8th annual workshop on
Operating Systems Platforms for Embedded Real-Time applications
July 10, 2012. Pisa, ItalyApr 29, 2012:
Submission Deadline
May 20, 2012:
Acceptance Notification
June 18, 2012:
Submission of camera-ready papers
July 10, 2012:
Workshop
July 11-13,
2012:
ECRTS Conference
Gabriel Parmer
George
Washgington University, USA
Andrea
Bastoni
MBDA, Italy
Roberto Gioiosa
Barcelona
Supercomputing Center
Björn B. Brandenburg
Max
Planck Institute for Software Systems
Gernot Heiser
The University
of New South Wales
Shinpei Kato
Nagoya University
Jim Anderson
University of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Thomas Gleixner
Linutronix, Germany
Steven Rostedt
Red Hat
John Regehr
University of Utah
Tuesday, July 10th 2012 | |
8:30-9:30 | Registration |
9:30-11:00 |
Keynote Talk by Paul E. McKenney: Real-Time Response on Multicore Systems: It Is Bigger Than You Think |
11:00-11:30 | Coffee Break |
11:30-13:00 | Session 1: Parallelism in Real-Time
Systems
|
13:30-14:30 | Lunch |
14:30-16:00 | Panel Discussion: Smartphone and Real-Time: Innovation
or yet another Embedded Device?
|
16:00-16:30 | Coffee Break |
16:30-18:00 | Session 2: Real-Time Systems Potpourri
|
18:00-18:30 | Discussion and Closing Thoughts |
Research on innovative RTOS architectures and services is a hot topic. Developers of Real-Time Operating Systems (RTOS) are faced with many challenges arising from two opposite needs: extreme optimization of resource usage (processor, energy, network bandwidth, etc.) vs. dynamic configuration and upgrading, flexible scheduling, component-based development and deployment, etc. While real-time systems continue to be used in many small embedded applications, real-time services are being introduced and used in general- purpose operating systems. Notable examples are the various flavors Linux that provide support to time-sensitive applications.
This workshop is intended as a forum for researchers and practitioners of RTOS to discuss the recent advances in RTOS technology and the challenges that lie ahead. The workshop will consist of two categories of submitted papers:
Upon acceptance, a complete version of the paper must be prepared and submitted. All papers will be made available to all participants a week before the workshop so that contributions can be examined prior to the workshop.
Topics include but are not limited to:
Submitted papers should follow the IEEE conference format (2 columns, 10 pt, single-line spacing) and should not exceed 10 pages for technical papers, and 5 pages for forward-looking papers. On the title page, the submission should clearly state which category of papers the submission is for. Papers may be submitted in either PDF or Postscript format. The papers will be reviewed by the workshop Program Committee. All accepted papers will be made available to all participants one week before the workshop so that contributions can be examined prior to the event.
We want to encourage scientific reproducibility, and discourage redundant work within the community. Thus, code relevant to each submission must be publicly available, and a link to it included in the submission. If you require an exception, please contact the chairs. If your submission does not include an implementation, there are no such restrictions.
Papers should be submitted by using the START Conference Manager system. The system acknowledges receipt of each submission by sending an e-mail to the contact author, and it allows to revise a submission till the deadline.
If a paper is accepted, at least one author should register for the workshop following indications sent in the notification of acceptance, and present the paper at the workshop in person.
To submit a paper, visit the submission page.