| 1 | I would like you address the comments of Reviewer 2, particularly with | 
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| 2 | regard to the description of the adaptation Java harness to deal with | 
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| 3 | warmup. I would expect to see a convincing argument that the computation | 
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| 4 | has reached a steady state. | 
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| 5 |  | 
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| 6 | We understand referee2 and your concern about the JIT experiments, which is why | 
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| 7 | we verified our experiments with two experts in JIT development for both Java | 
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| 8 | and Node.js before submitting the paper. We also read the supplied papers, but | 
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| 9 | most of the information is not applicable to our work for the following | 
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| 10 | reasons. | 
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| 11 |  | 
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| 12 | 1. SPEC benchmarks are medium to large. In contrast, our benchmarks are 5-15 | 
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| 13 | lines in length for each programming language (see code for the Cforall | 
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| 14 | tests in the paper). Hence, there is no significant computations, complex | 
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| 15 | control flow, or use of memory.  They test one specific language features | 
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| 16 | (context switch, mutex call, etc.) in isolation over and over again. These | 
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| 17 | language features are fixed (e.g., acquiring and releasing a lock is a fixed | 
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| 18 | cost). Therefore, unless the feature can be removed there is nothing to | 
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| 19 | optimize at runtime. But these features cannot be removed without changing | 
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| 20 | the meaning of the benchmark. If the feature is removed, the timing result | 
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| 21 | would be 0. In fact, it was difficult to prevent the JIT from completely | 
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| 22 | eliding some benchmarks because there are no side-effects. | 
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| 23 |  | 
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| 24 | 2. All of our benchmark results correlate across programming languages with and | 
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| 25 | without JIT, indicating the JIT has completed any runtime optimizations | 
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| 26 | (added this sentence to Section 8.1). Any large differences are explained by | 
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| 27 | how a language implements a feature not by how the compiler/JIT precesses | 
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| 28 | that feature.  Section 8.1 discusses these points in detail. | 
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| 29 |  | 
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| 30 | 3. We also added a sentence about running all JIT-base programming language | 
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| 31 | experiments for 30 minutes and there was no statistical difference, | 
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| 32 | med/avg/std correlated with the short-run experiments, which seems a | 
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| 33 | convincing argument that the benchmark has reached a steady state. If the | 
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| 34 | JIT takes longer than 30 minutes to achieve its optimization goals, it is | 
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| 35 | unlikely to be useful. | 
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| 36 |  | 
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| 37 | 4. The purpose of the performance section is not to draw conclusions about | 
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| 38 | improvements. It is to contrast program-language implementation approaches. | 
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| 39 | Section 8.1 talks about ramifications of certain design and implementation | 
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| 40 | decisions with respect to overall performance. The only conclusion we draw | 
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| 41 | about performance is: | 
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| 42 |  | 
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| 43 | Performance comparisons with other concurrent systems and languages show | 
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| 44 | the Cforall approach is competitive across all basic operations, which | 
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| 45 | translates directly into good performance in well-written applications | 
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| 46 | with advanced control-flow. | 
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| 47 |  | 
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| 48 |  | 
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| 49 | I would also like you to provide the values for N for each benchmark run. | 
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| 50 |  | 
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| 51 | Done. | 
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| 52 |  | 
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| 53 |  | 
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| 54 | Referee 2 suggested | 
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| 55 |  | 
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| 56 | * don't start sentences with "However" | 
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| 57 |  | 
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| 58 | However, there are numerous grammar sites on the web indicating "however" (a | 
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| 59 | conjunction) at the start of a sentence is acceptable, e.g.: | 
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| 60 |  | 
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| 61 | https://www.merriam-webster.com/words-at-play/can-you-start-a-sentence-with-however | 
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| 62 | This is a stylistic choice, more than anything else, as we have a | 
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| 63 | considerable body of evidence of writers using however to begin sentences, | 
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| 64 | frequently with the meaning of "nevertheless." | 
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