Reliability in Decentralized Distributed systems (RDDS 2006) Montpellier, France, Oct 30, 2006 http://www.cs.rmit.edu.au/fedconf/rdds2006cfp.html In conjunction with OnTheMove Federated Conferences (OTM'06) http://www.cs.rmit.edu.au/fedconf Proceedings will be published by Springer LNCS |
WORKSHOP THEME
Middleware has become a popular technology for building
distributed systems from tiny sensor networks to large scale peer-to-peer
(P2P) networks. Support such as asynchronous and multipoint communication
is well suited for constructing reactive distributed computing
applications over wired and wireless networks environments. While
middleware infrastructures exhibit attractive features from an application
development perspective (e.g., portability, interoperability, adaptability
etc.), they are often lacking in robustness and reliability. Distributed
systems become increasingly large and complex, thereby compounding many
reliability problems that necessitate different strategies and solutions.
For example, in the inherently distributed nature of P2P networks, the
most common solution to reliability is to take advantage of redundancy.
The same task can be initially assigned to multiple peers. In file sharing
applications, data can be replicated across many peers. In messaging
applications, messages can be simultaneously sent along multiple paths.
Redundancy may not be appropriate, however, in resource-constrained
environments such as wireless ad hoc networks where more lightweight
alternatives are needed. Some systems even rely on autonomic management
technologies inspired by nature and biological organisms to cope with the
challenges of scale, complexity, heterogeneity and unpredictability. In
any case, the system model (e.g., communication, failures) and application
requirements are key factors in the design of reliably mechanisms.
Among different aspects of reliability issues, this workshop focuses on
reliability in decentralized distributed systems. While decentralized
architectures are gaining adoption is most application domains, there is
still some reluctance in deploying them in systems with high dependability
requirements. This has led, over the past few years, to several academic
and industrial research efforts aimed at correcting this deficiency. For
the most part, these research efforts have been independent of each other,
and have often focused on specific pieces of the dependability puzzle. Our
aim, in this Workshop, is to bring researchers and practitioners together,
to further our insights on reliable decentralized architectures and to
investigate collectively the challenges that remain.
GOAL
The purpose of the RDDS 2006 workshop on Reliability in
Distributed Decentralized Systems is to bring together researchers from
diverse communities who are interested in building dependable reliable
distributed systems in decentralized form, to explore ways of making
today's middleware technologies more robust, and to discuss and exchange
experimental or theoretical results, novel design, work-in-progress,
experience, case study, and trend-setting ideas. We seek contributions
from researchers of all backgrounds, in particular peer-to-peer systems,
messaging, ad hoc communication, middleware and distributed systems, and
autonomic management systems.
TOPICS OF INTEREST
The Workshop solicits contributions on topics related to, but not limited to, the following:
- Reliable communication, architectures and algorithms
- Lessons learned in building/using dependable middleware: what works, what doesn't?
- Integrating dependable embedded and enterprise middleware systems
- Trade-offs in adding other "-ilities" (survivability, adaptability, scalability, availability, mobility, security, real-time, etc.) to reliable middleware infrastructures
- Integration of dependability into formal distributed object models
- Shaping/enhancing standards for reliable middleware
- Evaluating dependability for middleware applications
- Limitations of existing fault tolerance technologies in the context of middleware applications
- Metrics, benchmarks and performance studies in evaluating reliability for middleware applications
- Combining different dependability strategies, e.g., replication with transactions
- Self-healing, self-protecting systems
- Autonomic system management
- Reliability measurement, modelling and evaluation
- Tools for design and evaluation of reliable systems
- Application-specific reliable system (e.g., embedded systems, Web, databases)
- Enabling technologies for self-managing systems and networks
- Economic, biological and social models used for autonomic communications
- Timeliness and availability in support of reliability
- QoS for reliable systems
SUBMISSION REQUIREMENTS
All submitted papers will be carefully evaluated based on originality, significance, technical soundness, and clarity of expression. All submissions must be in English. Submissions should be in PDF format and must not exceed 10 pages in the final camera-ready format for regular papers and 4 pages for position papers. Authors instructions can be found at: http://www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html
The paper submission site is located at:
Accepted workshop contributions will be published by Springer-Verlag as LNCS (Lecture Notes in Computer Science) as a part of the workshop proceedings of the 2006 International On The Move Federated Conferences (OTM). Registering to the OTM conference and RDDS workshop is a prerequisite for the paper to be published.
Failure to commit to presentation at the conference automatically excludes a paper from the proceedings.
IMPORTANT DATES
| Abstract Submission Deadline | |||
| Paper Submission Deadline | |||
| Acceptance Notification | August 15, 2008 | ||
| Camera Ready Due | August 25, 2008 | ||
| Registration Due | August 25, 2008 | ||
| OTM Conferences | November 9 - 14, 2008 |
ORGANISATION COMMITTEE
- Eiko Yoneki
Computer Laboratory
University of Cambridge
United Kingdom
Email: eiko.yoneki@cl.cam.ac.uk
- Pascal Felber
Dependable and Distributed Computing Group
Université de Neuchâtel
Institut d'informatique
Swizerland
Email: pascal.felber@unine.ch
PROGRAM COMMITTEE
-
Licia Capra (University College London, UK)
-
Mariano Cilia (Darmstadt University of Technology, Germany)
-
Vittorio Cortellessa (Universita' de L'Aquila, Italy)
-
Simon Courtenage (University of Westminster, UK)
-
Patrick Eugster (Purdue University, USA)
-
Ludger Fiege (Siemens Research, Germany)
-
Maria Gradinariu (IRISA/INRIA-CNRS, France)
-
Eli Katsiri (Imperial College London, UK)
-
Michael Kounavis (Intel Research, USA)
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Marco Mamei (Università di Modena, Italy)
-
Jon Munson (IBM T J Watson Research Center, USA)
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Maziar Nekovee (BT Research, UK)
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Andrea Passarella (IIT-CNR, Italy)
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Peter Pietzuch (Harvard University, USA)
-
Matthieu Roy (LAAS-CNRS, France)
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François Taïani (Lancaster University, UK)
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Niki Trigoni (Birkbeck University London, UK)
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Einar Vollset (Cornell University, USA)