| S. Browne, J. Dongarra, E. Grosse, and T. Rowan. The Netlib Mathematical Software Repository. D-Lib Magazine, Sep, 1995, Accessible at http://www.dlib.org/ |
....by the manufacturer. Highly efficient, machine specific implementations of the BLAS are available for many modern high performance computers. The BLAS enable LAPACK routines to achieve high performance with transportable software. A model FORTRAN implementation of the BLAS is available from netlib[5] in the BLAS library. It is not expected to perform as well as a specially tuned implementation on most high performance computers. On some machines, it may give much worse performance. But it allows users to run LAPACK software on machines that do not offer any other implementation of the BLAS. ....
....Problems. Expert Driver Routines for Standard Eigenvalue Problems. Driver Routines for Generalized Eigenvalue and Singular Value Problems. Some Computational Routines for Linear Equations and Eigenproblems. The LAPACK90 library is successively updated and it is available from netlib (see [5, 4]) 1.6 ScaLAPACK for HPF The HPF ScaLAPACK interface project started in several places (see [9, 11] including UNI,C. The work at UNI C is not described yet. The report is in preparation. Several ScaLAPACK subroutines and test programs are interfaced with HPF. 3 USE FTT LAPACK, ONLY: ....
S. Browne, J. Dongarra, E. Grosse, and T. Rowan. The Netlib Mathematical Software Repository. D-Lib Magazine, Sep, 1995, Accessible at http://www.dlib.org/
....approach from the user s perspective. As the demand for a given module increases, that module gets disseminated among an increasingly large number of servers. NetSolve provides a rst attempt at a more exible module management: precompiled software modules can be downloaded from the Netlib [16] repository and dynamically linked into the server. Security concerns are not taken into account because the assumption is that Netlib is an authoritative source of software. This proof of concept prototype performs only simplistic checks for binary and O S compatibility that are sucient for ....
S. Browne, J. Dongarra, E. Grosse, and T. Rowan. The Netlib Mathematical Software Repository. D-Lib Magazine, Sep. 1995. Accessible at http://www.dlib.org/.
....of scientific life across nearly every domain and discipline, the challenge of deploying the software that encodes the underlying computational science has become increasingly complex and pressing. The ubiquity of the Internet and the establishment of large software repositories, such as Netlib [1], have made it relatively easy to provide basic access to such software. However, a rapidly growing and more diverse user community still has to cope with the process of collecting, compiling, installing, configuring, and managing the software on a constantly changing and increasingly elaborate ....
Browne S, Dongarra J, Grosse E, Rowan T. 1995. The Netlib Mathematical Software Repository," D-Lib Magazine, September 1995. http://www.dlib.org/dlib/september95/netlib/09browne.html
....manufacturer. Highly ecient machine speci c implementations of the BLAS are available for many modern high performance computers. The BLAS enable LAPACK routines to achieve high performance with transportable software. Although a model FORTRAN implementation of the BLAS is available from netlib [7] in the BLAS library. It is not expected to perform as well as a specially tuned implementation on most high performance computers. On some machines it may give much worse performance. But it allows users to run LAPACK software on machines that do not o er any other implementation of the BLAS. For ....
....Problems. Expert Driver Routines for Standard Eigenvalue Problems. Driver Routines for Generalized Eigenvalue and Singular Value Problems. Some Computational Routines for Linear Equations and Eigenproblems. The LAPACK90 library is successively updated and it is available from netlib (see [3, 7]) 1.4 ScaLAPACK ScaLAPACK is a library of high performance linear algebra routines for distributed memory message passing MIMD (Multiple Instruction Multiple Data) computers and networks of workstations supporting PVM [10] Parallel Virtual Machine) and or MPI [14] Message Passing Interface) ....
S. Browne, J. Dongarra, E. Grosse, and T. Rowan. The Netlib Mathematical Software Repository. D-Lib Magazine, Sep, 1995, Accessible at http://www.dlib.org/
....at will to set up computational servers. The actual numerical software should also be available to make the creation of these servers almost immediate. The idea would then be to add a complementary repository containing NetSolve description les to a regular software repository (like Netlib [2]) 1.2.3 Software Hierarchy The current version (1.2) of NetSolve contains the following subpackages: agent server with description les for various numerical libraries client interfaces (C, Fortran, Java, Matlab, Mathematica) tests and tools One of the biggest improvements of ....
....user has started Mathematica and is ready to try NetSolve. We can check what our agent is by typing 10 In[1] NetSolveGetAgent[ Out[1] unidhp.uni c.dk If there is no agent set, the result would be the Null symbol. One can change the agent by the function NetSolveSetAgent[ For instance In[2]: NetSolveSetAgent[ bluegrass.cs.utk.edu ] The agent can be changed at any time providing there is running another NetSolve agent on the host which name has been passed as argument. By doing this we actually change the set of servers and probably the set of solvable problems. A list of the ....
