Hi, all,
When running perl scripts on our Mac (our super computer with 16 CPU cores and 32 GB RAM), I found only one core is in process (100%). Other 15 cores are less than 5%. I feel the speed is quite slow when I try to analyze large datasets. But when I run the CLC workbench, all cores are active at one time. So is there anyway I can assign CPU cores to the terminal or my perl program? Or there is other reasons I don't figure out. Hope to get help.
Thank you in advance.
Rui
When running perl scripts on our Mac (our super computer with 16 CPU cores and 32 GB RAM), I found only one core is in process (100%). Other 15 cores are less than 5%. I feel the speed is quite slow when I try to analyze large datasets. But when I run the CLC workbench, all cores are active at one time. So is there anyway I can assign CPU cores to the terminal or my perl program? Or there is other reasons I don't figure out. Hope to get help.
Thank you in advance.
Rui
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