[virtmach] CFP: IRE 2002
James Power
virtmach@iecc.com
Mon, 04 Feb 2002 13:21:05 +0000
Call for papers: IRE-2002
2nd Workshop on
Intermediate Representation Engineering
for Virtual Machines
Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland
June 13-14, 2002
An associated workshop of the conference on
Principles and Practice of Programming in Java[TM]
Workshop web page: http://www.cs.may.ie/~jpower/ire/
The widespread use of Java[TM] technology has given increased prominence
to
the study of portable intermediate representation formats, particularly
those similar to the stack-based design of the Java Virtual Machine.
While
much attention has been given to performance issues, it is also
important to
consider the design of JVM bytecode in the light of its relationship to
to
its ancestors, such as Forth, as well as more recent competitors such as
the
Microsoft .NET framework.
This workshop seeks to explore issues relating to the design and
engineering
of intermediate representations. We are interested in position papers,
work-in-progress reports and synopses of current research.
Topics of interest include:
* design and analysis of intermediate representations
* static and/or dynamic analysis of Java bytecode
* stack-based abstract machines
* optimisation strategies
* alternative intermediate representations
* benchmarking and test suites
Papers covering related areas and systems (such as Forth, Oberon, C#
etc.)
will also be considered.
It is intended to run the event in true workshop style, so authors
should
expect to discuss their proposals for 20-25 minutes in total, allowing
time
for interaction and questions.
Submission
Authors should submit a 3-5 page extended abstract (Postscript or PDF
format) to ire2002@cs.may.ie, to arrive not later than April 1 2002.
Papers will be reviewed for relevance, and the authors will be contacted
with feedback within two weeks of the submission date.
Organisers
* James Power, Department of Computer Science, National University of
Ireland, Maynooth, Co. Kildare, Ireland.
* John Waldron, Department of Computer Science, University of Dublin,
Trinity College, Dublin 2,
Ireland.