Home Book reviews Contact

DISCLOSURE: When you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission at no extra cost to you. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network, Amazon and Alibris.

Please share to

2 titles, showing 1-2 sort by PRICE ASC.
Please follow us on AddALL Facebook page twitter page
TITLE

SORT

change title size:
AUTHOR

SORT

change author size:
PRICE

DEALER / SITE

SORT

DESCRIPTION

 

change description size:
Peter L. Bird
author size:
USD
113.89
price size:
AHA-BUCH GmbH /ZVAB
dealer size:
ISBN10: 0792394518, ISBN13: 9780792394518, [publisher: Springer US] Hardcover Druck auf Anfrage Neuware - Printed after ordering - In brief summary, the following results were presented in this work: - A linear time approach was developed to find register requirements for any specified CS schedule or filled MRT. - An algorithm was developed for finding register requirements for any kernel that has a dependence graph that is acyclic and has no data reuse on machines with depth independent instruction templates. - We presented an efficient method of estimating register requirements as a function of pipeline depth. - We developed a technique for efficiently finding bounds on register require ments as a function of pipeline depth. - Presented experimental data to verify these new techniques. - discussed some interesting design points for register file size on a number of different architectures. REFERENCES [1] Robert P. Colwell, Robert P. Nix, John J O'Donnell, David B Papworth, and Paul K. Rodman. A VLIW Architecture for a Trace Scheduling Com piler. In Architectural Support for Programming Languages and Operating Systems, pages 180-192, 1982. [2] C. Eisenbeis, W. Jalby, and A. Lichnewsky. Compile-Time Optimization of Memory and Register Usage on the Cray-2. In Proceedings of the Second Workshop on Languages and Compilers, Urbana l/inois, August 1989. [3] C. Eisenbeis, William Jalby, and Alain Lichnewsky. Squeezing More CPU Performance Out of a Cray-2 by Vector ...
Show/Hide image
description size:
Peter L. Bird
author size:
USD
125.50
price size:
AHA-BUCH GmbH /AbebooksDE
dealer size:
ISBN10: 0792394518, ISBN13: 9780792394518, [publisher: Springer US] Hardcover Druck auf Anfrage Neuware - Printed after ordering - In brief summary, the following results were presented in this work: - A linear time approach was developed to find register requirements for any specified CS schedule or filled MRT. - An algorithm was developed for finding register requirements for any kernel that has a dependence graph that is acyclic and has no data reuse on machines with depth independent instruction templates. - We presented an efficient method of estimating register requirements as a function of pipeline depth. - We developed a technique for efficiently finding bounds on register require ments as a function of pipeline depth. - Presented experimental data to verify these new techniques. - discussed some interesting design points for register file size on a number of different architectures. REFERENCES [1] Robert P. Colwell, Robert P. Nix, John J O'Donnell, David B Papworth, and Paul K. Rodman. A VLIW Architecture for a Trace Scheduling Com piler. In Architectural Support for Programming Languages and Operating Systems, pages 180-192, 1982. [2] C. Eisenbeis, W. Jalby, and A. Lichnewsky. Compile-Time Optimization of Memory and Register Usage on the Cray-2. In Proceedings of the Second Workshop on Languages and Compilers, Urbana l/inois, August 1989. [3] C. Eisenbeis, William Jalby, and Alain Lichnewsky. Squeezing More CPU Performance Out of a Cray-2 by Vector ...
Show/Hide image
description size:

DISCLOSURE: When you use one of our links to make a purchase, we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.
As an Amazon Associate, AddALL earn commission from qualifying Amazon purchases.


TOO Many Search Results? Refine it!
Exclude: (what you don't want)
Include: (what you want)
Search Results Sort By:
240427031731208246