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Topic: [isabelle] ENTROPY 2019: Second Call for Papers


view this post on Zulip Email Gateway (Aug 22 2022 at 19:12):

From: Toby.Murray@data61.csiro.au
NEW: two more invited speakers


Second Call for papers — ENTROPY 2019
ENabling TRust through Os Proofs … and beYond

Second International workshop on the use of theorem provers for modelling
and verification at the hardware-software interface

https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/h5JtCjZroMFQkjkKFW-1Th?domain=entropy2019.sciencesconf.org

Co-located with EuroS&P'19, KTH, Stockholm, June 2019


INVITED SPEAKERS

Dominique Bolignano, Prove & Run
Gernot Heiser, University of New South Wales
Frank Piessens, KU Leuven
Peter Sewell, University of Cambridge

IMPORTANT DATES

Paper submission: March 11 2019
Author notification: April 10, 2019
Camera-ready versions: April 22, 2019 (strict)
Workshop: 16 June 2019

AIM AND SCOPE

Low level software such as kernels and drivers, along with the hardware
this software runs on, is critical for application security. In contrast
with user applications, OS kernel software runs in privileged CPU mode
and is thus highly critical. Large projects such as seL4, VeriSoft,
CertiKoS and Prosper have invested considerable resources in developing
formally verified systems such as hypervisors and microkernels, supplying
proofs that they satisfy critical properties. Such proofs are delicate in
terms of the scale and complexity of real systems, the models used in
performing the proof search, and the relations between the two, which
recent vulnerabilities such as Spectre and Meltdown have shown to be a
highly non-trivial issue.

The purpose of this workshop is to share, compare and disseminate best
practices, tools and methodologies to verify OS kernels, also setting the
stage for future steps in the direction of fully verified systems,
dealing with issues related to modelling, model validation, and large
proof maintenance through system evolution. On one hand, we need to make
low-level proofs more scalable, modular and cost-effective. On the other
hand, once certified systems are available, preservation and maintenance
of their proofs of validity become key questions.

The goal of the ENTROPY workshop is to provide a forum for researchers
and practitioners in this space, linking operating systems, formal
methods, and hardware architecture, interested in system design as well
as machine verified mathematical proofs using proof assistants such as
Coq, Isabelle and HOL4.

This will be the second edition of the ENTROPY workshop series. The
first workshop was organised by the Pip Development Team at University
of Lille in 2018.

TOPICS OF INTEREST

Specific topics include, but are not limited to:

The aim of the workshop is to stimulate innovation and active exchange
of ideas, so position papers, work-in-progress and industrial
experience submissions are welcome.

SUBMISSION AND PUBLICATION

There are two categories of submissions:

  1. Regular papers describing fully developed work and complete results
    (10 pages, references included, IEEE format)

  2. Short papers, position papers, industry experience reports,
    work-in-progress submissions (4 pages, references included, IEEE
    format)

All papers should be in English and describe original work that has not
been published or submitted elsewhere. The submission category should
be clearly indicated. All submissions will be fully reviewed by members
of the Programme Committee. Papers will appear in IEEE Xplore in a
companion volume to the regular EuroS&P proceedings. For formatting and
submission instructions see https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/h5JtCjZroMFQkjkKFW-1Th?domain=entropy2019.sciencesconf.org.

PROGRAM CHAIRS

Mads Dam, KTH Royal Institute of Technology
David Nowak, CNRS and University of Lille

PROGRAM COMMITTEE

Christoph Baumann, Ericsson AB
Gustavo Betarte, Univ. de la República, Uruguay
David Cock, ETH Zurich
Mads Dam, KTH Royal Institute of Technology (chair)
Anthony Fox, ARM
Deepak Garg, MPI Saarbrucken
Ronghui Gu, Columbia University
Samuel Hym, Univ. Lille
Thomas Jensen, INRIA and Univ. Rennes
Toby Murray, Univ. Melbourne
David Nowak, CNRS & Univ. Lille (chair)
Vicente Sanchez-Leighton, Orange Labs
Thomas Sewell, Chalmers


Last updated: Mar 29 2024 at 12:28 UTC