Open main menu
Home
Random
Recent changes
Special pages
Community portal
Preferences
About Wikipedia
Disclaimers
Incubator escapee wiki
Search
User menu
Talk
Dark mode
Contributions
Create account
Log in
Editing
Cilk
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
{{Short description|Programming language}} {{Infobox programming language | name = Cilk | logo = | paradigm = [[imperative programming|imperative]] ([[Procedural programming|procedural]]), [[structured programming|structured]], [[parallel programming|parallel]] | year = 1994 | designer =[[Massachusetts Institute of Technology|MIT]] Laboratory for Computer Science | developer =[[Intel]] | latest_release_version = | latest release date = | typing = [[Type system|static]], [[Weak typing|weak]], [[manifest typing|manifest]] | implementations = | dialects = Cilk++, Cilk Plus, OpenCilk | influenced_by =[[C (programming language)|C]] | influenced = [[OpenMP]] 3.0,<ref>{{cite conference |title=A Runtime Implementation of OpenMP Tasks |first1=James |last1=LaGrone |first2=Ayodunni |last2=Aribuki |first3=Cody |last3=Addison |first4=Barbara |last4=Chapman|author4-link=Barbara Chapman |conference=7th Int'l Workshop on OpenMP |year=2011 |pages=165–178 |doi=10.1007/978-3-642-21487-5_13 |citeseerx=10.1.1.221.2775}}</ref> Rayon ([[Rust (programming language)|Rust]] library)<ref>{{cite web|url=https://github.com/rayon-rs/rayon/blob/master/FAQ.md#how-does-rayon-balance-work-between-threads|title=Rayon FAQ|website=[[GitHub]] |quote=The name rayon is a homage to that work.}}</ref> | operating_system = | license = | website = {{URL|https://cilk.mit.edu/}} | file_ext = }} {{Infobox programming language | name = OpenCilk | logo = | paradigm = | year = 2020 | designer = MIT | developer = MIT | latest_release_version = 2.0.1 | latest release date = {{release date and age|2022|9|3}} | typing = | implementations = | dialects = | influenced_by = | influenced = | operating_system = [[Unix-like]], [[macOS]] | license = MIT | website = {{URL|https://www.opencilk.org}} | file_ext = }} {{Distinguish|SYCL}} {{Infobox programming language | name = Cilk Plus | logo = | paradigm = | year = 2010 | designer = Intel | developer = Intel | latest_release_version = 1.2 | latest release date = {{release date and age|2013|09|09}} | typing = | implementations = | dialects = | influenced_by = | influenced = | operating_system = | license = | website = [https://web.archive.org/web/20210117031010/http://cilkplus.org/ http://cilkplus.org/] | file_ext = (Same as C or C++) }} '''Cilk''', '''Cilk++''', '''Cilk Plus''' and '''OpenCilk''' are [[general-purpose programming language|general-purpose]] [[programming language]]s designed for [[thread (computer science)|multithreaded]] [[parallel computing]]. They are based on the [[C (programming language)|C]] and [[C++]] programming languages, which they extend with constructs to express parallel loops and the [[fork–join model|fork–join idiom]]. Originally developed in the 1990s at the [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology]] (MIT) in the group of [[Charles E. Leiserson]], Cilk was later commercialized as Cilk++ by a spinoff company, Cilk Arts. That company was subsequently acquired by [[Intel]], which increased compatibility with existing C and C++ code, calling the result Cilk Plus. After Intel stopped supporting Cilk Plus in 2017, MIT is again developing Cilk in the form of OpenCilk. ==History== ===MIT Cilk=== The Cilk programming language grew out of three separate projects at the MIT Laboratory for Computer Science:<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.cilkplus.org/cilk-history |title="A Brief History of Cilk |access-date=2015-06-25 |archive-date=2015-06-26 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150626125629/https://www.cilkplus.org/cilk-history |url-status=dead }}</ref> * Theoretical work on scheduling multi-threaded applications. * StarTech – a parallel [[computer chess|chess program]] built to run on the Thinking Machines Corporation's Connection Machine model CM-5. * PCM/Threaded-C – a C-based package for scheduling continuation-passing-style threads on the CM-5 In April 1994 the three projects were combined and christened "Cilk". The name Cilk is not an acronym, but an allusion to "nice threads" ([[silk]]) and the C programming language. The Cilk-1 compiler