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HIPS
1998
IEEE

ZPL's WYSIWYG Performance Model

13 years 8 months ago
ZPL's WYSIWYG Performance Model
ZPL is a parallel array language designed for high performance scientific and engineering computations. Unlike other parallel languages, ZPL is founded on a machine he CTA) that accurately abstracts contemporary MIMD parallel computers. This makes it possible to correlate ZPL programs with machine behavior. As a result, programmers can reason about how code will perform on a typical parallel machine and thereby make informed decisions between alternative programming solutions. This paper describes ZPL's performance model and its syntactic cues for conveying operation cost. The what-you-seeis-what-you-get (WYSIWYG) nature of ZPL operations is demonstrated on the IBM SP-2, Intel Paragon, SGI Power Challenge, and Cray T3E. Additionally, the model is used to evaluate two algorithms for matrix multiplication. Experiments show that the performance model correctly predicts the faster solution on all four platforms for a range of problem sizes.
Bradford L. Chamberlain, Sung-Eun Choi, E. Christo
Added 04 Aug 2010
Updated 04 Aug 2010
Type Conference
Year 1998
Where HIPS
Authors Bradford L. Chamberlain, Sung-Eun Choi, E. Christopher Lewis, Calvin Lin, Lawrence Snyder, Derrick Weathersby
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