Skip site navigation (1)Skip section navigation (2)
Date:      Thu, 14 Apr 2022 20:05:17 +0200
From:      Tommaso Cucinotta <tommaso.cucinotta@santannapisa.it>
To:        freebsd-virtualization@freebsd.org
Subject:   =?UTF-8?Q?Virtualization_in_High=c2=ad-Performance_Cloud_Computing_?= =?UTF-8?Q?=28VHPC_2022=29_-_Call_for_Papers?=
Message-ID:  <bd9f8caa-9ecb-4f37-2f66-f646d485b84f@santannapisa.it>
In-Reply-To: <CAGT8KiHGe=NdDfNY=wuEwCvf9t-RyNQ-z0qDMRkd5GG1QF-rjw@mail.gmail.com>
References:  <CAGT8KiG5Hj-QVxn90kA-rLMR0di=_6jHG2pZhPGUp3VLPKztFg@mail.gmail.com> <ac8e2eab-c7d3-11bf-431d-bdfbe4398d50@santannapisa.it> <4e5befcd-110a-7721-3fd4-e8c27233945c@santannapisa.it> <CAGT8KiHGe=NdDfNY=wuEwCvf9t-RyNQ-z0qDMRkd5GG1QF-rjw@mail.gmail.com>

next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help

[-- Attachment #1 --]
[apologies for cross-postings]

*The paper submission deadline for VHPC 2022 has been extended to April 26th (AoE). Abstract registrations are due on 
April 19th.*

The Workshop on Virtualization in High­-Performance Cloud Computing (VHPC) <vhpc.org/> is an international forum 
bringing together researchers and industrial practitioners facing the challenges posed by virtualization in HPC/Cloud 
scenarios, in order to foster discussion, collaboration, mutual exchange of knowledge and experience, enabling research 
to ultimately provide novel solutions for virtualized computing systems of tomorrow.

The 17th edition of VHPC will be held on June 2nd, jointly with the ISC High-Performance 2022 <https://www.isc-hpc.com/>; 
conference and exhibition in Hamburg (Germany), and will feature two excellent industrial _/keynote speakers/_

  * “rtla: finding the sources of OS noise on Linux”, Daniel Bristot De Oliveira, Senior Principal Software Engineer in
    the real-time kernel team at Red Hat
  * “DynamoDB: NoSQL database services for predictable HPC workloads”, Akshat Vig, Principal Software Engineer at Amazon
    Web Services (AWS).

In addition to the general research topics mentioned below, VHPC'22 encourages particularly contributions on the 
following _/focus topics/_:

  * Container Platforms (Kubernetes, Docker, Singularity, Shifter, rkt, …) for Scientific Workflows
  * Composable Lightweight Applications and Unikernel Frameworks
  * Latency Control and Data/Container Placement in Heterogeneous HPC Virtualized Environments
  * Energy-efficiency and Service Orchestration in Virtualized Cloud & HPC Infrastructures

*Workshop Overview*

Containers and virtualization technologies constitute key enabling factors for flexible resource management in modern 
data centers, and particularly in cloud environments. Cloud providers need to manage complex and heterogeneous 
infrastructures in a seamless fashion to support the highly dynamic and diverse workloads and applications customers 
deploy. Similarly, HPC environments have been increasingly adopting techniques that enable flexible management of vast 
computing and networking resources, close to marginal provisioning cost, which is unprecedented in the history of 
scientific and commercial computing. More recently, Function as a Service (Faas) and Serverless computing, leveraging on 
lightweight virtualizaton and containerization solutions, widens the spectrum of applications that can be deployed in a 
cloud environment, especially in an HPC context. Here, HPC-provided services can become accessible to distributed 
workloads outside of large cluster environments.

Various virtualization-containerization technologies contribute to the overall picture in different ways: machine 
virtualization, with its capability to enable consolidation of multiple under­utilized servers with heterogeneous 
software and operating systems (OSes), and its capability to live­-migrate a fully operating virtual machine (VM) with a 
very short downtime, enables novel and dynamic ways to manage physical servers; OS-­level virtualization (i.e., 
containerization), with its capability to isolate multiple user­-space environments and to allow for their co­existence 
within the same OS kernel, promises to provide many of the advantages of machine virtualization with bare-metal 
responsiveness and performance; lastly, unikernels provide for many virtualization benefits with a minimized OS/library 
surface. I/O Virtualization in turn allows physical network interfaces to take traffic from multiple VMs or containers; 
network virtualization, with its capability to create logical network overlays that are independent of the underlying 
physical topology is furthermore enabling virtualization of HPC infrastructures.