was released in September 1994. The original Cilk language was based on [[ANSI C]], with the addition of Cilk-specific keywords to signal parallelism. When the Cilk keywords are removed from Cilk source code, the result should always be a valid C program, called the ''serial elision'' (or ''C elision'') of the full Cilk program, with the same semantics as the Cilk program running on a single processor. Despite several similarities,{{which|date=September 2015}} Cilk is not directly related to AT&T Bell Labs' [[Concurrent C]]. Cilk was implemented as a translator to C, targeting the [[GNU C Compiler]] (GCC). The last version, Cilk 5.4.6, is available from the MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL), but is no longer supported.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://supertech.csail.mit.edu/cilk/ |title=The Cilk Project |date=8 October 2010 |access-date=25 January 2016 |publisher=MIT CSAIL}}</ref> A showcase for Cilk's capabilities was the Cilkchess parallel chess-playing program, which won several computer chess prizes in the 1990s, including the 1996 Open Dutch Computer Chess Championship.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Leiserson |first1=Charles E. |first2=Aske |last2=Plaat |title=Programming parallel applications in Cilk |journal=SIAM News |volume=31 |year=1998 |url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/2427921}}</ref> ===Cilk Arts and Cilk++=== Prior to {{circa|2006}}, the market for Cilk was restricted to high-performance computing. The emergence of multicore processors in mainstream computing meant that hundreds of millions of new parallel computers were being shipped every year. Cilk Arts was formed to capitalize on that opportunity: in 2006, Leiserson launched Cilk Arts to create and bring to market a modern version of Cilk that supports the commercial needs of an upcoming generation of programmers. The company closed a Series A venture financing round in October 2007, and its product, Cilk++ 1.0, shipped in December, 2008. Cilk++ differs from Cilk in several ways: support for C++, support for loops, and [[#Reducers and hyperobjects|hyperobjects]]{{snd}} a new construct designed to solve data race problems created by parallel accesses to global variables. Cilk++ was [[proprietary software]]. Like its predecessor, it was implemented as a Cilk-to-C++ compiler. It supported the [[Microsoft Visual C++|Microsoft]] and GNU compilers. ===Intel Cilk Plus=== On July 31, 2009, Cilk Arts announced on its web site that its products and engineering team were now part of [[Intel]] Corp. In early 2010, the Cilk website at <code>www.cilk.com</code> began redirecting to the Intel website (as of early 2017, the original Cilk website no longer resolves to a host). Intel and Cilk Arts integrated and advanced the technology further resulting in a September 2010 release of Intel [[Cilk Plus]].<ref>[http://www.hpcwire.com/features/Intel-Flexes-Parallel-Programming-Muscles-102084438.html "Intel Flexes Parallel Programming Muscles"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100906030803/http://www.hpcwire.com/features/Intel-Flexes-Parallel-Programming-Muscles-102084438.html |date=2010-09-06 }}, HPCwire (2010-09-02). Retrieved on 2010-09-14.</ref><ref>[http://www.drdobbs.com/go-parallel/blog/archives/2010/09/parallel_studio_1.html "Parallel Studio 2011: Now We Know What Happened to Ct, Cilk++, and RapidMind"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100926110843/http://www.drdobbs.com/go-parallel/blog/archives/2010/09/parallel_studio_1.html |date=2010-09-26 }}, Dr. Dobb's Journal (2010-09-02). Retrieved on 2010-09-14.</ref> Cilk Plus adopts simplifications, proposed by Cilk Arts in Cilk++, to eliminate the need for several of the original Cilk keywords while adding the ability to spawn functions and to deal with variables involved in reduction operations. Cilk Plus differs from Cilk and Cilk++ by adding array extensions, being incorporated in a commercial compiler (from Intel), and compatibility with existing debuggers.<ref>[http://software.intel.com/en-us/articles/intel-cilk-plus/ "Intel Cilk Plus: A quick, easy and reliable way to improve threaded performance"], Intel. Retrieved on 2010-09-14.</ref> Cilk Plus was first implemented in the [[Intel C++ Compiler]] with the release of the Intel compiler in Intel Composer XE 2010.