The current trend in development of parallel programming models is to combine different well established models into a single programming model in order to support efficient implementation of a wide range of real world applications. The dataflow model has particularly managed to recapture the interest of the research community due to its ability to express parallelism efficiently. Thus, a number of recently proposed hybrid parallel programming models combine dataflow and traditional shared memory. Their findings have influenced the introduction of task dependency in the recently published OpenMP 4.0 standard. In this paper, we present DaSH - the first comprehensive benchmark suite for hybrid dataflow and shared memory programming models....
Abstract — This paper presents all parallel programming models available today. It reviews shared an...
The majority of current HPC applications are composed of complex and irregular data structures that ...
Original article can be found at: http://www.worldscinet.com/ Copyright World Scientific Publishing ...
The current trend in development of parallel programming models is to combine different well establi...
The current trend in development of parallel programming models is to combine different well establi...
© 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. Abstract The current trend in development of parallel prog...
Recently proposed hybrid dataflow and shared memory programming models combine these two underlying ...
This paper presents several algorithmic innovations and a hybrid programming style that lead to high...
[Abstract]: Dataflow computing is a very attractive paradigm for high-performance computing, given i...
Nowadays, shared-memory parallel architectures have evolved and new programming frameworks have appe...
In this paper we present Atomic Dataflow model (ADF), a new task-based parallel programming model fo...
In the foreseeable future, high-performance supercomputers will continue to evolve in the direction ...
In this paper, we show the potential benefits of translating OpenMP code to low-level parallel code ...
The mixing of shared memory and message passing programming models within a single application has o...
Producción CientíficaDataflow programming consists in developing a program by describing its sequent...
Abstract — This paper presents all parallel programming models available today. It reviews shared an...
The majority of current HPC applications are composed of complex and irregular data structures that ...
Original article can be found at: http://www.worldscinet.com/ Copyright World Scientific Publishing ...
The current trend in development of parallel programming models is to combine different well establi...
The current trend in development of parallel programming models is to combine different well establi...
© 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. Abstract The current trend in development of parallel prog...
Recently proposed hybrid dataflow and shared memory programming models combine these two underlying ...
This paper presents several algorithmic innovations and a hybrid programming style that lead to high...
[Abstract]: Dataflow computing is a very attractive paradigm for high-performance computing, given i...
Nowadays, shared-memory parallel architectures have evolved and new programming frameworks have appe...
In this paper we present Atomic Dataflow model (ADF), a new task-based parallel programming model fo...
In the foreseeable future, high-performance supercomputers will continue to evolve in the direction ...
In this paper, we show the potential benefits of translating OpenMP code to low-level parallel code ...
The mixing of shared memory and message passing programming models within a single application has o...
Producción CientíficaDataflow programming consists in developing a program by describing its sequent...
Abstract — This paper presents all parallel programming models available today. It reviews shared an...
The majority of current HPC applications are composed of complex and irregular data structures that ...
Original article can be found at: http://www.worldscinet.com/ Copyright World Scientific Publishing ...