*Topics of Interest*

The VHPC program committee solicits original, high-quality submissions related to virtualization across the entire 
software stack with a special focus on the intersection of HPC, containers-virtualization and cloud computing.

Each topic encompasses aspects related to design/architecture, management, performance management, modeling and 
configuration/tooling:

Design / Architecture:

  * Containers and OS-level virtualization (LXC, Docker, rkt, Singularity, Shifter)
  * Hypervisor support for heterogeneous resources (GPUs, co-processors, FPGAs, etc.)
  * Hypervisor extensions to mitigate side-channel attacks ([micro-]architectural timing attacks, privilege escalation)
  * VM & Container trust and security models
  * Multi-environment coupling, system software supporting in-situ analysis with HPC simulation
  * Cloud reliability, fault-tolerance and high-availability
  * Energy-efficient and power-aware virtualization
  * Containers inside VMs with hypervisor isolation
  * Virtualization support for emerging memory technologies
  * Lightweight/specialized operating systems in conjunction with virtual machines
  * Hypervisor support for heterogeneous resources (GPUs, co-processors, FPGAs, etc.)
  * Novel unikernels and use cases for virtualized HPC environments
  * ARM-based hypervisors, ARM virtualization extensions

Management:

  * Container, VM and data management for HPC and cloud environments
  * HPC services integration, services to support HPC
  * Service and on-demand scheduling & resource management
  * Dedicated workload management with VMs or containers
  * Workflow coupling with VMs and containers
  * Unikernels and lightweight VM application management
  * Environments and tools for operating containerized environments (batch, orchestration)
  * Novel models for non-HPC workload provisioning on HPC resources

Performance Measurements and Modeling:

  * Performance improvements for or driven by unikernels
  * Optimizations of virtual machine monitor platforms and hypervisors
  * Scalability analysis of VMs and/or containers at large scale
  * Performance measurement, modeling and monitoring of virtualized/cloud workloads
  * Virtualization in supercomputing environments, HPC clusters, HPC in the cloud
  * Energy-efficient deployment of high-performance, ultra-low latency and real-time workloads in cloud infrastructures
  * Modeling, control and isolation of end-to-end performance for parallel & distributed cloud/HPC applications

Configuration / Tooling:

  * Tool support for unikernels: configuration/build environments, debuggers, profilers
  * Job scheduling/control/policy and container placement in virtualized environments
  * Measuring and controlling “OS/Virtualization noise”
  * Operating MPI in containers/VMs and Unikernels
  * GPU virtualization operationalization

The workshop will be one day in length, composed of 20 min paper presentations, each followed by 10 min discussion 
sections, plus lightning talks that are limited to 5 minutes. Presentations may be accompanied by interactive 
demonstrations.

For more information and detailed paper submission instructions, refer to the VHPC'22 webpage <https://vhpc.org/>:
https://vhpc.org/

*Important Dates*

  * *Apr 19th, 2022 (extended)*: Abstract submission (opens /Feb 14th, 2022/)
  * *Apr 26th, 2022**(extended)*: Paper submission deadline (Springer LNCS)
  * *May 6th, 2022*: Acceptance notification
  * *Jun 2nd, 2022*: Workshop Day
  * *Jul 10th, 2022*: Camera-ready version due (post-workshop)

*General Chairs*

  * Michael Alexander, BOKU Vienna, Austria
  * Anastassios Nanos, Nubificus Ltd., UK
  * Tommaso Cucinotta, Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna, Ital

-- 
Tommaso Cucinotta, Associate Professor of Computer Engineering, PhD
Head of the Real-Time Systems Laboratory (ReTiS)
Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna, Pisa, Italy
http://retis.sssup.it/~tommaso/eng/research.html

