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Distributed programming library in OCaml (personal fork)
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thelema/Functory
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************************************************************************** * * * Functory: a distributed computing library for Ocaml * * Copyright (C) 2010 Jean-Christophe Filliatre and Kalyan Krishnamani * * * * This software is free software; you can redistribute it and/or * * modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public * * License version 2.1, with the special exception on linking * * described in file LICENSE. * * * * This software is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, * * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of * * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. * * * ************************************************************************** This is Functory mini tutorial. Installation ============ ./configure make sudo make install Usage ===== Assume you want to apply a function "map" such as let map x = x+1 to some list elements such as [1;2;3;4;5] and sum the results with a function "fold" such as let fold = (+) You can do that using function "map_local_fold" from the library, as follows: let () = Printf.printf "%d@." (map_local_fold ~map ~fold 0 [1;2;3;4;5]) The Functory library allows you to perform this computation in three different ways: either sequentially, or using several cores on the same machine, or using a network of different machines. To use the sequential implementation, you simply use the following line of code open Functory.Sequential To use several cores (say 4) on a single machine, you should add instead open Functory.Cores let () = set_number_of_cores 4 Finally, to use a network of, say 2 cores on machine "mach1" and 4 cores on machine "mach2", you should add instead open Functory.Network let () = declare_workers ~n:2 "mach1" let () = declare_workers ~n:4 "mach2" Your program is compiled in the following way (in any case): ocamlopt -I +functory unix.cmxa functory.cmxa <your files...> and then run as usual. In the network case, the same program should be run on the three machines, that are the two workers and the master. (It is also possible to run different programs for master and workers; see the documentation).
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