3rd Workshop on
High-performance and Real-time Embedded Systems
(HiRES 2015)
January
21, 2015, Amsterdam, the Netherlands
To
be held in conjunction with the
10th International Conference on
High-Performance and Embedded Architectures and Compilers (HiPEAC 2015)
http://www.hipeac.net/2015/amsterdam
News: Presentations are available
Goal of the Workshop
Increasingly, time is
a relevant concern which impacts in all application areas and challenges
ahead. Real-time requirements can be found in applications ranging from
large-scale data processing systems to deeply embedded devices. Examples
include safety-critical systems with high-performance requirements, such as
collision avoidance and autonomous driving in avionics and automotive
respectively, in which the correct timing behaviour is of paramount
importance; consumer systems, such as video processing in TV sets and games;
or real-time complex event processing applications, such as online trading
or real-time traffic management.
In all these applications,
systems are expected to cope with an increasing demand of functional and
non-functional requirements, with the corresponding increase in processing
capabilities, paving the way for high-performance architectures, of which
multi-core and many-core systems are becoming pervasive. The capabilities
and challenges of parallelization as a means to provide higher performance
is a cross-cutting concern.
This workshop intends to
bring together researchers and engineers in the confluence of
high-performance, embedded systems and real-time systems. The goal is to
allow for fruitful discussions on the challenges and research directions that
should be tackled by the community. Papers and presentations illustrate
current and future work in the theory and practice of the design and
engineering of high-performance real-time embedded systems for a variety of
application domains.
This is the 3rd
workshop in the series. Information on previous workshop can be found at HiRES 2013 and HiRES 2014.
Workshop Program
(Preliminary)
Room: G107
10:00-11:00 Welcome & Keynote
Session Chair: Luis Miguel Pinho
In the opening talk of the workshop, Eric
Debes, responsible for computing R&T strategy for Thales, will
present a perspective on the challenges of high-performance and real-time
embedded systems.
11:00-11:30 Coffee Break
11:30-13:00 Paper Session #1
Session Chair: Eduardo Quiñones
Experiences
and Results of Parallelisation of Industrial Hard Real-time Applications
for the parMERASA Multi-core (Presentation)
Theo Ungerer, Christian Bradatsch,
Martin Frieb, Florian Kluge, Jörg Mische, Alexander Stegmeier, Ralf Jahr, Mike
Gerdes, Pavel Zaykov, Lucie Matusova, Zai Jian Jia Li, Zlatko Petrov, Bert
Böddeker, Sebastian Kehr, Hans Regler, Andreas Hugl, Christine Rochange,
Haluk Ozaktas, Hugues Cassé, Armelle Bonenfant, Pascal Sainrat, Nick Lay,
David George, Ian Broster, Eduardo Quiñones, Milos Panic, Jaume Abella,
Carles Hernandez, Francisco Cazorla, Sacha Uhrig, Mathias Rohde and Arthur
Pyka
WCET
Analysis of Parallel Benchmarks using On-Demand Coherent Cache (Presentation)
Arthur Pyka, Lillian Tadros, Sascha
Uhrig, Hugues Cassé, Haluk Ozaktas and Christine Rochange
Partitioning
Algorithm for Mixed Criticality Systems (Presentation)
Emilio Salazar and Alejandro Alonso
13:00-14:00 Lunch Break
14:15-15:15 Paper Session #2
Session Chair: Sascha Uhrig
Algorithmic
Skeletons for Parallelization of Embedded Real-time Systems (Presentation)
Alexander Stegmeier, Martin Frieb,
Ralf Jahr and Theo Ungerer
A
system model and stack for the parallelization of time-critical
applications on many-core architectures (Presentation)
Vincent Nelis, Patrick Meumeu Yomsi,
Luis Miguel Pinho, Eduardo Quiñones, Marko Bertogna, Andrea Marongiu, Paolo
Gai and Claudio Scordino
15:15-16:00 Break
16:00-17:30 Panel: Challenges of
Timing Analysis of Many-Core Platforms
Moderator: Luis Miguel Pinho
With the
increasing interest on many-core platforms for high-performance real-time
systems, it is more and more challenging how to derive safe and accurate
worst-case execution times.
The panel
will include the perspective on the topic of prominent experts in the area:
- Christian Ferdinand, AbsInt
- Francisco Cazorla, BSC
- Luca Fossati, ESA
-
Sebastian
Altmeyer, UvA
The
panel is in conjunction with the TACLe Workshop.
17:30 (Closing)
Topics of interest
Topics of interest to this edition
of the workshop include but are not limited to:
-
Runtimes
and operating systems combining high-performance and predictability
requirements;
-
Programming
models and compiler support for providing real-time capabilities to multi-
and many-core architectures;
-
Models
and tools for code generation, system verification and validation;
-
Worst-case
execution time analysis, parallel/dag-based task models, schedulability
analysis of multi- and many-core systems;
-
Heterogeneous
multi-core embedded real-time architectures, many-core accelerators;
-
Time-predictable
multi- and many-core processor architectures;
-
Time-aware
energy-efficiency.
Paper submission
Submitted papers should use
the LNCS format and should be 12 pages maximum. Submissions are handled
through easychair at https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=hires2015.
HiRES goals are to allow
for interaction and discussion on early results. Informal proceedings will
be provided to the participants and online on the workshop website, but no
formal publication will be provided.
Important dates
Submission deadline:
Abstract registration - October 20, 2014
Paper submission - October
27, 2014
Notification to authors:
November 23, 2014
Final version of accepted
papers: December 9, 2014
Workshop: January 21, 2015
Organizers
Luís Miguel Pinho, CISTER,
Portugal
Eduardo Quiñones, BSC,
Spain
Sascha Uhrig, TU Dortmund,
Germany
Program committee
Albert Cohen, INRIA, France
Alejandro Alonso, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Spain
Andrea Marongiu, ETHZ,
Switzerland
Eduardo Quiñones, BSC,
Spain
Johan Eker, Ericsson,
Sweden
Luís Miguel Pinho, CISTER, Portugal
Marko Bertogna, University of Modena, Italy
Martin Schoeberl, DTU,
Denmark
Mats Brorsson, KTH, Sweden
Neil Audsley, University of
York, UK
Philippe Bonnot, Thales,
France
Sascha Uhrig, TU Dortmund,
Germany
Theo Ungerer, University of
Augsburg, Germany
Zlatko Petrov, Honeywell,
Czech Republic
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