Bram Adams
2010-Nov-20 21:19 UTC
[LLVMdev] CFP: MISS 2011 workshop (ex ACP4IS) at AOSD 2011
Hi, The MISS 2011 workshop below is highly related to this mailing list, since VMs are some of the best-known examples of systems software. Dealing with modularity in a VM is known to be critical, yet tough, so insights, advances or experiences from the trenches are extremely welcome at our workshop. Consider participating! Thanks in advance, the MISS 2011 committee ************************************************************************* 1st AOSD Workshop on Modularity in Systems Software MISS 2011 (ex ACP4IS) March 22, 2011 Porto de Galinhas, Pernambuco (Brazil) http://www.aosd.net/workshops/miss A one-day workshop to be held in conjunction with the 10th International Conference on Aspect-Oriented Software Development (AOSD'11), March 21 -- March 25, 2011, Porto de Galinhas, Pernambuco (Brazil) http://aosd.net/conference ************************************************************************** The importance of "systems infrastructure" software - including application servers, virtual machines, middleware, compilers, and operating systems - is increasing as application programmers demand better and higher-level support for software development. Vendors that provide superior support for application development have a competitive advantage. The software industry as a whole benefits as the base level of abstraction increases, thus decreasing the need for application programmers to continually "reinvent the wheel". These trends, however, mean that the demands on infrastructure software are increasing. More and more features and requirements are being "pushed down" into the infrastructure, and the developers of systems software need better tools and techniques for handling these increased demands. The design and implementation of systems-level software presents unique opportunities and challenges for research on software modularity. These challenges include the need to address the inherent complexity of infrastructure software, the need for strong assurances of correct and predictable behaviour, the need for maximum run-time performance, and the necessity of dealing with the large body of existing systems software components. MISS 2011 aims to provide a highly interactive forum for researchers and developers to discuss the application of and relationships between exciting new modularity constructs for systems software such as aspects, components, traits and context layers. The goal is to put these constructs into a common reference frame and to build connections between the software engineering and systems communities. Following up on last year's workshop, MISS 2011 puts special focus on the challenges in system's programming introduced by multi-core platforms. As hardware-supported parallelization becomes mainstream, there is an increasing pressure on systems infrastructure to exploit this new parallelism to its fullest. However, the non-modular nature of parallel execution, and the numerous levels at which parallelism can be achieved (application, systems infrastructure, hardware or even a combination) make it hard to come up with an intuitive, yet efficient parallel architecture. We solicit novel ideas and experience reports on this emerging research area. Other suggested topics for position papers include, but are not restricted to: - Approaches that combine or relate techniques based on advanced modularization concepts - Dimensions of infrastructure software quality including comprehensibility, configurability (by implementers), customizability (by users), reliability, evolvability, scalability, and run-time characteristics such as performance and code size - Merits and downsides of container-, ORB-, and system-based separation of concerns - Architectural techniques for particular system concerns, e.g., security, static and dynamic optimization, and real-time behaviour - Design patterns for systems software - "Mining" and refactoring of concerns in systems code - Application- or domain-specific optimization of systems - Reasoning and optimization across architectural layers - Quantitative and qualitative evaluation AGENDA The workshop will be structured to encourage fruitful discussions and build connections between workshop participants. To this end, approximately half of the workshop time will be devoted to short presentations of accepted papers, with the remaining half devoted to semi-structured discussion groups and lightning talks. The latter are short talks that are combined with tool demos, aimed at stimulating even more interaction between workshop attendees. Participants will be expected to have read the accepted papers prior to the workshop, to help ensure focused discussions. SUBMISSION GUIDELINES Invitation to the workshop will be based on accepted position papers, 3-5 pages in length. All papers must be submitted as PDF documents in ACM format through the MISS 2011 online submission system found at: http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=miss11. Paper submissions will be reviewed by the workshop program committee and by designated reviewers. Papers will be evaluated based on technical quality, originality, relevance, and presentation. In addition to position papers, we also solicit proposals for lightning talks, i.e., a combination of a 5 minute talk and 5 minute tool demo. Prospective lightning presenters should send us an abstract of 250 words (deadline: March 13, 2010). Abstracts will NOT be published, they are intended to be read by the reviewers only (hence the late deadline). Comments and questions can be sent to miss11 AT aosd DOH net. PUBLICATION OF PAPERS All accepted papers will be posted at the workshop web site prior to the workshop date, to give all participants the opportunity to read them before the workshop. In addition, the accepted position papers will be published in a Workshop Proceedings in the ACM Digital Library. IMPORTANT DATES Paper Deadline: January 7, 2011 at 23:59 (Apia time) Notification of acceptance: January 23, 2011 Final papers due: February 19, 2011 Lightning abstracts: March 13, 2011 Workshop: March 22, 2011 PROGRAM COMMITTEE - Bram Adams, Queen's University - Walter Binder, University of Lugano - Michael Haupt, Hasso Plattner Institut - Mick Jordan, Oracle Labs - Julia Lawall, DIKU - David Lorenz, The Open University of Israel - Stefan Marr, Vrije Universiteit Brussel - Eddy Truyen, KU Leuven - Eric Wohlstadter, University of British Columbia - Charles Zhang Hong Kong University of Science and Technology - more to be announced soon ... ORGANIZING COMMITTEE - Bram Adams, Queen's University - Michael Haupt, Hasso Plattner Institut - David Lorenz, The Open University of Israel - Eric Wohlstadter, University of British Columbia STEERING COMMITTEE - Eric Eide, University of Utah - Olaf Spinczyk, University of Dortmund - Yvonne Coady, University of Victoria - David Lorenz, The Open University of Israel
Chris Lattner
2010-Nov-20 21:52 UTC
[LLVMdev] CFP: MISS 2011 workshop (ex ACP4IS) at AOSD 2011
On Nov 20, 2010, at 1:19 PM, Bram Adams wrote:> Hi, > > The MISS 2011 workshop below is highly related to this mailing list, since VMs are some of the best-known examples of systems software. Dealing with modularity in a VM is known to be critical, yet tough, so insights, advances or experiences from the trenches are extremely welcome at our workshop. Consider participating!FYI, unless they are specifically about LLVM, general conference postings are off-topic for this list. There are many dozens of conferences for which LLVM is potentially related - we don't want all of them posted to the list! Thanks, -Chris
Bram Adams
2010-Nov-21 19:37 UTC
[LLVMdev] CFP: MISS 2011 workshop (ex ACP4IS) at AOSD 2011
Hi, On 2010-11-20, at 4:52 PM, Chris Lattner wrote:> > On Nov 20, 2010, at 1:19 PM, Bram Adams wrote: > >> Hi, >> >> The MISS 2011 workshop below is highly related to this mailing list, since VMs are some of the best-known examples of systems software. Dealing with modularity in a VM is known to be critical, yet tough, so insights, advances or experiences from the trenches are extremely welcome at our workshop. Consider participating! > > FYI, unless they are specifically about LLVM, general conference postings are off-topic for this list. There are many dozens of conferences for which LLVM is potentially related - we don't want all of them posted to the list!OK, sorry for that. Kind regards, Bram Adams
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