United Business Media EE Times


Search

HOMEMARKET INTELLIGENCE UNITFORUMSDESIGNNEW PRODUCTSCAREERSBLOGSCONTACTEVENTSSIGN UP!RSSMost Popular contentTrusted Sources

 

Parallel software plays catch-up with multicore
Print this article Email this article Reprints RSS Digital Edition

Page 1 of 4
EE Times


Microprocessors are marching into a multicore future to keep delivering performance gains without frying in their own heat. But mainstream software has yet to find its path to using the new parallelism.

Proprietary programming approaches are gaining traction in a handful of applications. It could take a decade or more, however, for the brunt of the industry to catch up in any organized fashion, and the way forward goes through some tough terrain.

"Anything performance-critical will have to be rewritten," said Kunle Olukotun, director of the Pervasive Parallelism Lab at Stanford University, one of many research groups working on the problem seen as the toughest in computer science today.


Click on image to enlarge.

"Eventually, you either have to rewrite that code or it will become obsolete," said Olukotun, who will deliver a keynote on the topic this month during the Multicore Virtual Conference.

"This is one of the biggest problems telecom companies face today," said Alex Bachmutsky, a system architect and author of an upcoming book on telecom design. "Their apps were not written for multiple cores and threads, and the apps are huge; they have millions and tens of millions of lines of code."

The ubiquitous C language "is the worst [tool] because it is inherently sequential and obscures any parallelism inherent in an algorithm," said Jeff Bier, president of DSP consulting firm Berkeley Design Technology Inc.

In a study conducted earlier this year by TechInsights, the publisher of EE Times, 62 percent of the embedded systems developers polled said their latest project was written in C. A further 24 percent said they used C++.



Page 2: Parallel programming languages
Page 3: Control plane designs
Page 4: Multicore architecture

Page 1 2 3 4

Related Links:

  • Multicore CPUs face slow road in comms
  • An insider's view of the 2008 Embedded Market Study
  • Multicore Virtual Conference
  • Impulse Response: Massively parallel chips can lead to sticky software



  •   Free Subscription to EE Times
    First Name Last Name
    Company Name Title
    Email address
      Click here for your Free Subscription to EETimes Europe
     
    CAREER CENTER
    Looking for a new job?
    SEARCH JOBS
    SPONSOR

    RECENT JOB POSTINGS
    CAREER NEWS
    DoD Recognizes University Scientists For Basic Research
    Annual awards to university faculty to conduct next-generation research projects were announced this week by the Defense Department.

    For more great jobs, career related news, features and services, please visit EETimes' Career Center.


    All White Papers »   

     
    Education and
    Learning


    Learn Now:












    Home | About | Editorial Calendar | Feedback | Subscriptions | Newsletter | Media Kit | Contact | Reprints|  RSS|   Digital|  Mobile
    Network Websites
    International
    Network Features




    All materials on this site Copyright © 2010 TechInsights, a Division of United Business Media LLC All rights reserved.
    Privacy Statement | Terms of Service | About