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CHEOPS 2022 : Workshop on Challenges and Opportunities of Efficient and Performant Storage Systems | |||||||||||||||||
Link: http://cheops-workshop.github.io | |||||||||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||||||||
CHEOPS will be hosted by EuroSys 2022, in the Beautiful city of Rennes, France
The second workshop on “Challenges and Opportunities of Efficient and Performant Storage Systems” (CHEOPS) is aimed at researchers, developers of scientific applications, engineers and everyone interested in the evolution of storage systems. As the developments of computing power, storage and network technologies continue to diverge, the bandwidth performance gap between them widens. This trend, combined with the ever growing data volumes and data-driven computing such as machine learning, results in I/O and storage limitations, impacting the scalability and efficiency of current and future computing systems. Some of these challenges are quantitative, such as scale to match exascale system requirements, or latency reduction of the software stack to efficiently integrate new generations of hardware like storage class memory (SCM). Some other issues are more subtle and arise with the increased complexity of the storage solutions, like new smarter and more potent data management tools, monitoring systems or interoperability between I/O components or data formats. The main objective of this workshop is to present state-of-the-art research, innovative ideas and experiences that focus on the design and implementation of storage systems in both academic and industrial worlds. Important Dates Abstract Submission: January 15, 2022 (Anywhere on Earth) Paper Submission: January 22, 2022 (Anywhere on Earth) Notification to Authors: March 5, 2022 Camera-Ready Deadline: March 13, 2022 Workshop Date: April 5, 2022 Submission Guidelines In order to guarantee the quality of the submissions, we have formed a globally distributed, diverse program committee. All submissions will be reviewed by the program committee. We will use HotCRP to manage the submissions. The reviewing process will be double blind with at least 3 reviews for each submission. An online discussion will determine which papers to accept. Only original and novel work not currently under review in other venues will be considered for publication. Submissions can either be full papers (6 pages) or short papers (4 pages). The page count includes the title, text, figures, appendices but excludes the references. They must be submitted electronically as PDF files formatted according to the submission rules of EuroSys. Accepted submissions will have to comply with the EuroSys proceedings format. One author of each accepted paper is required to register for the workshop and present the paper. Extended versions of selected papers will be considered for publication in the ACM SIGOPS Operating Systems Review journal. Topics of Interest Submissions may be more hands-on than research papers and we therefore explicitly encourage submissions in the early stages of research. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to: Operating system optimizations Kernel and user space file/storage systems Including virtual file systems Cloud, parallel and distributed file/storage systems Network challenges, such as scalability, QoS and partitionability Approaches for low-latency and heterogeneous storage systems Such as SCM and NVRAM combined with HDDs Metadata management Machine Learning and Artificial Intelligence Storage requirements of ML and AI applications Using ML and AI within storage systems (e.g., to replace heuristics) Hybrid solutions using file systems and databases Approaches using query and database interfaces, including key-value stores Optimized indexing techniques Data organizations to support online workflows Domain-specific data management solutions Application I/O characterization Storage systems modeling and analysis tools Data reduction techniques Lossless and lossy compression, deduplication UI/UX for storage systems Related experiences from users: what worked, what didn’t? Feedback and empirical evaluation of storage systems Agenda (to be finalized) Keynote: Dr. Darrell D. E. Long is a Distinguished Professor of Engineering at the University of California, Santa Cruz. He holds the Kumar Malavalli Endowed Chair of Storage Systems Research and is Director, emeritus, of the Storage Systems Research Center and Director of the NSF I/UCRC Center for Storage Systems Research. He has authored highly cited research papers on web caching, distributed file systems, power-aware hard disk management in mobile computing, and low-bandwidth multicast techniques for video on demand, among other topics. Organization Michael Kuhn - Otto von Guericke University Magdeburg (OVGU), Germany Kira Duwe - Otto von Guericke University Magdeburg (OVGU), Germany Jean-Thomas Acquaviva - DDN, France Konstantinos Chasapis - DDN, France Jalil Boukhobza - National Institute of Advanced Technologies of Brittany (ENSTA Bretagne), France Program Committee (To be finalized) Suren Byna - Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, USA Yuan-Hao Chang - Academia Sinica, Taiwan Stefano Cozzini - Area Science Park, Italy Philippe Deniel - French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission (CEA), France Andreas Dilger - Whamcloud, USA Anna Fuchs - Universität Hamburg, Germany Shadi Ibrahim - INRIA, France Jay Lofstead - Sandia National Laboratories (SNL), USA Jakob Lüttgau - GCLab, USA George Markomanolis - IT Center for Science Ltd. (CSC), Finland Ramon Nou - Barcelona Supercomputing Center (BSC), Spain Marcus Paradies - DLR, Germany |
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