From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Received: from mail4-relais-sop.national.inria.fr (mail4-relais-sop.national.inria.fr [192.134.164.105]) by walapai.inria.fr (8.13.6/8.13.6) with ESMTP id p54GmKKp019253 for ; Sat, 4 Jun 2011 18:48:20 +0200 X-IronPort-Anti-Spam-Filtered: true X-IronPort-Anti-Spam-Result: AoUDACBh6k1ZELGagWdsb2JhbABTploBARYmJalBnjOGIQSQeY87 X-IronPort-AV: E=Sophos;i="4.65,320,1304287200"; d="scan'208";a="100478075" Received: from recoil.dh.bytemark.co.uk (HELO dark.recoil.org) ([89.16.177.154]) by mail4-smtp-sop.national.inria.fr with SMTP; 04 Jun 2011 18:48:14 +0200 Received: (qmail 28512 invoked by uid 10000); 4 Jun 2011 16:48:14 -0000 Date: Sat, 4 Jun 2011 17:48:14 +0100 From: Anil Madhavapeddy To: caml-list@yquem.inria.fr Message-ID: <20110604164814.GA30761@dark.recoil.org> MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Disposition: inline User-Agent: Mutt/1.5.20 (2009-06-14) X-Validation-by: anil@recoil.org Subject: [Caml-list] [CFP] International Workshop on Rigorous Protocol Engineering (WRiPE 2011) This workshop is examining pragmatic approaches to building correct Internet protocols, which I hope will be of interest to OCaml hackers. -- 1st International Workshop on Rigorous Protocol Engineering (WRiPE 2011) Co-located with the 19th IEEE International Conference on Network Protocols (ICNP 2011), Vancouver, Canada, on October 17th 2011. http://wripe11.cis.upenn.edu/ WRiPE is an inter-disciplinary workshop that will bring together researchers from the networking, formal methods and programming languages communities. ICNP started nearly twenty years ago as a conference focused on the application of formal methods to the design and analysis of protocols primarily from the telecommunication space. This initial focus on formal methods has diminished over the years as ICNP has shifted towards research on Internet protocols. The aim of WRiPE is to reinvigorate and revitalize the application of formal methods to the design and analysis of network protocols. We think the time is ripe for this type of workshop because (1) verification techniques have matured greatly in the last few decades, (2) verification tools such as model checkers, theorem provers, and SAT/SMT solvers have attracted a sizable user base, and (3) such techniques and tools have not traditionally been applied to network protocols (in particular IP, which is now the dominant networking technology). By network protocols, we include traditional IP routing protocols, wireless multi-hop routing, BGP policies, transport protocols, application-layer overlay networks, and enterprise and data center networks. These may also include security extensions to these protocols, e.g. IPSec and Secure BGP, as well as protocols developed using emerging software router platforms such as OpenFlow. By verification technique, we mean any rigorous method of demonstrating that an implementations satisfies a given specification, or that reliable conclusions can be extracted from measurements. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to, the following: * Correct-by-Construction methods: meta-model frameworks (logics, algebras, calculi, etc.) for Internet protocols * Applications of model checkers, theorem provers, and SAT/SMT solvers to Internet protocol design. * Domain specific languages (declarative, functional, or logic-based) that raise the level of abstraction in Internet protocol development. * Formal-methods based techniques for run-time verification and testing of Internet protocols. * Combining model checking and theorem proving for verifying Internet protocols. * Model finding techniques for network configuration. Submission guidelines Paper submission will not be blind. The submissions will indicate the names or affiliations of the authors in the paper. Please do not submit abbreviated versions of journal or conference papers. In particular, submissions to WRiPE must not be concurrent with a substantially similar submission to a conference or workshop, including condensed versions of work that has been submitted and is currently under review. We do encourage submissions of work-in-progress based on novel and interesting ideas. Submitted papers must be no longer than six (6) pages in double-column format with standard margins (i.e., at least one inch all around) and at least a 10 point font. This length includes everything: figures, tables, references, appendices and so forth. Longer submissions will not be reviewed. Papers should include a title; full list of authors, their organizations and email addresses; and an abstract of fewer than 200 words. Important Dates * Submission deadline for papers June 20, 2011. * Notification to authors July 30, 2011. * Camera ready due Aug 20, 2011. * Workshop date Oct 17, 2011. Program Committee co-Chairs * Tim Griffin, Cambridge University * Boon Thau Loo, University of Pennsylvania Program Committee * Edwin Brady, University of St Andrews * Randy Bush, Internet Initiative Japan * Ana Cavalli, TELECOM SudParis * Nate Foster, Cornell University * Alexander Gurney, University of Pennsylvania * Mike Gordon, Cambridge University * Stephane Grumbach, INRIA * Ranjit Jhala, UC San Diego * Anil Madhavapeddy, Cambridge University * Jennifer Rexford, Princeton University * Matthew Roughan, University of Adelaide * Georg Struth, University of Sheffield * Walter Willinger AT&T Labs Research * Pamela Zave, AT&T Labs Research