MeTRiD 2019 - 2nd International Workshop on Methods and Tools for Rigorous System Design (MeTRiD 2019)
Topics/Call fo Papers
Modern software systems are inherently concurrent. They consist of components running simultaneously and sharing access to resources provided by the execution platform. This leads to resource contention and potential deadlocks compromising mission- and safety-critical operations. Similar problems are observed in various kinds of software, including system, work-flow management, integration software, web services etc. Essentially, any software entity that goes beyond simply computing a certain function, necessarily has to interact and share resources with other such entities.
The intrinsic concurrent nature of such interactions is the root cause of the sheer complexity of the resulting software, which is exponential in the number of components, making complete a posteriori verification practically infeasible. An alternative approach consists in ensuring correctness by construction.
The Rigorous System Design approach is based on a formal, accountable and iterative process for deriving trustworthy and optimized implementations from models of application software, its execution platform and its external environment. A system implementation is derived from a set of appropriate high-level models by applying a sequence of semantics-preserving transformations.
Organisers: Simon Bliudze, Panagiotis Katsaros
The intrinsic concurrent nature of such interactions is the root cause of the sheer complexity of the resulting software, which is exponential in the number of components, making complete a posteriori verification practically infeasible. An alternative approach consists in ensuring correctness by construction.
The Rigorous System Design approach is based on a formal, accountable and iterative process for deriving trustworthy and optimized implementations from models of application software, its execution platform and its external environment. A system implementation is derived from a set of appropriate high-level models by applying a sequence of semantics-preserving transformations.
Organisers: Simon Bliudze, Panagiotis Katsaros
Other CFPs
- 3rd International Workshop on Program Equivalence and Relational Reasoning (PERR 2019)
- 11th Workshop on Programming Language Approaches to Concurrency and Communication-cEntric Software (PLACES 2019)
- 16th Workshop on Quantitative Aspects of Programming Languages and Systems (QAPL 2019)
- Workshop on Security Practices for Internet of Things (SPIoT 2019)
- 6th International Workshop on Synthesis of Complex Parameters (SynCoP 2019)
Last modified: 2018-12-29 20:57:53