Foreword by Bjarne Stroustrup Software is generally acknowledged to be the single greatest obstacle preventing mainstream adoption of massively-parallel computing. While sequential applications are routinely ported to platforms ranging from PCs to mainframes, most parallel programs only ever run on one type of machine. One reason for this is that most parallel programming systems have failed to insulate their users from the architectures of the machines on which they have run. Those that have been platform-independent have usually also had poor performance. Many researchers now believe that object-oriented languages may offer a solution. By hiding the architecture-specific constructs required for high performance inside platform-independent abstractions, parallel object-oriented programming systems may be able to combine the speed of massively-parallel computing with the comfort of sequential programming. Parallel Programming Using C++ describes fifteen parallel programming systems based on C++, the most popular object-oriented language of today. These systems cover the whole spectrum of parallel programming paradigms, from data parallelism through dataflow and distributed shared memory to message-passing control parallelism. For the parallel programming community, a common parallel application is discussed in each chapter, as part of the description of the system itself. By comparing the implementations of the polygon overlay problem in each system, the reader can get a better sense of their expressiveness and functionality for a common problem. For the systems community, the chapters contain a discussion of the implementation of the various compilers and runtime systems. In addition to discussing the performance of polygon overlay, several of the contributors also discuss the performance of other, more substantial, applications. For the research community, the contributors discuss the motivations for and philosophy of their systems. As well, many of the chapters include critiques that complete the research arc by pointing out possible future research directions. Finally, for the object-oriented community, there are many examples of how encapsulation, inheritance, and polymorphism can be used to control the complexity of developing, debugging, and tuning parallel software.
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"Parallel Programming Using C++" presents a broad survey of efforts to use C++, an object-oriented programming language, on high-performance parallel computers and clusters of workstations. Sixteen different dialects and libraries are described by their developers and illustrated with many small example programmes. Most programming systems for high-performance parallel computers widely used by scientists and engineers to solve complex problems are so-called universal languages that can run on a variety of computer platforms. Despite the benefits of this "platform independence", such a watered-down approach results in poor peformance. A way to solve the problem, while preserving universality and efficiency, is to use an object-oriented programming language such as C++. Parallel object-oriented programming systems may be able to combine the speed of massively parallel computing with the ease of sequential programming. In each of the 16 chapters a different system is described by its developers. The systems featured cover the entire spectrum of parallel programming paradigms from dataflow and distributed shared memory to message passing and control parallelism.
The descriptions include information on the system's history, design, implementation and performance. A common example (polygon overlay) is implemented in each chapter to facilitate comparison of different systems. Three appendices provide brief overviews of parallel computing, C++, and the polygon overlay problem.Gregory Wilson is Head of Instructor Training at Data Camp, Cofounder of Software Carpentry, and editor of Beautiful Code, Making Software, and The Architecture of Open Source Applications. William Gropp is Director of the Parallel Computing Institute and Thomas M. Siebel Chair in Computer Science at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. Ewing Lusk is Argonne Distinguished Fellow Emeritus at Argonne National Laboratory.
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