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research article
Multiprocessing Extensions in SPUR Lisp
1989
The authors describe their multiprocessing extensions to Common Lisp. They have added a few simple, expressive features on which one can build high-level constructs. These consist of a multithreading mechanism, primitives for communication and synchronization (mailboxes and signals), and a feature called futures. A few examples clarify how the primitives work and demonstrate their expressiveness. When Spur Lisp is ported to and optimized on the Spur workstation (a shared memory multiprocessor), programmers can use it to make symbolic programs parallel.
Type
research article
Authors
Zorn, Benjamin
•
Ho, Kinson
•
Larus, James
•
Semenzato, Luigi
•
Hilfinger, Paul
Publication date
1989
Publisher
Published in
Volume
6
Issue
4
Start page
41
End page
49
Peer reviewed
REVIEWED
EPFL units
Available on Infoscience
December 23, 2013
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