here they'll probably be executed simultaneously, since they both have zero dependencies and the machine can run multiple jobs at the same time. (can be disabled with `--max_jobs=1` or `-p=1`).
Here's another illustrative example:
A -> B
B -> C
Z -> C
In this situation, frof will schedule `Z` to run in a parallel thread ASAP, so it will likely run alongside A... and if Z takes longer to run than A, Z will continue running when A stops and B starts. But C will wait for all other jobs to finish before it can schedule.
Nice, thanks a lot. Unfortunately I am quite swamped recently so I will definitely cannot help you with feature requests and testing but I have bookmarked frof and absolutely will be giving it a try.
Just one thing I would dislike... Python. How easy it is to run frof without having to fiddle with venvs and such?