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* Grade will be asigned to each presentation individually
* Grade will be asigned to each presentation individually


=== Project 1 ===
=== Project 2 ===
* This project will consist on a practical programming problem from the
* This project will consist on a practical programming problem from the
student's research. The student is required to describe a problem from his
student's research. The student is required to describe a problem from his

Edição das 11h43min de 14 de agosto de 2012

This is the main page of a course in parallel computing being taught in 2012/2 at the Polytechnic Institute IPRJ/UERJ. It is generally useful for programmers at the advanced level in the fields of scientific and multimedia programming.

General Info

  • Meeting times: Tues 12:30pm-2pm, Thursdays 2:20pm - 4pm
  • Evaluation criteria: The class will consist on 1 quizz at the end of the term (60%), plus practical projects (40%).

Pre-requisites

  • Linux - intermediate to advanced (will be reviewed as needed)
  • C/C++ - intermediate to advanced (will be reviewed)

Approximate Content

The course focuses on software techniques for parallel computing. We are aiming at a comprehensive treatment on different types of practical parallel programming techniques

  • process-oriented parallel programming
  • thread programming/thread safety
  • single-core vector instructions
  • multi-processor and multi-core programming
  • mapreduce/hadoop
  • MPI
  • Cuda


Homework

Project 1

  • The class will be divided into interest groups
  • The interest groups will each pick one of the following technologies or else propose another one of their liking.
    • mapreduce/hadoop
    • MPI
    • Cuda
    • Hybrid technologies (Distributed + Cuda)
    • Languages designed for concurrency: Google Go, Erlang, etc.
    • Programming for the Playstation 3 parallel architecture[1]
  • The project will consist in a series of presentations by the group members

individually.

  • Grade will be asigned to each presentation individually

Project 2

  • This project will consist on a practical programming problem from the

student's research. The student is required to describe a problem from his research and present a parallel implementation of some aspect of it.

  • This will be evaluated through actual code and acompanying monograph.

Main Resources

  • Textbooks
    • 1st part of the course: "Is Parallel Programming Hard, and, if so, what can you do about it?" - Paul E. McKenney / IBM (editor).
    • For MPI: "An Introduction to Parallel Programming" , by Peter Pacheco[2]
    • For Cuda: Programming Massively Parallel Processors: A Hands-On Approach[3]
    • General textbook: A. Grama, A. Gupta, G. Karypis, V. Kumar, Introduction to Parallel Computing, Second Edition, Addison-Wesley, 2003.
    • Algorithms-oriented textbook: Algorithms: sequential, parallel, and

distributed, Kenneth A. Berman, Jerome L. Paul


Lectures

Partial listing & Tentative Outline

  1. Overview of parallel computing: https://computing.llnl.gov/tutorials/parallel_comp/
  2. Review of Linux:
    1. See the book Running Linux http://wiki.nosdigitais.teia.org.br/Literatura_recomendada_pela_equipe
  3. Review of C/C++
  4. Fundamental programming techniques: processes and threads
    1. Read The Unix Programming Environment for some classic multi-process programming[5]
  5. Mapreduce/Hadoop
  6. MPI
  7. Cuda