mythreads = []
for tid in range(numThreads):
name = "Proc-"+str(pid)+"-Thread-"+str(tid)
th = ThreadRunner(name)
mythreads.append(th)
for i in mythreads:
i.start()
for i in mythreads:
i.join()
class ParallelExtractor:
def runInParallel(self, numProcesses, numThreads):
myprocs = []
prunner = ProcessRunner()
for pid in range(numProcesses):
pr = Process(target=prunner.runp, args=(pid, numThreads))
myprocs.append(pr)
# if __name__ == 'parallelTestModule': #This didnt work
# if __name__ == '__main__': #This obviously doesnt work
# multiprocessing.freeze_support() #added after seeing error to no avail
for i in myprocs:
i.start()
for i in myprocs:
i.join()
On Windows the subprocesses will import (i.e. execute) the main module at start. You need to insert an if __name__ == '__main__': guard in the main module to avoid creating subprocesses recursively.
Modified testMain.py:
import parallelTestModule
if __name__ == '__main__':
extractor = parallelTestModule.ParallelExtractor()
extractor.runInParallel(numProcesses=2, numThreads=4)
Try putting your code inside a main function in testMain.py
import parallelTestModule
if __name__ == '__main__':
extractor = parallelTestModule.ParallelExtractor()
extractor.runInParallel(numProcesses=2, numThreads=4)
See the docs:
"For an explanation of why (on Windows) the if __name__ == '__main__'
part is necessary, see Programming guidelines."
which say
"Make sure that the main module can be safely imported by a new Python
interpreter without causing unintended side effects (such a starting a
new process)."
... by using if __name__ == '__main__'
Though the earlier answers are correct, there's a small complication it would help to remark on.
In case your main module imports another module in which global variables or class member variables are defined and initialized to (or using) some new objects, you may have to condition that import in the same way:
if __name__ == '__main__':
import my_module
As #Ofer said, when you are using another libraries or modules, you should import all of them inside the if __name__ == '__main__':
So, in my case, ended like this:
if __name__ == '__main__':
import librosa
import os
import pandas as pd
run_my_program()
hello here is my structure for multi process
from multiprocessing import Process
import time
start = time.perf_counter()
def do_something(time_for_sleep):
print(f'Sleeping {time_for_sleep} second...')
time.sleep(time_for_sleep)
print('Done Sleeping...')
p1 = Process(target=do_something, args=[1])
p2 = Process(target=do_something, args=[2])
if __name__ == '__main__':
p1.start()
p2.start()
p1.join()
p2.join()
finish = time.perf_counter()
print(f'Finished in {round(finish-start,2 )} second(s)')
you don't have to put imports in the if __name__ == '__main__':, just running the program you wish to running inside
In yolo v5 with python 3.8.5
if __name__ == '__main__':
from yolov5 import train
train.run()
In my case it was a simple bug in the code, using a variable before it was created. Worth checking that out before trying the above solutions. Why I got this particular error message, Lord knows.
The below solution should work for both python multiprocessing and pytorch multiprocessing.
As other answers mentioned that the fix is to have if __name__ == '__main__': but I faced several issues in identifying where to start because I am using several scripts and modules. When I can call my first function inside main then everything before it started to create multiple processes (not sure why).
Putting it at the very first line (even before the import) worked. Only calling the first function return timeout error. The below is the first file of my code and multiprocessing is used after calling several functions but putting main in the first seems to be the only fix here.
if __name__ == '__main__':
from mjrl.utils.gym_env import GymEnv
from mjrl.policies.gaussian_mlp import MLP
from mjrl.baselines.quadratic_baseline import QuadraticBaseline
from mjrl.baselines.mlp_baseline import MLPBaseline
from mjrl.algos.npg_cg import NPG
from mjrl.algos.dapg import DAPG
from mjrl.algos.behavior_cloning import BC
from mjrl.utils.train_agent import train_agent
from mjrl.samplers.core import sample_paths
import os
import json
import mjrl.envs
import mj_envs
import time as timer
import pickle
import argparse
import numpy as np
# ===============================================================================
# Get command line arguments
# ===============================================================================
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description='Policy gradient algorithms with demonstration data.')
