This is the July 2004 Digest of SIGARCH Messages (sigarch-jul04): * Acceptance Rates and Program Committee Memberships for Selected Architecture Conferences http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~markhill/AcceptanceRates_and_PCs.xls Submitted by Mark D. Hill <markhill@cs.wisc.edu> * HotChips 16 Advance Program http://www.hotchips.org Submitted by Alan Smith <smith@eecs.berkeley.edu> * Call for Participation for ASPLOS XI http://www.eecg.toronto.edu/asplos2004 Submitted by Shubu Mukherjee <shubu.mukherjee@intel.com> * ISCA 2005 Call for Papers and Call for Tutorial/Workshop Proposals http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~isca2005/ Submitted by Craig Zilles <zilles@cs.uiuc.edu> * Call for Papers, The Wild and Crazy Ideas Session IV http://www.cs.utexas.edu/users/skeckler/wild04 Submitted by Steve Keckler <skeckler@cs.utexas.edu> * Call for Workshop and Tutorial Proposals for HPCA-11 http://www.hpcaconf.org/hpca11 Submitted by Jared Stark <jared.w.stark@intel.com> * JILP Call for Predictors (Branch Predictor Competition) website: http://www.jilp.org/cbp Submitted by Jared Stark <jared.w.stark@intel.com> * Second Value-Prediction and Value-Based Optimization Workshop Call for Papers http://www.csl.cornell.edu/VPW2/ Submitted by Martin Burtscher <burtscher@csl.cornell.edu> * Workshop on Workload Characterization Call for Papers http://www.ece.utexas.edu/~ljohn/wwc/ Submitted by Tao Li <taoli@ece.ufl.edu> * 2004 OASIS Workshop - Call for Papers http://www.research.ibm.com/actc/OASIS-2004/ Submitted by Jason Nieh <nieh@cs.columbia.edu> * Call for Participation - SCOPES 2004 Amsterdam, The Netherlands http://www.scopes2004.org/registration.html Submitted by Marianne Dalmolen <marianne@ace.nl> * New papers published online by Computer Architecture Letters http://www.comp-arch-letters.org/2004paps.html Submitted by Kevin Skadron <skadron@cs.virginia.edu> --Doug Burger SIGARCH Information Director infodir_SIGARCH@acm.org * Archive: http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~lists/archive/sigarch-members/maillist.html * Web pages: http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~arch/www/, http://www.acm.org/sigarch/ * To remove yourself from the SIGARCH mailing list: mail listserv@acm.org with message body: unsubscribe SIGARCH-MEMBERS ----------------------------------------------------------------- Doug Burger Office: 3.432 ACES Assistant Professor Phone: 512-471-9795 Department of Computer Sciences Assistant: 512-232-7460 The University of Texas at Austin Fax: 512-232-1413 1 University Station, #C0500 E-mail: dburger@cs.utexas.edu Austin, TX 78712-1188 USA www.cs.utexas.edu/users/dburger ----------------------------------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * Acceptance Rates and Program Committee Memberships for Selected Architecture Conferences Carrie Pritchard, Mark Hill, Guri Sohi, and David Wood http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~markhill/AcceptanceRates_and_PCs.xls When preparing tenure cases and forming program committees, it is often useful to know the acceptance rates (sheet 1) and program committee memberships (sheet 2) of ISCA, MICRO, ASPLOS, and HPCA. Since Carrie Pritchard has typed this information into an excel workbook, we thought we could save replicated effort by making it available on the web. The workbook can also be found off Mark Hill's home page: http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~markhill > Web Docs > Tools and Data. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * HotChips 16 Advance Program HotChips 16 Advance Program and Registration Information Sunday, August 22, 2004 8:30-12:00 Morning Tutorial Ultrawideband; Technology and Issues Roberto Aiello Staccato Communications Anuj Batra Texas Instruments Sandeep Kumar Adimos plus others To Be Announced This tutorial delves into the major issues surrounding the emerging UWB environment. We discuss some of the fundamental technology issues of this PHY in both the analog and digital domains. This topic is elaborated using real world designs to consider the key system level issues that manifest in UWB based designs. We follow the technology discussions with target market descriptions and explore the opportunities that UWB technologies enable. Our discussions are hosted by the drivers behind UWB, system architects and chip implementers. They describe and discuss the tradeoffs that they faced during their development of the UWB specs and the initial implementations. 