[CfP] Workshop on Virtual Machines and Language Implementations (VMIL’24)

by smarr, June 20, 2024

The concept of Virtual Machines is pervasive in the design and implementation of programming systems. Virtual Machines and the languages they implement are crucial in the specification, implementation and/or user-facing deployment of most programming technologies.

The VMIL workshop is a forum for researchers and cutting-edge practitioners in language virtual machines, the intermediate languages they use, and related issues.

Co-located with SPLASH 2024
October 20-25, 2024, Pasadena, California
https://2024.splashcon.org/home/vmil-2024

The concept of Virtual Machines is pervasive in the design and implementation of programming systems. Virtual Machines and the languages they implement are crucial in the specification, implementation and/or user-facing deployment of most programming technologies.

The VMIL workshop is a forum for researchers and cutting-edge practitioners in language virtual machines, the intermediate languages they use, and related issues.

The workshop is intended to be welcoming to a wide range of topics and perspectives, covering all areas relevant to the workshop’s theme. Aspects of interest include, but are not limited to:

- design issues in VMs and IRs (e.g. IR design, VM modularity, polyglotism);
- compilation (static and dynamic compilation strategies, optimizations, data representations);
- memory management;
- security considerations;
- concurrency (both internal and user-facing);
- performance engineering;
- tool support and related infrastructure (profiling, debugging, liveness, persistence);
- the experience of VM development (use of high-level languages, bootstrapping and self-hosting, reusability, portability, developer tooling, etc.);
- empirical studies on related topics, such as usage patterns, the usability of languages or tools, experimental methodology, or benchmark design;
- the use of VMs in teaching programming, programming languages, and programming language implementation.

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Submission Guidelines
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We invite high-quality papers in the following two categories:

- Research and experience papers: These submissions should describe work that advances the current state of the art in the above or related areas. The suggested length of these submissions is 6–10 pages (maximum 10 pages, excluding references).

- Work-in-progress or position papers: These papers should document ongoing efforts in an area of interest which have not yet yielded final results, and/or should present and defend the authors’ position on a topic related to the broad area of the workshop. The maximum length of these submissions is 6 pages, but we will consider shorter submissions (e.g. a well-written 2-page abstract).

Submissions will be judged on novelty, clarity, timeliness, relevance, and potential to stimulate discussion during the workshop.

The workshop has two submission deadlines.

For the first submission deadline, all paper types are considered for publication in the ACM Digital Library, except if the authors prefer not to be included. Publication of work-in-progress and position papers at VMIL is not intended to preclude later publication elsewhere.

For the second deadline, we will consider only work-in-progress and position papers. These will not be published in the ACM DL, and will only appear on the website.

The address of the submission site is: https://vmil24.hotcrp.com/

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Important Dates
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All deadlines are Anywhere on Earth (AoE), i.e., UTC-12h
Thu 18 Jul 2024: Abstract Submission (Research papers)
Thu 25 Jul 2024: Submission Deadline (Research papers)
Wed 21 Aug 2024: Author Notification (Research papers)
Tue 27 Aug 2024: Submission Deadline (Work-in-Progress papers)
Tue 10 Sep 2024: Author Notification (Work-in-Progress papers)

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Format Instructions
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Please use the SIGPLAN acmart style (`sigplan` option) for all papers:
https://sigplan.org/Resources/Author/#acmart-format . The provided 
double-column template is available for Latex and Word.

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Organization
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Organizing Committee: 
Dejice Jacob, University of Glasgow
Fredrik Kjolstad, Stanford University 

Program Committee:

Steve Blackburn, Google and Australian National University
Matthew Gaudet, Mozilla
Sara S. Hamouda, Google Deepmind
David Leopoldseder, Oracle Labs
Yu David Liu, State University of New York (SUNY), Binghamton
Stefan Marr, University of Kent
Kartik Nagar, IIT Madras
Jeremy Singer, University of Glasgow
Laurence Tratt, King’s College London
Tomoharu Ugawa, University of Tokyo
Christian Wimmer, Oracle Labs

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AUTHORS TAKE NOTE
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The official publication date is the date the proceedings are made available in the ACM Digital Library. This date may be up to two weeks before the first day of your conference. The official publication date affects the deadline for any patent filings related to published work.