You can't use Python multiprocessing to pass a TensorFlow Session
into a multiprocessing.Pool
in the straightfoward way because the Session
object can't be pickled (it's fundamentally not serializable because it may manage GPU memory and state like that).
I'd suggest parallelizing the code using actors, which are essentially the parallel computing analog of "objects" and use used to manage state in the distributed setting.
Ray is a good framework for doing this. You can define a Python class which manages the TensorFlow Session
and exposes a method for running your simulation.
import ray
import tensorflow as tf
ray.init()
@ray.remote
class Simulator(object):
def __init__(self):
self.sess = tf.Session()
self.simple_model = tf.constant([1.0])
def simulate(self):
return self.sess.run(self.simple_model)
# Create two actors.
simulators = [Simulator.remote() for _ in range(2)]
# Run two simulations in parallel.
results = ray.get([s.simulate.remote() for s in simulators])
Here are a few more examples of parallelizing TensorFlow with Ray.
See the Ray documentation. Note that I'm one of the Ray developers.
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