RV 2015 - 15th International Conference on Runtime Verification
Topics/Call fo Papers
Runtime verification is concerned with monitoring and analysis of software and hardware system executions. Runtime verification techniques are crucial for system correctness, reliability, and robustness; they are significantly more powerful and versatile than conventional testing, and more practical than exhaustive formal verification. Runtime verification can be used prior to deployment, for testing, verification, and debugging purposes, and after deployment for ensuring reliability, safety, and security and for providing fault containment and recovery as well as online system repair. Topics of interest to the conference include:
specification languages
specification mining
program instrumentation
monitor construction techniques
logging, recording, and replay
fault detection, localization, containment, recovery and repair
program steering and adaptation
metrics and statistical information gathering
combination of static and dynamic analyses
program execution visualization
monitoring techniques for safety/mission-critical systems
monitoring distributed systems, cloud services, and big data applications
monitoring security and privacy policies
Application areas of runtime verification include safety/mission-critical systems, enterprise and systems software, autonomous and reactive control systems, health management and diagnosis systems, and system security and privacy.
Research Papers Track:
Research papers can be submitted in two categories: regular and short papers. Papers in both categories will be reviewed by the conference Program Committee. All accepted technical papers will appear in an LNCS volume. Submitted papers must use the LNCS style. At least one author of each accepted paper must attend RV’15 to present the paper. Papers must be submitted electronically using the EasyChair system.
Regular Papers (up to 15 pages) should present original unpublished results. Theoretical and experimental papers as well as papers on applications of runtime verification and case studies are all welcome.
The Program Committee of RV 2015 will give this year a best paper award. The Best Paper Award recipient is given public recognition and will receive one high-end NVIDIA GPU equipment (Titan Black for a value of $1,150) donated by NVIDIA.
Short Papers (up to 5 pages) may present novel but not necessarily thoroughly worked out ideas, for example emerging runtime verification techniques and applications, or techniques and applications that establish relationships between runtime verification and other domains. Accepted short papers will be presented in special short talk (10 minutes) and poster sessions.
Program Committee
Thomas Ball, Microsoft, USA
Howard Barringer, University of Manchester, UK
Ezio Bartocci, Vienna University of Technology, Austria (PC Chair)
David Basin, ETH Zurich, Switzerland
Andreas Baurer, TU Munich, Germany
Saddek Bensalem, VERIMAG, France
Eric Bodden, TU Darmstadt, Germany
Borzoo Bonakdarpour, McMaster University, Canada
Luca Bortolussi, University of Trieste, Italy
Laura Bozzelli, UPW, Spain
Rohit Chadha, University of Missouri, USA
Satish Chandra, Samsung Electronics, USA
Dino Distefano, Facebook, UK
Alastair Donaldson, Imperial College London, UK
Alexandre Donzé, UC Berkeley, USA
Georgios Fainekos, Arizona State University, USA
Yliès Falcone, University of Grenoble I, France
Bernd Finkbeiner, Saarland University, Germany
Milos Gligoric, University of Illunois at Urbana-Champaign, USA
Radu Grosu, Vienna University of Technology, Austria (General Chair)
Kim Larsen, Aalborg Univeristy, Denmark
Insup Lee, University of Pennsylvania, USA
Klaus Havelund, NASA JPL, USA
Aditya Kanade, Indian Institute of Science, India
Panagiotis Katsaros, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece
Safraz Khurshid, The University of Texas at Austin, USA
Marta Kwiatkowska, University of Oxford, UK
Axel Legay, INRIA Rennes, France
Martin Leucker, University of Lübeck, Germany
Rupak Majumdar, Max Planck Institute, Germany (PC Chair)
Oded Maler, VERIMAG, France
Leonardo Mariani, University of Milano Bicocca, Italy
Dejan Nickovic, Austrian Institute of Technology, Austria
Joel Ouaknine, Oxford University, UK
Gordon Pace, University of Malta, Malta
Doron Peled, Bar Ilan University, Israel
Pavithra Prabhakar, IMDEA Software Institute, USA
Grigore Rosu, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA
Abhik Roychoudhury, National University of Singapore, Singapore
Koushik Sen, UC Berkeley, USA
Scott A. Smolka, Stony Brook University, USA
Oleg Sokolsky, University of Pennsylvania, USA
Bernhard Steffen, TU Dortmund, Germany
Scott D. Stoller, Stony Brook University, USA
Emina Torlak, UC Berkeley, USA
Serdar Taşıran, Koç University, Turkey
Lenore Zuck, University of Illinois at Chicago, USA
Tool Demonstration Track:
The aim of the RV 2015 tool demonstration track is to provide an opportunity for researchers and practitioners to show and to discuss the latest advances, experiences and challenges in devising and developing reliable software tools for runtime verification. Tool demonstration papers will be reviewed by the Tools Track Program Committee. All accepted tool demonstration papers will appear in the conference proceedings LNCS volume. Submitted papers must use the LNCS style. At least one author of each accepted paper must attend RV’15 to present the paper. Papers must be submitted electronically using the EasyChair system.
