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* [http://www.emsl.pnl.gov/docs/global/ | Global Arrays Webpage]
* [[Distributed computing]]


== References ==
== References ==

Revision as of 22:54, 19 December 2007

The Global Arrays (GA) toolkit provides an efficient and portable “shared-memory” programming interface for distributed-memory computers.

Each process in a MIMD parallel program can asynchronously access logical blocks of physically distributed dense multi-dimensional arrays, without need for explicit cooperation by other processes. Unlike other shared-memory environments, the GA model exposes to the programmer the non-uniform memory access (NUMA) characteristics of the high performance computers and acknowledges that access to a remote portion of the shared data is slower than to the local portion. The locality information for the shared data is available, and a direct access to the local portions of shared data is provided.

Global Arrays have been designed to complement rather than substitute for the message-passing programming model. The programmer is free to use both the shared-memory and message-passing paradigms in the same program, and to take advantage of existing message-passing software libraries. Global Arrays are compatible with the Message Passing Interface (MPI).

The Global Arrays toolkit has been in the public domain since 1994. It has been actively supported and employed in several large codes since then.

The GA toolkit is free software, licensed under a self-made license[1].

See also

References