Publicação

A pattern language for parallelizing irregular algorithms

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Detalhes bibliográficos
Resumo:In irregular algorithms, data set’s dependences and distributions cannot be statically predicted. This class of algorithms tends to organize computations in terms of data locality instead of parallelizing control in multiple threads. Thus, opportunities for exploiting parallelism vary dynamically, according to how the algorithm changes data dependences. As such, effective parallelization of such algorithms requires new approaches that account for that dynamic nature. This dissertation addresses the problem of building efficient parallel implementations of irregular algorithms by proposing to extract, analyze and document patterns of concurrency and parallelism present in the Galois parallelization framework for irregular algorithms. Patterns capture formal representations of a tangible solution to a problem that arises in a well defined context within a specific domain. We document the said patterns in a pattern language, i.e., a set of inter-dependent patterns that compose well-documented template solutions that can be reused whenever a certain problem arises in a well-known context.
Autores principais:Monteiro, Pedro Miguel Ferreira Costa
Assunto:Pattern language Irregular algorithms Parallel computing Reverse engineering Object-oriented frameworks
Ano:2009
País:Portugal
Tipo de documento:dissertação de mestrado
Tipo de acesso:acesso aberto
Instituição associada:Universidade Nova de Lisboa
Idioma:inglês
Origem:Repositório Institucional da UNL
Descrição
Resumo:In irregular algorithms, data set’s dependences and distributions cannot be statically predicted. This class of algorithms tends to organize computations in terms of data locality instead of parallelizing control in multiple threads. Thus, opportunities for exploiting parallelism vary dynamically, according to how the algorithm changes data dependences. As such, effective parallelization of such algorithms requires new approaches that account for that dynamic nature. This dissertation addresses the problem of building efficient parallel implementations of irregular algorithms by proposing to extract, analyze and document patterns of concurrency and parallelism present in the Galois parallelization framework for irregular algorithms. Patterns capture formal representations of a tangible solution to a problem that arises in a well defined context within a specific domain. We document the said patterns in a pattern language, i.e., a set of inter-dependent patterns that compose well-documented template solutions that can be reused whenever a certain problem arises in a well-known context.