Parallel Performance Project Research Paper
Research Paper
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Configuration Independent Analysis for Characterizing
Shared-Memory Applications
Gheith A. Abandah and Edward S. Davidson
Proceedings of the 12th International Parallel
Processing Symposium (IPPS'98), pp 485-491, March 1998.
Abstract
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This paper demonstrates that configuration independent
analysis of shared-memory applications is useful tool to characterize
inherent application characteristics that do not change from one
machine configuration to another. Although traditional configuration
dependent analysis, or simulation, may directly provide more
information about performance on specific configurations, it requires
developing a machine model and repeating the analysis for each target
configuration. A judicious combination of the two constitutes a
comprehensive and efficient methodology. In this paper, we use
configuration independent analysis to characterize seven aspects of
application behavior: general characteristics; working sets;
concurrency; communication patterns, variation over time, and
locality; and sharing behavior. Case-studies of eight scientific and
commercial benchmarks are used to illustrate the advantages and
limitations of this approach.
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