I needed to do a mass resampling of around 280,000 images. There are a number of ways to do this, but I settled on doing it via PHP because the images are stored on our web server, the total size of the images is large (~10GB), and I didn’t want to kill my machine trying to get it done.
PHP is ideal for a task such as this: parsing directories and subdirectories for images is easy; resampling using the built-in library (GD) is a breeze; specifying the destination as a subdirectory is simple. The one minus was processor usage. Performing image manipulation eats up the CPU in a big way.
Luckily linux systems have a built-in utility for addressing a situation like this: nice
. nice
will “run a program with modified scheduling priority.” I’m running the image manipulation script using the following command:
nice --adjustment=19 php script.php
If nothing else is going on the script will use whatever resources are available. When anything with a higher priority executes, that program will take precedence over the script with regard to system resources. The script should thus not affect the responsiveness of the web server. This is the reason I was searching for this kind of functionality.