Annual Conference: Communicating Process Architectures
Communicating Process Architectures 2018,
the 40th. WoTUG conference on concurrent and parallel systems, takes place from
Sunday August 19th. to Wednesday August 22nd. 2018 and is hosted by
Professor Dr. Rainer Spallek,
Chair of
VLSI Design, Diagnostics and Architecture
at the Faculty of Computer Science,
Technische Universität Dresden, Germany.
The conference is organised by Dr. Spallek in collboration with Oliver Knodel and Uwe Mielke
and in partnership with WoTUG.
About WoTUG
WoTUG provides a forum for the discussion and promotion of concurrency ideas,
tools and products in computer science.
It organises specialist workshops and annual conferences that address
key concurrency issues at all levels of software and hardware granularity.
WoTUG aims to progress the leading state of the art in:
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theory (programming models, process algebra, semantics, ...);
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practice (multicore processors and run-times, clusters, clouds, libraries, languages, verification, model checking, ...);
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education (at school, undergraduate and postgraduate levels, ...);
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applications (complex systems, modelling, supercomputing, embedded systems, robotics, games, e-commerce, ...);
and to stimulate discussion and ideas on the roles concurrency will play in the future:
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for the next generation of scalable computer infrastructure (hard and soft) and application,
where scaling means the ability to ramp up functionality (stay in control as complexity increases)
as well as physical metrics (such as absolute performance and response times);
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for system integrity (dependability, security, safety, liveness, ...);
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for making things simple.
Of course, neither of the above sets of bullets are exclusive.
WoTUG publications
A database of papers and presentations from WoTUG conferences is here.
The Abstract below has been randomly selected from this database.
Derivation of Scalable Message-Passing Algorithms Using Parallel Combinatorial List Generator Functions
By Ali E. Abdallah, John Hawkins
We present the transformational derivations of several efficient, scalable, message-passing parallel algorithms from clear functional specifications. The starting algorithms rely on some commonly used combinatorial list generator functions such as tails, inits, splits and cp (cartesian product) for generating useful intermediate results. This paper provides generic parallel algorithms for efficiently implementing a small library of useful combinatorial list generator functions. It also provides a framework for relating key higher order functions such as map, reduce, and scan with communicating processes with different configurations.The parallelisation of many interesting functional algorithms can then be systematically synthesized by taking an off-the-shelf parallel implementation of the list generator and composing it with appropriate parallel implementations of instances of higher order functions. Efficiency in the final message-passing algorithms is achieved by exploiting data parallelism, for generating the intermediate results in parallel; and functional parallelism, for processing intermediate results in stages such that the output of one stage is simultaneously input to the next one. This approach is then illustrated with a number of case studies which include: testing whether all the elements of a given list are distinct, the maximum segment sum problem, the minimum distance of two sets of points, and rank sort. In each case we progress from a quadratic time initial functional specification of the problem to a linear time parallel message passing implementation which uses a linear number of communicating sequential processes. Bird-Meertens Formalism is used to concisely carry out the transformations.
Complete record...
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