def main(): stopwatch = aiocells.Stopwatch() graph = create_graph(stopwatch) asyncio.run(aiocells.async_compute_concurrent(graph)) print("Computation with async_compute_concurrent took" f" {stopwatch.elapsed_time()}")
def main(): graph = aiocells.DependencyGraph() time = aiocells.Place() # 'aio.timer' will put the current time in the 'time' variable when # one second has expired timer = functools.partial(aiocells.timer, 1, time) printer = aiocells.print_value(time, "variable changed to {value}") graph.add_precedence(timer, time) graph.add_precedence(time, printer) logger.debug("graph: %s", graph) logger.info("First computation...") asyncio.run(aiocells.async_compute_concurrent(graph)) logger.debug("graph: %s", graph) logger.info("Second computation...") asyncio.run(aiocells.async_compute_concurrent(graph)) logger.debug("graph: %s", graph)
def main(): graph = aiocells.DependencyGraph() time = aiocells.Place() timer = TimerObject(time) # Here, we bind the coroutine method with the object compute_timer = functools.partial(TimerObject.compute, timer) printer = aiocells.print_value(time, "variable changed to {value}") graph.add_precedence(compute_timer, time) graph.add_precedence(time, printer) logger.debug("graph: %s", graph) logger.info("First computation...") asyncio.run(aiocells.async_compute_concurrent(graph)) logger.debug("graph: %s", graph) logger.info("Second computation...") asyncio.run(aiocells.async_compute_concurrent(graph)) logger.debug("graph: %s", graph)
def main(): stopwatch = aiocells.Stopwatch() graph = create_graph(stopwatch) print("Should take about 3 seconds...") asyncio.run(aiocells.async_compute_concurrent_simple(graph)) print("Computation with `async_compute_concurrent_simple` took " f"{stopwatch.elapsed_time()}") print("Should take about 3 seconds...") asyncio.run(aiocells.async_compute_concurrent(graph)) print("Computation with `async_compute_concurrent` took " f"{stopwatch.elapsed_time()}")
def main(): stopwatch = aiocells.Stopwatch() graph = demo_6.create_graph(stopwatch) # Here, we run the same graph as the previous demo but we use # 'async_compute_concurrent' which will run the two sleeps concurrently. # Thus, the execution time will be around 2 seconds, the maximum of # the two sleeps. print("Running previous demo's graph concurrently.") print("Total execution time should be about 2 seconds...") asyncio.run(aiocells.async_compute_concurrent(graph)) print("Computation with `async_compute_concurrent` took" f" {stopwatch.elapsed_time()}")
def main(): stopwatch = aiocells.Stopwatch() graph = create_graph(stopwatch) # How long does it take to compute 100000 null callables with # async_compute_concurrent_simple? asyncio.run(aiocells.async_compute_concurrent_simple(graph)) print("Computation with async_compute_concurrent_simple took" f"{stopwatch.elapsed_time()}") # How long does it take to compute 100000 null callables with # async_compute_concurrent? asyncio.run(aiocells.async_compute_concurrent(graph)) print("Computation with async_compute_concurrent took" f" {stopwatch.elapsed_time()}")
def main(): stopwatch = aiocells.Stopwatch() graph = create_graph(stopwatch) # How long does it take to run 100000 async 1 second sleeps with # async_compute_concurrent_simple? print("Running 100000 async 1 second sleeps with" " async_compute_concurrent_simple...") asyncio.run(aiocells.async_compute_concurrent_simple(graph)) print("Computation with `async_compute_concurrent_simple` took" f" {stopwatch.elapsed_time()}") # How long does it take to run 100000 async 1 second sleeps with # async_compute_concurrent? print("Running 100000 async 1 second sleeps with" " async_compute_concurrent...") asyncio.run(aiocells.async_compute_concurrent(graph)) print("Computation with `async_compute_concurrent` took" f" {stopwatch.elapsed_time()}")