Renaissance: benchmarking suite for parallel applications on the JVM

dc.contributor.authorAleksandar Prokopec
dc.contributor.authorAndrea Rosà
dc.contributor.authorDavid Leopoldseder
dc.contributor.authorGilles Duboscq
dc.contributor.authorPetr Tůma
dc.contributor.authorMartin Studener
dc.contributor.authorLubomír Bulej
dc.contributor.authorYudi Zheng
dc.contributor.authorAlex Villazón
dc.contributor.authorDoug Simon
dc.coverage.spatialBolivia
dc.date.accessioned2026-03-22T13:54:20Z
dc.date.available2026-03-22T13:54:20Z
dc.date.issued2019
dc.descriptionCitaciones: 102
dc.description.abstractEstablished benchmark suites for the Java Virtual Machine (JVM), such as DaCapo, ScalaBench, and SPECjvm2008, lack workloads that take advantage of the parallel programming abstractions and concurrency primitives offered by the JVM and the Java Class Library. However, such workloads are fundamental for understanding the way in which modern applications and data-processing frameworks use the JVM's concurrency features, and for validating new just-in-time (JIT) compiler optimizations that enable more efficient execution of such workloads. We present Renaissance, a new benchmark suite composed of modern, real-world, concurrent, and object-oriented workloads that exercise various concurrency primitives of the JVM. We show that the use of concurrency primitives in these workloads reveals optimization opportunities that were not visible with the existing workloads. We use Renaissance to compare performance of two state-of-the-art, production-quality JIT compilers (HotSpot C2 and Graal), and show that the performance differences are more significant than on existing suites such as DaCapo and SPECjvm2008. We also use Renaissance to expose four new compiler optimizations, and we analyze the behavior of several existing ones. We use Renaissance to compare performance of two state-of-the-art, production-quality JIT compilers (HotSpot C2 and Graal), and show that the performance differences are more significant than on existing suites such as DaCapo and SPECjvm2008. We also use Renaissance to expose four new compiler optimizations, and we analyze the behavior of several existing ones.
dc.identifier.doi10.1145/3314221.3314637
dc.identifier.urihttps://doi.org/10.1145/3314221.3314637
dc.identifier.urihttps://andeanlibrary.org/handle/123456789/43405
dc.language.isoen
dc.sourceUniversità della Svizzera italiana
dc.subjectComputer science
dc.subjectCompiler
dc.subjectSuite
dc.subjectConcurrency
dc.subjectJava
dc.subjectJust-in-time compilation
dc.subjectProgramming language
dc.subjectParallel computing
dc.subjectBenchmark (surveying)
dc.subjectOperating system
dc.titleRenaissance: benchmarking suite for parallel applications on the JVM
dc.typearticle

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