Implementation of a Portable Nested Data-Parallel Language

Guy E. Blelloch, Siddhartha Chatterjee, Jonathan C. Hardwick, Jay Sipelstein, and Marco Zagha

Technical Report CMU-CS-93-112, February 1993.

Abstract: This paper gives an overview of the implementation of NESL, a portable nested data-parallel language. This language and its implementation are the first to fully support nested data structures as well as nested data-parallel function calls. These features allow the concise description of parallel algorithms on irregular data structures, such as sparse matrices and graphs. In addition, they maintain the advantages of data-parallel languages: a simple programming model and portability. The current NESL implementation is based on an intermediate language called VCODE and a library of vector routines called CVL. It runs on the Connection Machines CM-2 and CM-5, the Cray C90, and serial workstations. We compare initial benchmark results of NESL with those of machine-specific code on these machines for three algorithms: least-squares line-fitting, median finding, and a sparse- matrix vector product. These results show that NESL's performance is competitive with that of machine-specific code for regular dense data, and is often superior for irregular data.

@techreport{ blelloch93implementation,
    author = "Guy~E. Blelloch and Siddhartha Chatterjee and Jonathan~C. Hardwick and Jay Sipelstein and Marco Zagha",
    title = "Implementation of a Portable Nested Data-Parallel Language",
    institution = "School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University",
    number = "CMU-CS-93-112",
    month = "February",
    year = "1993" }