The setup
I have written a pretty complex piece of software in Python (on a Windows PC). My software starts basically two Python interpreter shells. The first shell starts up (I suppose) when you double click the main.py
file. Within that shell, other threads are started in the following way:
# Start TCP_thread
TCP_thread = threading.Thread(name = 'TCP_loop', target = TCP_loop, args = (TCPsock,))
TCP_thread.start()
# Start UDP_thread
UDP_thread = threading.Thread(name = 'UDP_loop', target = UDP_loop, args = (UDPsock,))
TCP_thread.start()
The Main_thread
starts a TCP_thread
and a UDP_thread
. Although these are separate threads, they all run within one single Python shell.
The Main_thread
also starts a subprocess. This is done in the following way:
p = subprocess.Popen(['python', mySubprocessPath], shell=True)
From the Python documentation, I understand that this subprocess is running simultaneously (!) in a separate Python interpreter session/shell. The Main_thread
in this subprocess is completely dedicated to my GUI. The GUI starts a TCP_thread
for all its communications.
I know that things get a bit complicated. Therefore I have summarized the whole setup in this figure:
I have several questions concerning this setup. I will list them down here:
Question 1 [Solved]
Is it true that a Python interpreter uses only one CPU core at a time to run all the threads? In other words, will the Python interpreter session 1
(from the figure) run all 3 threads (Main_thread
, TCP_thread
and UDP_thread
) on one CPU core?
Answer: yes, this is true. The GIL (Global Interpreter Lock) ensures that all threads run on one CPU core at a time.
Question 2 [Not yet solved]
Do I have a way to track which CPU core it is?
Question 3 [Partly solved]
For this question we forget about threads, but we focus on the subprocess mechanism in Python. Starting a new subprocess implies starting up a new Python interpreter instance. Is this correct?
Answer: Yes this is correct. At first there was some confusion about whether the following code would create a new Python interpreter instance:
p = subprocess.Popen(['python', mySubprocessPath], shell = True)
The issue has been clarified. This code indeed starts a new Python interpreter instance.
Will Python be smart enough to make that separate Python interpreter instance run on a different CPU core? Is there a way to track which one, perhaps with some sporadic print statements as well?
Question 4 [New question]
The community discussion raised a new question. There are apparently two approaches when spawning a new process (within a new Python interpreter instance):
# Approach 1(a)
p = subprocess.Popen(['python', mySubprocessPath], shell = True)
# Approach 1(b) (J.F. Sebastian)
p = subprocess.Popen([sys.executable, mySubprocessPath])
# Approach 2
p = multiprocessing.Process(target=foo, args=(q,))
The second approach has the obvious downside that it targets just a function - whereas I need to open up a new Python script. Anyway, are both approaches similar in what they achieve?
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