
doi: 10.1007/bf00127949
In a SIMD or VLIW machine, conceptual synchronizations are accomplished by using a static code schedule that does not require run-time synchronization. The lack of run-time synchronization overhead makes these machines very effective for fine-grain parallelism, but they cannot execute parallel code structures as general as those executed by MIMD architectures, and this limits their utility.
code scheduling, Dynamic Barrier MIMD (DBM), barrier synchronization, Static Barrier MIMD (SBM), compiler optimization, 004, 510, compiler optimization.
code scheduling, Dynamic Barrier MIMD (DBM), barrier synchronization, Static Barrier MIMD (SBM), compiler optimization, 004, 510, compiler optimization.
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