Commands able to use this parallelisation are `stop`, `kill` and `rm`. We're using a backported function from python 3, to allow us to make the most of a pool of threads without having to write the low level code for managing this ourselves. A default value for number of threads is a low enough number so it shouldn't cause performance problems but if someone knows the capability of their system and wants to increase it, they can via an environment variable DEFAULT_MAX_WORKERS Signed-off-by: Mazz Mosley <mazz@houseofmnowster.com> |
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| .. | ||
| cli | ||
| __init__.py | ||
| config.py | ||
| const.py | ||
| container.py | ||
| legacy.py | ||
| progress_stream.py | ||
| project.py | ||
| service.py | ||
| state.py | ||
| utils.py | ||