parser.add_argument('--output', type=str, required=True, help='location to store results')
parser.add_argument('--config', type=str, required=True, help='path to config file with exp params')
args = parser.parse_args()
JOB_DIR = args.output
if not os.path.exists(JOB_DIR):
os.mkdir(JOB_DIR)
with open(args.config, 'r') as f:
job_data = eval(f.read())
assert 'algorithm' in job_data.keys()
assert any([job_data['algorithm'] == a for a in ['NPG', 'BCRL', 'DAPG']])
job_data['lam_0'] = 0.0 if 'lam_0' not in job_data.keys() else job_data['lam_0']
job_data['lam_1'] = 0.0 if 'lam_1' not in job_data.keys() else job_data['lam_1']
EXP_FILE = JOB_DIR + '/job_config.json'
with open(EXP_FILE, 'w') as f:
json.dump(job_data, f, indent=4)
# ===============================================================================
# Train Loop
# ===============================================================================
e = GymEnv(job_data['env'])
policy = MLP(e.spec, hidden_sizes=job_data['policy_size'], seed=job_data['seed'])
baseline = MLPBaseline(e.spec, reg_coef=1e-3, batch_size=job_data['vf_batch_size'],
epochs=job_data['vf_epochs'], learn_rate=job_data['vf_learn_rate'])
# Get demonstration data if necessary and behavior clone
if job_data['algorithm'] != 'NPG':
print("========================================")
print("Collecting expert demonstrations")
print("========================================")
demo_paths = pickle.load(open(job_data['demo_file'], 'rb'))
########################################################################################
demo_paths = demo_paths[0:3]
print (job_data['demo_file'], len(demo_paths))
for d in range(len(demo_paths)):
feats = demo_paths[d]['features']
feats = np.vstack(feats)
demo_paths[d]['observations'] = feats
########################################################################################
bc_agent = BC(demo_paths, policy=policy, epochs=job_data['bc_epochs'], batch_size=job_data['bc_batch_size'],
lr=job_data['bc_learn_rate'], loss_type='MSE', set_transforms=False)
in_shift, in_scale, out_shift, out_scale = bc_agent.compute_transformations()
bc_agent.set_transformations(in_shift, in_scale, out_shift, out_scale)
bc_agent.set_variance_with_data(out_scale)
ts = timer.time()
print("========================================")
print("Running BC with expert demonstrations")
print("========================================")
bc_agent.train()
print("========================================")
print("BC training complete !!!")
print("time taken = %f" % (timer.time() - ts))
print("========================================")
# if job_data['eval_rollouts'] >= 1:
# score = e.evaluate_policy(policy, num_episodes=job_data['eval_rollouts'], mean_action=True)
# print("Score with behavior cloning = %f" % score[0][0])
if job_data['algorithm'] != 'DAPG':
# We throw away the demo data when training from scratch or fine-tuning with RL without explicit augmentation
demo_paths = None
# ===============================================================================
# RL Loop
# ===============================================================================
rl_agent = DAPG(e, policy, baseline, demo_paths,
normalized_step_size=job_data['rl_step_size'],
lam_0=job_data['lam_0'], lam_1=job_data['lam_1'],
seed=job_data['seed'], save_logs=True
)
print("========================================")
print("Starting reinforcement learning phase")
print("========================================")
ts = timer.time()
train_agent(job_name=JOB_DIR,
agent=rl_agent,
seed=job_data['seed'],
niter=job_data['rl_num_iter'],
gamma=job_data['rl_gamma'],
gae_lambda=job_data['rl_gae'],
num_cpu=job_data['num_cpu'],
sample_mode='trajectories',
num_traj=job_data['rl_num_traj'],
num_samples= job_data['rl_num_samples'],
save_freq=job_data['save_freq'],
evaluation_rollouts=job_data['eval_rollouts'])
print("time taken = %f" % (timer.time()-ts))
I ran into the same problem. #ofter method is correct because there are some details to pay attention to. The following is the successful debugging code I modified for your reference:
if __name__ == '__main__':
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
import numpy as np
def imgshow(img):
img = img / 2 + 0.5
np_img = img.numpy()
plt.imshow(np.transpose(np_img, (1, 2, 0)))
plt.show()
dataiter = iter(train_loader)
images, labels = dataiter.next()
imgshow(torchvision.utils.make_grid(images))
print(' '.join('%5s' % classes[labels[i]] for i in range(4)))
For the record, I don't have a subroutine, I just have a main program, but I have the same problem as you. This demonstrates that when importing a Python library file in the middle of a program segment, we should add:
if __name__ == '__main__':
I tried the tricks mentioned above on the following very simple code. but I still cannot stop it from resetting on any of my Window machines with Python 3.8/3.10. I would very much appreciate it if you could tell me where I am wrong.
print('script reset')
def do_something(inp):
print('Done!')
if __name__ == '__main__':
from multiprocessing import Process, get_start_method
print('main reset')
print(get_start_method())
Process(target=do_something, args=[1]).start()
print('Finished')
output displays:
script reset
main reset
spawn
Finished
script reset
Done!
