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SCAFT 2011 : First Workshop on software-controlled, adaptive fault-tolerance in microprocessors | |||||||||||||||
Link: http://scaft.in.tum.de | |||||||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||||||
First Workshop on software-controlled, adaptive fault-tolerance in
microprocessors (SCAFT 2011) http://scaft.in.tum.de 22 February 2011, Lake Como, Italy Held in conjunction with ARCS 2011 - Architecture of Computing Systems http://conferences.dei.polimi.it/arcs2011 IMPORTANT DATES Extended Abstracts due: 17 December 2010 Author notification: 8 January 2011 SCAFT workshop date: 22 February 2011 OVERVIEW Future microprocessors will have more transistors, smaller feature sizes, a higher complexity, lower voltages, and higher clock frequencies as today. All these factors will increase the probability of design-, manufacturing-, and operational faults. Therefore, in order to obtain a satisfying production yield, and in order to fulfill the dependability requirements of modern applications, fault-tolerance techniques within digital designs will be of crucial importance. However, simple solutions like triple modular redundancy (TMR), as they are used in today's safety-critical application areas, are certainly to expensive for general purpose processors in data centers and embedded computing. This workshops therefore addresses light-weight fault tolerance techniques, which are implemented in hardware, but might be controlled from higher software layers. In such a way, the application or operating system can decide which degree of fault-tolerance is required. Thus, the software controls both the increase in dependability, but also the performance overhead involved. In particular, the workshop adresses the following topics: * techniques against different types of faults, such as + design, manufacturing, and operational faults + permanent, intermittent, and transient faults + faults affecting the control unit, arithmetic unit, and memory unit * light-weight fault masking * techniques to detect errors, like error detecting codes and checker circuits * fault diagnosis and root-cause analysis, online failure prediction * on-chip backward recovery techniques (e.g. pipeline flush and re-execution) * forward recovery techniques (notification of higher layers) * fault-tolerance techniques aware of the environment (temperature, vibration, age ...) * software-controlled fault-tolerance * error detection on the electrical layer * fault-tolerant caches * re-using unused parallel resources for fault-tolerance * fault-tolerance in multi- and manycore processors * fault-tolerance in systems on a chip * evaluation of fault-tolerant architectures, both by measurement and model-based approaches * fault-injection techniques * finding a tradeoff between dependability, performance, and power consumption SUBMISSION DETAILS Evaluation is based on a four page extended abstract which has to be submitted until 17 December 2010 (strict deadline). Accepted abstracts will appear in the workshop proceedings published by the VDE-Verlag. The deadline for the full papers is 15 April 2011. There will be a second round of reviewing for the full papers. Full papers will appear in a special issue of "Microprocessors and Microsystems", published by Elesevier: http://www.elsevier.com/wps/find/journaldescription.cws_home/525449/description Further details on the submission process, including formatting instructions, can be found on the workshop's webpage at http://scaft.in.tum.de ORGANIZERS C. Trinitis, M. Walter, J. Weidendorfer Lehrstuhl für Rechnertechnik und Rechnerorganisation (Informatik 10) Technische Universität München, Germany TECHNICAL PROGRAM COMMITTEE Fevzi Belli Universität Paderborn, Germany Mladen Berekovic Technische Universität Braunschweig, Germany Greg Bronevetsky Lawrence Livermore National Lab, USA Rainer Buchty Universität Karlsruhe, Eberhard-Karls-Universität Tübingen, Germany Masashi Imai University of Tokyo, Japan Klaus Echtle Universität Duisburg-Essen, Germany Bernhard Fechner Fernuniversität Hagen, Germany Elena Gramatova Slovenská technická univerzita v Bratislave, Slovakia Joshua Hursey Oak Ridge National Laboratory, USA Jörg Keller Fernuniversität Hagen, Germany Vyacheslav Kharchenko National Aerospace University, Ukraine Erik Mähle Universität zu Lübeck, Germany Miroslaw Malek Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Germany Dimitris Nikolos University of Patras, Greece Toshi Sato Fukuoka University, Japan Martin Schulz Lawrence Livermore National Lab, USA Peter Sobe Hochschule für Technik und Wirtschaft Dresden, Germany Janusz Sosnowski Politechnika Warszawska, Poland Carsten Trinitis Technische Universität München, Germany University of Bedfordshire, UK Peter Tröger Hasso-Plattner-Institut Potsdam, Germany Max Walter Technische Universität München, Germany Josef Weidendorfer Technische Universität München, Germany Hee Yong Youn Sungkyunkwan University, Korea Tomohiro Yoneda National Institute of Informatics, Japan CONTACT M. Walter walterm@in.tum.de |
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