Abstract |
We discuss the lack of expressivity in some skeleton-based parallel programming frameworks. The problem is further exacerbated when approaching irregular problems and dealing with dynamic data structures. Shared memory programming has been argued to have substantial ease of programming advantages for this class of problems. We present the eskimo library which represents an attempt to merge the two programming models by introducing skeletons in a shared memory framework. |
@inproceedings{eskimo:hlpp:03,
month = jun,
author = {Marco Aldinucci},
booktitle = {Proc. of HLPP2003: Intl. Workshop on High-Level Parallel
Programming},
url = {http://calvados.di.unipi.it/storage/paper_files/2003_eskimo_ppl.pdf},
abstract = {We discuss the lack of expressivity in some skeleton-based
parallel programming frameworks. The problem is further
exacerbated when approaching irregular problems and dealing with
dynamic data structures. Shared memory programming has been argued
to have substantial ease of programming advantages for this class
of problems. We present the eskimo library which represents an
attempt to merge the two programming models by introducing
skeletons in a shared memory framework.},
address = {Paris, France},
title = {eskimo: experimenting skeletons on the shared address model},
pages = {89-100},
year = {2003},
}
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