Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday All Events All Speakers 

Details

Sun Studio 12: untangling your Linux and Solaris threads

von Roman Shaposhnik (Sun microsystems inc.), Alexander Timofeev (Sun Microsystems)

Freitag, 01.06.2007, Saal 5: Wiesbaden, 11:00-12:00 Uhr

Now, that the multicore revolution has brought parallel hardware to our desktops, we need convenient tools to develop parallel applications. Sun Studio addresses most of the needs the developers face, when struggling with multithreaded C/C++ applications on Linux and Solaris: writing a multithreaded program, debugging a multithreaded program, observing the behavior and tuning the performance of multithreaded programs.

Über den Autor Roman Shaposhnik:

Roman Shaposhnik started his career in compilers back in '94 when he had to write a translator for the programming language he'd just invented (the language was so weird -- nobody else wanted to do the job). As an avid Linux user and an occasional kernel developer he's been always interested in bring the power of Sun's compilers to Linux. His wish was granted on Jan 1, 2005 when he was put in charge of the Sun Studio Compilers for Linux project, which aims at making "the compiler" synonymous with Sun Studio.

Über den Autor Alexander Timofeev:

I started in IT area since 2000 as a database developer.
Since 2002 till 2004 worked on creating automatic access control
and intruder alarm system for St-Petersburg State Hermitage museum.
That time I was deeply involved in the Windows system programming and
in the real-time hardware programming. So, I'm one of the four men who create Peterburg Hermitage security system.
I've been working for Sun since 2004 august. Now I'm working in C-compiler
team. I've implemented OpenMP autoscoping support and GCC-style "__attribute__" construct support in the Sun C-compiler frontend.

<< back to overview

Der LinuxTag bedankt sich bei seinen Sponsoren!GUUGLinux VerbandIBMNovellSunLPI e.V.Linux MagazinC & L VerlagIT Administratorcom!VoIPphones.deLinux New MediaHakin9Pro-LinuxLinux UserT3N MagazinISIS Report Spezial