14th Workshop on Programming Languages and Operating Systems

CALL FOR PAPERS

14th Workshop on Programming Languages and Operating Systems

(PLOS 2026)

September 29, 2026

Prague, Czechia

https://plos-workshop.org/2026/

In conjunction with SOSP 2026

https://sigops.org/s/conferences/sosp/2026/

Paper submission deadline: May 29, 2026

Notification of acceptance: July 3, 2026

Final papers due: August 10, 2026

Workshop: September 29, 2026

Historically, operating system and programming language development went

hand-in-hand. Challenges in one area were often approached using

ideas/techniques developed in the other, and advances in one area enabled new

capabilities in the other. Today, although the systems community at large

retains an iron grip on C, modern programming language ideas continue to spark

innovations in OS design and construction. Conversely, the systems field

continues to provide a wealth of challenging problems and practical results that

should lead to advances in programming languages, software designs, and idioms.

This workshop will bring together researchers and developers from the

programming language and operating system domains to discuss recent work at the

intersection of these fields. It will be a platform for discussing new

visions, challenges, experiences, problems, and solutions arising from the

application of advanced programming and software engineering concepts to

operating systems construction, and vice versa.

Suggested paper topics include, but are not restricted to:

* domain-specific and type-safe languages for the OS;

* the design of language-specific unikernels;

* language-based approaches to crosscutting system

concerns, such as security and run-time performance;

* PL support for system verification, testing, and debugging;

* synthesis of OS code, including AI/LLM-based approaches;

* static/dynamic OS configuration and specialization;

* PL support for OS integration of modern hardware,

including NVM, HBM, FPGAs, accelerators, RDMA, and

new hardware isolation mechanisms;

* OS abstractions and techniques in language runtimes;

* verification and static analysis of OS components;

* critical evaluations of new programming language ideas

in support of OS construction; and

* experience reports on applying new language techniques

in commercial OS settings.

AGENDA

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

promote focused and lively discussions. Part of the workshop program will be

based on paper presentations. PLOS welcomes research, experience, and position

papers; papers describing industrial experience are particularly encouraged.

The set of accepted papers will be made available to registered attendees in

advance of the workshop. Participants should come to the workshop prepared

with questions and comments.

SUBMISSION GUIDELINES

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

ACM article style (https://www.acm.org/publications/proceedings-template), 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://plos26.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 PLOS workshop proceedings is not intended to replace future

conference publication.

Note that ACM has made a transition towards open access publications

(https://dl.acm.org/). Papers with a corresponding author from an ACM Open member

institution (https://libraries.acm.org/) will not be subject to Article Processing

Charges.

PROGRAM COMMITTEE

Nathan H. Burow, MIT Lincoln Lab

Anton Burtsev, University of Utah

Matteo Busi, Foscari University of Venice

Michael Engel, University of Bamberg

Frantisek Farka, Barkhausen Institute

Chris Hawblitzel, Microsoft Research

Michael Homer, Victoria University of Wellington

Sang-Hoon Kim, Ajou University

Michael Klemm, AMD

Stefan Lankes, RWTH Aachen University

Hui Lu, University of Texas at Arlington

Tom Spink, University of St Andrews

Xiaoguang Wang, University of Illinois Chicago

Carsten Weinhold, Barkhausen Institute (chair)

ORGANIZING COMMITTEE

Antonio Barbalace, The University of Edinburgh

Stefan Lankes, RWTH Aachen University

Pierre Olivier, The University of Manchester

Olaf Spinczyk, Osnabrück University