International Workshop on Data Flow Models for Extreme Scale Computing

Event Dates

Sep 11, 2016 - Sep 11, 2016

Location

Haifa, Israel

Submission Deadline

Jul 24, 2016

Sixth International Workshop on Data Flow Models for Extreme-Scale Computing (DFM 2016)

September 15, Haifa, Israel

www.cs.ucy.ac.CY/dfmworkshop/

CALL FOR PAPERS:

The International workshop on “Data-Flow Models (DFM) for extreme scale computing” was held in six consecutive years in conjunction with the PACT conference. The purpose of DFM continues being to bring together those researchers interested in novel computational models based on Data-Flow principles of execution. The switch to multi-core systems has raised concurrency to the level of a major issue if we are to use the increasing number of cores in a chip.

In the past five decades, sequential computing dominated the computer architecture landscape because designers were successful at building faster and faster computers by solely relying on improvements on fabrication technologies and architectural/organization optimizations. The most severe limitation of the sequential model, namely its inability to tolerate long memory latencies has slowed down the performance gains. This phenomenon is the ubiquitous Memory Wall. While various mechanisms have been implemented to overcome the wall (such as extremely efficient hardware prefetch support for example), they only add to another wall that hampers highly efficient execution of programs and modern chip design: the Power Wall. Power considerations and heat dissipation issues have forced manufacturers to switch to multiple cores per chip and thus move into the concurrency era.

New concurrent models/paradigms are needed in order to fully utilize the potential of multi-core chips. The data-flow model is a formal model that can handle concurrency and tolerate memory and synchronization latencies. Data-Flow inspired systems could also be simpler and more power efficient than conventional systems.

Recent work has shown that the data-flow principles can be used to develop systems that can outperform systems based on conventional techniques. Thus, it is time to revisit data-driven computation and bring it to the multi-core and extreme scale computing.

DFM 2016 solicits novel papers that include but are not limited to:

– Novel Data-Flow inspired Execution models and architectures

– Functional and Single assignment based Languages.

– Strict and non-strict execution models.

– Compilers and tools for Data-Flow/Data-Driven systems.

– Hybrid Data-driven/Control-driven systems.

– Position Papers on the Future of Data-Flow in the Multi-core era and beyond.

– All accepted papers will appear in the Computer Society Digital Library

IMPORTANT DATES

Submission date: July 24, 2016

Authors notification: August 10, 2016

SUBMISSION INFORMATION

DFM 2015 will accept both Full (8 pages) and Short papers (4 pages). Papers should be prepared using the IEEE Proceedings format; Short Papers could be submitted in the form of extended abstracts. All accepted papers will appear in the Computer Society Digital Library. Submission site https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=dfm2015

PROGRAM COMMITTEE

Stéphane Zuckerman Co-chair, Univ. of Delaware

Skevos Evripidou Co-chair, University of Cyprus

Guang Gao, University of Delaware

Jean-Luc Gaudiot, University of California at Irvine

Vivek Sarkar, Rice University

Ian Watson, University of Manchester

Kei Hiraki, University of Tokyo

David Abramson, Monash University

Costas Kyriacou, Frederic University

Pedro Trancoso, University of Cyprus

Kyriacos Stavrou, Intel Labs Barcelona, SP

John Feo, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Bob Iannucci, CMU, Silicon Valley, USA

Wallid Najjar, University of California, Riverside

Wolfgang Karl, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

Mark Oskin, University of Washington

Andrew Sohn, NJIT, USA

Reiner Hartenstein, TU Kaiserslautern

Kemal Ebcioğlu, ,Global Supercomputing Corp.Sienna

Kevin Hammond, University of St Andrews

Roberto Giorgi, University of Sienna

Robert Clay, Sandia National Labs

Sven-Bodo Scholz, Heriot-Watt University

Krisha Kavi, Univerity Of North Texas

Yong Meng Teo, National Univ. of Singapore

STEERING COMMITTEE

Skevos Evripidou, University of Cyprus

Guang Gao, University of Delaware

Jean-Luc Gaudiot, University of California at Irvine

Ian Watson, University of Manchester

Kei Hiraki, University of Tokyo

PUBLICITY CHAIR

Giorgos Matheou, University of Cyprus

PROCEEDINGS CHAIR

Costas Kyriacou, Frederic University Cyprus