Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
461640 Journal of Systems and Software 2008 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

ContextWriting software for the current generation of parallel systems requires significant programmer effort, and the community is seeking alternatives that reduce effort while still achieving good performance.ObjectiveMeasure the effect of parallel programming models (message-passing vs. PRAM-like) on programmer effort.Design, setting, and subjectsOne group of subjects implemented sparse-matrix dense-vector multiplication using message-passing (MPI), and a second group solved the same problem using a PRAM-like model (XMTC). The subjects were students in two graduate-level classes: one class was taught MPI and the other was taught XMTC.Main outcome measuresDevelopment time, program correctness.ResultsMean XMTC development time was 4.8 h less than mean MPI development time (95% confidence interval, 2.0–7.7), a 46% reduction. XMTC programs were more likely to be correct, but the difference in correctness rates was not statistically significant (p = .16).ConclusionsXMTC solutions for this particular problem required less effort than MPI equivalents, but further studies are necessary which examine different types of problems and different levels of programmer experience.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computer Networks and Communications
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