Tool papers should meet the following criteria:
A tool paper should present a new tool, a new tool component or novel extensions to existing tools supporting runtime verification. Each submission should be original and not published previously in a tool paper form.
Each submission must not exceed 8 pages in the LNCS/Springer proceeding format, including all text, references and figures. The paper must be written in English and provided in PDF format.
Each submission must be accompanied at the time of the submission by a short screencast (between 5-10 minutes), with voice and overlay text commentary illustrating the demonstration of the tool (a link to it should be provided in the paper).
The paper must include information on tool availability, maturity, selected experimental results and it should provide a link to a website containing the theoretical background and user guide. Furthermore, we strongly encourage authors to make their tools and benchmarks available with their submission.
Each tool paper must include a script in an appendix (not included in the page count) describing how the demo will be conducted during the conference presentation with screenshots presenting step-by-step the tool’s capabilities, highlighting the main characteristics and the usage.
Tool Evaluation
Each submission will be reviewed by at least four members of the tool demonstration track program committee. The evaluation criteria will include:
the presentation quality
the availability (possibly in a open-source format) of the software.
the relevance for the Runtime Verification audience
the technical soundness of the presented tool
the originality of the underlying ideas
Tool Demonstration Committee
Dejan Nickovic, Austrian Institute of Technology, Austria, Chair
Alexandre Donzé, UC Berkeley, USA
Martin Leucker, University of Lübeck, Germany
Milos Gligoric, University of Illunois at Urbana-Champaign, USA
Eugen Zalinescu, ETH Zurich, Switzerland
Gordon Pace, University of Malta, Malta
Important Dates:
Both research papers and tool demonstration tracks will follow the following timeline:
Abstract deadline: April 12, 2015
Paper submission deadline: April 19, 2015
Paper Notification: May 31, 2015
Camera Ready submission: June 15, 2015
Conference dates: September 22-25, 2015
specification languages
specification mining
program instrumentation
monitor construction techniques
logging, recording, and replay
fault detection, localization, containment, recovery and repair
program steering and adaptation
metrics and statistical information gathering
combination of static and dynamic analyses
program execution visualization
monitoring techniques for safety/mission-critical systems
monitoring distributed systems, cloud services, and big data applications
monitoring security and privacy policies
Application areas of runtime verification include safety/mission-critical systems, enterprise and systems software, autonomous and reactive control systems, health management and diagnosis systems, and system security and privacy.
Research Papers Track:
Research papers can be submitted in two categories: regular and short papers. Papers in both categories will be reviewed by the conference Program Committee. All accepted technical papers will appear in an LNCS volume. Submitted papers must use the LNCS style. At least one author of each accepted paper must attend RV’15 to present the paper. Papers must be submitted electronically using the EasyChair system.
Regular Papers (up to 15 pages) should present original unpublished results. Theoretical and experimental papers as well as papers on applications of runtime verification and case studies are all welcome.
The Program Committee of RV 2015 will give this year a best paper award. The Best Paper Award recipient is given public recognition and will receive one high-end NVIDIA GPU equipment (Titan Black for a value of $1,150) donated by NVIDIA.
Short Papers (up to 5 pages) may present novel but not necessarily thoroughly worked out ideas, for example emerging runtime verification techniques and applications, or techniques and applications that establish relationships between runtime verification and other domains. Accepted short papers will be presented in special short talk (10 minutes) and poster sessions.
