Call For Papers
ACM SIGPLAN 2008 Workshop on Partial Evaluation and Program Manipulation
The PEPM Symposium/Workshop series aims to bring together researchers
and practitioners working in the areas of program manipulation,
partial evaluation, and program generation. PEPM focuses on
techniques, theory, tools, and applications of analysis and
manipulation of programs.
The 2007 PEPM workshop will be based on a broad interpretation of
semantics-based program manipulation and continue last year's
successful effort to expand the scope of PEPM significantly beyond the
traditionally covered areas of partial evaluation and specialization
and include practical applications of program transformations such as
refactoring tools, and practical implementation techniques such as
rule-based transformation systems. In addition, the scope of PEPM
covers manipulation and transformations of program and system
representations such as structural and semantic models that occur in
the context of model-driven development. In order to reach out to
practitioners, a separate category of tool demonstration papers will
be solicited.
Topics of interest for PEPM'07 include, but are not limited to:
- Program and model manipulation techniques such as transformations driven by rules, patterns, or analyses, partial evaluation, specialization, slicing, symbolic execution, refactoring, aspect weaving, decompilation, and obfuscation.
- Program analysis techniques that are used to drive program/model manipulation such as abstract interpretation, static analysis, binding-time analysis, dynamic analysis, constraint solving, and type systems.
- Analysis and transformation for programs/models with advanced features such as objects, generics, ownership types, aspects, reflection, XML type systems, component frameworks, and middleware.
- Techniques that treat programs/models as data objects including meta-programming, generative programming, staged computation, and model-driven program generation and transformation.
- Application of the above techniques including experimental studies, engineering needed for scalability, and benchmarking. Examples of application domains include legacy program understanding and transformation, domain-specific language implementations, scientific computing, middleware frameworks and infrastructure needed for distributed and web-based applications.
We especially encourage papers that break new ground including
descriptions of how program/model manipulation tools can be integrated
into realistic software development processes, descriptions of robust
tools capable of effectively handling realistic applications, and new
areas of application such as rapidly evolving systems, distributed and
webbased programming including middleware manipulation, model-driven
development, and on-the-fly program adaptation driven by run-time or
statistical analysis.
Submission Categories, Guidelines, and Proceedings
Regular Research Papers must not exceed 10 pages in ACM Proceedings style. Tool demonstration papers must not exceed 4 pages in ACM Proceedings style, and authors will be expected to present a live demonstration of the described tool at the workshop. Suggested topics, evaluation criteria, and writing guidelines for both research tool demonstration papers will be made available on the PEPM'06 Web-site. Papers should be submitted electronically via the workshop web site. We plan to publish the workshop proceedings in the ACM Digital Library (approval pending) and selected papers will be invited for a journal special issue dedicated to PEPM'07.
Important Dates
- Abstracts due: Fri, October 12, 2007
- Submission: Wed, October 17, 2007, 23:59, Apia time
- Notification: Mon, November 12, 2007
- Camera-ready: Wed, November 28, 2007
- Workshop: Mon-Tue, January 7-8, 2008
Organization
Program Chairs
Program Committee Members
- Kenichi Asai (Ochanomizu University, Japan)
- Lennart Augustsson (Credit Suisse, UK)
- Martin Bravenboer (Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands)
- Cristiano Calcagno (Imperial College London, UK)
- Robert M. Fuhrer (IBM T.J. Watson Research Center, USA)
- Shan Shan Huang (Georgia Institute of Technology, USA)
- Patricia Johann (Rutgers University, USA)
- Siau-Cheng Khoo (National University of Singapore, Singapore)
- Anne-Françoise Le Meur (University of Science and Technology Lille, France)
- Shin-Cheng Mu (Academia Sinica, Taiwan)
- Klaus Ostermann (University of Technology Darmstadt, Germany)
- Markus Püschel (Carnegie Mellon University, USA)
- Sergei Romanenko (Keldysh Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia)
- Mads Rosendahl (University of Roskilde, Denmark)
- Jeremy Siek (University of Colorado at Boulder, USA)
- Todd Veldhuizen (University of Waterloo, Canada)
- German Vidal (Technical University of Valencia, Spain)
- Tetsuo Yokoyama (Nagoya University, Japan)