Formalizing openMP performance properties with ASL

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Abstract

Performance analysis is an important step in tuning performance critical applications. It is a cyclic process of measuring and analyzing performance data which is driven by the programmer's hypotheses on potential performance problems. Currently this process is controlled manually by the programmer. We believe that the implicit knowledge applied in this cyclic process should be formalized in order to provide automatic performance analysis for a wider class of programming paradigms and target architectures. This article describes the performance property specification language (ASL) developed in the APART Esprit IV working group which allows specifying performance-related data by an object-oriented model and performance properties by functions and constraints defined over performance-related data. Performance problems and bottlenecks can then be identified based on user-or tool-defined thresholds. In order to demonstrate the usefulness of ASL we apply it to OpenMP by successfully formalizing several OpenMP performance properties.

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Fahringer, T., Gerndt, M., Riley, G., & Träff, J. L. (2000). Formalizing openMP performance properties with ASL. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 1940, pp. 428–439). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/3-540-39999-2_41

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