From: Traytel Dmitriy <traytel@inf.ethz.ch>
Certified Programs and Proofs (CPP) is an international conference on
practical and theoretical topics in all areas that consider
certification as an essential paradigm for their work. Certification
here means formal, mechanized verification of some sort, preferably
with the production of independently checkable certificates.
CPP spans areas of computer science, mathematics, logic, and education.
CPP 2020 will be held on 20-21 January 2020 in New Orleans, Louisiana,
United States and will be co-located with POPL 2020. CPP 2020 is
sponsored by ACM SIGPLAN, in cooperation with ACM SIGLOG.
For more information about this edition and the CPP series please visit:
https://popl20.sigplan.org/home/CPP-2020
Submission guideline news: lightweight double-blind reviewing process
and unrestricted appendices that don't count against the page limit
Delighted to announce that the invited speakers for CPP 2020 will be:
Adam Chlipala (MIT CSAIL) and Grigore Rosu (UIUC and Runtime Verification)
CPP 2020 will also host the POPLmark 15 Year Retrospective Panel
- Abstract Deadline: 16 October 2019 at 23:59 AoE (UTC-12h)
- Paper Submission Deadline: 21 October 2019 at 23:59 AoE (UTC-12h)
- Notification: 27 November 2019
- Camera Ready Deadline: 20 December 2019
- Conference: 20 - 21 January 2020
Deadlines expire at the end of the day, anywhere on earth. Abstract
and submission deadlines are tight and there will be no extensions.
We welcome submissions in research areas related to formal
certification of programs and proofs. The following is a
non-exhaustive list of topics of interests to CPP:
- certified or certifying programming, compilation, linking, OS
kernels, runtime systems, and security monitors;
- certified mathematical libraries and mathematical theorems;
- proof assistants (e.g, ACL2, Agda, Coq, Dafny, F*, HOL,
HOL-Light, Idris, Isabelle, Lean, Mizar, Nuprl, PVS, etc)
- new languages and tools for certified programming;
- program analysis, program verification, and program synthesis;
- program logics, type systems, and semantics for certified code;
- logics for certifying concurrent and distributed systems;
- mechanized metatheory, formalized programming language semantics,
and logical frameworks;
- higher-order logics, dependent type theory, proof theory,
logical systems, separation logics, and logics for security;
- verification of correctness and security properties;
- formally verified blockchains and smart contracts;
- certificates for decision procedures, including linear algebra,
polynomial systems, SAT, SMT, and unification in algebras of interest;
- certificates for semi-decision procedures, including equality,
first-order logic, and higher-order unification;
- certificates for program termination;
- formal models of computation;
- mechanized (un)decidability and computational complexity proofs;
- user interfaces for proof assistants and theorem provers;
- original formal proofs of known results in math or computer science;
- teaching mathematics and computer science with proof assistants.
- Jasmin Christian Blanchette (VU Amsterdam, Netherlands -- co-chair)
- Catalin Hritcu (Inria Paris, France -- co-chair)
- Nada Amin (Harvard University - USA)
- Jesús María Aransay Azofra (Universidad de La Rioja - Spain)
- Mauricio Ayala-Rincon (Universidade de Brasilia - Brazil)
- Liron Cohen (Cornell University - USA)
- Dominique Devriese (Vrije Universiteit Brussel - Belgium)
- Jean-Christophe Filliâtre (CNRS - France)
- Adam Grabowski (University of Bialystok - Poland)
- Warren Hunt (University of Texas - USA)
- Ori Lahav (Tel Aviv University - Israel)
- Peter Lammich (The University of Manchester - UK)
- Dominique Larchey-Wendling (Univ. de Lorraine, CNRS, LORIA - France)
- Hongjin Liang (Nanjing University - China)
- Assia Mahboubi (Inria and VU Amsterdam - France)
- Cesar Munoz (NASA - USA)
- Vivek Nigam (fortiss GmbH - Germany)
- Benjamin Pierce (University of Pennsylvania - USA)
- Vincent Rahli (University of Luxembourg, SnT - Luxembourg)
- Christine Rizkallah (UNSW Sydney - Australia)
- Ilya Sergey (Yale-NUS College and National University of Singapore)
- Kathrin Stark (Saarland University - Germany)
- Nikhil Swamy (Microsoft Research - USA)
- Nicolas Tabareau (Inria - France)
- Dmitriy Traytel (ETH Zürich - Switzerland)
- Floris van Doorn (University of Pittsburgh - USA)
- Akihisa Yamada (National Institute of Informatics - Japan)
- Roberto Zunino (University of Trento - Italy)
Prior to the paper submission deadline, the authors should upload their
anonymized paper in PDF format through the HotCRP system at
https://cpp2020.hotcrp.com
Submissions must be written in English and provide sufficient detail
to allow the program committee to assess the merits of the paper.
