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DFR 2013 - DFR - Workshop on Design for Reliability

Date2013-01-21 - 2013-01-23

Deadline2012-10-15

VenueBerlin, Germany Germany

Keywords

Websitehttp://www.hipeac.net/hipeac2013

Topics/Call fo Papers

While technology is scaling well into the nanometer era, design of reliable, dependable and verifiable systems emerges as one of the most prominent design challenges. The increasing rate of intermittent and permanent faults due to design errors, device variability and manufacturing defects (including wear-outs), environmental impact and aging of devices (degradation) rises significantly as device size and power supply voltage shrink. Process variation also shifts the traditional deterministic design methodology towards a more stochastic and unorthodox design paradigm.

The increased design complexity, increased device parameter variations due to manufacturing and lithographic defects, reduced noise margins resulting from the power supply voltage reduction, and the increase of noise due to crosstalk and power supply, all call for a design environment where traditional design methodologies are no longer effective. These cause further challenges in completing design verification and manufacturing tests; such effects manifest as inherent unreliability of the components, redefining the design and test paradigm for next-generation computing systems.

Additionally, energy reduction and performance enhancement techniques force designs to run near zero margins, and factors which cannot be controlled such as soft errors, thermal impact and aging result in an increased occurrence of transient and hard faults in computing systems.

Topics of interest include:
* Dependable systems from unreliable components, lifelong reliability
* Fault-Tolerant micro-architectures and system architectures
* Testing and verification strategies for the future
* On-line (dynamic) testing and verification techniques
* Software-based methodologies for fault tolerance and testing
* System validation mechanisms
* Built-in self diagnosis, self-tuning and recovery schemes
* Self-adaptive systems
* System-level design and integration for reliability, verifiability and dependability
* Error modeling, detection, correction, and tolerance for transient and permanent errors
* Reliable on-chip communications
* Energy/reliability/performance tradeoffs
* Aggressive power saving mechanisms
* Compiler/architecture/OS methodologies and strategies for reliability

Last modified: 2012-08-21 22:22:35