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Ray

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Ray is an experimental distributed extension of Python. It is under development and not ready for general use.

The goal of Ray is to make it easy to write machine learning applications that run on a cluster while providing the development and debugging experience of working on a single machine.

Before jumping into the details, here's a simple Python example for doing a Monte Carlo estimation of pi (using multiple cores or potentially multiple machines).

import ray
import numpy as np

# Start a scheduler, an object store, and some workers.
ray.init(start_ray_local=True, num_workers=10)

# Define a remote function for estimating pi.
@ray.remote([int], [float])
def estimate_pi(n):
  x = np.random.uniform(size=n)
  y = np.random.uniform(size=n)
  return 4 * np.mean(x ** 2 + y ** 2 < 1)

# Launch 10 tasks, each of which estimates pi.
result_ids = []
for _ in range(10):
  result_ids.append(estimate_pi.remote(100))

# Fetch the results of the tasks and print their average.
estimate = np.mean([ray.get(result_id) for result_id in result_ids])
print "Pi is approximately {}.".format(estimate)

Within the for loop, each call to estimate_pi.remote(100) sends a message to the scheduler asking it to schedule the task of running estimate_pi with the argument 100. This call returns right away without waiting for the actual estimation of pi to take place. Instead of returning a float, it returns an object ID, which represents the eventual output of the computation (this is a similar to a Future).

The call to ray.get(result_id) takes an object ID and returns the actual estimate of pi (waiting until the computation has finished if necessary).

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