Use system function with parfor
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I'm generating input files to C code from matlab and collecting output from C code into matlab for further processing through .txt files. In between writing & reading "system", matlab builtin
function
will be called to run C binary file as shown below. I'm unable to use "parfor" in place of "for" loop when I use system function?. What can I do to enable "parfor"?
itrMax = 10000;
StoreResult = zeros(1, itrMax );
for i = 1:itrMax
CINP = randi([0 1], 1, 1000);
fp = fopen("input.txt","w");
fprintf(fp, "%d", CINP);
fclose(fp);
cd cCode
system("./a.out");
cd ../
fp = fopen("output.txt","r");
COUT = fscanf(fp,"%d\n");
fclose(fp)
//FUNCTION Call to process COUT, whose output will be a constant
// OutFlag
StoreResult(1, i) = OutFlag;
end
itrMax = 10000;
StoreResult = zeros(1, itrMax );
for i = 1:itrMax
CINP = randi([0 1], 1, 1000);
fp = fopen("input.txt","w");
fprintf(fp, "%d", CINP);
fclose(fp);
cd cCode
system("./a.out");
cd ../
fp = fopen("output.txt","r");
COUT = fscanf(fp,"%d\n");
fclose(fp);
//FUNCTION Call to process COUT, whose output will be a constant
// OutFlag
StoreResult(1, i) = OutFlag;
end
0 Comments
Answers (1)
Edric Ellis
on 20 May 2020
It looks like your executable expects to read from input.txt and write to output.txt. This will not work in parallel because the different workers will clash when the all try to write input.txt. What I suggest is that you modify your program so that it takes the input and output files as command-line arguments, and then do something like this:
parfor i = 1:itrMax
input_fname = sprintf('input_%d.txt', i);
output_fname = sprintf('output_%d.txt', i);
fh = fopen(input_fname, 'w');
% write into fh
fclose(fh);
cmd = sprintf('./a.out %s %s', input_fname, output_fname);
system(cmd);
fh = fopen(output_fname, 'r');
% read from fh
fclose(fh);
% Optional - clean up these files
delete(input_fname);
delete(output_fname);
end
2 Comments
Edric Ellis
on 28 May 2020
You need to change your C code to read from a file named on the command line, and write to a file named on the command line to match the MATLAB code I posted. These days it's probably easier to write C++ than plain C, start with a tutorial like e.g. https://www.w3schools.com/cpp/default.asp . Basically, you need to modify your C(++) code to do the following:
- Make your main function take argc (number of command-line arguments) and argv (the values of those arguments)
- Use argv[1] as the input file name, argv[2] as the output file name
- Probably simpler to read from the file directly rather than using freopen.
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