1.

Record Nr.

UNISA996466078803316

Titolo

Languages and Compilers for Parallel Computing [[electronic resource] ] : 10th International Workshop, LCPC'97, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA, August 7-9, 1997. Proceedings / / edited by Zhiyuan Li, Pen-Chung Yew, Siddharta Chatterjee, Chua-Huang Huang, P. Sadayappan, David Sehr

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Berlin, Heidelberg : , : Springer Berlin Heidelberg : , : Imprint : Springer, , 1998

ISBN

3-540-69788-8

Edizione

[1st ed. 1998.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (XII, 440 p.)

Collana

Lecture Notes in Computer Science, , 0302-9743 ; ; 1366

Disciplina

005.13

Soggetti

Programming languages (Electronic computers)

Architecture, Computer

Computer programming

Computers

Arithmetic and logic units, Computer

Programming Languages, Compilers, Interpreters

Computer System Implementation

Programming Techniques

Computation by Abstract Devices

Arithmetic and Logic Structures

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph

Nota di contenuto

Quantifying the multi-level nature of tiling interactions -- Reuse-driven tiling for data locality -- Table-lookup approach for compiling two-level data-processor mappings in HPF -- Code generation for complex subscripts in data-parallel programs -- Automatic data decomposition for message-passing machines -- Program analysis of overlap area usage in self-similar parallel programs -- Analysis and optimization of explicity parallel programs using the parallel program graph representation -- Concurrent static single assignment form and constant propagation for explicitly parallel programs -- Identifying DEF/USE information of statements that construct and traverse dynamic



recursive data structures -- Program optimization for concurrent multithreaded architectures -- Interactive compilation and performance analysis with URSA MINOR -- The SPNT test: A new technology for run-time speculative parallelization of loops -- Lowering HPF procedure interface to a canonical representation -- PCRC-based HPF compilation -- Data parallel language extensions for exploiting locality in irregular problems -- Simplifying control flow in compiler-generated parallel code -- Reducing synchronization overhead for compiler-parallelized codes on software DSMs (extended abstract) -- An array data flow analysis based communication optimizer -- A compiler abstraction for machine independent parallel communication generation -- The aggregate function API: It's not just for PAPERS anymore -- Definition of the F?? extension to fortran 90 -- Exploiting parallelism through directives on the nano-threads programming model -- “Optimal” parallelism through integration of data and control parallelism: A case study in complete parallelization -- Java as a language for scientific parallel programming -- Experiences with loop parallelization in javar (A prototype restructuring compiler for java) -- NAMD: A case study in multilingual parallel programming -- A unified software pipeline construction scheme for modulo scheduled loops -- A systematic approach to branch speculation -- Integrating automatic data alignment and array operation synthesis to optimize data parallel programs -- A compiler for the ibm scalable shared memory project machine — extended abstract -- Automatic data layout with read-only replication and memory constraints -- Static analysis of recursive data structures.

Sommario/riassunto

This book constitutes the thoroughly refereed post-workshop proceedings of the 10th International Workshop on Languages and Compilers for Parallel Computing, LCPC'97, held in Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA in August 1997 The book presents 28 revised full papers together with four posters; all papers were carefully selected for presentation at the workshop and went through a thorough reviewing and revision phase afterwards. The papers are organized in topical sections on data locality, program analysis, automatic parallelization, HPF extensions and compilers, synchronization and communication, parallel programming models and language extensions, and instruction level parallelism.