Overview
- Editors:
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Jack Dongarra
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Innovative Computing Lab., University of Tennessee, Knoxville, USA
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Peter Kacsuk
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MTA SZTAKI Computer and Automation Research Institute, Budapest, Hungary
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Norbert Podhorszki
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MTA SZTAKI Computer and Automation Research Institute, Budapest, Hungary
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Table of contents (48 papers)
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Extensions and Improvements
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- Giuseppe Ciaccio, Giovanni Chiola
Pages 129-136
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- Vítor N. Távora, Luís M. Silva, João Gabriel Silva
Pages 137-144
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- Mauro Migliardi, Vaidy Sunderam, Arrigo Frisiani
Pages 152-159
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Implementation Issues
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- Ralph Butler, William Gropp, Ewing Lusk
Pages 168-175
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- Elson Mour>ao, Stephen Booth
Pages 176-183
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- Hernâni Pedroso, João Gabriel Silva
Pages 184-191
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- J. Y. Cotronis, Z. Tsiatsoulis, C. Kouniakis
Pages 192-199
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Heterogeneous Distributed Systems
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- Toshiyuki Imamura, Yuichi Tsujita, Hiroshi Koide, Hiroshi Takemiya
Pages 200-207
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Tools
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- Ján Astaloš, Ladislav Hluchý
Pages 225-232
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- Francesc Solsona, Francesc Giné, Josep Lérida, Porfidio Hernández, Emilio Luque
Pages 233-241
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- Marian Bubak, Włodzimierz Funika, Bartosz Baliś, Roland Wismüller
Pages 242-249
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- Viet D. Tran, Ladislav Hluchy, Giang T. Nguyen
Pages 250-257
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- Gábor Dózsa, Dániel Drótos, Róbert Lovas
Pages 258-265
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- N. Mazzocca, M. Rak, U. Villano
Pages 266-273
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Applications in Science and Engineering
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- Joanna Płażek, Krzysztof Banaś, Jacek Kitowski
Pages 282-288
About this book
Parallel Virtual Machine (PVM) and Message Passing Interface (MPI) are the most frequently used tools for programming according to the message passing paradigm, which is considered one of the best ways to develop parallel applications. This volume comprises 42 revised contributions presented at the Seventh European PVM/MPI Users’ Group Meeting, which was held in Balatonfr ed, Hungary, 10 13 September 2000. The conference was organized by the Laboratory of Parallel and Distributed Systems of the Computer and Automation Research Institute of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. This conference was previously held in Barcelona, Spain (1999), Liverpool, UK (1998) and Cracow, Poland (1997). The first three conferences were devoted to PVM and were held at the Technische Universit t M nchen, Germany (1996), Ecole Normale Superieure Lyon, France (1995), and University of Rome, Italy (1994). This conference has become a forum for users and developers of PVM, MPI, and other message passing environments. Interaction between those groups has proved to be very useful for developing new ideas in parallel computing and for applying existing ideas to new practical fields. The main topics of the meeting were evaluation and performance of PVM and MPI, extensions and improvements to PVM and MPI, algorithms using the message passing paradigm, and applications in science and engineering based on message passing. The conference included four tutorials and five invited talks on advances in MPI, cluster computing, network computing, grid computing, and SGI parallel computers and programming systems.