Update:
As far as I understand, you guys are not preventing either the script containing the __main__ or the .start() from resetting (which doesn't happen in Linux), rather you are suggesting workarounds so that we don't see the reset. One has to make all imports minimal and put them in each function separately, but it is still, relative to Linux, slow.
So I got an idea to build something like mp3 player. To build that, I used multiprocessing module provided in Python. Here is my code
import multiprocessing
from playsound import playsound
def cp():
playsound('Music.mp3') # play the music
x = multiprocessing.Process(target = cp, daemon = True)
def main():
x.start()
while True and x.is_alive:
u = input("Input: ")
print(u)
if u == "S":
x.terminate()
print("Terminated process")
break
elif u == 'P':
# questioned code
print("Process paused")
elif u == 'R':
# questioned code
print("Process resumed")
if __name__ == '__main__':
main()
The idea is, when the program is executed, the program will automatically play the Music.mp3 file. To control the program, the user must input specific keyword into it.
S to stop the music and exit the program
P to pause the music
R to resuming playing the music
For now, I only know how to code the S option. For the others, I don't have any idea how to code it. So my question is: Is there any idea how to complete the P and R options? Or maybe, is there any idea about how to build the program using another method besides using multiprocessing module?
Thanks for the help
I am trying my very first formal python program using Threading and Multiprocessing on a windows machine. I am unable to launch the processes though, with python giving the following message. The thing is, I am not launching my threads in the main module. The threads are handled in a separate module inside a class.
EDIT: By the way this code runs fine on ubuntu. Not quite on windows
RuntimeError:
Attempt to start a new process before the current process
has finished its bootstrapping phase.
This probably means that you are on Windows and you have
forgotten to use the proper idiom in the main module:
if __name__ == '__main__':
freeze_support()
...
The "freeze_support()" line can be omitted if the program
is not going to be frozen to produce a Windows executable.
My original code is pretty long, but I was able to reproduce the error in an abridged version of the code. It is split in two files, the first is the main module and does very little other than import the module which handles processes/threads and calls a method. The second module is where the meat of the code is.
testMain.py:
import parallelTestModule
extractor = parallelTestModule.ParallelExtractor()
extractor.runInParallel(numProcesses=2, numThreads=4)
parallelTestModule.py:
import multiprocessing
from multiprocessing import Process
import threading
class ThreadRunner(threading.Thread):
""" This class represents a single instance of a running thread"""
def __init__(self, name):
threading.Thread.__init__(self)
self.name = name
def run(self):
print self.name,'\n'
class ProcessRunner:
""" This class represents a single instance of a running process """
def runp(self, pid, numThreads):
mythreads = []
for tid in range(numThreads):
name = "Proc-"+str(pid)+"-Thread-"+str(tid)
th = ThreadRunner(name)
mythreads.append(th)
for i in mythreads:
i.start()
for i in mythreads:
i.join()
class ParallelExtractor:
def runInParallel(self, numProcesses, numThreads):
myprocs = []
prunner = ProcessRunner()
for pid in range(numProcesses):
pr = Process(target=prunner.runp, args=(pid, numThreads))
myprocs.append(pr)
# if __name__ == 'parallelTestModule': #This didnt work
# if __name__ == '__main__': #This obviously doesnt work
# multiprocessing.freeze_support() #added after seeing error to no avail
for i in myprocs:
i.start()
for i in myprocs:
i.join()
On Windows the subprocesses will import (i.e. execute) the main module at start. You need to insert an if __name__ == '__main__': guard in the main module to avoid creating subprocesses recursively.
Modified testMain.py:
import parallelTestModule
if __name__ == '__main__':
extractor = parallelTestModule.ParallelExtractor()
extractor.runInParallel(numProcesses=2, numThreads=4)
Try putting your code inside a main function in testMain.py
import parallelTestModule
if __name__ == '__main__':
extractor = parallelTestModule.ParallelExtractor()
extractor.runInParallel(numProcesses=2, numThreads=4)
See the docs:
"For an explanation of why (on Windows) the if __name__ == '__main__'
part is necessary, see Programming guidelines."
which say
"Make sure that the main module can be safely imported by a new Python
interpreter without causing unintended side effects (such a starting a
new process)."
... by using if __name__ == '__main__'
Though the earlier answers are correct, there's a small complication it would help to remark on.