12:00- 1:30 lunch 1:30- 5:00 Afternoon Tutorial Performance Comparison of State-of-the-Art Volatile and Non-Volatile Memory Devices J. Thomas Pawlowski Micron Technology Between vendor vested interests, presentation hype and datasheet specsmanship, it is often difficult to determine which memory devices are truly the most appropriate for an application in question. This is true for both volatile (DRAM, SRAM and pseudo-SRAM) and non-volatile (NOR and NAND FLASH) memory devices. This 3 hour tutorial will objectively examine the memories available today and in the reasonably near future, including SRAMs such as QDR II, DDR II and QDR III; DRAMs such as DDR2, GDDR3, FCRAM, RLDRAM and XDR, low-power volatile memory devices such as LPDRAM and PSRAM, and low-power non-volatile memory devices such as NOR and NAND FLASH. A brief description will be made concerning external operation of the major devices and where necessary some description of internal operation. The devices will be compared by performance (usable bandwidth under various operating scenarios, energy usage under these scenarios and signal count). Example operating scenarios include random operations, streaming requests with defined read/write ratios and resource predictability, streaming requests with defined read/write ratios but no predictable resource availability, etc. Performance comparisons are made using a cycle-accurate memory comparison software tool written by the author and empirically verified. Cost factors will be considered, including silicon area and test cost of competing architectures. A brief attempt will be made to assess market size and dynamics of the major devices where possible. Conclusions will be drawn for each major operating scenario concerning performance/cost ratios. Wherever possible, practical application examples will be illustrated to make the operating scenarios relevant to the system design tasks faced today and in the reasonably near future. As Senior Director of Architecture Development in Micron's NetCom Group, J. Thomas Pawlowski is responsible for Micron memory product definition for networking and communications applications including products built on DRAM and FLASH processes. During his tenure at Micron, Thomas has created or co-created the following DRAM and SRAM devices: reduced latency DRAM II (RLDRAM II); pipelined, burst, synchronous SRAM (used in Pentium® and PowerPC® systems); Zero Bus Turnaround. (ZBT®) SRAM (used in network and communication systems); Double Data Rate (DDR) SRAM; and Quad Data Rate (QDR) SRAM (versions I, II, and III). Thomas holds over 70 U.S. and international patents with more pending. Monday, August 23, 2004 8:30- 8:40 Welcome, Opening Remarks General Chair: Robert Lashley Program Co-Chairs: Bill Dally, Keith Diefendorff 8:40-10:10 Session 1: Mobile Processing Bulverde - An Applications Processor for Phone and PDA Applications Nigel Paver - Intel SC10: A Video Processor and Pixel Shading GPU For Handheld Devices Edward Hutchins - NVIDIA SH-Mobile3: Application Processor for 3G Cellular Phones on a Low-Power SoC Design Platform Hiroyuki Mizuno - Hitachi 10:10-10:30 Break 10:30-11:30 Keynote: Robert Denise (JPL) Mars Exploration Rovers -- a View from the Inside 11:30-12:30 Session 2: High-End Audio and Video Quartet: A Pipeline-Interleaved Multithreaded Audio DSP Carl Wakeland, Tom Savell - Creative Labs CS7050 High Performance H.264/AVC Hardware Video Decoder Core for Multimedia SOC's Jill Cush - Amphion Semiconductor 12:30- 1:30 Lunch 1:30- 2:30 Session 3: Wireless Communication IEEE802.11a Based Wireless AV Module with Digital AV Interface Takashi Wakutsu - Toshiba Single Chip CMOS Direct Conversion Transceivers for WWAN and WLAN Tajinder Manku - Sirific Wireless 2:30- 2:50 Break 2:50- 4:20 Session 4: Media and Graphics Processing The GeForce 6800 GPU John Montrym, Henry Moreton - NVIDIA New Media Architecture for Next Generation Application Processors Gerard Williams - ARM The MXP5800 Media Processor Lou Lippincott - Intel 4:20- 4:50 Break 4:50- 6:20 Session 5: Enabling Technology Simnow: An Extremely Fast and Accurate Platform and Processor Simulator Robert Bedichek - AMD Microchannel Liquid Cooling Solutions Mark Munch, Jim Hom, Girish Upadhya, Peng Zhou- Cooligy A New System-On-Chip Bus Architecture Optimized for 1GHz MIPS Processors John Kinsel, Anna Chiang - PMC-Sierra 6:20- 7:30 Dinner 7:30- 9:30 Panel: Outsourcing Engineering Development Offshore Moderator: John Nickolls NVIDIA Panelists: Vinod Dham NewPath Ventures Ron Hira IEEE-USA, Rochester Inst. Technology Carl Everett Accel Partners plus others To Be Announced Tuesday, August 24, 2004 8:40-10:10 Session 6: Potpourri MDGRAPE-3 chip: A 165-Gflops application-specific LSI for molecular dynamics simulations Makoto Taiji - RIKEN Accelerating Next-Generation Public-key Cryptography on General-Purpose CPUs Hans Eberle - Sun How SolarFlare Communications broke the 10Gbps on UTP barrier Ron Cates - SolarFlare 10:10-10:30 Break 10:30-11:30 Keynote: Steve