DocumentCode
474408
Title
Parallel programming: Can we PLEASE get it right this time?
Author
Mattson, Tim ; Wrinn, Michael
Author_Institution
Intel Corp., Dupont, WA
fYear
2008
fDate
8-13 June 2008
Firstpage
7
Lastpage
11
Abstract
The computer industry has a problem. As Moore\´s law marches on, it will be exploited to double cores, not frequencies. But all those cores, growing to 8, 16 and beyond over the next several years, are of little value without parallel software. Where will this come from? With few exceptions, only graduate students and other strange people write parallel software. Even for numerically intensive applications, where parallel algorithms are well understood, professional software engineers almost never write parallel software. Somehow we need to (1) design many core systems programmers can actually use and (2) provide programmers with parallel programming environments that work. The good news is we have 25+ years of history in the HPC space to guide us. The bad news is that few people are paying attention to this experience. This talk looks at the history of parallel computing to develop a set of anecdotal rules to follow as we create many core systems and their programming environments. A common theme is that just about every mistake we could make has already been made by someone. So rather than reinvent these mistakes, let\´s learn from the past and "do it right this time".
Keywords
history; parallel programming; anecdotal rules; manycore systems; parallel computing; parallel programming; parallel software; Application software; Computer industry; Frequency; History; Moore´s Law; Parallel algorithms; Parallel processing; Parallel programming; Programming environments; Programming profession; Design patterns; Parallel computing;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Design Automation Conference, 2008. DAC 2008. 45th ACM/IEEE
Conference_Location
Anaheim, CA
ISSN
0738-100X
Print_ISBN
978-1-60558-115-6
Type
conf
Filename
4555772
Link To Document