3rd Workshop on Kernel Isolation, Safety and Verification

Event Dates

Oct 13, 2025 - Oct 13, 2025

Location

Seoul, Republic of Korea

Submission Deadline

Aug 08, 2025

CALL FOR PAPERS

KISV’25: 3rd Workshop on Kernel Isolation, Safety and Verification

https://kisv-workshop.github.io/

October 13, 2025 Seoul, Republic of Korea

Held in conjunction with SOSP’25

https://sigops.org/s/conferences/sosp/2025/

KISV aims to bring together researchers and developers from the field of

operating systems, programming languages, security, computer architecture and

verification with the goal to accelerate changes in the kernel through a

combination of isolation, programming language safety, and formal verification.

The objectives of the workshop are:

– Identify the challenges and opportunities in using hardware support for kernel

isolation, safe programming languages like Rust, and automated verification

tools like Dafny within the kernel environment.

– Understand advantages and limitatins of modern hardware isolation mechanisms,

such as ARM memory tagging extensions (MTE), ARM pointer authentication (PAC),

Intel memory protection keys (MPK), etc.

– Identify potential directions for the next generation of hardware isolation

mechanisms.

– Identify performance and ergonomic limitations of safe programming languages

like Rust for development of kernel subsystems.

– Discuss opportunities and limitations of modern autmated verification tools

and their applicability for modeling and verifying kernel subsystems.

– Discuss the practical aspects of isolating kernel subsystems and developing

parts of the kernel in a safe program- ming language.

– Identify security limitations of isolation and safety.

Suggested paper topics include, but are not restricted to:

– Low-overhead, fine-grained isolation techniques

– Static analysis and programming language techniques aimed at automation of

isolation

– Hardware support for hardware-based address space isoaltion and software fault

isolation (SFI)

– Security and performance analysis of modern hardware isolation primitives and

safe programming languages

– Implementation of kernel subsystems in safe programming languages

– Programming language support for the kernel

– Verification of kernel subsystems

– Formal techniques for modeling kernel subsystems and hardware interfaces

– Verification tools aimed at support of low-level systems code

We welcome submissions of original research papers, position papers, and

experience reports.

All papers must be written in English and should be formatted in the two-column

ACM article style, using the options “sigplan,anonymous,10pt”. The CCS Concepts,

Keywords, and ACM Reference Format sections are not required in submissions.

Submissions are double blind: author names and affiliations should not be

included.

Submissions must not be more than six (6) pages in length, using 10-point font.

The bibliography does not count towards the page limit. The page limit will be

strictly enforced. They will be reviewed by the workshop program committee and

designated external reviewers. Papers will be evaluated based on technical

quality, originality, relevance, and presentation. The submission website is:

https://kisv25.hotcrp.com.

By default, accepted papers will be published electronically in the ACM Digital

Library. The authors of accepted papers to be included in the ACM Digital

Library will be required to sign ACM copyright release forms. The publication of

a paper in the KISV workshop proceedings is not intended to replace future

conference publication.

IMPORTANT DATES

The workshop is collocated with SOSP’2025. Registration is handled via SOSP’2025

website.

– Paper submission deadline: August 8, 2025 (AoE)

– Notification of acceptance: August 29, 2025 (note, early SOSP registration is

September 1, 2025)

– Camera-ready papers due: September 13, 2025

– Workshop date: October 13, 2025

The workshop will be a highly interactive event with an agenda designed to

promote focused and lively discussions. The set of accepted papers will be made

available to registered attendees in advance of the workshop.

ORGANIZERS

– Anton Burtsev, University of Utah

– Pierre Olivier, University of Manchester

PROGRAM COMMITTEE

– Reto Achermann, University of British Columbia

– Kevin Boos, Futurewei, Theseus Systems

– Nathan Burow, MIT Lincoln Labs

– Amit Levy, Princeton University

– Shih-Wei Li, National Taiwan University

– Ruslan Nikolaev, Pennsylvania State University

– Leon Schuermann, Princeton University

– Anjo Vahldiek-Oberwagner, Intel Labs

– Dan Williams, Virginia Tech