Jurvetson (Draper Fisher Jurvetson) Nanotech and the Future of Moore's Law 11:30-12:30 Session 7: Embedded Systems A Fast Powertrain Microcontroller Erik Norden - Infineon The Mote Revolution: Low Power Wireless Sensor Network Devices Joseph Polastre - UC Berkeley 12:30- 1:30 Lunch 1:30- 2:30 Session 8: Low-Power Processors A 90nm embedded DRAM single chip LSI with a 3D graphics, H.264 codec engine, and a reconfigurable processor Masanobu Okabe - Sony A Low-Power Opteron Processor Mike Leary - AMD 2:30- 2:50 Break 2:50- 4:20 Session 9: Instruction Set Automation The End of ISA Design: Power Tools for Optimal Processor Generation David Goodwin - Tensilica Long Words and Wide Ports: Reinventing the Configurable Processor Dhanendra Jani, Gulbin Ezer, James Kim - Tensilica OptimoDEJ Krisztian Flautner - ARM 4:20- 4:50 Break 4:50- 6:20 Session 10: High-End Processors The Montecito Processor Cameron McNairy, Rohit Bhatia - Intel A 32-way Multithreaded SPARC Processor Poonacha Kongetira - Sun Intel Pentium 4 Processor on 90nm Technology Ronak Singhal - Intel 6:20- 6:30 Closing Remarks ========================== Registration for HOT Chips 16 is available through our secure web server at http://www.hotchips.org Payment can be made with all common credit cards. A receipt can be printed after the registration is completed and a confirmation email will be sent to the email address provided. Discounted early registration rates apply if payment is completed on or before August 1, 2004. Online registration will continue to be available until August 20, 2004 at the higher Late/Onsite registration rate. After August 20, 2004 all registrations must be done on-site at the conference. Refund requests must reach us on or before August 1, and are subject to a $25 processing fee. Students are required to show valid picture ID cards. Please remember to bring your IEEE or ACM membership number if you are registering on-site. For answers to questions about registration, contact us by email at: registration@hotchips.org For other information, contact us by email at: info@hotchips.org Registration Fees Advance (on/before 8/1) Late (after 8/1) Tutorials Conf. Both Tutorials Conf. Both only only only only Member $75 $240 $315 $150 $380 $530 Non-Member $90 $325 $415 $150 $475 $620 Student $75 $ 95 $170 $ 90 $120 $210 Conference registration includes: + Conference Attendance + One copy of presentation notes + Monday and Tuesday luncheons + Coffee breaks + Sunday afternoon wine and cheese reception + Monday HOT Chips evening dinner and Panel + Monday and Tuesday Parking Tutorial registration includes: + Attendance for both Morning and Afternoon tutorials + One copy of tutorial notes + Sunday Luncheon + Coffee breaks + Sunday afternoon wine and cheese reception + Sunday Parking Location: HOT Chips and HOT Interconnects will be held in Memorial Auditorium on the Stanford University campus, Palo Alto, California, approximately 24 miles from San Francisco airport and 15 miles from San Jose airport. Directions, Maps: >From San Francisco: take Highway 101 south. >From San Jose: take Highway 101 north. + Exit 101 at Embarcadero Rd. (west) and drive 3 miles until you enter Stanford campus on Galvez St. + Keep to the left on Galvez, then turn right at Campus Drive. Parking is between Galvez and Palm Dr. + Walk along Galvez to the end, then turn right for Memorial Auditorium, opposite Hoover Tower. More details can be found on the attendee page on our website at http://www.hotchips.org/hc16/attendee Mass transit information is available at http://www.transitinfo.org/ Maps of Stanford campus and surroundings are at http://www.stanford.edu/home/visitors/maps.html Weather: Mid-August is typically in the 80s (F)/ 30s (C) and sunny during the day. Nights are much cooler; a light jacket or sweater is appropriate. Housing: HOT Chips does not recommend any specific hotel, but refers attendees to the following Stanford University webpage for related information: http://www.stanford.edu/dept/hds/scs/individuals/hotelmotel.html Reservations well in advance are advised. On campus housing is available in student residences and can be arranged by contacting the Stanford Summer Conference Office at (650) 725-1429 or summerhousing@conferences.stanford.edu or http://www.stanford.edu/dept/hds/scs/individuals ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * Call for Participation for ASPLOS XI CALL FOR PARTICIPATION Eleventh International Conference on Architectural Support for Programming Languages and Operating Systems Park Plaza, Boston, Massachusetts, October 9 through 13, 2004 http://www.eecg.toronto.edu/asplos2004 The ASPLOS XI organizing committee is pleased to announce the ASPLOS XI conference to be held in Boston, MA from Oct. 9 to Oct. 13, 