Stephen Beard will present his research seminar/general exam on Wednesday October 19 at 10AM in Room 402. The members of his committee are; David August (advisor), Andrew Appel, and Vivek Pai. Everyone is invited to attend his talk and those faculty wishing to remain for the oral exam following are welcome to do so. His abstract and reading list follow below. --------------------------- Client Driven Memory Profiling Profiling provides vital insight to a program’s run-time characteristics including data and control information. Control flow profiling is popular because it improves compiler optimizations without excessive profiling overhead (less than 2×). While memory profiling can enable aggressive speculative optimizations to overcome the perennial limits of static memory analysis, it is rarely used due to its excessive profiling overhead (29× to 290×). To help address this problem, this paper presents Client Driven Memory Profiling (CDMP). Most speculative transformations are only concerned with some subset of the dependences in the program. Given this information, CDMP profiles only those dependences which are of use to the client optimizations. As a result, CDMP incurs a running time overhead of 66× averaged across the C/C++ SPEC CPU2006 benchmark suite, a 2.2× improvement over the 143× overhead incurred by a state-of-the-art memory profiler. After combining our client targeting optimization with sampling techniques found in prior work, CDMP achieve a running time overhead of 1.8×, a 4.1× improvement over the 7.3× overhead of sampling alone, with no additional error over sampling. Reading List 1.1 Textbooks 1. A. W. Appel. Modern Compiler Implementation in C. Cambridge University Press, 1998 2. S. Muchnick. Advanced Compiler Design and Implementation. Morgan-Kaufmann Publishers, San Francisco, CA, 1997 1.2 Performance and Path Profiling 3. S. L. Graham, P. B. Kessler, and M. K. Mckusick. Gprof: A call graph execution profiler. In Proceedings of the 1982 SIGPLAN symposium on Compiler construction, SIGPLAN ’82, pages 120–126, New York, NY, USA, 1982. ACM 4. T. Ball, P. Mataga, and M. Sagiv. Edge profiling versus path profiling: The showdown. In Proceedings of the 25th ACM SIGPLAN-SIGACT Symposium on Principles of Programming Languages, pages 134–148, January 1998 1.3 Dependence Profiling 5. T. Chen, J. Lin, X. Dai, W.-C. Hsu, and P.-C. Yew. Data dependence profiling for speculative optimizations. In E. Duesterwald, editor, Compiler Construction, volume 2985 of Lecture Notes in Computer Science, pages 2733–2733. Springer Berlin / Heidelberg, 2004 6. A. K. Peng Wu and C. Cascaval. Compiler-driven dependence profiling to guide program parallelization. In LCPC, pages 232–248, 2008 7. M. Kim, H. Kim, and C.-K. Luk. SD3 : A scalable approach to dynamic data-dependence profiling. In Proceedings of the 2010 43rd Annual IEEE/ACM International Symposium on Microarchitecture, MICRO ’10, pages 535–546, Washington, DC, USA, 2010. IEEE Computer Society 1.4 Sampling 8. M. Arnold and B. G. Ryder. A framework for reducing the cost of instrumented code. In Proceedings of the ACM SIGPLAN 2001 conference on Programming language design and implementation, PLDI ’01, pages 168–179, New York, NY, USA, 2001. ACM 1.5 Analysis 9. M. Hind. Pointer analysis: Haven’t we solved this problem yet? In 2001 ACM SIGPLAN-SIGSOFT Workshop on Program Analysis for Software Tools and Engineering (PASTE’01), 2001 10. B. Hardekopf and C. Lin. Flow-sensitive pointer analysis for millions of lines of code. Code Generation and Optimization, IEEE/ACM International Symposium on, 0:289–298, 2011 1.6 Speculative Parallel Optimization 11. J. G. Steffan and T. C. Mowry. The potential for using thread-level data speculation to facilitate automatic parallelization. In Proceedings of the 4th International Symposium on High-Performance Computer Architecture, pages 2–13, February 1998
participants (1)
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Melissa M. Lawson