AMAS-BT 2012 - 5th Workshop on Architectural and Microarchitectural Support for Binary Translation
Topics/Call fo Papers
Long employed by industry, large scale use of binary translation and on-the-fly code generation is becoming pervasive both as an enabler for virtualization, processor migration and also as processor implementation technology. The emergence and expected growth of just-in-time compilation, virtualization and Web 2.0 scripting languages brings to the forefront a need for efficient execution of this class of applications. The availability of multiple execution threads brings new challenges and opportunities, as existing binaries need to be transformed to benefit from multiple processors, and extra processing resources enable continuous optimizations and translation.
The main goal of this half-day workshop is to bring together researchers and practitioners with the aim of stimulating the exchange of ideas and experiences on the potential and limits of Architectural and MicroArchitectural Support for Binary Translation (hence the acronym AMAS-BT). The key focus is on challenges and opportunities for such assistance and opening new avenues of research. A secondary goal is to enable dissemination of hitherto unpublished techniques from commercial projects.
The workshop scope includes support for decoding/translation, support for execution optimization and runtime support. It will set a high scientific standard for such experiments, and requires insightful analysis to justify all conclusions. The workshop will favor submissions that provide meaningful insights, and identify underlying root causes for the failure or success of the investigated technique. Acceptable work must thoroughly investigate and communicate why the proposed technique performs as the results indicate.
Submission Topics
Hardware assistance for translation and code discovery:
Interpretation engines, decoding assistance, translated code dispatch
On-the-fly reconstruction of CFGs and data dependences, scheduling and optimization
Bug-per-bug compatibility issues
Static translation: without runtime assistance/translation and with runtime assistance/translation (Hybrid Translation)
Hardware assistance for optimization:
Extra/enhanced internal/physical registers
Speculative execution support
Reduced footprint/low-power cores enabled by binary translation, area and power efficiency
Techniques for parallelizing single-thread programs
Hardware assistance for runtime management:
Self-modifying code, self-referential code, precise exceptions
Runtime information: profiling branch directions, instructions with cache misses, memory access monitoring
Management of translated code and adapting code to changing program behavior, persistent translation, incremental translation
Multi-many cores: parallel translation, auto parallelization, speculative execution
Binary Translation: Heterogeneous cores and applications
Dynamic code targeting to Heterogeneous Architectures
Dynamic parallelization, vectorization
Power-efficient execution
CPU-GPU code migration
Novel architectures, memory systems and caching for CPU/GPU
Binary Translation: Architectural effects and experience:
Novel applications of binary translation and virtualization
Performance characterization
Dynamic instrumentation and debugging
HW/SW co-design for efficient execution
Experimental insights on binary translation and industrial experience
How to Submit
In order to submit a paper to AMAS-BT 2012 authors should use EasyChair. If you do not already have an EasyChair account, you can generate one using the same link. Click on New Submission, and then follow the instructions to submit your paper. You can return later to update your submission. EasyChair will send you an e-mail message confirming your submission. Please remember that AMAS-BT 2012 uses a two phase submission process. You will first submit the abstract of your paper, and later the final manuscript (please check the important dates below). Submissions should be ready for publication, containing no more than 5000 words, in IEEE style, 2-column, 10-point text using .doc, .pdf, or .ps. formats.
Important Dates
Abstract due: April 18, 2012
Submission: April 25, 2012
Notification of acceptance: May 2, 2012
Workshop Organizers
Mauricio Breternitz, AMD
Robert Cohn, Intel
Erik Altman, IBM
Youfeng Wu, Intel
The main goal of this half-day workshop is to bring together researchers and practitioners with the aim of stimulating the exchange of ideas and experiences on the potential and limits of Architectural and MicroArchitectural Support for Binary Translation (hence the acronym AMAS-BT). The key focus is on challenges and opportunities for such assistance and opening new avenues of research. A secondary goal is to enable dissemination of hitherto unpublished techniques from commercial projects.
The workshop scope includes support for decoding/translation, support for execution optimization and runtime support. It will set a high scientific standard for such experiments, and requires insightful analysis to justify all conclusions. The workshop will favor submissions that provide meaningful insights, and identify underlying root causes for the failure or success of the investigated technique. Acceptable work must thoroughly investigate and communicate why the proposed technique performs as the results indicate.
Submission Topics
Hardware assistance for translation and code discovery:
Interpretation engines, decoding assistance, translated code dispatch
On-the-fly reconstruction of CFGs and data dependences, scheduling and optimization
Bug-per-bug compatibility issues
Static translation: without runtime assistance/translation and with runtime assistance/translation (Hybrid Translation)
Hardware assistance for optimization:
Extra/enhanced internal/physical registers
Speculative execution support
Reduced footprint/low-power cores enabled by binary translation, area and power efficiency
Techniques for parallelizing single-thread programs
Hardware assistance for runtime management:
Self-modifying code, self-referential code, precise exceptions
Runtime information: profiling branch directions, instructions with cache misses, memory access monitoring
Management of translated code and adapting code to changing program behavior, persistent translation, incremental translation
Multi-many cores: parallel translation, auto parallelization, speculative execution
Binary Translation: Heterogeneous cores and applications
Dynamic code targeting to Heterogeneous Architectures
Dynamic parallelization, vectorization
Power-efficient execution
CPU-GPU code migration
Novel architectures, memory systems and caching for CPU/GPU
Binary Translation: Architectural effects and experience:
Novel applications of binary translation and virtualization
Performance characterization
Dynamic instrumentation and debugging
HW/SW co-design for efficient execution
Experimental insights on binary translation and industrial experience
How to Submit
In order to submit a paper to AMAS-BT 2012 authors should use EasyChair. If you do not already have an EasyChair account, you can generate one using the same link. Click on New Submission, and then follow the instructions to submit your paper. You can return later to update your submission. EasyChair will send you an e-mail message confirming your submission. Please remember that AMAS-BT 2012 uses a two phase submission process. You will first submit the abstract of your paper, and later the final manuscript (please check the important dates below). Submissions should be ready for publication, containing no more than 5000 words, in IEEE style, 2-column, 10-point text using .doc, .pdf, or .ps. formats.
Important Dates
Abstract due: April 18, 2012
Submission: April 25, 2012
Notification of acceptance: May 2, 2012
Workshop Organizers
Mauricio Breternitz, AMD
Robert Cohn, Intel
Erik Altman, IBM
Youfeng Wu, Intel
Other CFPs
Last modified: 2012-03-12 14:36:11