Each table row shows performance measurements for this PyPy 3 program with a particular command-line input value N.
| N | CPU secs | Elapsed secs | Memory KB | Code B | ≈ CPU Load |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5,000,000 | 28.61 | 37.17 | 73,036 | 448 | 19% 7% 4% 3% 12% 24% 5% 15% |
Read the ↓ make, command line, and program output logs to see how this program was run.
Read thread-ring benchmark to see what this program should do.
# The Computer Language Benchmarks Game
# http://benchmarksgame.alioth.debian.org/
# Contributed by Antti Kervinen
# Modified by Tupteq
# 2to3
import sys
import _thread
# Set minimum stack size for threads, otherwise the program may fail
# to create such a many threads
_thread.stack_size(32*1024)
def threadfun(number, lock_acquire, next_release):
global n
while 1:
lock_acquire()
if n > 0:
n -= 1
next_release()
else:
print(number)
main_lock.release()
# main
n = int(sys.argv[1])
main_lock = _thread.allocate_lock()
main_lock.acquire()
first_lock = _thread.allocate_lock()
next_lock = first_lock
for number in range(503):
lock = next_lock
lock.acquire()
next_lock = _thread.allocate_lock() if number < 502 else first_lock
_thread.start_new_thread(threadfun,
(number+1, lock.acquire, next_lock.release))
first_lock.release()
main_lock.acquire()
Fri, 09 Sep 2022 06:06:21 GMT COMMAND LINE: /usr/bin/pypy3 threadring.pypy3-2.pypy3 5000000 PROGRAM OUTPUT: 181