INDUSTRY
Sun unveils Fortress as replacement for Fortran
Sun Microsystems has unveiled a new open-source programming language for high-performance computing to replace the established Fortran language, originally launched by IBM. Fortress is designed for high-performance computing (HPC) with high programmability. In order to explore breakaway approaches to improving programmability, the Fortress design has not been tied to legacy language syntax or semantics; all aspects of HPC language design have been rethought from the ground up. As a result, Sun is able to support features in Fortress such as transactions, specification of locality, and implicit parallel computation, as integral features built into the core of the language.
Features such as the Fortress component system and test framework facilitate program assembly and testing, and enable powerful compiler optimizations across library boundaries. Even the syntax and type system of Fortress are custom-tailored to modern HPC programming, supporting mathematical notation and static checking of properties such as physical units and dimensions, static type checking of multidimensional arrays and matrices, and definitions of domain-specific language syntax in libraries. Moreover, Fortress has been designed with the intent that it be a "growable" language, gracefully supporting the addition of future language features. In fact, much of the Fortress language itself (even the definition of arrays and other basic types) is encoded in libraries atop a relatively small core language.
The project's leader Eric Allen said that he wanted to encourage academics and other interested partied to have a go at the new language.