[-- Attachment #2 --]
<html><head>
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8">
  </head>
  <body>
    [apologies for cross-postings]<br>
    <p><b>The paper submission deadline for VHPC 2022 has been extended
        to April 26th (AoE). Abstract registrations are due on April
        19th.</b></p>
    <p>The <a moz-do-not-send="true" href="vhpc.org/">Workshop on
        Virtualization in High­-Performance Cloud Computing (VHPC)</a>
      is an international forum bringing together researchers and
      industrial practitioners facing the challenges posed by
      virtualization in HPC/Cloud scenarios, in order to foster
      discussion, collaboration, mutual exchange of knowledge and
      experience, enabling research to ultimately provide novel
      solutions for virtualized computing systems of tomorrow.<br>
      <br>
      The 17th edition of VHPC will be held on June 2nd, jointly with
      the <a moz-do-not-send="true" href="https://www.isc-hpc.com/">ISC
        High-Performance 2022</a> conference and exhibition in Hamburg
      (Germany), and will feature two excellent industrial <u><i>keynote
          speakers</i></u><br>
    </p>
    <ul>
      <li>“rtla: finding the sources of OS noise on Linux”, Daniel
        Bristot De Oliveira, Senior Principal Software Engineer in the
        real-time kernel team at Red Hat</li>
      <li>“DynamoDB: NoSQL database services for predictable HPC
        workloads”, Akshat Vig, Principal Software Engineer at Amazon
        Web Services (AWS).</li>
    </ul>
    <p>In addition to the general research topics mentioned below,
      VHPC'22 encourages particularly contributions on the following <u><i>focus
          topics</i></u>:<br>
    </p>
    <ul>
      <li> Container Platforms (Kubernetes, Docker, Singularity,
        Shifter, rkt, …) for Scientific Workflows</li>
      <li>Composable Lightweight Applications and Unikernel Frameworks</li>
      <li>Latency Control and Data/Container Placement in Heterogeneous
        HPC Virtualized Environments</li>
      <li>Energy-efficiency and Service Orchestration in Virtualized
        Cloud &amp; HPC Infrastructures <br>
      </li>
    </ul>
    <ul>
    </ul>
    <p><b>Workshop Overview</b><br>
      <br>
      Containers and virtualization technologies constitute key enabling
      factors for flexible resource management in modern data centers,
      and particularly in cloud environments. Cloud providers need to
      manage complex and heterogeneous infrastructures in a seamless
      fashion to support the highly dynamic and diverse workloads and
      applications customers deploy. Similarly, HPC environments have
      been increasingly adopting techniques that enable flexible
      management of vast computing and networking resources, close to
      marginal provisioning cost, which is unprecedented in the history
      of scientific and commercial computing. More recently, Function as
      a Service (Faas) and Serverless computing, leveraging on
      lightweight virtualizaton and containerization solutions, widens
      the spectrum of applications that can be deployed in a cloud
      environment, especially in an HPC context. Here, HPC-provided
      services can become accessible to distributed workloads outside of
      large cluster environments. <br>
      <br>
      Various virtualization-containerization technologies contribute to
      the overall picture in different ways: machine virtualization,
      with its capability to enable consolidation of multiple
      under­utilized servers with heterogeneous software and operating
      systems (OSes), and its capability to live­-migrate a fully
      operating virtual machine (VM) with a very short downtime, enables
      novel and dynamic ways to manage physical servers; OS-­level
      virtualization (i.e., containerization), with its capability to
      isolate multiple user­-space environments and to allow for their
      co­existence within the same OS kernel, promises to provide many
      of the advantages of machine virtualization with bare-metal
      responsiveness and performance; lastly, unikernels provide for
      many virtualization benefits with a minimized OS/library surface.
      I/O Virtualization in turn allows physical network interfaces to
      take traffic from multiple VMs or containers; network
      virtualization, with its capability to create logical network
      overlays that are independent of the underlying physical topology
      is furthermore enabling virtualization of HPC infrastructures. <br>
    </p>
    <p><b>Topics of Interest</b> <br>
      <br>
      The VHPC program committee solicits original, high-quality
      submissions related to virtualization across the entire software
      stack with a special focus on the intersection of HPC,
      containers-virtualization and cloud computing. <br>
      <br>
      Each topic encompasses aspects related to design/architecture,
      management, performance management, modeling and
      configuration/tooling: <br>
      <br>
