Task parallelism

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Task parallelism (also known as function parallelism and control parallelism) is a form of parallelization of computer code across multiple processors in parallel computing environments. Task parallelism focusses on distributing execution processes (threads) across different parallel computing nodes. It contrasts to data parallelism as another form of parallelism.


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[edit] Description

In a multiprocessor system, task parallelism is achieved when each processor executes a different thread (or process) on the same or different data. The threads may execute the same or different code. In the general case, different execution threads communicate with one another as they work. Communication takes place usually to pass data from one thread to the next as part of a workflow.

As a simple example, if we are running code on a 2-processor system (CPUs "a" & "b") in a parallel environment and we wish to do tasks "A" and "B" , it is possible to tell CPU "a" to do task "A" and CPU "b" to do task 'B" simultaneously, thereby reducing the runtime of the execution. The tasks can be assigned using conditional statements as described below.

Task parallelism emphasizes the distributed (parallelized) nature of the processing (i.e. threads), as opposed to the data (data parallelism). Most real programs fall somewhere on a continuum between Task parallelism and Data parallelism.

[edit] Example

The pseudocode below illustrates task parallelism:

program:
...
if CPU="a" then
   do task "A"
else if CPU="b" then
        do task "B"
end if
...
end program

The goal of the program is to do some net total task ("A+B"). If we write the code as above and launch it on a 2-processor system, then the runtime environment will execute it as follows.

  • In a SIMD system, both CPUs will execute the code.
  • In a parallel environment, both will have access to the same data.
  • The "if" clause differentiates between the CPU's. CPU "a" will read true on the "if" and CPU "b" will read true on the "else if", thus having their own task.
  • Now, both CPU's execute separate code blocks simultaneously, performing different tasks simultaneously.

Code executed by CPU "a":

program:
...
do task "A"
...
end program

Code executed by CPU "b":

program:
...
do task "B"
...
end program

This concept can now be generalized to any number of processors.

[edit] References

  • Quinn Michael J, Parallel Programming in C with MPI and OpenMP McGraw-Hill Inc. 2004. ISBN 0-07-058201-7

[edit] See also


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