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  • Conference proceedings
  • © 2010

Languages and Compilers for Parallel Computing

22nd International Workshop, LCPC 2009, Newark, DE, USA, October 8-10, 2009, Revised Selected Papers

Part of the book series: Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS, volume 5898)

Part of the book sub series: Theoretical Computer Science and General Issues (LNTCS)

Conference series link(s): LCPC: International Workshop on Languages and Compilers for Parallel Computing

Conference proceedings info: LCPC 2009.

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Table of contents (30 papers)

  1. Front Matter

  2. A Communication Framework for Fault-Tolerant Parallel Execution

    • Nagarajan Kanna, Jaspal Subhlok, Edgar Gabriel, Eshwar Rohit, David Anderson
    Pages 1-15
  3. The STAPL pList

    • Gabriel Tanase, Xiabing Xu, Antal Buss, Harshvardhan, Ioannis Papadopoulos, Olga Pearce et al.
    Pages 16-30
  4. Hardware Support for OpenMP Collective Operations

    • Soohong P. Kim, Samuel P. Midkiff, Henry G. Dietz
    Pages 31-49
  5. Loop Transformation Recipes for Code Generation and Auto-Tuning

    • Mary Hall, Jacqueline Chame, Chun Chen, Jaewook Shin, Gabe Rudy, Malik Murtaza Khan
    Pages 50-64
  6. MIMD Interpretation on a GPU

    • Henry G. Dietz, B. Dalton Young
    Pages 65-79
  7. A Balanced Approach to Application Performance Tuning

    • Souad Koliai, Stéphane Zuckerman, Emmanuel Oseret, Mickaël Ivascot, Tipp Moseley, Dinh Quang et al.
    Pages 111-125
  8. Automatically Tuning Parallel and Parallelized Programs

    • Chirag Dave, Rudolf Eigenmann
    Pages 126-139
  9. DFT Performance Prediction in FFTW

    • Liang Gu, Xiaoming Li
    Pages 140-156
  10. Hierarchical Place Trees: A Portable Abstraction for Task Parallelism and Data Movement

    • Yonghong Yan, Jisheng Zhao, Yi Guo, Vivek Sarkar
    Pages 172-187
  11. OSCAR API for Real-Time Low-Power Multicores and Its Performance on Multicores and SMP Servers

    • Keiji Kimura, Masayoshi Mase, Hiroki Mikami, Takamichi Miyamoto, Jun Shirako, Hironori Kasahara
    Pages 188-202
  12. Programming with Intervals

    • Nicholas D. Matsakis, Thomas R. Gross
    Pages 203-217
  13. Adaptive and Speculative Memory Consistency Support for Multi-core Architectures with On-Chip Local Memories

    • Nikola Vujic, Lluc Alvarez, Marc Gonzalez Tallada, Xavier Martorell, Eduard Ayguadé
    Pages 218-232
  14. Synchronization-Free Automatic Parallelization: Beyond Affine Iteration-Space Slicing

    • Anna Beletska, Wlodzimierz Bielecki, Albert Cohen, Marek Palkowski
    Pages 233-246
  15. Automatic Data Distribution for Improving Data Locality on the Cell BE Architecture

    • Miao Wang, François Bodin, Sébastien Matz
    Pages 247-262
  16. Automatic Restructuring of Linked Data Structures

    • Harmen L. A. van der Spek, C. W. Mattias Holm, Harry A. G. Wijshoff
    Pages 263-277
  17. Using the Meeting Graph Framework to Minimise Kernel Loop Unrolling for Scheduled Loops

    • Mounira Bachir, David Gregg, Sid-Ahmed-Ali Touati
    Pages 278-292

Other Volumes

  1. Languages and Compilers for Parallel Computing

About this book

Itisourpleasuretopresentthepapersacceptedforthe22ndInternationalWo- shop on Languages and Compilers for Parallel Computing held during October 8–10 2009 in Newark Delaware, USA. Since 1986, LCPC has became a valuable venueforresearchersto reportonworkinthegeneralareaofparallelcomputing, high-performance computer architecture and compilers. LCPC 2009 continued this tradition and in particular extended the area of interest to new parallel computing accelerators such as the IBM Cell Processor and Graphic Processing Unit (GPU). This year we received 52 submissions from 15 countries. Each submission receivedatleastthreereviewsandmosthadfour.ThePCalsosoughtadditional externalreviewsforcontentiouspapers.ThePCheldanall-dayphoneconference on August 24 to discuss the papers. PC members who had a con?ict of interest were asked to leave the call temporarily when the corresponding papers were discussed. From the 52 submissions, the PC selected 25 full papers and 5 short paperstobeincludedintheworkshopproceeding,representinga58%acceptance rate. We were fortunate to have three keynote speeches, a panel discussion and a tutorial in this year’s workshop. First, Thomas Sterling, Professor of Computer Science at Louisiana State University, gave a keynote talk titled “HPC in Phase Change: Towards a New Parallel Execution Model.” Sterling argued that a new multi-dimensional research thrust was required to realize the design goals with regard to power, complexity, clock rate and reliability in the new parallel c- puter systems.ParalleX,anexploratoryexecutionmodeldevelopedbySterling’s group was introduced to guide the co-design of new architectures, programming methods and system software.

Editors and Affiliations

  • Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Delaware, Newark, USA

    Guang R. Gao, Xiaoming Li

  • Department of Computer and Information Sciences, University of Delaware, Newark, USA

    Lori L. Pollock, John Cavazos

Bibliographic Information

Buy it now

Buying options

eBook USD 39.99
Price excludes VAT (USA)
  • Available as PDF
  • Read on any device
  • Instant download
  • Own it forever
Softcover Book USD 54.99
Price excludes VAT (USA)
  • Compact, lightweight edition
  • Dispatched in 3 to 5 business days
  • Free shipping worldwide - see info

Tax calculation will be finalised at checkout

Other ways to access