PowerShell module for parallel data processing
SplitPipeline is designed for Windows PowerShell 5.1 and PowerShell Core.
It provides the only command Split-Pipeline
.
Split-Pipeline
splits the input, processes parts by parallel pipelines, and
outputs results. It may work without collecting the whole input, large or
infinite.
Step 1: Get and install.
The module is published at the PSGallery: SplitPipeline. It may be installed by this command:
Install-Module SplitPipeline
Step 2: Import the module:
Import-Module SplitPipeline
Step 3: Take a look at help:
help Split-Pipeline
Step 4: Try these three commands performing the same job simulating long but not processor consuming operations on each item:
1..10 | . {process{ $_; sleep 1 }}
1..10 | Split-Pipeline {process{ $_; sleep 1 }}
1..10 | Split-Pipeline -Count 10 {process{ $_; sleep 1 }}
Output of all commands is the same, numbers from 1 to 10 (Split-Pipeline does
not guarantee the same order without the switch Order
). But consumed times
are different. Let's measure them:
Measure-Command { 1..10 | . {process{ $_; sleep 1 }} }
Measure-Command { 1..10 | Split-Pipeline {process{ $_; sleep 1 }} }
Measure-Command { 1..10 | Split-Pipeline -Count 10 {process{ $_; sleep 1 }} }
The first command takes about 10 seconds.
Performance of the second command depends on the number of processors which is used as the default split count. For example, with 2 processors it takes about 6 seconds.
The third command takes about 2 seconds. The number of processors is not very important for such sleeping jobs. The split count is important. Increasing it to some extent improves overall performance. As for intensive jobs, the split count normally should not exceed the number of processors.