Linux Itanium Community Joins GCC Developers to Target Itanium Performance
Released on = April 5, 2005, 2:01 pm
Press Release Author = Nan Holda
Industry = Computers
Press Release Summary = A group of international compiler experts on Intel® Itanium®
processors, including representatives from HP, Intel Corporation, the Gelato
Federation, and the GCC community, recently came together to consider Itanium
processor-specific improvements to the GNU Compiler Collection (GCC)— a
multi-platform set of compilers for C, C++, Fortran, Objective-C, and the Java™
programming language as well as others. The workshop, hosted by the Gelato
Federation and the Federation's founding sponsor, HP, was held on January 26-27 in
Geneva, Switzerland. The group discussed possible GCC optimizations with a goal of
producing faster running code for Itanium 2 processors, ideally in shorter
compilation times.
Press Release Body = CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (April 5, 2005)— A group of international
compiler experts on Intel® Itanium® processors, including representatives from HP,
Intel Corporation, the Gelato Federation (http://www.gelato.org), and the GCC
community, recently came together to consider Itanium processor-specific
improvements to the GNU Compiler Collection (GCC)— a multi-platform set of compilers
for C, C++, Fortran, Objective-C, and the Java™ programming language as well as
others. The workshop, hosted by the Gelato Federation and the Federation's founding
sponsor, HP, was held on January 26-27 in Geneva, Switzerland. The group discussed
possible GCC optimizations with a goal of producing faster running code for Itanium
2 processors, ideally in shorter compilation times.
GCC Tweaks Help Itanium Adoption
Improving GCC performance on Itanium is important in the acceleration of the
processor's adoption in the broader computing community beyond high-performance
computing. The Itanium-based platform is unique because it relies far more on the
compiler in comparison to other platforms, and GCC is the standard compiler on
GNU/Linux distributions. Many have dismissed Itanium-based platforms as viable
determined only on GCC-compiled application performance. Until this point, GCC has
not been fined-tuned specifically for Itanium and its high-performance features.
Thus, improving GCC performance on Itanium will mean automatically improving
thousands of applications and libraries provided by Linux distributions for the
Itanium.
On selecting improvements to address, Professor Wen-mei Hwu of the University of
Illinois at Urbana-Champaign explains, "We were very judicious in selecting our
initial projects. We systematically discussed several potential improvements to GCC
and based our proposals on a combination of estimated benefit, effort to implement,
and likelihood of GCC community acceptance. In addition, benefits were determined
using other compilers that have already implemented the optimizations under
consideration."
The group agreed to tackle the three top recommendations: superblock scheduling,
rotating register support, and memory disambiguation with additional plans for
targeting future modifications. As part of an improved optimization set, superblock
scheduling has an estimated gain between 5% and 10%; rotating register support has
an estimated gain between 2% and 30%; and memory disambiguation has an estimated
gain up to 10%. Beyond the boost in performance for Itanium, these modifications are
also expected to benefit other platforms.
According to Al Stone, senior software engineer at HP and co-organizer of the
workshop, "This meeting was a great success to move the goals of the organization
forward. The face-to-face discussions enabled attendees to quickly pinpoint and
prioritize optimizations to implement, to build collaborative relationships, and to
develop a strategic plan of action."
More details about the workshop can be found at:
http://www.gelato.org/community/workshop/gcc/index.php.
Coordination Key
Since accepting improvements into the GCC development cycle is under the control of
the GCC community, working with the GCC developers and keeping them informed of work
progress is key to the acceptance of these proposed improvements. Attending the
workshop was Gerald Pfeifer, a GCC developer and project manager at Novell, who gave
keen insight on building a strong relationship with the GCC community. "You must
keep an open line of communication and collaboration between project developers and
the GCC community." Pfeifer says. "GCC is used by millions of people who have great
expectations in terms of the stability and performance of these compilers. GCC
developers cannot simply accept a series of patches if they are not confident with
them."
Measures are in place to promote coordination between the Linux Itanium project
developers and the GCC representatives to insure initial efforts will be implemented
and to pave the way for future work. Close contact is maintained through an active
mailing list, bi-weekly conference calls, and a workgroup wiki. In addition, several
workshop attendees—HP; Intel; and Gelato members, University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign and Institute for System Programming of the Russian Academy of
Sciences—have submitted papers about specific improvement efforts to the GCC Summit
June 22-24 in Ottawa, Canada. Development contributions are planned to be made
according to the GCC 4.1 release cycle schedule, and results will be shared at the
Gelato Federation Meeting May 23-25 in San Jose, California
(http://www.gelato.org/community/events/sanjose).
About Gelato
The Gelato Federation is the global research community dedicated to advancing the
Linux Itanium platform through collaborative relationships targeting real-world
problems and solutions. Gelato members are suppliers and users of Linux Itanium
technology with a shared goal of producing open-source solutions for academic,
government, and industrial HPC research. The Gelato portal (http://www.gelato.org)
serves as the primary channel for Federation business and collaborations.
Information about Gelato members' software and solutions are available through the
portal, and the community is welcome to participate and contribute.
If you'd like more information on this topic, please contact Nan Holda via email at
nan@gelato.org or by phone at 217-265-0947.
Intel and Itanium are registered trademarks of Intel Corporation or its subsidiaries
in the United States and other countries. Linux is a registered trademark of Linus
Torvalds in several countries. Sun, Sun Microsystems, the Sun logo, Solaris, Java,
and The Network Is The Computer are trademarks or registered trademarks of Sun
Microsystems, Inc. All other trademarks mentioned herein are the property of their
respective owners.
# # #
Web Site = http://www.gelato.org
Contact Details = Nan Holda
Gelato Federation
Phone: 217-265-0947
Email: nan@gelato.org
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