
On 16/12/2009 19:21, Scott A. Waterman wrote:
It looks like there was a recent hackathon focusing on implementing distributed haskell. http://hackage.haskell.org/trac/ghc/wiki/HackPar
I feel there is quite a bit of latent interest in the subject here, but relatively little active development (compared to erlang, clojure, etc.) Can anyone involved give a quick overview (or pointers to one)? It would be good to hear what directions people are taking, and why, and where it's going.
The main directions are: GUM, which was one of the first parallel implementations of Haskell many years ago [1]. The programming API is the same as GHC has: par/pseq and strategies (indeed this API was invented in the context of GUM, we just re-used it in GHC). GUM uses PVM message passing to implement a distributed heap, and can run on clusters of machines or a multicore, or a combination of the two. GUM has in the past been integrated with GHC, but has sufferred from a lack of development effort so has rotted in recent years. Efforts are now underway to get it working with GHC HEAD again. Eden [2] also uses PVM, but does not have a distributed heap. It's implementation is much simpler, and the API is rather more explicit than par/seq and strategies. Eden has been tracking GHC more closely than GUM, but it's still a research project and there's little effort available to make releases. Neither of these are really what you'd call "Distributed Haskell", they are implementations of parallel variants of Haskell running on distributed hardware. There was a Distributed Haskell project, but it is not active at the moment [3]. Cheers, Simon [1] GUM: a portable parallel implementation of Haskell http://www.macs.hw.ac.uk/~dsg/gph/papers/abstracts/gum.html [2] Parallel functional programming in Eden Journal of Functional Programming (2005), 15 [3] http://www.macs.hw.ac.uk/~dsg/gdh/