WORKSHOP OVERVIEW
Serverless computing represents the next significant leap forward with respect to abstracting commoditized computing resources. The main principle of serverless computing is that compute providers deploy and manage the entire compute environment---from hardware through to runtime in which an application executes; users therefore think entirely at the level of their application without regard for the underlying computing environment. For example, the function as a service (FaaS) model allows users to first register a programming function (e.g., in Python) and then they may invoke that function many times with different input arguments.
Serverless computing is poised to become not only the face of cloud computing in the commercial world, but also a model for remote and distributed computing more broadly. The 1st workshop on High Performance Serverless Computing will provide the high performance and distributed computing community with a dedicated forum for discussing foundational research in serverless computing in both industry and academia. The workshop will bring together these communities and provide a forum for innovation in both the high performance and distributed systems that underlie serverless computing platforms and also the use of serverless models for abstracting traditional high performance and distributed computing systems.
TOPICS
We invite the submission of original work that is related to the topics outlined below.
- Developing high performance serverless computing platforms
- Federation of serverless computing platforms
- Container management and scheduling
- Programming paradigms for serverless computing
- Data management for serverless computing
- Applications of serverless computing
- Benchmarking and performance of serverless computing
- On-demand and event-based computation
- Serverless economics and billing models
- Fault tolerance and reliability
- Data-intensive workloads and tools
- Productivity tools (Debugging, Profiling, Logging, etc)
- Stream and events processing
- Security in serverless
- Heterogeneous computing (GPU, Accelerators, exotic architectures)
SUBMISSION
Important Dates
- Papers due:
April 9, 2021 AoEApril 16, 2021 AoE (Hard deadline) - Notifications: April 30, 2021
- Camera ready: May 09, 2021
- Workshop date: June 25, 2021
Paper Categories
Authors are invited to submit:- Full 8-page papers
- Short/work-in-progress 4-page papers
Submission
Authors are invited to submit papers describing unpublished, original research. All submitted manuscripts should be formatted using the ACM Master Template with sigconf format (please be sure to use the current version). All necessary documentation can be found at: https://www.acm.org/publications/proceedings-template.
Papers may be either full (8 pages) or short (4 pages) including all text, figures, and references. Papers will be peer-reviewed (single blind), and accepted papers will be published in the workshop proceedings as part of the ACM Digital Library.
Papers conforming to these guidelines should be submitted through EasyChair
ORGANIZATION
General Chairs
- Ian Foster, Argonne National Lab & University of Chicago (foster@uchicago.edu)
- Kyle Chard, Argonne National Lab & University of Chicago (chard@uchicago.edu)
- Yadu Babuji, Argonne National Lab & University of Chicago (yadu@uchicago.edu)
Publicity Chairs
- Zhuozhao Li, University of Chicago (zhuozhao@uchicago.edu)
To contact the chairs, please use the email addresses listed above.
Program Committee Members
- Istemi Ekin Akkus, Nokia Bell Labs
- Ali R. Butt, Virginia Tech
- Yue Cheng, George Mason University
- Andrew Chien, University of Chicago
- Peter Dinda, Northwestern University
- Thomas Fahringer, University of Innsbruck
- Stephen Jason Fink, Facebook
- Volker Hilt, Nokia Bell Labs
- Alexandru Iosup, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
- Dan Katz, National Center for Supercomputing Applications
- Jay F. Lofstead II, Sandia National Laboratories
- Andre Luckow, Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich
- Tim Shaffer, University of Notre Dame
- Rafael Ferreira da Silva, University of Southern California
- Devesh Tiwari, Northeastern University
- Rich Wolski, University of California, Santa Barbara
- Justin Wozniak, Argonne National Laboratory