Submitted papers must be formatted following the ACM SIGPLAN
Proceedings format using the
acmart
style with the sigplan
option, which provides a two-column
style,
using 10 point font for the main text, and a header for double blind review
submission, i.e.,
\documentclass[sigplan,10pt,review]{acmart}\settopmatter{printfolios=true,printccs=false,printacmref=false}
Submitted papers should not exceed 12 pages, including tables and
figures, but excluding bibliography and clearly marked appendices.
The paper should be self contained without the appendices. Shorter
papers are welcome and will be given equal consideration. Papers not
conforming to the requirements concerning format and maximum length may
be rejected without further consideration.
CPP 2020 will employ a lightweight double-blind reviewing process.
To facilitate this, submitted papers must adhere to two rules:
author names and institutions must be omitted, and
references to authors' own related work should be in the third person
(e.g., not "We build on our previous work …" but rather “We build on
the work of …").
The purpose of this process is to help the PC and external reviewers
come to an initial judgment about the paper without bias, not to make it
impossible for them to discover the authors if they were to try. Nothing
should be done in the name of anonymity that weakens the submission or
makes the job of reviewing the paper more difficult. In particular,
important background references should not be omitted or anonymized. In
addition, authors are free to disseminate their ideas or draft versions
of their paper as usual. For example, authors may post drafts of their
papers on the web or give talks on their research ideas. POPL has
answers for frequently asked questions addressing many common concerns:
https://popl20.sigplan.org/track/POPL-2020-Research-Papers#Submission-and-Reviewing-FAQ
We encourage authors to provide any supplementary material that is
required to support the claims made in the paper, such as proof scripts
or experimental data. These materials must be uploaded at submission
time, as an archive, not via a URL. Two forms of supplementary material
may be submitted:
Anonymous supplementary material is available to the reviewers before
they submit their first-draft reviews.
Non-anonymous supplementary material is available to the reviewers
after they have submitted their first-draft reviews and learned the
identity of the authors.
Use the anonymous form whenever possible, so that the materials can be
taken into account from the beginning of the reviewing process.
Submitted papers must adhere to the SIGPLAN Republication Policy and the
ACM Policy on Plagiarism. Concurrent submissions to other conferences,
journals, workshops with proceedings, or similar forums of publication
are not allowed. The PC chairs should be informed of closely related
work submitted to a conference or journal in advance of submission.
One author of each accepted paper is expected to present it at the
conference.
The CPP proceedings will be published by the ACM, and authors of accepted
papers will be required to choose one of the following publication options:
Author retains copyright of the work and grants ACM
a non-exclusive permission-to-publish license
and, optionally, licenses the work under a Creative Commons license;
Author retains copyright of the work and grants ACM
an exclusive permission-to-publish license;
Author transfers copyright of the work to ACM.
For authors who can afford it, we recommend option 1, which will make
the paper Gold Open Access, and also encourage such authors to
license their work under the CC-BY license. ACM will charge you an
article processing fee for this option (currently, US$700), which you
have to pay directly with the ACM.
For everyone else, we recommend option 2, which is free and allows you
to achieve Green Open Access, by uploading a pre-print of your paper
to a repository that guarantees permanent archival such as arXiv or
HAL. This is anyway a good idea for timely dissemination even if you
chose option 1. Ensuring timely dissemination is particularly important
for this edition, since, because of the very tight schedule, the
official proceedings might not be available in time for CPP.
The official CPP 2020 proceedings will also be available via SIGPLAN
OpenTOC.
For ACM's take on this, see their Copyright Policy and Author Rights.
For any questions please contact the
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Last updated: Nov 21 2024 at 12:39 UTC