In case your main module imports another module in which global variables or class member variables are defined and initialized to (or using) some new objects, you may have to condition that import in the same way:
if __name__ == '__main__':
import my_module
As #Ofer said, when you are using another libraries or modules, you should import all of them inside the if __name__ == '__main__':
So, in my case, ended like this:
if __name__ == '__main__':
import librosa
import os
import pandas as pd
run_my_program()
hello here is my structure for multi process
from multiprocessing import Process
import time
start = time.perf_counter()
def do_something(time_for_sleep):
print(f'Sleeping {time_for_sleep} second...')
time.sleep(time_for_sleep)
print('Done Sleeping...')
p1 = Process(target=do_something, args=[1])
p2 = Process(target=do_something, args=[2])
if __name__ == '__main__':
p1.start()
p2.start()
p1.join()
p2.join()
finish = time.perf_counter()
print(f'Finished in {round(finish-start,2 )} second(s)')
you don't have to put imports in the if __name__ == '__main__':, just running the program you wish to running inside
In yolo v5 with python 3.8.5
if __name__ == '__main__':
from yolov5 import train
train.run()
In my case it was a simple bug in the code, using a variable before it was created. Worth checking that out before trying the above solutions. Why I got this particular error message, Lord knows.
The below solution should work for both python multiprocessing and pytorch multiprocessing.
As other answers mentioned that the fix is to have if __name__ == '__main__': but I faced several issues in identifying where to start because I am using several scripts and modules. When I can call my first function inside main then everything before it started to create multiple processes (not sure why).
Putting it at the very first line (even before the import) worked. Only calling the first function return timeout error. The below is the first file of my code and multiprocessing is used after calling several functions but putting main in the first seems to be the only fix here.
if __name__ == '__main__':
from mjrl.utils.gym_env import GymEnv
from mjrl.policies.gaussian_mlp import MLP
from mjrl.baselines.quadratic_baseline import QuadraticBaseline
from mjrl.baselines.mlp_baseline import MLPBaseline
from mjrl.algos.npg_cg import NPG
from mjrl.algos.dapg import DAPG
from mjrl.algos.behavior_cloning import BC
from mjrl.utils.train_agent import train_agent
from mjrl.samplers.core import sample_paths
import os
import json
import mjrl.envs
import mj_envs
import time as timer
import pickle
import argparse
import numpy as np
# ===============================================================================
# Get command line arguments
# ===============================================================================
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description='Policy gradient algorithms with demonstration data.')
parser.add_argument('--output', type=str, required=True, help='location to store results')
parser.add_argument('--config', type=str, required=True, help='path to config file with exp params')
args = parser.parse_args()
JOB_DIR = args.output
if not os.path.exists(JOB_DIR):
os.mkdir(JOB_DIR)
with open(args.config, 'r') as f:
job_data = eval(f.read())
assert 'algorithm' in job_data.keys()
assert any([job_data['algorithm'] == a for a in ['NPG', 'BCRL', 'DAPG']])
job_data['lam_0'] = 0.0 if 'lam_0' not in job_data.keys() else job_data['lam_0']
job_data['lam_1'] = 0.0 if 'lam_1' not in job_data.keys() else job_data['lam_1']
EXP_FILE = JOB_DIR + '/job_config.json'
with open(EXP_FILE, 'w') as f:
json.dump(job_data, f, indent=4)
# ===============================================================================
# Train Loop
# ===============================================================================
e = GymEnv(job_data['env'])
policy = MLP(e.spec, hidden_sizes=job_data['policy_size'], seed=job_data['seed'])
baseline = MLPBaseline(e.spec, reg_coef=1e-3, batch_size=job_data['vf_batch_size'],
epochs=job_data['vf_epochs'], learn_rate=job_data['vf_learn_rate'])
# Get demonstration data if necessary and behavior clone
if job_data['algorithm'] != 'NPG':
print("========================================")
print("Collecting expert demonstrations")
print("========================================")
demo_paths = pickle.load(open(job_data['demo_file'], 'rb'))
########################################################################################
demo_paths = demo_paths[0:3]
print (job_data['demo_file'], len(demo_paths))
for d in range(len(demo_paths)):
feats = demo_paths[d]['features']
feats = np.vstack(feats)
demo_paths[d]['observations'] = feats
########################################################################################
bc_agent = BC(demo_paths, policy=policy, epochs=job_data['bc_epochs'], batch_size=job_data['bc_batch_size'],
lr=job_data['bc_learn_rate'], loss_type='MSE', set_transforms=False)
in_shift, in_scale, out_shift, out_scale = bc_agent.compute_transformations()
bc_agent.set_transformations(in_shift, in_scale, out_shift, out_scale)
bc_agent.set_variance_with_data(out_scale)
ts = timer.time()
print("========================================")
print("Running BC with expert demonstrations")
print("========================================")
bc_agent.train()
print("========================================")
print("BC training complete !!!")