{{Citation needed|date=March 2015}} An open source ([[BSD license|BSD-licensed]]) implementation was contributed by Intel to the [[GNU Compiler Collection]] (GCC), which shipped Cilk Plus support in version 4.9,<ref>[https://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-4.9/changes.html "GCC 4.9 Release Series Changes, New Features, and Fixes"], Free Software Foundation, Inc. Retrieved on 2014-06-29.</ref> except for the {{mono|_Cilk_for}} keyword, which was added in GCC 5.0. In February 2013, Intel announced a [[Clang]] [[Fork (software development)|fork]] with Cilk Plus support.<ref>[https://cilkplus.github.io/ Cilk Plus/LLVM]</ref> The Intel Compiler, but not the open source implementations, comes with a [[race condition|race detector]] and a performance analyzer. Intel later discontinued it, recommending its users switch to instead using either [[OpenMP]] or [[Threading Building Blocks|Intel's own TBB library]] for their parallel programming needs.<ref name=intelforum>{{cite web|url=https://software.intel.com/en-us/forums/intel-cilk-plus/topic/745556|title=Intel Cilk Plus is being deprecated|author=Hansang B.|date=20 September 2017|website=Intel Cilk Plus forum}}</ref> ===Differences between versions=== In the original MIT Cilk implementation, the first Cilk keyword is in fact <code>cilk</code>, which identifies a function which is written in Cilk. Since Cilk procedures can call C procedures directly, but C procedures cannot directly call or [[Spawn (computing)|spawn]] Cilk procedures, this keyword is needed to distinguish Cilk code from C code. Cilk Plus removes this restriction, as well as the <code>cilk</code> keyword, so C and C++ functions can call into Cilk Plus code and vice versa. ===Deprecation of Cilk Plus=== In May, 2017, GCC 7.1 was released and marked Cilk Plus support as deprecated.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-7/changes.html|title=GCC 7 Release Series. Changes, New Features, and Fixes|website=GCC, the GNU Compiler Collection}}</ref> Intel itself announced in September 2017 that they would deprecate Cilk Plus with the 2018 release of the Intel Software Development Tools.<ref name=intelforum/> In May 2018, GCC 8.1 was released with Cilk Plus support removed.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-8/changes.html|title=GCC 8 Release Series. Changes, New Features, and Fixes|website=GCC, the GNU Compiler Collection}}</ref> ===OpenCilk=== After Cilk Plus support was deprecated by Intel, MIT has taken on the development of Cilk in the OpenCilk implementation, focusing on the LLVM/Clang fork now termed "Tapir".<ref name="intelforum" /><ref>{{Cite web|date=2017-12-01|title=Cilk Hub taking on Cilk development after Intel announcement|url=http://cilk.mit.edu/cilkhub/2017/12/01/cilkhub/|url-status=live|access-date=2021-12-06|website=OpenCilk|language=en|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180612204746/http://cilk.mit.edu/cilkhub/2017/12/01/cilkhub/ |archive-date=2018-06-12 }}</ref> OpenCilk remains largely compatible with Intel Cilk Plus.<ref>{{Cite web|title=OpenCilk|url=https://cilk.mit.edu/|access-date=2021-12-06|website=OpenCilk|language=en}}</ref> Its first stable version was released in March 2021.<ref>{{Cite web|date=2021-03-05|title=Release opencilk/v1.0 · OpenCilk/opencilk-project|url=https://github.com/OpenCilk/opencilk-project/releases/tag/opencilk%2Fv1.0|url-status=live|access-date=2021-12-06|website=GitHub|language=en|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211206122729/https://github.com/OpenCilk/opencilk-project/releases/tag/opencilk%2Fv1.0 |archive-date=2021-12-06 }}</ref> ==Language features== The principle behind the design of the Cilk language is that the programmer should be responsible for ''exposing'' the parallelism, identifying elements that can safely be executed in parallel; it should then be left to the run-time environment, particularly the [[Scheduling (computing)|scheduler]], to decide during execution how to actually divide the work between processors. It is because these responsibilities are separated that a Cilk program can run without rewriting on any number of processors, including one. ===Task parallelism: spawn and sync=== {{See also|Fork–join model}} Cilk's main addition to C are two keywords that together allow writing task-parallel programs. * The {{mono|spawn}} keyword, when preceding a function call ({{mono|spawn f(x)}}), indicates that the function call ({{mono|f(x)}}) can safely run in parallel with the statements following it in the calling function. Note that the scheduler is not ''obligated'' to run this procedure in parallel; the keyword merely alerts the scheduler that it can do so. * A {{mono|sync}} statement indicates that execution of the current function cannot proceed until all previously spawned function calls have completed. This is an example of a [[barrier (computer science)|barrier]] method. (In Cilk Plus, the keywords are spelled {{mono|_Cilk_spawn}} and {{mono|_Cilk_sync}}, or {{mono|cilk_spawn}} and {{mono|cilk_sync}} if the Cilk Plus headers are included.) Below is a [[recursion|recursive]] implementation of the [[Fibonacci number|Fibonacci]] function in Cilk, with parallel recursive calls, which demonstrates the {{mono|spawn}}, and {{mono|sync}} keywords. The original Cilk required any function using these to be annotated with the {{mono|cilk}} keyword, which is gone as of Cilk Plus. (Cilk program code is not numbered; the numbers have been added only to make the discussion easier to follow.) <syntaxhighlight lang="c" line highlight="8,9,11"> cilk int fib(int n) { if (n < 2) { return n; } else { int x, y; x = spawn fib(n - 1); y = spawn fib(n - 2); sync; return x + y; } } </syntaxhighlight> If this code was executed by a ''single'' processor to determine the value of {{mono|fib(2)}}, that processor would create a [[Stack frame|frame]] for {{mono|fib(2)}}, and execute lines 1 through 5. On line 6, it would create spaces in the frame to hold the values of {{mono|x}} and {{mono|y}}. On line 8, the processor would have to suspend the current frame, create a new frame to execute the procedure {{mono|fib(1)}}, execute the code of that frame until reaching a return statement, and then resume the {{mono|fib(2)}} frame with the value of fib(1) placed into {{mono|fib(2)}}<nowiki>'s</nowiki> {{mono|x}} variable. On the next line, it would need to suspend again to execute {{mono|fib(0)}} and place the result in {{mono|fib(2)}}<nowiki>'s</nowiki> {{mono|y}} variable. When the code is executed on a ''multiprocessor'' machine, however, execution proceeds differently. One processor starts the execution of {{mono|fib(2)}}; when it reaches line 8, however, the {{mono|spawn}} keyword modifying the call to {{mono|fib(n-1)}} tells the processor that it can safely give the job to a second processor: this second processor can create a frame for {{mono|fib(1)}}, execute its code, and store its result in {{mono|fib(2)}}<nowiki>'s</nowiki> frame when it finishes; the first processor continues executing the code of {{mono|fib(2)}} at the same time. A processor is not obligated to assign a spawned procedure elsewhere; if the machine only has two processors and the second is still busy on {{mono|fib(1)}} when the processor executing {{mono|fib(2)}} gets to the procedure call, the first processor will suspend {{mono|fib(2)}} and execute {{mono|fib(0)}} itself, as it would if it were the only processor. Of course, if another processor is available, then it will be called into service, and all three processors would be executing separate frames simultaneously. (The preceding description is not entirely accurate. Even though the common terminology for discussing Cilk refers to processors making the decision to spawn off work to other processors, it is actually the scheduler which assigns procedures to processors for execution, using a policy called ''work-stealing'', described later.) If the processor executing {{mono|fib(2)}} were to execute line 13 before both of the other processors had completed their frames, it would generate an incorrect result or an error; {{mono|fib(2)}} would be trying to add the values stored in {{mono|x}} and {{mono|y}}, but one or both of those values would be missing. This is the purpose of the {{mono|sync}} keyword, which we see in line 11: it tells the processor executing a frame that it must suspend its own execution until all the procedure calls it has spawned off have returned. When {{mono|fib(2)}} is allowed to proceed past the {{mono|sync}} statement in line 11, it can only be because {{mono|fib(1)}} and {{mono|fib(0)}} have completed and placed their results in {{mono|x}} and {{mono|y}}, making