2004. ASPLOS is a multi-disciplinary conference that cultivates cross-fertilizing research in areas of hardware, architecture, compilers, operating systems, networking, and applications. A preliminary program is available at the ASPLOS XI website (given above). The main program also includes a Wild and Crazy Ideas session. In addition to the main program, this year's ASPLOS offers four workshops and eight tutorials on a variety of focus areas. Keynote Speech: Building Dependable Software James R. Larus Senior Researcher and Assistant Director Microsoft Research * Wild/Crazy Ideas Session Workshops ------------------------------------------------------------------------ --- * WASSA: Workshop on Architectural Support for Security and Anti-Virus * 1st Workshop on Building Block Engine Architectures for COmputers and Networks * Second Value-Prediction and Value-Based Optimization Workshop * Operating System and Architectural Support for the on demand IT InfraStructure Tutorials ------------------------------------------------------------------------ * Architectures, Languages, and Compilers for the Streaming Domain * Using the Click Modular Router for Routing, Measurement, Protocols, and the Classroom * Designing Instrumentation Tools With PIN * Building Experimental Networks Using Platform FPGA's * Using The Liberty Simulation Environment with emphasis on hardware validated OS-level simulation * Tutorial on Remote Direct Memory Access (RDMA) over IP transports * Program locality models and their use in memory optimization * Computing In The Presence of Soft Errors ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * ISCA 2005 Call for Papers and Call for Tutorial/Workshop Proposals ISCA 2005 Call for Papers and Call for Tutorial/Workshop Proposals ISCA 2005 Call for Papers 32nd Annual International Symposium on Computer Architecture Madison, Wisconsin (USA) June 4-8, 2005 http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~isca2005/ IMPORTANT DEADLINES: Abstract Deadline: November 11, 2004 Full Paper Deadline: November 18, 2004 Workshops/Tutorials: November 24, 2004 Papers are solicited for the 32nd Annual International Symposium on Computer Architecture. Papers are being sought on all aspects of computer architecture, including (but not limited to): * Processor architectures * Memory hierarchy subsystems * Multiprocessors and multicomputers * Storage and interconnect subsystems * Application-specific, reconfigurable, and embedded architectures * Power-efficient architectures * Dependable architectures * Impact of technology on architecture * Impact of application characteristics on architecture * Architectures for emerging technologies and applications * Performance/power evaluation and measurement of real systems Please refer to the URL below for a complete call for papers: http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~isca2005/ ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * Call for Papers, The Wild and Crazy Ideas Session IV The Wild and Crazy Ideas Session IV Held at ASPLOS XI in Boston, MA Tuesday, October 12, 2004 In the successful tradition of the madness of past Wild and Crazy Ideas (WACI) Sessions, ASPLOS again seeks to provide a forum for far-out, radical, and unconventional ideas. In contrast to the papers in the main ASPLOS program, submissions to the WACI session will be held to a much higher standard of novelty, and a lower standard of scientific proof. Accepted wild and crazy submissions will excel at highlighting interesting problems and novel approaches, but may raise more questions than they answer. They will supply fresh insights, unveil surprising ideas, and identify hidden trends. The underlying goal is to free presenters from the yoke of quantitative analysis, thus making it easier explore revolutionary (as opposed to incremental) research. Such revolutionary work should inspire the audience, rather than recommend a concrete design or solution. The format of the session is anticipated to be a series of 8-minute talks, plus time for questions. Topics of submission are expected to be consistent with the mission of ASPLOS ---pretty much anything in architecture, but with a special emphasis on the interplay between architecture and programming languages and operating systems. We explicitly decline to list specific topic areas. Again, we are looking for new ideas, insights, concepts and problem formulations, not for definitive, polished answers to long-standing problems. While simple "numbers" are ok, speakers will have to convince the audience (and us) with insights that their forward- looking idea is good. Talks will be chosen from one-page abstracts submitted as plain text or pdf file. Abstracts Due: Wednesday, August 4, 6pm CDT (no extensions) Accept/reject: Friday, August 13 Submit via email: wildandcrazy@cs.utexas.edu For more information: www.cs.utexas.edu/users/skeckler/wild04 WACI Asylum Superintendent: Steve Keckler skeckler@cs.utexas.edu Wild and Crazy Henchmen: Steve Blackburn Steve.Blackburn@anu.edu.au Emmett Witchel witchel@cs.utexas.edu ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * Call for Workshop and Tutorial Proposals for HPCA-11 ******************************************************** *** HPCA-11 CALL FOR WORKSHOP AND TUTORIAL PROPOSALS *** ******************************************************** 11th International Symposium on High-Performance Computer Architecture Palace Hotel; San Francisco; February 12-16, 2005 http://www.hpcaconf.org/hpca11 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- WORKSHOP AND TUTORIAL PROPOSAL DEADLINE: AUGUST 13, 2004 SEND PROPOSALS TO JARED STARK (jared.w.stark@intel.com) We appreciate proposals for workshops and tutorials related to computer architecture. See previous HPCA conferences (http://www.hpcaconf.org) for example workshops and tutorials. Please submit your proposal of no more than a couple pages to Jared Stark (jared.w.stark@intel.com) on or before August 13, 2004. For workshops, please include in your proposal: * title of the workshop * organizers and their affiliations * sample call for papers, including the workshop's main topics * expected duration of the workshop; i.e., 1/2 day, full day, or 2 days * if the workshop was previously held, the number of published papers and attendees at the last workshop For tutorials, include: * title of the tutorial * organizers, presenters, and their affiliations * abstract of the tutorial * a list of topics to be covered and some of their related bibliography * expected duration of the tutorial; i.e., 1/2 day, full day, or 2 days * if the tutorial was previously held, the location (i.e., which conference), date, and number of attendees at the last tutorial Sponsored by the IEEE Computer Society TC on Computer Architecture ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * JILP Call for Predictors (Branch Predictor Competition) The Journal of Instruction-Level Parallelism Championship Branch Prediction website: http://www.jilp.org/cbp *************************** *** CALL FOR PREDICTORS *** *************************** The 1st JILP Championship Branch Prediction Competition (CBP-1) Sponsored by: Intel MRL and IEEE TC-uARCH in conjunction with: MICRO-37 (http://www.microarch.org/micro37/) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Championship Branch Prediction (CBP) is a branch predictor competition. Contestants will be given a fixed storage budget to implement their best branch prediction algorithms on a common evaluation framework distributed by the CBP steering committee. OBJECTIVE --------- The goal of the Championship Branch Prediction competition is to evaluate and compare branch prediction algorithms in a common framework. The competition's simple and transparent evaluation process enables dissemination of results and techniques to the larger computer design community and allows independent verification of the competition's results. The performance and cost metrics are selected to be as simple and quantitative as possible Predictors must be implemented within a fixed storage budget, and will be judged on performance. Finalists will be selected in the first round of the competition on the basis of predictor performance on a distributed benchmark set. In the second round of the competition a second benchmark set (not distributed) will be used to select the champion from the finalists. PRIZES ------ Selected finalists (including the champion) will be published in a special issue of the Journal of Instruction-Level Parallelism (JILP). All finalists' source code, predictor writeups, and performance results will be made publicly available through the CBP website. The champion will receive a trophy (details not yet determined). SUBMISSION REQUIREMENTS ----------------------- See http://www.jilp.org/cbp/rules.htm for additional information and requirements. Submissions should be sent through the CBP website, http://www.jilp.org/cbp, and must include the following: * Abstract: which must be submitted before Friday, October 15, 2004, 9pm PST (one week before the predictor submission deadline). * Writeup: of the prediction algorithm including references to published work directly relevant to the implemented algorithm. * Performance results: a table giving performance for the distributed trace list. * Branch predictor code: the driver code containing the predictor. To prevent minor variations of a predictor, no person may be part of more than one submission. The final submission must be submitted in its entirety before Friday