print("time taken = %f" % (timer.time() - ts))
print("========================================")
# if job_data['eval_rollouts'] >= 1:
# score = e.evaluate_policy(policy, num_episodes=job_data['eval_rollouts'], mean_action=True)
# print("Score with behavior cloning = %f" % score[0][0])
if job_data['algorithm'] != 'DAPG':
# We throw away the demo data when training from scratch or fine-tuning with RL without explicit augmentation
demo_paths = None
# ===============================================================================
# RL Loop
# ===============================================================================
rl_agent = DAPG(e, policy, baseline, demo_paths,
normalized_step_size=job_data['rl_step_size'],
lam_0=job_data['lam_0'], lam_1=job_data['lam_1'],
seed=job_data['seed'], save_logs=True
)
print("========================================")
print("Starting reinforcement learning phase")
print("========================================")
ts = timer.time()
train_agent(job_name=JOB_DIR,
agent=rl_agent,
seed=job_data['seed'],
niter=job_data['rl_num_iter'],
gamma=job_data['rl_gamma'],
gae_lambda=job_data['rl_gae'],
num_cpu=job_data['num_cpu'],
sample_mode='trajectories',
num_traj=job_data['rl_num_traj'],
num_samples= job_data['rl_num_samples'],
save_freq=job_data['save_freq'],
evaluation_rollouts=job_data['eval_rollouts'])
print("time taken = %f" % (timer.time()-ts))
I ran into the same problem. #ofter method is correct because there are some details to pay attention to. The following is the successful debugging code I modified for your reference:
if __name__ == '__main__':
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
import numpy as np
def imgshow(img):
img = img / 2 + 0.5
np_img = img.numpy()
plt.imshow(np.transpose(np_img, (1, 2, 0)))
plt.show()
dataiter = iter(train_loader)
images, labels = dataiter.next()
imgshow(torchvision.utils.make_grid(images))
print(' '.join('%5s' % classes[labels[i]] for i in range(4)))
For the record, I don't have a subroutine, I just have a main program, but I have the same problem as you. This demonstrates that when importing a Python library file in the middle of a program segment, we should add:
if __name__ == '__main__':
I tried the tricks mentioned above on the following very simple code. but I still cannot stop it from resetting on any of my Window machines with Python 3.8/3.10. I would very much appreciate it if you could tell me where I am wrong.
print('script reset')
def do_something(inp):
print('Done!')
if __name__ == '__main__':
from multiprocessing import Process, get_start_method
print('main reset')
print(get_start_method())
Process(target=do_something, args=[1]).start()
print('Finished')
output displays:
script reset
main reset
spawn
Finished
script reset
Done!
Update:
As far as I understand, you guys are not preventing either the script containing the __main__ or the .start() from resetting (which doesn't happen in Linux), rather you are suggesting workarounds so that we don't see the reset. One has to make all imports minimal and put them in each function separately, but it is still, relative to Linux, slow.
What I want to do is get an audio file to play while a def (function) is running.
I've looked it up and seen that threading works but it is wayyyy to complicated for me to work out. Is there a way you guys can explain it to me? I was using winsound to play the audio file, and SND_FILENAME.
Try this:
from multiprocessing import Process
def play():
#winsound stuff
def function():
#functiony stuff
if __name__ == '__main__':
p = Process(target=play)
d = Process(target=function)
p.start()
d.start()
I'm getting "EOFError: EOF when reading a line", when I try to take input.
def one():
xyz = input("enter : ")
print(xyz)
time.sleep(1)
if __name__=='__main__':
from multiprocessing import Process
import time
p1 = Process(target = one)
p1.start()
the main process owns standard input, the forked process doesn't.
What would work would be to use multiprocessing.dummy which doesn't create subprocesses but threads.
def one(stdin):
xyz = input("enter: ")
print(xyz)
time.sleep(1)
if __name__=='__main__':
from multiprocessing.dummy import Process
import time
p1 = Process(target = one)
p1.start()
since threads share the process, they also share standard input.
for real multiprocessing, I suggest that you collect interactive input from main process and pass it as argument.