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    TRANSACT 2012 - 7th ACM SIGPLAN Workshop on Transactional Computing

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    Website transact2012.cse.lehigh.edu | Want to Edit it Edit Freely

    Category TRANSACT 2012

    Deadline: December 08, 2011 | Date: February 26, 2012

    Venue/Country: New Orleans, U.S.A

    Updated: 2011-12-10 19:44:56 (GMT+9)

    Call For Papers - CFP

    The past decade has seen an explosion of interest in programming languages, systems, and hardware to support transactions, speculation, and related alternatives to classical lock-based concurrency. In the last year alone, significant progress has been made toward integrating transactional memory support into mainstream programming languages, like C++ and Scala, and hardware transactional memory support has been announced for a next-generation microprocessor.

    This workshop, the seventh in its series, will provide a forum for the presentation of research on all aspects of transactional computing. The scope of the workshop is intentionally broad, with the goal of encouraging interaction across the languages, architecture, systems, database, and theory communities. Papers may address implementation techniques, foundational results, applications and workloads, or experience with working systems. Environments of interest include the full range from multithreaded or multicore processors to high-end parallel computing.

    Topics

    The workshop seeks papers on topics related to all areas of software and hardware for transactional computing. Specific topics of interest include but are not limited to:

    Run-time systems

    Hardware support

    Memory models

    Language mechanisms and semantics

    Formal verification

    Speculative concurrency

    Conflict detection and contention management

    Debugging and tools

    Static analysis and compiler optimizations

    Checkpointing and failure atomicity

    Persistence and I/O

    Nesting and exceptions

    Applications, workloads, and test suites

    Experience reports

    Papers should present original research. As transactional memory spans many disciplines, papers should provide sufficient background material to make them accessible to the broader community. Papers focused on foundations should indicate how the work can be used to advance practice; papers on experiences and applications should indicate how the experiments reinforce or reflect principles.


    Keywords: Accepted papers list. Acceptance Rate. EI Compendex. Engineering Index. ISTP index. ISI index. Impact Factor.
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