Events
The Taub Faculty of Computer Science Events and Talks
Adam Morrison (CS, Technion)
Wednesday, 16.12.2015, 11:30
Developers and researchers design parallel systems and concurrent
algorithms using models---both formal and mental---that abstract away
details of the underlying hardware. In practice, however, these
hidden hardware/software interactions often have a dominating impact
on performance. In this talk, I will show how understanding the
interplay between hardware and software can lead to more efficient
program execution and better algorithms, which are achieved through
more precise models and architectural changes:
(1) I will show how understanding the implementation of the x86
processors' total store ordering (TSO) memory model enables designing
a fence-free work stealing algorithm, which was thought to be
impossible.
(2) I will describe how insights on the way software uses atomic
memory operations lead to a novel hardware architecture design, which
parallelizes the execution of certain atomic synchronization
instructions instead of serializing them.
Bio:
Adam Morrison is a Post Doctoral Fellow at the Technion---Israel
Institute of Technology. His research focuses on building efficient
infrastructure for multicore architectures. He completed a PhD in CS
at Tel Aviv University, during which he was awarded an IBM PhD
Fellowship as well as Intel and Deutsch prizes.