October 22, 2004, 9pm PST. No extensions will be granted. Submission issues should be directed to the steering committee at cbp@lists.ncsu.edu. IMPORTANT DATES --------------- Competition formally announced at ISCA: June 19, 2004 Evaluation framework available: July 29, 2004 Abstract submission: October 15, 2004, (9pm Pacific Time, USA) Predictor submission: October 22, 2004, (9pm Pacific Time, USA) Finalists selected/notified: November 5, 2004 Champion selected from finalists at MICRO: December 5, 2004 (TENTATIVE) STEERING COMMITTEE ------------------ Dan Connors Univ. of Colorado Tom Conte North Carolina State Univ. Konrad Lai Intel MRL Yale Patt Univ. of Texas at Austin Jim Smith Univ. of Wisconsin Jared Stark Intel MRL Mateo Valero Univ. Politecnica Catalunya Chris Wilkerson Intel MRL SELECTION COMMITTEE ------------------- Dan Connors Univ. of Colorado Tom Conte North Carolina State Univ. Phil Emma IBM Research Konrad Lai Intel MRL Scott McFarling Microsoft Chuck Moore AMD Yale Patt Univ. of Texas at Austin Jim Smith Univ. of Wisconsin Jared Stark Intel MRL Mateo Valero Univ. Politecnica Catalunya Chris Wilkerson Intel MRL ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * Second Value-Prediction and Value-Based Optimization Workshop Call for Papers Call for Papers Second Value-Prediction and Value-Based Optimization Workshop http://www.csl.cornell.edu/VPW2/ to be held in conjunction with the Eleventh International Conference on Architectural Support for Programming Languages and Operating Systems Boston, Massachusetts October 9 or 10, 2004 Theme The Second Value-Prediction and Value-Based Optimization Workshop (VPW2) encompasses all hardware and software speculation mechanisms that make or use multi-bit predictions as well as value profiling and other value-based optimization techniques. Extended versions of selected papers will be invited for publication in the Journal of Instruction-Level Parallelism. Topics - value predictors - confidence estimators - value profiling - value-based compiler optimizations - value-based power reduction - misprediction recovery schemes - latency predictors - dependency predictors - coherency predictors - address predictors (prefetchers) - branch target predictors - etc. Important Dates - Submission: July 29 (5pm EDT) - Notification: September 2 - Final papers: September 23 Submission Guidelines Submissions must use ten-point or larger fonts, one-inch margins, US letter size format, and are not to exceed six pages (including everything). Papers should be submitted in PDF with all fonts embedded. Please email submissions and questions to vpw2@csl.cornell.edu. Organizers - Martin Burtscher (Cornell University) - Amer Diwan (University of Colorado at Boulder) Program Committee - Martin Burtscher (Cornell University) - Amer Diwan (University of Colorado at Boulder) - Lizy K. John (The University of Texas at Austin) - David R. Kaeli (Northeastern University) - Gabriel H. Loh (Intel / Georgia Institute of Technology) - Mary Lou Soffa (University of Pittsburgh) - Dean M. Tullsen (University of California, San Diego) - Benjamin G. Zorn (Microsoft) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * Workshop on Workload Characterization Call for Papers http://www.ece.utexas.edu/~ljohn/wwc/ Submitted by Tao Li <taoli@ece.ufl.edu> ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * 2004 OASIS Workshop - Call for Papers ******************************************** * 2004 OASIS Workshop - Call for Papers * ******************************************** 1st Workshop on Operating System and Architectural Support for the on demand IT InfraStructure http://www.research.ibm.com/actc/OASIS-2004/ Oct 9, 2004 Held along with ASPLOS-XI Park Plaza, Boston, Massachusetts Oct 9-13, 2004 Overview of the Workshop: The demand on today's IT infrastructures is rapidly changing. Fueled by an ever-increasing data-centric society that desires information anywhere, anytime and anyhow, workloads have shifted from predominantly backdoor batch processing and static information serving to dynamic transactions and web services. Such changed workloads are often difficult to predict and hence require flexibility in the IT itself to be able to react on demand and improve operation. With the increased flexibility arises a new level of complexity that needs to be addressed. Furthermore, adequate support for this data-centric world is requiring the system infrastructure to provide high level of resilience and differentiated levels of robustness and availability for various kinds of IT services. This workshop focuses on operating system and architecture support to facility such on demand infrastructures. The OASIS-1 workshop will be held along with ASPLOS XI and is intended to bring together researchers