4 resultados para T-parallelism
em Instituto Politécnico do Porto, Portugal
Resumo:
High-level parallel languages offer a simple way for application programmers to specify parallelism in a form that easily scales with problem size, leaving the scheduling of the tasks onto processors to be performed at runtime. Therefore, if the underlying system cannot efficiently execute those applications on the available cores, the benefits will be lost. In this paper, we consider how to schedule highly heterogenous parallel applications that require real-time performance guarantees on multicore processors. The paper proposes a novel scheduling approach that combines the global Earliest Deadline First (EDF) scheduler with a priority-aware work-stealing load balancing scheme, which enables parallel realtime tasks to be executed on more than one processor at a given time instant. Experimental results demonstrate the better scalability and lower scheduling overhead of the proposed approach comparatively to an existing real-time deadline-oriented scheduling class for the Linux kernel.
Resumo:
Over the last three decades, computer architects have been able to achieve an increase in performance for single processors by, e.g., increasing clock speed, introducing cache memories and using instruction level parallelism. However, because of power consumption and heat dissipation constraints, this trend is going to cease. In recent times, hardware engineers have instead moved to new chip architectures with multiple processor cores on a single chip. With multi-core processors, applications can complete more total work than with one core alone. To take advantage of multi-core processors, parallel programming models are proposed as promising solutions for more effectively using multi-core processors. This paper discusses some of the existent models and frameworks for parallel programming, leading to outline a draft parallel programming model for Ada.
Resumo:
Composition is a practice of key importance in software engineering. When real-time applications are composed, it is necessary that their timing properties (such as meeting the deadlines) are guaranteed. The composition is performed by establishing an interface between the application and the physical platform. Such an interface typically contains information about the amount of computing capacity needed by the application. For multiprocessor platforms, the interface should also present information about the degree of parallelism. Several interface proposals have recently been put forward in various research works. However, those interfaces are either too complex to be handled or too pessimistic. In this paper we propose the generalized multiprocessor periodic resource model (GMPR) that is strictly superior to the MPR model without requiring a too detailed description. We then derive a method to compute the interface from the application specification. This method has been implemented in Matlab routines that are publicly available.
Resumo:
As plataformas com múltiplos núcleos tornaram a programação paralela/concorrente num tópico de interesse geral. Diversos modelos de programação têm vindo a ser propostos, facilitando aos programadores a identificação de regiões de código potencialmente paralelizáveis, deixando ao sistema operativo a tarefa de as escalonar dinamicamente em tempo de execução, explorando o maior grau possível de paralelismo. O Java não foge a esta tendência, disponibilizando ao programador um número crescente de bibliotecas de mecanismos de sincronização e paralelização de código. Neste contexto, esta tese apresenta e discute um conjunto de resultados obtidos através de testes intensivos à eficiência de algoritmos de ordenação implementados com recurso aos mecanismos de concorrência da API do Java 8 (Threads, Threadpools, ExecutorService, CountdownLach, ExecutorCompletionService e ForkJoinPools) em sistemas com um número de núcleos variável. Para cada um dos mecanismos, são apresentadas conclusões sobre o seu funcionamento e discutidos os cenários em que o seu uso pode ser rentabilizado de modo a serem obtidos melhores tempos de execução.