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The second half of the 1970s was marked with impressive advances in
array/vector architectures and vectorization techniques and
compilers. This progress continued with a particular focus on
vector machines until the middle of the 1980s. The major ity of
supercomputers during this period were register-to-register (Cray
1) or memory-to-memory (CDC Cyber 205) vector (pipelined) machines.
However, the increasing demand for higher computational rates lead
naturally to parallel comput ers and software. Through the
replication of autonomous processors in a coordinated system, one
can skip over performance barriers due technology limitations. In
princi ple, parallelism offers unlimited performance potential.
Nevertheless, it is very difficult to realize this performance
potential in practice. So far, we have seen only the tip of the
iceberg called "parallel machines and parallel programming."
Parallel programming in particular is a rapidly evolving art and,
at present, highly empirical. In this book we discuss several
aspects of parallel programming and parallelizing compilers.
Instead of trying to develop parallel programming methodologies and
paradigms, we often focus on more advanced topics assuming that the
reader has an adequate background in parallel processing. The book
is organized in three main parts. In the first part (Chapters 1 and
2) we set the stage and focus on program transformations and
parallelizing compilers. The second part of this book (Chapters 3
and 4) discusses scheduling for parallel machines from the
practical point of view macro and microtasking and supporting
environments). Finally, the last part (Le."
The 1st International Conference on Supercomputing took place in
Athens, Greece, June 8-12, 1987. The purpose of this conference was
to bring together researchers from universities, industrial
laboratories, and other research institutions with common interests
in architectures and hardware technology, software, and
applications for supercomputers. Authors from 12 countries
submitted 107 papers, from which 52 were accepted and presented at
the conference. In addition, 15 distinguished researchers presented
invited papers. The papers from these presentations make up the
current proceedings volume. Based on the quality of the papers
presented and the response and excitement of the participants, the
Program Committee has decided to hold annual meetings on the
subject of supercomputing.
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