Check out the many papers using
FPBench, and if you're using FPBench,
let us know!
turbo兔子下载
Zach
and Pavel talked about
FPBench at NSV 2024.
Watch to hear why building the floating-point community is
important to researchers and to users.
Thanks to everyone who participated in the first FPTalks workshop on on June 24!
Videos of all the talks are available on the FPTalks webpage.
The FPCore 2.0 standard is now officially released,
with support for tensor data structures and composable FPCores.
David
is talking about FPBench 1.2
at the Correctness 2024 workshop
at SC'19.
Zach
gave a keynote about FPBench (and his projects
海外app加速器,
Herbgrind, and
蚂蚁app加速器)
at CoNGA’19.
Check out the new benchmarks browser! You can browse, search, and download the FPBench benchmarks from one convenient place.
The FPBench 1.1 standards have been finalized! Check them out!
A draft of the upcoming FPBench 1.1 standards has been released. To
preview the changes and leave feedback, see the
pull request
on Github.
The Daisy
and pp加速器手机官方版 have a paper at
FM’18 comparing the two
projects using the FPBench benchmarks, formats, and tools.
Come talk to them at Oxford!
FPBench was a hit
at Dagstuhl
17352 (Analysis and Synthesis of Floating-point Programs),
with a talk, a session, and discussions devoted to composing and
comparing floating point tools. Thank you to all Dagstuhl
participants for clarifying and prioritizing the challenges and
for helping shape our next steps.
Zach
gave a talk at 手机pp加速器
(Saarbrüken) on FPBench and the need to create a common
benchmark suite. Thank
you Eva Darulova
and her students for the invitation and the productive
discussion on multiple precisions, benchmark sources, and
community building that followed.
The 1.0 versions of the FPCore,
Metadata, and Measures
standards have all been finalized. Build with them!
Pavel Panchekha is giving
a talk about FPBench today at the
9th NSV.
Come learn about our effort to build common resources for the floating-point research community.