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The appearance of various high-performance computing (HPC) systems compels a user to write a code considering the characteristic of each HPC system. To describe the system-dependent information without drastic code modifications, the directive sets such as the OpenMP directive set and the OpenACC directive set are useful. However, a code becomes complex to achieve high performance on various HPC systems...
The Xevolver framework has been developed to enable application programmers to define their own code translation rules outside of their codes so that they can express platform-specific optimizations separately from algorithm-level application codes. Due to the diversity of HPC node architectures, the Xevolver framework has so far mainly been used to separate node-level code optimizations from application...
This paper proposes an extensible programming framework to separate platform-specific optimizations from application codes. The framework allows programmers to define their own code translation rules for special demands of individual systems, compilers, libraries, and applications. Code translation rules associated with user-defined compiler directives are defined in an external file, and the application...
High-performance computing (HPC) applications have been specialized for their target systems to achieve high performances. Hence, their performances are not portable to other systems. This performance portability problem leads to higher costs for maintaining HPC applications, because the life of an HPC application is usually much longer than that of an HPC system. Therefore, an HPC application needs...
A code smell is any part of an application code that might indicate a code or design problem, which makes the application code hard to evolve and maintain. Automatic detection of code smells has been studied to help programmers find which parts of their application codes should be refactored. However, code smells have not been defined in a formal manner. Moreover, existing detection tools are designed...
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