6th Workshop on Reactive and Event-based Languages & Systems

Event Dates

Oct 21, 2019 - Oct 21, 2019

Location

Athens, Greece

Submission Deadline

Aug 16, 2019

CALL FOR PAPERS

6th Workshop on Reactive and Event-based Languages and Systems (REBLS 2019)

co-located with the SPLASH Conference

Athens, Greece, Sun 20 – Fri 25 October 2019

Website: https://2019.splashcon.org/home/rebls-2019

IMPORTANT DATES

Submission Deadline: 16 Aug 2019 (extended)

Author Notification: 7 Sep 2019

INTRODUCTION

Reactive programming and event-based programming are two closely related

programming styles that are becoming ever more important with the advent of

advanced HPC technology and the ever increasing requirement for our

applications to run on the web or on collaborating mobile devices. A number

of publications on middleware and language design — so-called reactive and

event-based languages and systems (REBLS) — have already seen the light,

but the field still raises several questions. For example, the interaction

with mainstream language concepts is poorly understood, implementation

technology is in its infancy and modularity mechanisms are almost totally

lacking. Moreover, large applications are still to be developed and

patterns and tools for developing reactive applications is an area that is

vastly unexplored. This workshop will gather researchers in reactive and

event-based languages and systems. The goal of the workshop is to exchange

new technical research results and to define better the field by coming up

with taxonomies and overviews of the existing work.

We welcome all submissions on reactive programming, aspect- and event-

oriented systems, including but not limited to:

* Language design, implementation, runtime systems, program analysis,

software metrics, patterns and benchmarks.

* Study of the paradigm: interaction of reactive and event-based

programming with existing language features such as object-oriented

programming, mutable state, concurrency.

* Advanced event systems, event quantification, event composition,

aspect-oriented programming for reactive applications.

* Functional-reactive programming, self-adjusting computation and

incremental computing.

* Synchronous languages, modeling real-time systems, safety-critical

reactive and embedded systems.

* Applications, case studies that show the efficacy of reactive

programming.

* Empirical studies that motivate further research in the field.

* Patterns and best-practices.

* Related fields, such as complex event processing, reactive data

structures, view maintenance, constraint-based languages, and their

integration with reactive programming. IDEs, Tools.

* Implementation technology, language runtimes, virtual machine support,

compilers.

* Modularity and abstraction mechanisms in large systems.

* Formal models for reactive and event-based programming.

The format of the workshop is that of a mini-conference. Participants can

present their work in slots of 30 mins with Q&A included. Because of the

declarative nature of reactive programs, it is often hard to understand

their semantics just by looking at the code. We therefore also encourage

authors to use their slots for presenting their work based on live demos.

SUBMISSIONS

REBLS encourages submissions of two types of papers:

* Research results: complete works that will be published in the ACM

digital library.

* In progress papers: papers that have the potential of triggering an

interesting discussion at the workshop or present new ideas that require

further systematic investigation. These papers will not be published in

the ACM digital library.

Format:

* Submissions should be formatted according to the instructions for the

authors below.

* Full papers can be up to 10 pages in length including references.

* In progress papers can be up to 6 pages.

* Authors are required to explicitly specify the type of paper in the

submission.

Instructions for the Authors:

Submission link: https://rebls19.hotcrp.com/

For fairness reasons, all submitted papers should conform to the formatting

instructions. Submissions that violate these instructions may be rejected

without review.

Papers must describe unpublished work that is not currently submitted for

publication elsewhere as described by SIGPLAN’s Republication Policy.

Submitters should also be aware of ACM’s Policy and Procedures on

Plagiarism.

Submissions should use the ACM SIGPLAN Conference acmart Format with

sigplan Subformat, 10 point font, using Biolinum as sans-serif font and

Libertine as serif font. All submissions should be in PDF format. If you

use

LaTeX or Word, please use the ACM SIGPLAN acmart Templates.

PROGRAM COMMITTEE

Tomoyuki Aotani, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan

Patrick Bahr, IT University of Copenhagen, Denmark

Engineer Bainomugisha, Makerere University, Uganda

Guillaume Baudart, IBM Research, United States

Aggelos Biboudis, EPFL, Switzerland

Tim Felgentreff, Oracle Labs, Potsdam, Germany

Tetsuo Kamina, Oita University, Japan *co-chair*

Louis Mandel, IBM Research, United States

Hidehiko Masuhara, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan *co-chair*

Yoshiki Ohshima, HARC / Y Combinator Research, Japan

Ivan Perez, NIA / NASA Formal Methods, United States

Noemi Rodriguez, PUC-Rio, Brazil

Steven Smyth, Kiel University, Germany

Mirko Viroli, University of Bologna, Italy

Harumi Watanabe, Tokai University, Japan

Takuo Watanabe, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan

YungYu Zhuang, National Central University, Taiwan

Ana Lúcia de Moura, PUC-Rio, Brazil

ORGANIZING COMMITTEE

Guido Salvaneschi, TU Darmstadt, Germany

Wolfgang De Meuter, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium

Patrick Eugster, Universita della Svizzera Italiana, Switzerland

Francisco Sant’Anna, Rio de Janeiro State University, Brazil

Lukasz Ziarek, SUNY Buffalo, United States