it safe to perform calculations on those results. The code example above uses the syntax of Cilk-5. The original Cilk (Cilk-1) used a rather different syntax that required programming in an explicit [[continuation-passing style]], and the Fibonacci examples looks as follows:<ref>{{cite conference |url=http://supertech.csail.mit.edu/papers/PPoPP95.pdf |title=Cilk: An Efficient Multithreaded Runtime System |first1=Robert D. |last1=Blumofe |first2=Christopher F. |last2=Joerg |first3=Bradley C. |last3=Kuszmaul |first4=Charles E. |last4=Leiserson |first5=Keith H. |last5=Randall |first6=Yuli |last6=Zhou |conference=Proc. ACM SIGPLAN [[Symposium on Principles and Practice of Parallel Programming|Symp. Principles and Practice of Parallel Programming]] |pages=207–216 |year=1995}}</ref> <syntaxhighlight lang="c"> thread fib(cont int k, int n) { if (n < 2) { send_argument(k, n); } else { cont int x, y; spawn_next sum(k, ?x, ?y); spawn fib(x, n - 1); spawn fib(y, n - 2); } } thread sum(cont int k, int x, int y) { send_argument(k, x + y); } </syntaxhighlight> Inside {{mono|fib}}'s recursive case, the {{mono|spawn_next}} keyword indicates the creation of a ''successor'' thread (as opposed to the ''child'' threads created by {{mono|spawn}}), which executes the {{mono|sum}} subroutine after waiting for the ''continuation variables'' {{mono|x}} and {{mono|y}} to be filled in by the recursive calls. The base case and {{mono|sum}} use a {{mono|send_argument(k, n)}} operation to set their continuation variable {{mono|k}} to the value of {{mono|n}}, effectively "returning" the value to the successor thread. ===Inlets=== The two remaining Cilk keywords are slightly more advanced, and concern the use of ''inlets''. Ordinarily, when a Cilk procedure is spawned, it can return its results to the parent procedure only by putting those results in a variable in the parent's frame, as we assigned the results of our spawned procedure calls in the example to <code>x</code> and <code>y</code>. The alternative is to use an inlet. An inlet is a function internal to a Cilk procedure which handles the results of a spawned procedure call as they return. One major reason to use inlets is that all the inlets of a procedure are guaranteed to operate [[atomic (computer science)|atomic]]ally with regards to each other and to the parent procedure, thus avoiding the bugs that could occur if the multiple returning procedures tried to update the same variables in the parent frame at the same time. * The <code>inlet</code> keyword identifies a function defined within the procedure as an inlet. * The <code>abort</code> keyword can only be used inside an inlet; it tells the scheduler that any other procedures that have been spawned off by the parent procedure can safely be aborted. Inlets were removed when Cilk became Cilk++, and are not present in Cilk Plus. ===Parallel loops=== Cilk++ added an additional construct, the parallel loop, denoted {{mono|cilk_for}} in Cilk Plus. These loops look like <syntaxhighlight lang="c" line highlight="3,4"> void loop(int *a, int n) { #pragma cilk grainsize = 100 // optional cilk_for (int i = 0; i < n; i++) { a[i] = f(a[i]); } } </syntaxhighlight> This implements the [[map (parallel programming)|parallel map]] idiom: the body of the loop, here a call to {{mono|f}} followed by an assignment to the array {{mono|a}}, is executed for each value of {{mono|i}} from zero to {{mono|n}} in an indeterminate order. The optional "grain size" [[Directive (programming)|pragma]] determines the [[coarsening]]: any sub-array of one hundred or fewer elements is processed sequentially. Although the Cilk specification does not specify the exact behavior of the construct, the typical implementation is a divide-and-conquer recursion,<ref name="loops">{{cite web |title=Compilers and More: The Past, Present and Future of Parallel Loops |first=Michael |last=Wolfe |date=6 April 2015 |website=HPCwire |url=http://www.hpcwire.com/2015/04/06/compilers-and-more-the-past-present-and-future-of-parallel-loops/}}</ref> as if the programmer had written <syntaxhighlight lang="c"> static void recursion(int *a, int start, int end) { if (end - start <= 100) { // The 100 here is the grainsize. for (int i = start; i < end; i++) { a[i] = f(a[i]); } } else { int midpoint = start + (end - start) / 2; cilk_spawn recursion(a, start, midpoint); recursion(a, midpoint, end); cilk_sync; } } void loop(int *a, int n) { recursion(a, 0, n); } </syntaxhighlight> The reasons for generating a divide-and-conquer program rather than the obvious alternative, a loop that spawn-calls the loop body as a function, lie in both the grainsize handling and in efficiency: doing all the spawning in a single task makes load balancing a bottleneck.