WoTUG - The place for concurrent processes

Paper Details

@InProceedings{Teig98,
  title = "{PAR} and {STARTP} {T}ake the {T}anks",
  author= "Teig, Øyvind",
  editor= "Welch, Peter H. and Bakkers, Andr\`{e} W. P.",
  pages = "1--18",
  booktitle= "{P}roceedings of {W}o{TUG}-21: {A}rchitectures, {L}anguages and {P}atterns for {P}arallel and {D}istributed {A}pplications",
  isbn= "90 5199 391 9",
  year= "1998",
  month= "mar",
  abstract= "The article describes how SPoC (Southampton Portable occam
     Compiler) has been used -- together with hand-written C --
     in Autronica's new GL-100 radar-based fluid gauge. The final
     C-code is running on a Texas TMS320C32 DSP. Some 2600 lines
     of C code have been automatically translated from the occam
     sources. SPoC's non-preemptive scheduling filled our needs
     with a few exceptions. The main problem has been aligning
     occam 2 and ANSI-C data abstractions. A realtime system
     based on language support of high-level concurrency
     abstractions (as opposed to separate real-time kernel and
     use of library calls without direct language support) is
     soon to monitor worldwide charging and discharging of oil
     tankers."
}

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