scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Scheduling multithreaded computations by work stealing

TLDR
This paper gives the first provably good work-stealing scheduler for multithreaded computations with dependencies, and shows that the expected time to execute a fully strict computation on P processors using this scheduler is 1:1.
Abstract
This paper studies the problem of efficiently schedulling fully strict (i.e., well-structured) multithreaded computations on parallel computers. A popular and practical method of scheduling this kind of dynamic MIMD-style computation is “work stealing,” in which processors needing work steal computational threads from other processors. In this paper, we give the first provably good work-stealing scheduler for multithreaded computations with dependencies.Specifically, our analysis shows that the expected time to execute a fully strict computation on P processors using our work-stealing scheduler is T1/P + O(T ∞ , where T1 is the minimum serial execution time of the multithreaded computation and (T ∞ is the minimum execution time with an infinite number of processors. Moreover, the space required by the execution is at most S1P, where S1 is the minimum serial space requirement. We also show that the expected total communication of the algorithm is at most O(PT ∞( 1 + nd)Smax), where Smax is the size of the largest activation record of any thread and nd is the maximum number of times that any thread synchronizes with its parent. This communication bound justifies the folk wisdom that work-stealing schedulers are more communication efficient than their work-sharing counterparts. All three of these bounds are existentially optimal to within a constant factor.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Experimental analysis of space-bounded schedulers

TL;DR: A head-to-head comparison of the relative strengths of schedulers in terms of running times and cache miss counts across a range of benchmarks, and generalize prior definitions of space-bounded Schedulers to allow for more practical variants (while still preserving their guarantees), and explore implementation tradeoffs.
Book

Scalable String and Suffix Sorting: Algorithms, Techniques, and Tools

Timo Bingmann
TL;DR: This dissertation focuses on two fundamental sorting problems: string sorting and suffix sorting, and proposes both multiway distribution-based with string sample sort and multiway merge-based string sorting with LCP-aware merge and mergesort, and engineer and parallelize both approaches.

Ungoliant: An Optimized Pipeline for the Generation of a Very Large-Scale Multilingual Web Corpus

TL;DR: This work tries to reproduce and improve the goclassy pipeline used to create the OSCAR corpus, and proposes a new pipeline that is faster, modular, parameterizable, and well documented.
Book ChapterDOI

Hierarchical partitioning algorithm for scientific computing on highly heterogeneous CPU + GPU clusters

TL;DR: Large scale experiments on a heterogeneous multi-cluster site incorporating multicore CPUs and GPU nodes show that the presented algorithm outperforms current state of the art approaches and successfully load balance very large problems.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

High-Performance Parallel Graph Coloring with Strong Guarantees on Work, Depth, and Quality

TL;DR: In this paper, the first parallel graph coloring heuristics with strong theoretical guarantees on work and depth and coloring quality were developed, and they have competitive run-times for several real-world graphs, while almost always providing superior coloring quality.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Cilk: An Efficient Multithreaded Runtime System

TL;DR: It is shown that on real and synthetic applications, the “work” and “critical-path length” of a Cilk computation can be used to model performance accurately, and it is proved that for the class of “fully strict” (well-structured) programs, the Cilk scheduler achieves space, time, and communication bounds all within a constant factor of optimal.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bounds for certain multiprocessing anomalies

TL;DR: In this paper, precise bounds are derived for several anomalies of this type in a multiprocessing system composed of many identical processing units operating in parallel, and they show that an increase in the number of processing units can cause an increased total length of time needed to process a fixed set of tasks.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

The implementation of the Cilk-5 multithreaded language

TL;DR: Cilk-5's novel "two-clone" compilation strategy and its Dijkstra-like mutual-exclusion protocol for implementing the ready deque in the work-stealing scheduler are presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Parallel Evaluation of General Arithmetic Expressions

TL;DR: It is shown that arithmetic expressions with n ≥ 1 variables and constants; operations of addition, multiplication, and division; and any depth of parenthesis nesting can be evaluated in time 4 log 2 + 10(n - 1) using processors which can independently perform arithmetic operations in unit time.
Related Papers (5)