| |||||||||||||||
ALLIANCE 2016 : International Workshop on Applications of Language Engineering Techniques in Many-Core Compilers | |||||||||||||||
Link: http://www.cfaed.tu-dresden.de/workshop/alliance | |||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||
Call For Papers | |||||||||||||||
CALL FOR PAPERS
First International Workshop on "Applications of Language Engineering Techniques in Many-Core Compilers (ALLIANCE)", co-located with the 2016 "International Symposium on Code Generation and Optimization (CGO)" in Barcelona (Spain). http://www.cfaed.tu-dresden.de/workshop/alliance/ IMPORTANT DATES Paper submission deadline: 21st of December 2015 Author notification: 25th of January 2016 Camera ready version: 12th of February 2016 Workshop date: 13th of March 2016 All dates are Anywhere on Earth. SCOPE Declarative and high-level approaches in software language engineering have been developed and successfully applied for decades. This includes research and tools related to grammarware (i.e., grammar-based software), automatic graph and term-rewrite systems as well as model-based transformations and analyses. These techniques have proven to be valuable in particular for the development of high-level translators and language abstractions, typically in terms of domain specific languages (DSLs). However, these kinds of research tools are not widely used for general purpose programming languages, let alone in the design of compiler backends. One reason for this is that high-quality compiler implementations for languages like C, C++ or Java are provided by established hand-written compiler infrastructures like GCC, LLVM or ICC. And because languages and computer architectures have been relatively stable, maintenance costs of these infrastructures was reasonable. However, the emerging many-core architectures require new language abstractions for parallel programming and corresponding backend support, which increases maintenance costs of hand-written compiler infrastructures. Subject of the workshop therefore is the application of language engineering techniques for the implementation of many-core compilers. Examples for such applications are the development of DSLs acting as a source-code preprocessor injecting parallelization means by using grammarware; or transformation rules preparing intermediate representations for many-core execution by using rewriting techniques. This includes software application-specific many-core support by means of software language engineering techniques. The intention of the workshop is to foster communication and beneficial cooperation between language engineers, compiler developers and many-core programmers. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to, the following: - Transformation techniques and tools in compilers - Applications of graph and term-rewrite systems in many-core compiler backends - Model-driven approaches to compiler development - Component models for compilers - Efficient high-level approaches for program analyses - Case studies of language engineering for many cores - Language-engineering based applications for many cores - Approaches for parallelism extraction - Positive and negative experience reports SUBMISSION & PUBLICATION Our intension is to foster communication between researchers and practitioners in the topics addressed by ALLIANCE. Hence, research papers, reports on ongoing research, experience reports and tool papers are the favorite types of submissions. It is intended to publish the workshop proceedings as CEUR Workshop Proceedings (CEUR-WS.org), an open access journal (ISSN 1613-0073). Papers should follow the EPTCS style (http://style.eptcs.org/) and should not exceed a length of 8 pages. Submitted articles must not have been previously published or currently be submitted for publication elsewhere. Each paper will be reviewed thoroughly by members of the ALLIANCE program committee. Submission is made via Easychair: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=alliance-2016 CONTACT The workshop is organized by Sven Karol (TU Dresden, Germany) and Christoff Bürger (Lund University, Sweden). For any questions or concerns about the call for papers, please contact the workshop chairs at alliance2016@easychair.org. |
|