The BLAZE language: A parallel language for scientific programming (Q580952): Difference between revisions
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Programming multiprocessor parallel architectures is a complex task. This paper describes a block-structured scientific programming language, BLAZE, designed to simplify this task. BLAZE contains array arithmetic, `forall' loops, and APL-style accumulation operators, which allow natural expression of fine grained parallelism. It also employs an applicative or functional invocation mechanism, which makes it easy for compilers to extract coarse grained parallelism using machine specific program restructuring. Thus BLAZE should allow one to achieve highly parallel execution on multiprocessor architectures, while still providing the user with conceptually sequential control flow. A central goal in the design of BLAZE is portability across a broad range of parallel architectures. The multiple levels of parallelism present in BLAZE code, in principle, allow a compiler to extract the types of parallelism appropriate for the given architecture, while neglecting the remainder. This paper describes the features of BLAZE, and shows how this language would be used in typical scientific programming. | |||
Property / review text: Programming multiprocessor parallel architectures is a complex task. This paper describes a block-structured scientific programming language, BLAZE, designed to simplify this task. BLAZE contains array arithmetic, `forall' loops, and APL-style accumulation operators, which allow natural expression of fine grained parallelism. It also employs an applicative or functional invocation mechanism, which makes it easy for compilers to extract coarse grained parallelism using machine specific program restructuring. Thus BLAZE should allow one to achieve highly parallel execution on multiprocessor architectures, while still providing the user with conceptually sequential control flow. A central goal in the design of BLAZE is portability across a broad range of parallel architectures. The multiple levels of parallelism present in BLAZE code, in principle, allow a compiler to extract the types of parallelism appropriate for the given architecture, while neglecting the remainder. This paper describes the features of BLAZE, and shows how this language would be used in typical scientific programming. / rank | |||
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 68N01 / rank | |||
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Property / zbMATH DE Number: 4018353 / rank | |||
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MIMD architectures | |||
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restructuring of conventional sequential languages | |||
Property / zbMATH Keywords: restructuring of conventional sequential languages / rank | |||
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compiler | |||
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multiprocessor parallel architectures | |||
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parallelism | |||
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Revision as of 17:47, 1 July 2023
scientific article
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English | The BLAZE language: A parallel language for scientific programming |
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The BLAZE language: A parallel language for scientific programming (English)
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1987
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Programming multiprocessor parallel architectures is a complex task. This paper describes a block-structured scientific programming language, BLAZE, designed to simplify this task. BLAZE contains array arithmetic, `forall' loops, and APL-style accumulation operators, which allow natural expression of fine grained parallelism. It also employs an applicative or functional invocation mechanism, which makes it easy for compilers to extract coarse grained parallelism using machine specific program restructuring. Thus BLAZE should allow one to achieve highly parallel execution on multiprocessor architectures, while still providing the user with conceptually sequential control flow. A central goal in the design of BLAZE is portability across a broad range of parallel architectures. The multiple levels of parallelism present in BLAZE code, in principle, allow a compiler to extract the types of parallelism appropriate for the given architecture, while neglecting the remainder. This paper describes the features of BLAZE, and shows how this language would be used in typical scientific programming.
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MIMD architectures
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restructuring of conventional sequential languages
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compiler
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multiprocessor parallel architectures
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parallelism
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