<ref name="spp">{{cite book |first1=Michael |last1=McCool |first2=James |last2=Reinders |first3=Arch |last3=Robison |title=Structured Parallel Programming: Patterns for Efficient Computation |publisher=Elsevier |year=2013 |page=30}}</ref> A review of various parallel loop constructs on HPCwire found the {{mono|cilk_for}} construct to be quite general, but noted that the Cilk Plus specification did not stipulate that its iterations need to be data-independent, so a compiler cannot [[automatic vectorization|automatically vectorize]] a {{mono|cilk_for}} loop. The review also noted the fact that reductions (e.g., sums over arrays) need additional code.{{r|loops}} ===Reducers and hyperobjects=== Cilk++ added a kind of objects called ''hyperobjects'', that allow multiple strands to share state without [[race condition]]s and without using explicit locks. Each strand has a view on the hyperobject that it can use and update; when the strands synchronize, the views are combined in a way specified by the programmer.<ref>{{cite conference |last1=Frigo |first1=Matteo |first2=Pablo |last2=Halpern |first3=Charles E. |last3=Leiserson |first4=Stephen |last4=Lewin-Berlin |title=Reducers and other Cilk++ hyperobjects |conference=Proc. Annual Symposium on Parallelism in Algorithms and Architectures (SPAA) |publisher=ACM |year=2009 |url=http://www.fftw.org/~athena/papers/hyper.pdf}}</ref> The most common type of hyperobject is a reducer, which corresponds to the reduction clause in [[OpenMP]] or to the algebraic notion of a [[monoid]]. Each reducer has an [[identity element]] and an [[associative operation]] that combines two values. The archetypal reducer is [[summation]] of numbers: the identity element is zero, and the associative ''reduce'' operation computes a sum. This reducer is built into Cilk++ and Cilk Plus: <syntaxhighlight lang="cpp"> // Compute ∑ foo(i) for i from 0 to N, in parallel. cilk::reducer_opadd<float> result(0); cilk_for (int i = 0; i < N; i++) result += foo(i); </syntaxhighlight> Other reducers can be used to construct [[linked list]]s or strings, and programmers can define custom reducers. A limitation of hyperobjects is that they provide only limited [[Indeterminacy in concurrent computation|determinacy]]. Burckhardt ''et al.'' point out that even the sum reducer can result in non-deterministic behavior, showing a program that may produce either {{mono|1}} or {{mono|2}} depending on the scheduling order:<ref>{{cite conference |title=Concurrent Programming with Revisions and Isolation Types |first1=Sebastian |last1=Burckhardt |first2=Alexandro |last2=Baldassin |first3=Daan |last3=Leijen |year=2010 |conference=Proc. [[OOPSLA]]/SPLASH |url=http://research.microsoft.com/pubs/132619/revisions-oopsla2010.pdf}}</ref> <syntaxhighlight lang="cpp"> void add1(cilk::reducer_opadd<int> &r) { r++; } // ... cilk::reducer_opadd<int> r(0); cilk_spawn add1(r); if (r == 0) { r++; } cilk_sync; output(r.get_value()); </syntaxhighlight> ===Array notation=== Intel Cilk Plus adds notation to express high-level [[Array programming|operations on entire arrays]] or [[Array slicing|sections of arrays]]; e.g., an [[Basic Linear Algebra Subprograms#Level 1|axpy]]-style function that is ordinarily written <syntaxhighlight lang="c"> // y ← α x + y void axpy(int n, float alpha, const float *x, float *y) { for (int i = 0; i < n; i++) { y[i] += alpha * x[i]; } } </syntaxhighlight> can in Cilk Plus be expressed as y[0:n] += alpha * x[0:n]; This notation helps the compiler to effectively vectorize the application. Intel Cilk Plus allows C/C++ operations to be applied to multiple array elements in parallel, and also provides a set of built-in functions that can be used to perform vectorized shifts, rotates, and reductions. Similar functionality exists in [[Fortran 90]]; Cilk Plus differs in that it never allocates temporary arrays, so memory usage is easier to predict. ===Elemental functions=== In Cilk Plus, an elemental