Hacked By AnonymousFox
#!/usr/bin/perl
# Run tests in parallel. This just allows you to check that your tests
# are roughly capable of running in parallel. It writes output to a
# tree in /tmp.
# From: Eric Wilhelm @ ewilhelm at cpan.org
use warnings;
use strict;
use File::Basename ();
use File::Path ();
use List::Util ();
my @tests = @ARGV;
#@tests = List::Util::shuffle(@tests);
use POSIX ();
my %map;
my $i = 0;
my $jobs = 9; # scalar(@tests); # if you like forkbombs
my @running;
while (@tests) {
if ( $jobs == @running ) {
my @list;
while ( my $pid = shift(@running) ) {
if ( waitpid( $pid, POSIX::WNOHANG() ) > 0 ) {
warn ' ' x 25 . "done $map{$pid}\n";
next;
}
push( @list, $pid );
}
#warn "running ", scalar(@list);
@running = @list;
next;
}
my $test = shift(@tests);
defined( my $pid = fork ) or die;
$i++;
if ($pid) {
push( @running, $pid );
$map{$pid} = $test;
print "$test\n";
}
else {
my $dest_base = '/tmp';
my $dest_dir = File::Basename::dirname("$dest_base/$test");
unless ( -d $dest_dir ) {
File::Path::mkpath($dest_dir) or die;
}
$| = 1;
open( STDOUT, '>', "$dest_base/$test.out" ) or die;
open( STDERR, '>', "$dest_base/$test.err" ) or die;
exec( $^X, '-Ilib', $test );
}
}
my $v = 0;
until ( $v == -1 ) {
$v = wait;
( $v == -1 ) and last;
$? and warn "$map{$v} ($v) no happy $?";
}
print "bye\n";
# vim:ts=2:sw=2:et:sta
Hacked By AnonymousFox1.0, Coded By AnonymousFox