11th International Workshop on Serverless Computing (WoSC11)

Event Dates

Dec 15, 2025 - Dec 19, 2025

Location

Vanderbilt University Nashville, TN, US

Submission Deadline

Oct 12, 2025

11th International Workshop on Serverless Computing (WoSC11) 2025

Part of [1]ACM/IFIP Middleware 2025.

WoSC11 will be hybrid this year with both virtual and on-location

formats. Please note that while hybrid formats will be supported for

workshops, the Middleware 2025 steering committee wants the main

conference to be held in in-person only. Prospective attendees of the

workshop should keep this in mind if they plan to attend both WoSC11

and Middleware 2025.

Over the last eleven years, Serverless Computing (Serverless) has

gained an enthusiastic following in industry as a compelling paradigm

for the deployment of cloud applications, and is enabled by the recent

shift of enterprise application architectures to containers and

micro-services. Many of the major cloud vendors have released

serverless platforms, including Amazon Lambda, Google Cloud Functions,

Microsoft Azure Functions, IBM Cloud Functions. Open source projects

are gaining popularity in providing serverless computing as a service.

Recently, Kubernetes gained popularity in enterprise and academia.

Several open source projects, such as OpenFaaS and Knative, aim to

provide developers with a serverless experience on top of Kubernetes by

hiding low-level details. Auto-scalable multi-tenant Kubernetes

deployments like Google Cloud Run or IBM Code Engine also overcome

previous limitations of Serverless Functions like duration, networking,

and higher granularity (more vCPUs).

Serverless on the cloud is a mature research area with many conferences

accepting papers on this topic. In the spirit of having this workshop

serve as a venue for future and exploratory research directions, we

will be evolving the workshop to include hybrid cloud environments, as

well as edge and IoT devices. These next-gen computing architectures

are becoming more common but have little support from serverless

platforms and bring new challenges to old concerns such as resource

optimization, scaling, cost, monitoring, and ease of use. The

serverless experience becomes an essential topic for emerging topics

such as DevOps and [2]Platform Engineering in industry and will be

critical to the success of next-gen computing.

Building on the recent advances in generative AI, including Large

Language Models (LLMs) and other types of Foundations Models (FMs), the

workshop also plans to explore the use of hybrid serverless platforms

to fine-tune, serve, and manage the lifecycle of LLMs with a focus on

aspects such as use cases, resource allocations, optimizations, and

using AI to improve serverless experience.

Emerging applications such as AI agents present interesting serverless

workloads patterns. These agentic solutions are characterized by

multiple LLM calls to process user requests and construct dynamic

plans, unpredictable orchestrations of API calls, and invocations of

deterministic code and AI models to reflect on API responses and make

progress towards a goal. They may be triggered by events, run quickly

for a few seconds or autonomously for days, and communicate with other

agents. These applications resurface known serverless challenges in a

new setting, including cold start, state management, and resource

allocation. They also raise new challenges such as mixed GPU and CPU

workloads, applications with stochastic plans, bursty long running

processes, inter-process communication, and integrations with agentic

programming models such as LangGraph and Crew AI.

This workshop brings together researchers and practitioners to discuss

their experiences and thoughts on future directions of serverless

research.

As this year the workshop is hybrid and we are looking not only for

research papers, experience papers, demonstrations, or position papers

but also for live presentations of ongoing work, demonstrations, and

anything else that may be interesting to workshop audience.

The latest version of this CFP is available at

[3]http://serverlesscomputing.org/wosc11/

Topics

This workshop solicits papers from both academia and industry on the

state of practice and state of the art in serverless computing. Topics

of interest include but are not limited to:

* Infrastructure and network optimizations for serverless

applications

* Multi-cloud and hybrid cloud for serverless and next-gen computing

like Edge, Fog, IoT, etc.

* Elastic AI platforms and pay-as-you-go for GPUs with different cost

metrics.

* Using AI assist and generative LLMs such as ChatGPT for building,

running, and maintaining serverless-like applications.

* Supporting AI agents and with serverless approaches in agentic

platforms

* Supporting Model Context Protocol (MCP) and using it in

serverless-like applications

* Supporting customization and running user provided AI models any

place: Cloud, Edge,Fog, IoT, etc.

* Developer experience as we transition from “traditional” serverless

and FaaS

* Serverless data management for AI, vector and graph databases

applied to serverless experience

* Serverless and next-gen computing in Industry such as Platform

Engineering and Internal Developer Platforms and other areas

* Next-gen data platform and how to use it with serverless-like

approaches

* Low-code and no-code – new programming abstractions

* Developer productivity: from local code to observability and

maintenance

* Debugging serverless applications

* Programming models

* Use cases, experiences

* Benchmarks

* Cost models, pricing models, and economics of serverless

* DevOps

* Confidential computing

* Sustainable computing

* Granular computing

* Super-lightweight containers Web Assembly

* Swarm intelligence

* Other topics related to serverless computing

Important Dates

Paper Submission: October 12, 2025 (extended from September 24) (AOE)

Notification of Acceptance: October 23, 2025

Final Camera-Ready Manuscript (Hard Deadline): October 27, 2025

Non-paper submissions (demos and other proposals): November 10, 2024

Author registration deadline: TBD

Conference: December 15-19, 2025

Papers and Submissions

Papers submissions

Authors are invited to submit original, unpublished

research/application papers that are not being considered in another

forum.

Submitted manuscripts should be structured as technical papers and may

not exceed six (6) single-spaced double-column pages using ACM SIGPLAN

style, which can be found on the ACM template page. The page limit

contains all the content, including bibliography, appendix, etc.

Note that submissions must be doubly anonymous – authors’ names must

not appear on the manuscript, and authors must make a good-faith

attempt to anonymize their submissions.

