- How many dedicated workers? Most often, more workers, the lower the amount of time.
- Amount of time to run the unit of work. Does it take more time to send the code then to run the code?
parfor slower than for
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Hi Community members,
I am trying to run a very simple parfor loop and a for loop to compare results. However, to my surprise parfor is almost 100 times slower than for loop. Can anyone please explain this? I intend to run a code with almost 10000000000 iterations and need to decide how to make it fastest. Your suggestions will be very helpful in this regard.
arr=[];
tic
parfor x=1:50
arr(x) = x;
end
toc
arr=[];
tic
for x=1:50
arr(x) = x;
end
toc
0 Comments
Answers (2)
Raymond Norris
on 20 Sep 2021
There are several considerations
Your example is trivial. If your code really takes 0.005s to run all your sims, then parfor is not needed. Conversely, here's a better trivial example
tic
parfor idx = 1:50
pause(2)
end
toc
5 Comments
Jan
on 20 Sep 2021
The main work in you example is the iterative growing of the array. This is a waste of time in sequential and parallel code. Pre-allocate the output properly.
Starting parallel threads must take some time. For such a trivial code, the overhead is expected to be higher than the payload. Compare this with instructing 8 people to say the numbers 1 to 50. It is much faster to do this by your own.
3 Comments
Walter Roberson
on 20 Sep 2021
a{x} and b{x} have to be transfered through to the worker. That requires communications time while the worker sends back its iteration number and the controller gathers the data and sends it over, and the worker puts it into the appropriate internal variables. Then you do the strcat() on the worker, which is not much work.
Then you do the fprintf(), which is not much work. You did not use 'W' permissions, so the fprintf() flushes the file after the fprintf(), which requires talking to the operating system which has to talk to the file system, which has to process the flush()
If you were writing much more data, then you would run into problems that the files are all on the same drive, and drive writing is usually most efficient when at two (sometimes four) processes per controller are writing. Not per drive, but rather per controller . The reason is that the memory bandwidth is per controller so you can use up all of the memory bandwidth with just one drive. Two processes allows there to be I/O requests in the queue immediately after one I/O has finished -- and these days a lot of drives are able to re-order I/O requests according to rotational latency requirements.
Steven Lord
on 20 Sep 2021
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