May 08, 2011 - RV 2011 (International Conference on Runtime Verification)
When |
May 08, 2011
from 12:00 AM to 11:35 PM |
---|---|
Where | Berkeley, California, USA |
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International Conference on Runtime Verification (RV 2011)
September 27 - 30, 2011
Berkeley, California, USA
http://sites.google.com/site/2011rv/
Runtime verification (RV) is concerned with monitoring and
analysis of software or hardware system executions. The field is
often referred to under different names, such as runtime
verification, runtime monitoring, runtime checking, runtime
reflection, runtime analysis, dynamic analysis, runtime symbolic
analysis, trace analysis, log file analysis, etc. RV can be used
for many purposes, such as security or safety policy monitoring,
debugging, testing, verification, validation, profiling, fault
protection, behavior modification (e.g., recovery), etc. A
running system can be abstractly regarded as a generator of
execution traces, i.e., sequences of relevant states or
events. Traces can be processed in various ways, e.g., checked
against formal specifications, analyzed with special algorithms,
visualized, etc.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
* program instrumentation techniques
* specification languages for writing monitors
* dynamic program slicing
* record-and-replay
* trace simplification for debugging
* extraction of monitors from specifications
* APIs for writing monitors
* programming language constructs for monitoring
* model-based monitoring and reconfiguration
* the use of aspect oriented programming for dynamic analysis
* algorithmic solutions to minimize runtime monitoring impact
* combination of static and dynamic analysis
* full program verification based on runtime verification
* intrusion detection, security policies, policy enforcement
* log file analysis
* model-based test oracles
* observation-based debugging techniques
* fault detection and recovery
* model-based integrated health management and diagnosis
* program steering and adaptation
* dynamic concurrency analysis
* dynamic specification mining
* metrics and statistical information gathered during runtime
* program execution visualization
* data structure repair for error recovery
* parallel algorithms for efficient monitoring
* monitoring for effective fault localization and program repair
The RV series of events started in 2001, as an annual workshop.
The RV'01 to RV'05 proceedings were published in ENTCS. Since
2006, the RV proceedings have been published in LNCS. In year
2010, RV became an international conference. Links to past RV
events can be found at the permanent URL:
http://runtime-verification.org <http://runtime-verification.org/>
INVITED SPEAKERS
TBD
Talk titles will be made available on RV 2011 web page.
PAPER SUBMISSION
RV will have two research paper categories: regular and short
papers. Papers in both categories will be reviewed by the
conference Program Committee.
* Regular papers (up to 15 pages) should present original
unpublished results. Applications of runtime verification are
particularly welcome. A Best Paper Award (USD 300) will be
offered. Selected papers will be published in an issue of Formal
Methods in System Design.
* 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 (5-10 minutes) and poster
sessions.
In addition to short and regular papers, proposals for tutorials
and tool demonstrations are welcome. Proposals should be up to 2
pages long.
* Tutorial proposals on any of the topics above, as well as on
topics at the boundary between RV and other domains, are welcome.
Accepted tutorials will be allocated up to 15 pages in the
conference proceedings. Tutorial presentations will be at least
2 hours.
* Tool demonstration proposals should briefly introduce the problem
solved by the tool and give the outline of the demonstration.
Tool papers will be allocated 5 pages in the conference
proceedings. A Best Tool Award (USD 200) will be offered.
Submitted tutorial and tool demonstration proposals will be
evaluated by the corresponding chairs, with the help of selected
reviewers.
All accepted papers, including tutorial and tool papers, will
appear in the LNCS proceedings. Submitted papers must use the
LNCS style. At least one author of each accepted paper must
attend RV'11 to present the paper. Papers must be submitted
electronically using the EasyChair system. A link to the
electronic submission page will be made available on the RV'11
web page.
IMPORTANT DATES
May 8, 2011 - Submission of regular and short papers
May 15, 2011 - Submission of tutorial and tool demonstration proposals
June 26, 2011 - Notification for regular, short, and tool papers
July 24, 2011 - Submission of camera-ready versions of accepted papers
September 27-30, 2011 - RV 2011 Conference and tutorials
ORGANIZERS
Programme committee chairs:
Sarfraz Khurshid (University of Texas at Austin, USA)
Koushik Sen (University of California at Berkeley, USA)
Local organization chairs:
Jacob Burnim (University of California at Berkeley, USA)
Nicholas Jalbert (University of California at Berkeley, USA)
PROGRAM COMMITTEE
Howard Barringer (University of Manchester, UK)
Eric Bodden (Technical University Darmstadt, Germany)
Rance Cleaveland (University of Maryland, USA)
Mads Dam (Kungliga Tekniska högskolan, Sweden)
Brian Demsky (University of California at Irvine, USA)
Bernd Finkbeiner (Saarland University, Germany)
Cormac Flanagan (University of California at Santa Cruz, USA)
Patrice Godefroid (Microsoft Research Redmond, USA)
Jean Goubault-Larrecq (ENS Cachan, France)
Susanne Graf (Verimag, France)
Radu Grosu (State University of New York at Stony Brook, USA)
Lars Grunske (University of Kaiserslautern, Germany)
Aarti Gupta (NEC Laboratories America, USA)
Rajiv Gupta (University of California at Riverside, USA)
Klaus Havelund (NASA/JPL, USA)
Mats Heimdahl (University of Minnesota, USA)
Gerard Holzmann (NASA/JPL, USA)
Sarfraz Khurshid (University of Texas at Austin, USA) (co-chair)
Viktor Kuncak (École Polytechnique Fédérale De Lausanne, Switzerland)
Kim Larsen (Aalborg University, Denmark)
Martin Leucker (University of Luebeck, Germany)
Rupak Majumdar (Max Planck Institute Germany and University of California
at Los Angeles USA)
Greg Morrisett (Harvard University, USA)
Mayur Naik (Intel Berkeley Labs, USA)
Brian Nielsen (Aalborg University, Denmark)
Klaus Ostermann (University of Marburg, Germany)
Corina Pasareanu (NASA Ames, USA)
Suzette Person (NASA Langley, USA)
Gilles Pokam (Intel, Santa Clara, USA)
Shaz Qadeer (Microsoft Research Redmond, USA)
Derek Rayside (University of Waterloo, Canada)
Grigore Rosu (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA)
Wolfram Schulte (Microsoft Research Redmond, USA)
Manu Sridharan (IBM T. J. Watson, USA)
Koushik Sen (University of California, Berkeley, USA) (co-chair)
Peter Sestoft (IT University of Copenhagen, Denmark)
Scott Smolka (State University of New York at Stony Brook, USA)
Oleg Sokolsky (University of Pennsylvania, USA)
Mana Taghdiri (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany)
Serdar Tasiran (Koc University, Turkey)
Nikolai Tillmann (Microsoft Research Redmond, USA)
Shmuel Ur (Shmuel Ur Innovation, Israel)
Willem Visser (University of Stellenbosch, South Africa)
Mahesh Viswanathan (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA)
Xiangyu Zhang (Purdue University, USA)
RV STEERING COMMITTEE
Howard Barringer (University of Manchester, UK)
Klaus Havelund (NASA/JPL, USA)
Gerard Holzmann (NASA/JPL, USA)
Insup Lee (University of Pennsylvania, USA)
Grigore Rosu (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA)
Oleg Sokolsky (University of Pennsylvania, USA)
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