from academia and industry for an engaging discussion on architecture and operating system support in the emerging field of on demand infrastructures. Topics of Interest (not limited to): * Hardware and Operating System Support for Server Virtualization. * Flexible Storage / Network integration with Server * Application Management * Flexible techniques for Security and robustness of on-demand systems * Resource management for on-demand computing * Operating system support for scalable computing services * Application experiences with deployed on-demand IT infrastructures Paper Submission Information: We welcome submissions in the form of short papers (6 double-column pages) or extended abstracts (5 pages). Please e-mail your submissions (preferably in pdf) to frankeh@us.ibm.com and nieh@cs.columbia.edu . Submissions are due by August 7th. Workshop Chairs: Hubertus Franke IBM Research frankeh@us.ibm.com Jason Nieh Columbia University nieh@cs.columbia.edu Organizing / Program Committee: Andrew Chien UC San Diego Graeme Dixon IBM Research Joefon Jann IBM Research Scott Kaplan Amherst College Angelos Keromytis Columbia University Beng-Hong Lim VMware Shailabh Nagar IBM Research Klaus Schauser Citrix Karsten Schwan Georgia Tech Uwe Schwiegelshohn University of Dortmund Important Dates: Paper Submission August 7, 2004 Author Notification September 1, 2004 Final Paper Submission September 14, 2004 For More Information: Please send mail to frankeh@us.ibm.com or nieh@cs.columbia.edu ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * Call for Participation - SCOPES 2004 Amsterdam, The Netherlands ON-LINE REGISTRATION IS OPEN FOR SCOPES 2004 http://www.scopes2004.org/registration.html !!!!!!!!!!!!!REGISTER NOW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Deadline for early registration: August 1st, 2004 ================================================= SCOPES is the workshop for researchers, developers, educators and practitioners to exchange their knowledge on software for embedded systems. SCOPES will be held in Amsterdam, The Netherlands, on September 2nd and 3rd, 2004. This year's SCOPES workshop features: - Keynote address by Mike Uhler (CTO, MIPS): - The new economics of embedded systems - 17 presentations (selected from around 50 excellent submissions) on: - Application specific (co)design - System & application synthesis - Data flow analysis - Data partioning - Task scheduling - Code generation - 2 Panel sessions on: - Future of Embedded Systems Programming - Academia and Industry, Bridging the Gap - Best paper award - 2 Social events The proceedings will be published by Springer in the Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) series ALL RECENT INFO AND ON-LINE REGISTRATION can be found at: http://www.scopes2004.org ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * New papers published online by Computer Architecture Letters Computer Architecture Letters announces our most recent paper, which is publicly available at http://www.comp-arch-letters.org/2004paps.html. We continue to seek new submissions and remain committed to fast and accurate review. Our mean time to decision remains one month, with an acceptance rate of approximately 21%. For more information on submission, please see http://www.comp-arch-letters.org M. E. Gomez, J. Duato, J. Flich, P. Lopez, A. Robles, N. A. Nordbotten, O. Lysne, T. Skeie. "An Efficient Fault-Tolerant Routing Methodology for Meshes and Tori." Volume 3, May. 2004. Abstract: In this paper we present a methodology to design fault-tolerant routing algorithms for regular direct interconnection networks. It supports fully adaptive routing, does not degrade performance in the absence of faults, and supports a reasonably large number of faults without significantly degrading performance. The methodology is mainly based on the selection of an intermediate node (if needed) for each source-destination pair. Packets are adaptively routed to the intermediate node and, at this node, without being ejected, they are adaptively forwarded to their destinations. In order to allow deadlock-free minimal adaptive routing, the methodology requires only one additional virtual channel (for a total of three), even for tori. Evaluation results for a 4x4x4 torus network show that the methodology is 5-fault tolerant. Indeed, for up to 14 link failures, the percentage of fault combinations supported is higher than 99.96%. Additionally, network throughput degrades by less than 10% when injecting three random link faults without disabling any node. In contrast, a mechanism similar to the one proposed in the BlueGene/L, that disables some network planes, would strongly degrade network throughput by 79%. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------------