Deadline January 15: Architecture, Languages, Compilation and Hardware support for Emerging ManYcore systems
News:
[1] Submission deadline extended to January 15.
[2] 27 thematic workshops are registered http://www.iccs-meeting.org/iccs2015/registered-workshops.
[3] In addition to the Full Paper submission, we offer a Presentation Only option (a short abstract is published in a book of abstracts, but not in proceedings). You may also go for a Poster presentation, with or without a full paper.
ALCHEMY Workshop 2015
Architecture, Languages, Compilation and Hardware support for Emerging ManYcore systems
Held in conjunction with the International Conference on Computational Science (ICCS 2015)
Reykjavik, Iceland, 1-3 June 2015
http://sites.google.com/site/alchemyworkshop
Important dates are synchronized with the ICCS meeting
The International Conference on Computational Science is an annual conference that brings together researchers and scientists from mathematics and computer science as basic computing disciplines, researchers from various application areas who are pioneering computational methods in sciences such as physics, chemistry, life sciences, and engineering, as well as in arts and humanitarian fields, to discuss problems and solutions in the area, to identify new issues, and to shape future directions for research.
Call for Papers
Massively parallel processors have entered high performance computing architectures, as well as embedded systems. In June 2014, the TOP500 number one system (Tianhe-2) features the 57-core Intel Xeon Phi processor. The increase of the number of cores on a chip is expected to rise in the next years, as shown by the ITRS trends: other examples include the Kalray MPPA 256-core chip, the 63-core Tilera GX processor and even the crowd-funded 64-core Parallella Epiphany chip. In this context, developers of parallel applications, including heavy simulations and scientific calculations will undoubtedly have to cope with many-core processors at the early design steps.
In the two past sessions of the Alchemy workshop, held together with the ICCS meeting, we have presented significant contributions on the design of many-core processors, both in the hardware and the software programming environment sides, as well as some industrial-grade application case studies. In this 2015 session, we seek academic and industrial works that contribute to the design and the programmability of many-core processors.
Topics include, but are not limited to:
- Programming models and languages for many-cores
- Compilers for programming languages
- Runtime generation for parallel programming on manycores
- Architecture support for massive parallelism management
- Enhanced communications for CMP/manycores
- Shared memory, data consistency models and protocols
- New operating systems, or dedicated OS
- Security, crypto systems for manycores
- User feedback on existing manycore architectures (experiments with Adapteva Epiphany, Intel Phi, Kalray MPPA, ST STHorm, Tilera Gx, TSAR..etc)
Submission
This year, there will be two formats for the presentation at the workshop. The usual full-length paper is 10 pages according to the ICCS format, and the short-paper format well fitted for works in progress, with a maximum of 2 pages. The accepted papers for full-length paper will be published alongside with the ICCS proceedings in Procedia Computer Science, whereas the short-papers will be presentation and poster only at the conference (with proceedings and presentations available from the workshop website).
The manuscripts of up to 10 pages, written in English and formatted according to the EasyChair templates, should be submitted electronically.
Templates are available for download in the Easychair right-hand-side menu in a "New submission" mode.
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=iccs20150
Important Dates
- When - Jun 1, 2015 - Jun 3, 2015
- Where - Reykjavik, Iceland
- Submission Deadline - Jan 15, 2015
- Notification Due - Feb 15, 2015
- Final Version Due - Mar 15, 2015
Program Committee
(to be extended)
Akram BEN AHMED, University of Aizu, Fukushima, Japan Jeronimo CASTRILLON, CFAED / TU Dresden, Germany Camille COTI, Universite de Paris-Nord, France Loic CUDENNEC, CEA, LIST, France Stephan DIESTELHORST, ARM Ltd; Cambridge, UK Aleksandar DRAGOJEVIC, Microsoft Research Cambridge, UK Daniel ETIEMBLE, Universite de Paris-Sud, France Bernard GOOSSENS, Universite de Perpignan, France Vincent GRAMOLI, NICTA / University of Sydney, Australia Jorn W. JANNECK, Lund University, Sweden Vianney LAPOTRE, Universite de Bretagne-Sud, France Eric LENORMAND, Thales TRT, France Stephane LOUISE, CEA, LIST, France Vania MARANGOZOVA-MARTIN, Universite Joseph-Fourier Grenoble, France Marco MATTAVELLI, Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne (EPFL), Switzerland Eric PETIT, Universite de Versailles Saint Quentin-en-Yvelines, France Erwan PIRIOU, CEA, LIST, France Antoniu POP, University of Manchester, UK Mickael RAULET, IETR / INSA de Rennes, France Jason RIEDY, Georgia Institute of Technology, USA Etienne RIVIERE, Universite de Neuchatel, Switzerland Thomas ROPARS, Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne (EPFL), Switzerland Martha JOHANNA SEPULVEDA, INRIA, Ecole Centrale de Lyon, France Osamu TATEBE, AIST / University of Tsukuba, Japan