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Opus: A Coordination Language for Multidisciplinary Applications
Author(s) -
Barbara Chapman,
Matthew Haines,
Piyush Mehrotra,
Hans Zima,
John Van Rosendale
Publication year - 1997
Publication title -
scientific programming
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.269
H-Index - 36
eISSN - 1875-919X
pISSN - 1058-9244
DOI - 10.1155/1997/632908
Subject(s) - computer science , asynchronous communication , parallelism (grammar) , data parallelism , task (project management) , programming language , parallel computing , task parallelism , computation , fortran , distributed computing , theoretical computer science , computer network , management , economics
Data parallel languages, such as High Performance Fortran, can be successfully applied to a wide range of numerical applications.However, many advanced scientific and engineering applications are multidisciplinary and heterogeneous in nature, and thus do not fit well into the data parallel paradigm. In this paper we present Opus, a language designed to fill this gap. The central concept of Opus is a mechanism called ShareD Abstractions (SDA). An SDA can be used as a computation server, i.e., a locus of computational activity, or as a data repository for sharing data between asynchronous tasks. SDAs can be internally data parallel, providing support for the integration of data and task parallelism as well as nested task parallelism. They can thus be used to express multidisciplinary applications in a natural and efficient way. In this paper we describe the features of the language through a series of examples and give an overview of the runtime support required to implement these concepts in parallel and distributed environments

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