Submitted papers must adhere to the formatting instructions of the

standard ACM format style, which can be found on the [4]ACM template

page. The font size has to be set to 9pt.

The Middleware conference organizers will provide companion proceedings

including all workshop papers, which will be available in the ACM

Digital Library. This is subject to the availability of their

camera-ready papers by October 26, 2025.

Authors should submit the manuscript in PDF format. All manuscripts

will be reviewed and will be judged on correctness, originality,

technical strength, rigour in analysis, quality of results, quality of

presentation, and interest and relevance to the conference attendees.

Papers conforming to the above guidelines can be submitted through the

paper submission system powered by HotCRP

([5]https://wosc2025.hotcrp.com/).

All submitted manuscripts (following MIDDLEWARE conference requirements

on formatting and page limits) will be peer-reviewed by at least 3

program committee members. Accepted papers with confirmed presentation

will appear in the conference proceedings as well as in the ACM Digital

Library.

Note that at least one author of each accepted workshop paper must hold

a full pre-conference registration.

Please ensure that you and your co-authors obtain an ORCID ID, so you

can complete the publishing process for your accepted paper. ACM has

been involved in ORCID from the start and we have recently made a

commitment to collect ORCID IDs from all of our published authors

([6]https://authors.acm.org/author-resources/orcid-faqs). The

collection process has started and will roll out as a requirement

throughout 2022. We are committed to improve author discoverability,

ensure proper attribution and contribute to ongoing community efforts

around name normalization; your ORCID ID will help in these efforts.

Anonymity Requirements for Doubly-Anonymous Reviewing

Every research paper submitted to ACM Middleware 2025 will undergo a

”doubly-anonymous” reviewing process: in addition to maintaining the

anonymity of the reviewers of the papers, the PC members and reviewers

will not know the identity of the authors. To ensure the anonymity of

authorship, authors must at least do the following:

1. Authors’ names and affiliations must not appear on the title page

or elsewhere in the paper.

2. Funding sources must not be acknowledged anywhere in the paper

under review; these can be added to accepted papers upon submission

of the camera-ready manuscript.

3. Non-anonymized links to the authors’ online content must be

removed.

4. Research group members, or other colleagues or collaborators, must

not be acknowledged anywhere in the paper.

5. The paper’s file name must not identify the authors of the paper.

Authors should also use care in referring to related past work. The

solution is to reference past work in the third person (in the same way

that one would reference work by anyone else). This allows you to set

the context for your submission while at the same time preserving

anonymity.

Despite the anonymity requirements, authors should still include all

relevant work, including their own; omitting them could reveal the

author’s identity by negation. However, self-references should be

limited to the essential ones, and extended versions of the submitted

paper (e.g., technical reports or URLs for downloadable versions) must

not be referenced. The goal is to preserve anonymity while allowing the

reader to grasp the context of the submitted paper fully. It is the

responsibility of authors to do their very best to preserve anonymity.

Papers that do not follow the guidelines or potentially reveal the

author’s identity are subject to immediate rejection.

Other submissions

Authors are invited to submit proposals for demos and other

presentations that are not papers.

Proposals must be submitted as short abstracts (not longer than one

page) in PDF format using the paper submission system HotCRP

([7]https://wosc2025.hotcrp.com/).

Accepted presentations will not be part of the conference proceedings

but will be part of the workshop agenda with dedicated time for live

presentation (with video backup), questions etc.

Workshop co-chairs

Paul Castro, IBM Research

Pedro García López, University Rovira i Virgili

Vatche Ishakian, IBM Research

Vinod Muthusamy, IBM Research

Aleksander Slominski, IBM Research

Steering Committee

Geoffrey Fox, Indiana University

Dennis Gannon, Indiana University & Formerly Microsoft Research

Arno Jacobsen, MSRG (Middleware Systems Research Group)

Program Committee (tentative)

* Alexandru Iosup, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam

* Ali Kanso, Microsoft

* Amine Barrak Assistant Professor, Oakland University

* Azer Bestavros, Boston University

* Cristina Abad, Escuela Superior Politécnica del Litoral (Ecuador)

* Dennis Gannon, Indiana University & Formerly Microsoft Research

* Eric Rozner, University of Colorado Boulder

* Etienne Rivière, UCLouvain

* Geoffrey Fox, Indiana University

* Gul Agha, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

* Hans-Arno Jacobsen, MSRG (Middleware Systems Research Group)

* Ian Foster, University of Chicago and Argonne National Laboratory

* Josef Spillner, Zurich University of Applied Sciences

* Kyungyong Lee, Kookmin University

* Lucas Nussbaum, LORIA, France

* Maciej Malawski, AGH University of Science and Technology, Poland

* Maciej Pawlik, Academic Computer Centre CYFRONET of the University

of Science and Technology in Cracow

* Marc Sánchez Artigas, Universitat Rovira i Virgili

* Per Persson, Ericsson Research

* Peter Pietzuch, Imperial College

* Rich Wolski, University of California, Santa Barbara

* Rodric Rabbah, Nimbella and Apache OpenWhisk

* Rodrigo Fonseca, Microsoft Research

* Samuel Kounev, University of Wuerzburg

* Tyler R. Caraza-Harter, University of Wisconsin-Madison

* Volker Hilt, Bell Labs (Nokia)

* Wes Lloyd, University of Washington Tacoma

References

1. https://middleware-conf.github.io/2025/

2. https://platformengineering.org/

3. http://serverlesscomputing.org/wosc11/

4. https://www.acm.org/publications/proceedings-template

5. https://wosc2025.hotcrp.com/

6. https://authors.acm.org/author-resources/orcid-faqs

7. https://wosc2025.hotcrp.com/