[Article contains additional citation context not shown here]
S. Browne, J. Dongarra, E. Grosse, and T. Rowan. The Netlib Mathematical Software Repository. D-Lib Magazine, Sep. 1995. Accessible at http://www.dlib.org/.
....Highly efficient machine specific implementations of the BLAS are available for many modern high performance computers. The BLAS enable LAPACK routines to achieve high performance with transportable software. Although a model FORTRAN implementation of the BLAS is available from netlib[5] in the BLAS library. It is not expected to perform as well as a specially tuned implementation on most high performance computers. On some machines it may give much worse performance. But it allows users to run LAPACK software on machines that do not offer any other implementation of the BLAS. ....
S. Browne, J. Dongarra, E. Grosse and T. Rowan. The Netlib Mathematical Software Repository. D-Lib Magazine, Sep, 1995, Accessible at http://www.dlib.org/
....at will to set up computational servers. The actual numerical software should also be available to make the creation of these servers almost immediate. The idea would then be to add a complementary repository containing NetSolve description files to a regular software repository (like Netlib [1]) 1.2.3 Existing resources So far, description files have been written for the following numerical libraries: FitPack [2] ItPack [3] MinPack [4] FFTPACK [5] LAPACK [6] BLAS [7, 8, 9] QMR [10] and ScaLAPACK [11] NetSolve computational servers providing access to these packages are running ....
S. Browne, J. Dongarra, E. Grosse, and T. Rowan. The Netlib Mathematical Software Repository. D-Lib Magazine, Sep. 1995. Accessible at http://www.dlib.org/.
....manufacturer. Highly efficient machine specific implementations of the BLAS are available for many modern high performance computers. The BLAS enable LAPACK routines to achieve high performance with transportable software. Although a model FORTRAN implementation of the BLAS is available from netlib[5] in the BLAS library. It is not expected to perform as well as a specially tuned implementation on most high performance computers. On some machines it may give much worse performance. But it allows users to run LAPACK software on machines that do not offer any other implementation of the BLAS. ....
....ffl Expert Driver Routines for Standard Eigenvalue Problems. ffl Driver Routines for Generalized Eigenvalue and Singular Value Problems. ffl Some Computational Routines for Linear Equations and Eigenproblems. The LAPACK90 library is successively updated and it is available from netlib (see [5, 4]) 1.6 ScaLAPACK for HPF The HPF ScaLAPACK interface project started in several places (see [9, 11] and at UNIfflC. The work at UNIfflC is not described yet. The report is in preparation. Several ScaLAPACK subroutines and test programs are interfaced with HPF. 2 Interface Blocks for LAPACK 77 ....
S. Browne, J. Dongarra, E. Grosse, and T. Rowan. The Netlib Mathematical Software Repository. D-Lib Magazine, Sep, 1995, Accessible at http://www.dlib.org/
....get easy access to side by side comparative evaluations based on consistent and objective criteria. Our current evaluation focus is on the Parallel Tools Library (PTLIB) a new software repository for parallel systems software and tools, and HPC Netlib, a high performance branch of the Netlib [3, 4] mathematical software repository. We refine the NHSE high level evaluation framework to the domains in these two areas and for each package in a particular domain, we apply a consistent set of criteria to assess various characteristics of the software. The evaluations, as well as author and user ....
Shirley Browne, Jack Dongarra, Eric Grosse, and Tom Rowan, "The Netlib mathematical software repository", D-Lib Magazine, Sep. 1995, http://www.dlib.org/magazine.html.
....at will to set up computational servers. The actual numerical software should also be available to make the creation of these servers nearly immediate. The idea would then be to add a complementary repository containing NetSolve description files to a regular software repository like Netlib [1]. 1.2.3 Existing Resources A number of description files have been generated for the following numerical libraries: ARPACK [2] FitPack [3] ItPack [4] MinPack [5] FFTPACK [6] LAPACK [7] BLAS [8, 9, 10] QMR [11] Minpack [5] and ScaLAPACK [12] NetSolve computational servers providing access ....
S. Browne, J. Dongarra, E. Grosse, and T. Rowan. The Netlib Mathematical Software Repository. D-Lib Magazine, Sep. 1995. Accessible at http://www.dlib.org/.
....by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency under contract DAAH04 95 1 0595, administered by the U.S. Army Research Office. Software repositories have traditionally provided access to software resources for particular communities of users within specific domains. For example, our Netlib 1 [6] and GAMS 2 [4] repositories provide access to collections of mathematical software, while our National HPCC Software Exchange (NHSE) 3 [5] provides access to high performance computing resources. The growth of the World Wide Web has created new opportunities for expanding the scope of ....
S. Browne, J. Dongarra, E. Grosse, and T. Rowan. The netlib mathematical software repository. D-Lib Magazine, Sept. 1995. Accessible at http://www.dlib.org/.
