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Languages and Compilers for Parallel Computing

19th International Workshop, LCPC 2006, New Orleans, LA, USA, November 2-4, 2006, Revised Papers

  • Conference proceedings
  • © 2007

Overview

Part of the book series: Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS, volume 4382)

Part of the book sub series: Theoretical Computer Science and General Issues (LNTCS)

Included in the following conference series:

Conference proceedings info: LCPC 2006.

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Table of contents (25 papers)

  1. Session 1: Programming Models

  2. Session 2: Code Generation

  3. Session 3: Parallelism

  4. Session 4: Compilation Techniques

  5. Session 5: Data Structures

  6. Session 6: Register Allocation

Other volumes

  1. Languages and Compilers for Parallel Computing

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About this book

The 19th Workshop on Languages and Compilers for Parallel Computing was heldinNovember2006inNewOrleans,LouisianaUSA.Morethan40researchers from around the world gathered together to present their latest results and to exchange ideas on topics ranging from parallel programming models, code generation,compilationtechniques,paralleldatastructureandparallelexecution models,toregisterallocationandmemorymanagementinparallelenvironments. Out of the 49 paper submissions, the Program Committee, with the help of external reviewers, selected 24 papers for presentation at the workshop. Each paper had at least three reviews and was extensively discussed in the comm- tee meeting. The papers were presented in 30-minute sessions at the workshop. One of the selected papers, while still included in the proceedings, was not p- sented because of an unfortunate visa problem that prevented the authors from attending the workshop. We werefortunateto havetwooutstanding keynoteaddressesatLCPC2006, both from UC Berkeley. Kathy Yelick presented “Compilation Techniques for Partitioned Global Address Space Languages.” In this keynote she discussed the issues in developing programming models for large-scale parallel machines and clusters, and how PGAS languages compare to languages emerging from the DARPA HPCS program.She also presented compiler analysis and optimi- tion techniques developed in the context of UPC and Titanium source-to-source compilers for parallel program and communication optimizations.

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