Abstract

This paper describes the motivation for a set of intertask communication primitives, the hardware support of these primitives, the architecture used in the Sylvan project which studies these issues, and the experience gained from various experiments conducted in this area. We start by describing how these facilities have been implemented in a multiprocessor configuration that utilizes a shared backplane. This configuration represents a single node in the system. The latter part of the paper discusses a distributed multiple node system and the extension of the primitives that are used in this expanded environment. This research is funded by a strategic grant from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (Grant No. G1581).

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