[gclist] CFP: 2nd Workshop on Hardware Support for Objects and Microarchitectures for Java
Mario Wolczko
mario@Eng.Sun.COM
Thu, 27 Apr 2000 18:04:10 -0700 (PDT)
Second Annual Workshop on Hardware Support for Objects
and Microarchitectures for Java
In conjunction with ICCD 2000
http://www.ece.utexas.edu/~chase/ICCD
Austin, Texas
September 17, 2000
Most modern programming languages and techniques include
object-oriented methods. However, mainstream computer architectures
have not acknowledged the presence of objects. With the widespread
use of object-oriented programming languages and techniques, it is
becoming important for computer architects to acknowledge the
existence of these methods and their impacts on execution (including
high object allocation rates, the impact of garbage collection,
dynamic binding of calls to methods, and dynamic assembly of programs
at run time from components obtained from disparate sources).
Java is an exciting new object-oriented technology. Hardware for
supporting objects and other features of Java such as multithreading,
dynamic linking and loading is the focus of this workshop. The impact
of Java's features on micro-architectural resources and issues in the
design of Java-specific architectures are interesting topics that
require immediate attention of the research community.
The purpose of this workshop is to draw together researchers and
practitioners concerned with hardware support for objects and Java
implementations for a stimulating exchange of views.
Topics of interest include (but are not limited to):
- Microarchitectural features for object-oriented systems, especially
their quantitative evaluation
- Measurements of hardware-level behavior of object-oriented systems
- Design of Java Processors: resource, power and performance constraints
- Tuning Java compilers and applications to efficiently utilize hardware
resources
- Memory hierarchy for supporting objects
- Instruction set designs and enhancements to support objects and
Java execution.
The format of the workshop will include presentations of selected
papers and plenty of time for discussion.
Detailed submission guidelines
Talks will be accepted on the basis of a position paper relevant to
the theme of the workshop. Papers should be at most 5 pages in
length. The paper should be submitted in PDF format by email to the
workshop co-chair: mario.wolczko@sun.com. Please include the following
information in plain text with the submission:
- author's Name(s),
- postal address,
- phone and FAX numbers,
- email address,
- title,
- 5 keywords and
- abstract.
Hard copy (postal) submissions will not be accepted.
Please email submissions by July 12. You should receive an
acknowledgement of your submission by the following week. Authors
will be notified of acceptance or rejection by Aug 9 and the final
papers are due by August 23.
All submissions will be refereed, and workshop attendees will receive
copies of all accepted papers.
Important Dates:
July 12 Electronic submission due
Aug 9: Notification of authors
Aug 23: Final version of papers due
Organizers
Workshop Co-Chairs:
Vijaykrishnan Narayanan, Penn State Univ. vijay@cse.psu.edu
Mario Wolczko, Sun Microsystems Inc. mario.wolczko@sun.com
Program Committee
Manish Gupta, IBM mgupta@us.ibm.com
Timothy Heil, Univ. of Wisconsin heilt@ece.utexas.edu
Lizy John, Univ. of Texas at Austin ljohn@ece.utexas.edu
Mahmut Kandemir, Penn State Univ. kandemir@cse.psu.edu
Vijaykrishnan Narayanan, Penn State Univ. vijay@cse.psu.edu
Kunle Olukotun, Stanford Univ. kunle@ogun.stanford.edu
Ramesh Radhakrishnan, Univ of Texas at Austin radhakri@ece.utexas.edu
James Smith, Univ. of Wisconsin jes@ece.wisc.edu
Mario Wolczko, Sun Microsystems Inc. mario.wolczko@sun.com
This page is available at
http://www.sun.com/labs/people/mario/iccd2000whso/call.html.