      Design / Architecture: <br>
    </p>
    <ul>
      <li>Containers and OS-level virtualization (LXC, Docker, rkt,
        Singularity, Shifter) </li>
      <li>Hypervisor support for heterogeneous resources (GPUs,
        co-processors, FPGAs, etc.) </li>
      <li>Hypervisor extensions to mitigate side-channel attacks
        ([micro-]architectural timing attacks, privilege escalation) </li>
      <li>VM &amp; Container trust and security models </li>
      <li>Multi-environment coupling, system software supporting in-situ
        analysis with HPC simulation </li>
      <li>Cloud reliability, fault-tolerance and high-availability </li>
      <li>Energy-efficient and power-aware virtualization </li>
      <li>Containers inside VMs with hypervisor isolation </li>
      <li>Virtualization support for emerging memory technologies </li>
      <li>Lightweight/specialized operating systems in conjunction with
        virtual machines </li>
      <li>Hypervisor support for heterogeneous resources (GPUs,
        co-processors, FPGAs, etc.) </li>
      <li>Novel unikernels and use cases for virtualized HPC
        environments </li>
      <li>ARM-based hypervisors, ARM virtualization extensions<br>
      </li>
    </ul>
    <p>Management: <br>
    </p>
    <ul>
      <li>Container, VM and data management for HPC and cloud
        environments </li>
      <li>HPC services integration, services to support HPC </li>
      <li>Service and on-demand scheduling &amp; resource management </li>
      <li>Dedicated workload management with VMs or containers </li>
      <li>Workflow coupling with VMs and containers </li>
      <li>Unikernels and lightweight VM application management </li>
      <li>Environments and tools for operating containerized
        environments (batch, orchestration) </li>
      <li>Novel models for non-HPC workload provisioning on HPC
        resources<br>
      </li>
    </ul>
    <p>Performance Measurements and Modeling: <br>
    </p>
    <ul>
      <li>Performance improvements for or driven by unikernels </li>
      <li>Optimizations of virtual machine monitor platforms and
        hypervisors </li>
      <li>Scalability analysis of VMs and/or containers at large scale </li>
      <li>Performance measurement, modeling and monitoring of
        virtualized/cloud workloads </li>
      <li>Virtualization in supercomputing environments, HPC clusters,
        HPC in the cloud </li>
      <li>Energy-efficient deployment of high-performance, ultra-low
        latency and real-time workloads in cloud infrastructures </li>
      <li>Modeling, control and isolation of end-to-end performance for
        parallel &amp; distributed cloud/HPC applications<br>
      </li>
    </ul>
    <p>Configuration / Tooling: <br>
    </p>
    <ul>
      <li>Tool support for unikernels: configuration/build environments,
        debuggers, profilers </li>
      <li>Job scheduling/control/policy and container placement in
        virtualized environments </li>
      <li>Measuring and controlling “OS/Virtualization noise” </li>
      <li>Operating MPI in containers/VMs and Unikernels </li>
      <li>GPU virtualization operationalization </li>
    </ul>
    <p> The workshop will be one day in length, composed of 20 min paper
      presentations, each followed by 10 min discussion sections, plus
      lightning talks that are limited to 5 minutes. Presentations may
      be accompanied by interactive demonstrations.</p>
    <p>For more information and detailed paper submission instructions,
      refer to the <a moz-do-not-send="true" href="https://vhpc.org/">VHPC'22
        webpage</a>:<br>
      <a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://vhpc.org/" moz-do-not-send="true">https://vhpc.org/</a><br>;
    </p>
    <p><b>Important Dates</b></p>
    <p> </p>
    <ul>
      <li><strong>Apr 19th, 2022 (extended)</strong>: Abstract
        submission (opens <em>Feb 14th, 2022</em>)</li>
      <li><strong>Apr 26th, 2022</strong><strong> (extended)</strong>:
        Paper submission deadline (Springer LNCS)</li>
      <li><strong>May 6th, 2022</strong>: Acceptance notification</li>
      <li><strong>Jun 2nd, 2022</strong>: Workshop Day</li>
      <li><strong>Jul 10th, 2022</strong>: Camera-ready version due
        (post-workshop)</li>
    </ul>
    <p><b>General Chairs</b><br>
    </p>
    <ul>
      <li>Michael Alexander, BOKU Vienna, Austria </li>
      <li>Anastassios Nanos, Nubificus Ltd., UK </li>
      <li>Tommaso Cucinotta, Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna, Ital </li>
    </ul>
    <ul>
    </ul>
    <pre class="moz-signature" cols="120">-- 
Tommaso Cucinotta, Associate Professor of Computer Engineering, PhD
Head of the Real-Time Systems Laboratory (ReTiS)
Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna, Pisa, Italy
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://retis.sssup.it/people/tommaso" moz-do-not-send="true">http://retis.sssup.it/~tommaso/eng/research.html</a></pre>;
  </body>
</html>

Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?bd9f8caa-9ecb-4f37-2f66-f646d485b84f>