function is a regular function which can be invoked either on scalar arguments or on array elements in parallel. They are similar to the kernel functions of [[OpenCL]]. ===#pragma simd=== This pragma gives the compiler permission to vectorize a loop even in cases where auto-vectorization might fail. It is the simplest way to manually apply vectorization. ==Work-stealing== {{main|Work stealing}} The Cilk scheduler uses a policy called "work-stealing" to divide procedure execution efficiently among multiple processors. Again, it is easiest to understand if we look first at how Cilk code is executed on a single-processor machine. The processor maintains a [[call stack|stack]] on which it places each frame that it has to suspend in order to handle a procedure call. If it is executing ''fib(2)'', and encounters a recursive call to ''fib(1)'', it will save ''fib(2)''<nowiki>'s</nowiki> state, including its variables and where the code suspended execution, and put that state on the stack. It will not take a suspended state off the stack and resume execution until the procedure call that caused the suspension, and any procedures called in turn by that procedure, have all been fully executed. With multiple processors, things of course change. Each processor still has a stack for storing frames whose execution has been suspended; however, these stacks are more like [[deque]]s, in that suspended states can be removed from either end. A processor can still only remove states from its ''own'' stack from the same end that it puts them on; however, any processor which is not currently working (having finished its own work, or not yet having been assigned any) will pick another processor at random, through the scheduler, and try to "steal" work from the opposite end of their stack{{snd}} suspended states, which the stealing processor can then begin to execute. The states which get stolen are the states that the processor stolen from would get around to executing last. ==See also== * [[Grand Central Dispatch]] * [[Intel Concurrent Collections]] (CnC) * [[Intel Parallel Building Blocks]] (PBB) ** [[Intel Array Building Blocks]] (ArBB) * [[Intel Parallel Studio]] * [[NESL]] * [[OpenMP]] * [[Parallel computing]] * [[Sieve C++ Parallel Programming System]] * [[Threading Building Blocks]] (TBB) * [[Unified Parallel C]] ==References== {{reflist|30em}} ==External links== * {{official website|http://cilk.mit.edu/}} for OpenCilk * [https://web.archive.org/web/20210117031010/http://cilkplus.org/ Intel's Cilk Plus website] * [https://web.archive.org/web/20201128222246/http://supertech.csail.mit.edu/cilk/ Cilk Project website at MIT] * Arch D. Robison, [http://parallelbook.com/sites/parallelbook.com/files/CilkPlus-HPCAST18_0.pdf "Cilk Plus: Language Support for Thread and Vector Parallelism"] and [http://www.parallelbook.com/sites/parallelbook.com/files/ISC2012_Tutorial_9_CilkPlus_Robison_final.pdf "Parallel Programming with Cilk Plus"], July 16, 2012. {{CProLang | state=collapsed}} {{Intel software}} {{Parallel computing}} [[Category:Articles with example code]] [[Category:Concurrent programming languages]] [[Category:C programming language family]] [[Category:Massachusetts Institute of Technology software]] [[Category:Intel software]] [[Category:Programming languages created in 1994]]
Edit summary
(Briefly describe your changes)
By publishing changes, you agree to the
Terms of Use
, and you irrevocably agree to release your contribution under the
CC BY-SA 4.0 License
and the
GFDL
. You agree that a hyperlink or URL is sufficient attribution under the Creative Commons license.
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)
Pages transcluded onto the current version of this page
(
help
)
:
Template:CProLang
(
edit
)
Template:Circa
(
edit
)
Template:Citation needed
(
edit
)
Template:Cite book
(
edit
)
Template:Cite conference
(
edit
)
Template:Cite journal
(
edit
)
Template:Cite web
(
edit
)
Template:Distinguish
(
edit
)
Template:Infobox programming language
(
edit
)
Template:Intel software
(
edit
)
Template:Main
(
edit
)
Template:Mono
(
edit
)
Template:Official website
(
edit
)
Template:Parallel computing
(
edit
)
Template:R
(
edit
)
Template:Reflist
(
edit
)
Template:See also
(
edit
)
Template:Short description
(
edit
)
Template:Snd
(
edit
)
Template:Webarchive
(
edit
)
Template:Which
(
edit
)