I have decided to learn how multi-threading is done in Python, and I did a comparison to see what kind of performance gain I would get on a dual-core CPU. I found that my simple multi-threaded code actually runs slower than the sequential equivalent, and I cant figure out why.
The test I contrived was to generate a large list of random numbers and then print the maximum
from random import random
import threading
def ox():
print max([random() for x in xrange(20000000)])
ox()
takes about 6 seconds to complete on my Intel Core 2 Duo, while ox();ox()
takes about 12 seconds.
I then tried calling ox() from two threads to see how fast that would complete.
def go():
r = threading.Thread(target=ox)
r.start()
ox()
go()
takes about 18 seconds to complete, with the two results printing within 1 second of eachother. Why should this be slower?
I suspect ox()
is being parallelized automatically, because I if look at the Windows task manager performance tab, and call ox()
in my python console, both processors jump to about 75% utilization until it completes. Does Python automatically parallelize things like max()
when it can?
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