11th Workshop on Programming Language Approaches to Concurrency- & Communication-cEntric SoftwarePLACES 2019
2019 Proceedings in EPTCS: http://eptcs.web.cse.unsw.edu.au/content.cgi?PLACES2019
Applications today are built using numerous interacting services; soon off-the-shelf CPUs will host thousands of cores, and sensor networks will be composed from a large number of processing units. Many applications need to make effective use of thousands of computing nodes. At some level of granularity, computation in such systems is inherently concurrent and communication-centred. PLACES aims to offer a forum where researchers from different fields exchange new ideas on one of the central challenges for programming: the development of programming methodologies and infrastructures where concurrency and distribution are the norm rather than a marginal concern.
PLACES has had 10 previous iterations, co-located with ETAPS; this will be the eleventh edition.
Accepted Papers
Call for Papers
The development of effective programming methodologies for this increasingly parallel landscape of hardware and infrastructure demands exploration and understanding of a wide variety of foundational and practical ideas. The International Workshop on Programming Language Approaches to Concurrency- and Communication-cEntric Software (PLACES) is dedicated to work in this area. The workshop offers a forum for researchers from different fields to exchange new ideas about these challenges to modern and future programming, where concurrency and distribution are the norm rather than a marginal concern.
Submissions are invited in the general area of programming language approaches to concurrency, communication and distribution, ranging from foundational issues, through language implementations, to applications and case studies. Submissions will be peer-reviewed by a minimum of three reviewers, with the aim of allocating at least one expert reviewer. Papers are reviewed based on their novelty, clarity, and technical soundness. Submissions must not be submitted for publication elsewhere and must be formatted in EPTCS format, containing a maximum of 8 pages (with no restriction on bibliography or appendices, which the reviewers need not read). Accepted papers will be published as an issue of EPTCS.
After the workshop, there will be a special issue of JLAMP dedicated to PLACES 2019. Authors of PLACES 2019 will be invited to submit extended versions of their workshop papers. There will also be an open call for submissions to this special issue.
Submission link: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=places2019
Relevant topics include, but are not limited to:
- Design and implementation of programming languages with first class concurrency and communication
- Models, such as process algebra and automata
- Behavioural types, including session types
- Concurrent data types, objects and actors
- Verification and program analysis methods for concurrent and distributed software
- Memory models for concurrent programming on relaxed-memory architectures
- Interface languages for communication and distribution
- Applications in web services, sensor networks, scientific computing, HPC.
- Concurrency and communication in event processing and business process management
Sun 7 AprDisplayed time zone: Amsterdam, Berlin, Bern, Rome, Stockholm, Vienna change
09:00 - 10:30 | |||
09:00 60mTalk | Keynote: Unstructured Parallelism Considered Harmful -- Using Structured Parallelism for Enhanced Software Verification PLACES Vivek Sarkar Rice University, USA | ||
10:00 30mFull-paper | A Message-Passing Interpretation of Adjoint Logic PLACES |
11:00 - 12:00 | |||
11:00 30mFull-paper | FreeST: context-free session types in a functional language PLACES Bernardo Almeida Universidade de Lisboa, Andreia Mordido Lasige / Faculty of Sciences, Universidade de Lisboa, Vasco T. Vasconcelos University of Lisbon, Portugal | ||
11:30 30mFull-paper | Concurrent Typestate-Oriented Programming in Java PLACES |
13:30 - 15:30 | |||
13:30 60mTalk | Keynote: Shared Session Types for Safe, Practical Concurrency PLACES Stephanie Balzer Carnegie Mellon University | ||
14:30 30mFull-paper | Multiparty session type-safe web development with static linearity PLACES Jonathan King Habito and Imperial College London, Nicholas Ng Imperial College London, Nobuko Yoshida Imperial College London | ||
15:00 30mFull-paper | Service Equivalence via Multiparty Session Type Isomorphisms PLACES |
16:00 - 18:00 | |||
16:00 30mFull-paper | Value-Dependent Session Design in a Dependently Typed Language PLACES Jan de Muijnck-Hughes University of Glasgow, Edwin Brady University of St. Andrews, UK, Wim Vanderbauwhede University of Glasgow | ||
16:30 30mTalk | Fluid Types: Statically Verified Distributed Protocols with Refinements PLACES Fangyi Zhou Imperial College London, Francisco Ferreira Imperial College London, Rumyana Neykova Brunel University London, Nobuko Yoshida Imperial College London | ||
17:00 30mTalk | The Cpi-calculus: a Model for Confidential Name Passing PLACES Ivan Prokić University of Novi Sad | ||
17:30 5mDay closing | Closing remarks PLACES |