Program Committee
Thomas Ball, Microsoft, USA
Howard Barringer, University of Manchester, UK
Ezio Bartocci, Vienna University of Technology, Austria (PC Chair)
David Basin, ETH Zurich, Switzerland
Andreas Baurer, TU Munich, Germany
Saddek Bensalem, VERIMAG, France
Eric Bodden, TU Darmstadt, Germany
Borzoo Bonakdarpour, McMaster University, Canada
Luca Bortolussi, University of Trieste, Italy
Laura Bozzelli, UPW, Spain
Rohit Chadha, University of Missouri, USA
Satish Chandra, Samsung Electronics, USA
Dino Distefano, Facebook, UK
Alastair Donaldson, Imperial College London, UK
Alexandre Donzé, UC Berkeley, USA
Georgios Fainekos, Arizona State University, USA
Yliès Falcone, University of Grenoble I, France
Bernd Finkbeiner, Saarland University, Germany
Milos Gligoric, University of Illunois at Urbana-Champaign, USA
Radu Grosu, Vienna University of Technology, Austria (General Chair)
Kim Larsen, Aalborg Univeristy, Denmark
Insup Lee, University of Pennsylvania, USA
Klaus Havelund, NASA JPL, USA
Aditya Kanade, Indian Institute of Science, India
Panagiotis Katsaros, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece
Safraz Khurshid, The University of Texas at Austin, USA
Marta Kwiatkowska, University of Oxford, UK
Axel Legay, INRIA Rennes, France
Martin Leucker, University of Lübeck, Germany
Rupak Majumdar, Max Planck Institute, Germany (PC Chair)
Oded Maler, VERIMAG, France
Leonardo Mariani, University of Milano Bicocca, Italy
Dejan Nickovic, Austrian Institute of Technology, Austria
Joel Ouaknine, Oxford University, UK
Gordon Pace, University of Malta, Malta
Doron Peled, Bar Ilan University, Israel
Pavithra Prabhakar, IMDEA Software Institute, USA
Grigore Rosu, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA
Abhik Roychoudhury, National University of Singapore, Singapore
Koushik Sen, UC Berkeley, USA
Scott A. Smolka, Stony Brook University, USA
Oleg Sokolsky, University of Pennsylvania, USA
Bernhard Steffen, TU Dortmund, Germany
Scott D. Stoller, Stony Brook University, USA
Emina Torlak, UC Berkeley, USA
Serdar Taşıran, Koç University, Turkey
Lenore Zuck, University of Illinois at Chicago, USA
Tool Demonstration Track:
The aim of the RV 2015 tool demonstration track is to provide an opportunity for researchers and practitioners to show and to discuss the latest advances, experiences and challenges in devising and developing reliable software tools for runtime verification. Tool demonstration papers will be reviewed by the Tools Track Program Committee. All accepted tool demonstration papers will appear in the conference proceedings LNCS volume. Submitted papers must use the LNCS style. At least one author of each accepted paper must attend RV’15 to present the paper. Papers must be submitted electronically using the EasyChair system.
Tool papers should meet the following criteria:
A tool paper should present a new tool, a new tool component or novel extensions to existing tools supporting runtime verification. Each submission should be original and not published previously in a tool paper form.
Each submission must not exceed 8 pages in the LNCS/Springer proceeding format, including all text, references and figures. The paper must be written in English and provided in PDF format.
Each submission must be accompanied at the time of the submission by a short screencast (between 5-10 minutes), with voice and overlay text commentary illustrating the demonstration of the tool (a link to it should be provided in the paper).
The paper must include information on tool availability, maturity, selected experimental results and it should provide a link to a website containing the theoretical background and user guide. Furthermore, we strongly encourage authors to make their tools and benchmarks available with their submission.
Each tool paper must include a script in an appendix (not included in the page count) describing how the demo will be conducted during the conference presentation with screenshots presenting step-by-step the tool’s capabilities, highlighting the main characteristics and the usage.
Tool Evaluation
Each submission will be reviewed by at least four members of the tool demonstration track program committee. The evaluation criteria will include:
the presentation quality
the availability (possibly in a open-source format) of the software.
the relevance for the Runtime Verification audience
the technical soundness of the presented tool
the originality of the underlying ideas
Tool Demonstration Committee
Dejan Nickovic, Austrian Institute of Technology, Austria, Chair
Alexandre Donzé, UC Berkeley, USA
Martin Leucker, University of Lübeck, Germany
Milos Gligoric, University of Illunois at Urbana-Champaign, USA
Eugen Zalinescu, ETH Zurich, Switzerland
Gordon Pace, University of Malta, Malta
Important Dates:
Both research papers and tool demonstration tracks will follow the following timeline:
Abstract deadline: April 12, 2015
Paper submission deadline: April 19, 2015
Paper Notification: May 31, 2015
Camera Ready submission: June 15, 2015
Conference dates: September 22-25, 2015
Other CFPs
- European Symposium on Research in Computer Security (ESORICS) 2015
- ITR-International Conference on Mechanical And Production Engineering(ICMPE-2015)
- ITR-International Conference on Advanced Computer Science and Information Technology(ICACSIT-2015)
- ITR-International Conference on Electrical Electronics and Data Communication(ICEEDC-2015)
- ITR-International Conference on Advanced Computer Science and Information Technology(ICACSIT-2015)
Last modified: 2014-12-20 23:55:41