PhD position on "Semantics and Verification of Accelerator Programming"
[[Apologies for multiple copies]]
Application deadline is in a week from now, on 1st of May!
PhD position for four years on "Semantics and Verification of Accelerator Programming" in the Formal Methods and Tools group, University of Twente, Netherlands
Deadline for application: 1st of May
More information and applications via: http://utwente.nl/vacatures/
The research group Formal Methods and Tools at the University of
Twente (Enschede, The Netherlands) is looking for
a PhD researcher (4 years)
to work on the EU Strep project CARP (Correct and Efficient Accelerator Programming), funded by the European Union.
Application deadline is in a week from now, on 1st of May!
PhD position for four years on "Semantics and Verification of
Accelerator Programming" in the Formal Methods and Tools group,
University of Twente, Netherlands
Deadline for application: 1st of May
More information and applications via: http://utwente.nl/vacatures/
The research group Formal Methods and Tools at the University of
Twente (Enschede, The Netherlands) is looking for
a PhD researcher (4 years)
to work on the EU Strep project CARP (Correct and Efficient
Accelerator Programming), funded by the European Union.
Within the context of the CARP project, you will collaborate with
the other partners in the project: Imperial College, UK; Realeyes,
Estonia; ARM, UK; RTWH Aachen, Germany, Monoidics, UK, ENS, France
and Rightware, Finland.
The CARP Project:
In recent years, massively parallel accelerator processors,
primarily GPUs, have become widely available to end-users.
Accelerators offer tremendous compute power at a low cost, and tasks
such as media processing, simulation, medical imaging and
eye-tracking can be accelerated to beat CPU performance by orders of
magnitude. Performance is gained in energy efficiency and execution
speed, allowing intensive media processing software to run in
low-power consumer devices.
Accelerators present a serious challenge for software developers. A
system may contain one or more of the plethora of accelerators on
the market, with many more products anticipated in the immediate
future. Applications must exhibit portable correctness, operating
correctly on any configuration of accelerators, and portable
performance, exploiting processing power and energy efficiency
offered by a wide range of devices.
The overall aims of CARP are to design techniques and tools for
correct and efficient accelerator programming:
- Novel & attractive methods for constructing system-independent
accelerator programs
- Advanced code generation techniques to produce highly optimised
system-specific code from system-independent programs
- Scalable static techniques for analysing system-independent and
system-specific accelerator programs, both qualitatively and
quantitatively
This Project:
The PhD candidate we are looking for is expected to work on the
development of tools and techniques for correct accelerator
programming. We have developed a verification technique for
low-level GPU programming (for OpenCL), ba, and want to extend this
to verify also the functional behaviour of applications. Moreover,
the verifications should be done automatically, which requires the
development of dedicated verification algorithms. Within the
consortium an intermediate programming language for accelerator
programming is developed. In this programming language, the
developer can give compiler hints on where to parallellise. The PhD
candidate is expected to develop automatic verification techniques
to check whether the compiler hints are indeed applicable, or if
they could lead to errors in the code.
We seek:
An enthusiastic PhD student with an MSc degree in Computer Science
(or an equivalent qualification). The candidate should have a
thorough theoretical background, a demonstrable interest in program
semantics and verification, and some knowledge about multithreaded
programming (in Java/C/C++).
We are looking for a researcher with an independent mind who is
willing to cooperate in our team. It is understood that he or she
works on the topics listed above, and contributes to the expected
deliverables for the project. Further we ask for good communicative
and good collaboration skills. Candidates should be prepared to
prove their English language skills.
As a research outcome we expect publications, (prototype) tools, and
a PhD thesis.
Starting date of the position: June 1st, 2013, or as soon as
possible thereafter.
We offer:
- A PhD position for four years (38 hrs/week)
- A stimulating scientific environment
- Gross salary ranging from EUR 2042 tot E 2612 (4th yr) per month
- Holiday allowance (8%), end-of-year bonus (8.3%)
- Good secondary conditions, in accordance with the collective
labour agreement CAO-NU for Dutch universities
- A green Campus with lots of sports facilities
You will be a member of the Twente Graduate School in the research
programme 'Dependable and Secure Computing' under the leadership of
Prof Dr Jaco van de Pol. The research programme offers advanced
courses to deepen your scientific knowledge in preparation to your
future career (within or outside academia). We provide our PhD
students with excellent opportunities to broaden their personal
knowledge and to professionalise their academic skills.
Participation in national and/or international summer schools and
workshops, and visits to other prestigious research institutes and
universities can be part of this programme.
Further information:
- FMT group: http://fmt.cs.utwente.nl/
- Dr. Marieke Huisman ([email protected])
- The CARP project:
http://fmt.ewi.utwente.nl/files/projects/CARP.d1.pdf
Application:
Please submit your application before 1st of May, 2013 via
http://www.utwente.nl/vacatures/en/. We strongly encourage
interested applicants to send in their applications as soon as
possible.
Your application should consist of:
- a cover letter (explain your specific interest and
qualifications);
- a full Curriculum Vitae, including a list of all courses + marks,
and a short description of your MSc thesis; and
- references (contact information) of two scientific staff members.