gnu-parallel
tmux
gnu-parallel | tmux | |
---|---|---|
22 | 208 | |
25 | 33,008 | |
- | 1.2% | |
10.0 | 8.3 | |
about 9 years ago | 5 days ago | |
Perl | C | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
gnu-parallel
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SQL query execution idea
You can use GNU Parallel (https://www.gnu.org/software/parallel/) to run command-line clients with all of those queries. You can set up the upper limit of simultaneous clients run, and this will automatically handle all possible parallelism.
- Parallel – shell tool for executing jobs in parallel using one or more computers
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Distcc: A fast, free distributed C/C++ compiler
Some other multi machine options that have worked well for me, well beyond just compilation of C/C++ on multiple machines with multiple cores.
1) set up passwordless, ssh.
and
2) use the gnu parallel. https://www.gnu.org/software/parallel/
gnu parallel is super flexible, very useful.
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Peplum: F/OSS distributed parallel computing and supercomputing at Home with Ruby infrastructure
How does this stack up againg GNU parallel? If you just wanna parallelize CLI work-loads (like nmap), parallel should be easier, I guess.
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Search in your Jupyter notebooks from the CLI, fast.
It requires jq for JSON processing and GNU parallel for concurrent searches in the notebooks.
- Is there a way to use all CPU cores while using RIBlast?
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Can cuda help me here?
Since you've got lots of images, you could use GNU Parallel to spread the job across multiple CPUs.
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5 great Perl scripts to keep in your sysadmin toolbox
Gnu parallel
- Is there an .deb package for installing GNU parallel?
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Modern SPAs without bundlers, CDNs, or Node.js
You could easily use something like GNU Parallel:
https://www.gnu.org/software/parallel/
tmux
- Chained ttys for side-by-side reading
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Let's See Your Terminal
This got me thinking about my recent pivot, my switch to Neovim by way of LazyVim to write most of my code, and using tmux to keep terminal states alive after closing a session.
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Just How Much Faster Are the Gnome 46 Terminals?
I use Tmux. It's a terminal-agnostic multiplexer. Gives you persistence and automation superpowers.
https://github.com/tmux/tmux/wiki
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Easy Access to Terminal Commands in Neovim using FTerm
Having a common set of tools already set up in different windows or sessions in Tmux or Zellij is obviously an option, but there is a subset of us ( 👋 ) that would rather just have fingertip access to our common tools inside of our editor.
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Using Shell Scripting to simplify your Shopify App development workflow 🐚
Once you have your Mac or Linux machine ready, make sure to downlaod and install TMUX (Terminal Mulitplexer). A lot of our scripts are going to be running headless inside of a TMUX session as it's an incredibly clean way to manage and organise different workspaces simultaneously. A lot of our scripts will help us to interact with TMUX so don't worry if it looks a little intimidating at first. You can install TMUX using your package manager in the terminal, use whichever applies to you:
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Zellij – A terminal workspace with batteries included (tmux alternative)
After having spent too much time trying to get the simple https://github.com/csdvrx/sixel-tmux/ features into mainline tmux (last November https://github.com/tmux/tmux/issues/3753), maybe it'd be easier to jump ship as use zellij?
Could anyone offer recommendations on "riced" zellij configuations, or just a demo where it shows doing with (say charts of disk usage per folder), watching a movie with mpv + keeping a vim to type on?
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Automating the startup of a dev workflow
Well, I now use tmux and tmuxinator. I have had many failed tmux attempts over the years, but I'm firmly bedded in now.
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Clipboards, Terminals, and Linux
Which leads me to clipboards. Linux has two of them! Adding to the interest, I typically use Neovim remotely, via an SSH connection to a Tmux session. And on my Linux system, I use urxvt as my terminal program. All of these are very UNIX-y tools, and somehow they all need to play nicely together.
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Connecting Debugger to Rails Applications
The downside of overmind is that it requires tmux, which is a terminal multiplexer tool. If you don't already use tmux, I'd say it's probably not worth learning it just for the purposes of using overmind. But if you're like me and already know/use tmux, this can be a great solution to pursue.
- Enchula Mi Consola
What are some alternatives?
Parallel
zellij - A terminal workspace with batteries included
bazel-buildfarm - Bazel remote caching and execution service
kitty - Cross-platform, fast, feature-rich, GPU based terminal
lolcate-rs - Lolcate -- A comically fast way of indexing and querying your filesystem. Replaces locate / mlocate / updatedb. Written in Rust.
tilix - A tiling terminal emulator for Linux using GTK+ 3
xidel - Command line tool to download and extract data from HTML/XML pages or JSON-APIs, using CSS, XPath 3.0, XQuery 3.0, JSONiq or pattern matching. It can also create new or transformed XML/HTML/JSON documents.
toggleterm.nvim - A neovim lua plugin to help easily manage multiple terminal windows
jc - CLI tool and python library that converts the output of popular command-line tools, file-types, and common strings to JSON, YAML, or Dictionaries. This allows piping of output to tools like jq and simplifying automation scripts.
i3 - A tiling window manager for X11
ripgrep - ripgrep recursively searches directories for a regex pattern while respecting your gitignore
Mosh - Mobile Shell