....is confronted with many difficulties. The first task the user must undertake is to look for the appropriate library or set of libraries he she needs for their own computational problem. Usually, such libraries can be found in software repositories. A well known repository, for example, is Netlib [4] which is maintained through the collaborative effort of several institutions and universities. Software repositories present some intrinsic difficulties for the inexperienced user : i) they are generally very large and (ii) contain very different types of libraries. Once located, the appropriate ....
....be downloaded at will to set up computational servers. The actual numerical software should also be available to make the creation of computational servers almost immediate. The idea would then be to add a complementary repository of description files to a regular software repository (like Netlib [4]) JAVA CLIENT INTERFACE Why a Java interface For NetSolve to be accepted by many users, it needs to provide several distinct ways to access computational resources, mainly different user interfaces. Before the development of the Java interface, the only interfaces that were available were ....
S. Browne, J. Dongarra, E. Grosse, and T. Rowan. The Netlib Mathematical Software Repository. D-Lib Magazine, sep 1995. Accessible at http://www.dlib.org/.
No context found.
S. Browne, J. Dongarra, E. Grosse, and T. Rowan. The Netlib Mathematical Software Repository. D-Lib Magazine, Sep, 1995, Accessible at http://www.dlib.org/
....situation. The user who decides to use free software libraries must first look for the appropriate library or set of libraries needed for his specific computational problem. Usually, such libraries can be found in established software repositories. A well known repository, for example, is Netlib [4], which is maintained through the collaborative effort of several institutions and universities. Software repositories present some intrinsic difficulties for the unexperienced user. First, they are usually very large. For example, Netlib contains more than 40 different numerical libraries, a ....
....at will to set up computational servers. The actual numerical software should also be available to make the creation of these servers almost immediate. The idea would then be to add a complementary repository containing NetSolve description files to a regular software repository (like Netlib [4]) 2.2.3 Existing Resources So far, description files have been written for the following numerical libraries: FitPack [6] ItPack [7] MinPack [8] FFTPACK [9] LAPACK [10] BLAS [11, 12, 13] QMR [14] and ScaLAPACK [15] NetSolve computational servers providing access to these packages are ....
S. Browne, J. Dongarra, E. Grosse, and T. Rowan. The Netlib Mathematical Software Repository. D-Lib Magazine, Sep. 1995. Accessible at http://www.dlib.org/.
....by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency under contract DAAH04 95 1 0595, administered by the U.S. Army Research Office. Software repositories have traditionally provided access to software resources for particular communities of users within specific domains. For example, our Netlib 1 [6] and GAMS 2 [4] repositories provide access to collections of mathematical software, while our National HPCC Software Exchange (NHSE) 3 [5] provides access to high performance computing resources. The growth of the World Wide Web has created new opportunities for expanding the scope of ....
S. Browne, J. Dongarra, E. Grosse, and T. Rowan. The netlib mathematical software repository. D-Lib Magazine, Sept. 1995. Accessible at http://www.dlib.org/.
....by the manufacturer. Highly efficient, machine specific implementations of the BLAS are available for many modern high performance computers. The BLAS enable LAPACK routines to achieve high performance with transportable software. A model FORTRAN implementation of the BLAS is available from netlib[5] in the BLAS library. It is not expected to perform as well as a specially tuned implementation on most high performance computers. On some machines, it may give much worse performance. But it allows users to run LAPACK software on machines that do not offer any other implementation of the BLAS. ....
....ffl Expert Driver Routines for Standard Eigenvalue Problems. ffl Driver Routines for Generalized Eigenvalue and Singular Value Problems. ffl Some Computational Routines for Linear Equations and Eigenproblems. The LAPACK90 library is successively updated and it is available from netlib (see [5, 4]) 1.6 ScaLAPACK for HPF The HPF ScaLAPACK interface project started in several places (see [9, 11] including UNIfflC. The work at UNIfflC is not described yet. The report is in preparation. Several ScaLAPACK subroutines and test programs are interfaced with HPF. 2 Interface Blocks for LAPACK ....
S. Browne, J. Dongarra, E. Grosse, and T. Rowan. The Netlib Mathematical Software Repository. D-Lib Magazine, Sep, 1995, Accessible at http://www.dlib.org/
....confronted with many difficulties. The first task the user must undertake is to look for the appropriate library or set of libraries he or she needs for their own computational problem. Usually, such libraries can be found in software repositories. One wellknown repository, for example, is Netlib [4], which is maintained through the collaborative effort of several institutions and universities. Software repositories present some intrinsic difficulties for the inexperienced user: i) they are generally very large and (ii) contain very different types of libraries. Once located, the appropriate ....
S. Browne, J. Dongarra, E. Grosse, and T. Rowan. The Netlib Mathematical Software Repository. D-Lib Magazine, sep 1995. Accessible at http://www.dlib.org/.
No context found.
S. Browne, \The Netlib Mathematical Software Repository," D-lib Magazine, Sep. 1995.
No context found.
S. Browne, "The Netlib Mathematical Software Repository," D-lib Magazine, Sep. 1995.
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