/par

Small utility that runs multiple computations in parallel

Primary LanguageHaskellMIT LicenseMIT

Build Status Run several commands in parallel

par is a small utility that runs multiple commands in parallel and by default exits with a failure status of a first failure it sees.

Use --help for command-line help.

Basic usage example

> par "echo foo; sleep 1; echo foo; sleep 1; echo foo" "echo bar; sleep 1; echo bar; sleep 1; echo bar" && echo "success"
foo
bar
bar
foo
bar
foo
success
> par "echo foo; sleep 1; foofoo" "echo bar; sleep 1; echo bar; sleep 1; echo bar" && echo "success"
bar
foo
bar
/bin/sh: foofoo: command not found
bar

Adding prefix to output

> par "PARPREFIX=[fooechoer] echo foo" "PARPREFIX=[bar] echo bar"
[fooechoer] foo
[bar] bar

Force success exit-code

> par --succeed "foo" "bar" && echo 'wow'
/bin/sh: foo: command not found
/bin/sh: bar: command not found
wow

Installation

For Ubuntu 12.04, 14.04 and MacOS X download some release and put it into $PATH. For others -- see "building from source" instructions.

https://github.com/k-bx/par/releases

Example:

cd /tmp
wget https://github.com/k-bx/par/releases/download/1.0.1/par-ubuntu-12.04
sudo mv ./par-ubuntu-12.04 /usr/local/bin/

Building from source

  1. Install haskell stack tool
  2. Run stack install. It'll build and install tool into ~/.local/bin/par

Footnote on strings in bash/zsh

Many people know that strings in bash and zsh are "weird", but not many people know that there are good old ASCII-strings also present.

Double-quoted strings are interpolating variables and do other interesting things like reacting on "!" sign, for example.

Single-quotes don't interpolate variables and don't react on "!" sign, but they also don't let you quote neither single-quote nor double-quote.

Turns out good old ASCII-quotes are available as $'string' syntax! Example:

> echo $'foo'
foo
> echo $'foo with "doublequotes and \'singletuoes\' inside"!'
foo with "doublequotes and 'singletuoes' inside"!

You are a better person with this knowledge now. $'Enjoy!'