19th WORKSHOP ON JOB SCHEDULING STRATEGIES FOR PARALLEL PROCESSING
(JSSPP'2015)
in conjunction with IPDPS 2015
Hyderabad, India, May 25-29, 2015
http://www.cs.huji.ac.il/~feit/parsched/

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EXTENDED DEADLINE:  February 1st, 2015
==================================

The JSSPP workshop addresses all scheduling aspects of parallel
processing.

Large parallel systems have been in production for about 20 years, creating
the need of scheduling for such systems. This workshop was created in 1995
to provide a forum for the research and engineering community working in the
area. Initially, parallel systems were very static. Machines were built
in fixed configurations, which would be wholesale replaced every few
years. Much of the workload consisted of parallel scientific jobs. These
jobs were static, running on a fixed number of nodes. Systems were
primarily managed via batch queues. The user experience was far from
interactive; jobs could wait in queues for days or even weeks.

A little over 10 years ago, the emergence of large scale, interactive, web
applications began to drive the development of a new class of systems and
schedulers. These systems would run “services”, which
would essentially never terminate (unlike scientific jobs). This created
systems and schedulers with vastly different properties. Moreover, this
created an enormous demand for computing resources, resulting in a
commercial market of competing providers. At the same time, the increasing
demands for more power and interactivity have driven scientific platforms in
a similar direction, causing the lines between these platforms to blur.

Nowadays, parallel processing is much more dynamic and connected. Many
workloads are interactive and make use of variable resources over time.
Complex parallel infrastructures can now be built on the fly, using
resources from different sources, provided with different prices and quality
of services. Capacity planning became more proactive, where resources are
acquired continuously, with the goal of staying ahead of demand. The
interaction model between job and resource manager is shifting to one of
negotiation, where they agree on resources, price, and quality of service.
These are just a few examples of the open issues facing our field.

JSSPP solicits papers that address any of the challenges in parallel
scheduling, including:
- Design and evaluation of new scheduling approaches.
- Performance evaluation of scheduling approaches, including methodology,
benchmarks, and metrics.
- Workloads, including characterization, classification, and modeling.
- Consideration of additional constraints in scheduling systems, like job
priorities, price, accounting, load estimation, and quality of service
guarantees.
- Impact of scheduling strategies on application performance, user
friendliness, cost efficiency, and energy efficiency.
- Scaling and composition of very large scheduling systems.
- Cloud provider issues: capacity planning, service level assurance,
reliability.
- Interaction between schedulers on different levels, like processor level
as well as whole single- or even multi-owner systems.
- Experience reports from production systems.
- Experience reports from large scale compute campaigns.

From its very beginning, JSSPP has strived to balance practice and theory in
its program. This combination provides a rich environment for technical
debate about scheduling approaches including both academic researchers as
well as participants from industry. JSSPP is a high-visibility workshop,
which has been ranking repeatedly in the top 10% of Citeseer’s venue
impact list.

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Submission dates and guidelines
DEADLINE: February 1st, 2015
NOTIFICATION: March 14th, 2015

Papers should be no longer than 20 single-spaced pages, 10pt font, including
figures and references. All papers in scope will be reviewed by at least
three members of the program committee. All submissions must follow the
LNCS format, see the instructions at Springer’s web site:
http://www.springer.com/computer/lncs?SGWID=0-164-7-72376-0

Files must be submitted electronically in PDF format and must be formatted
for 8.5×11 inch paper. Papers must be submitted via EDAS:
http://edas.info/N18731

Registration Registration will be part of the IPDPS process and is handled
by the IEEE. For details, see the IPDPS web site
http://www.ipdps.org/

Proceedings Interim proceedings containing a collection of the papers
presented will be distributed at the workshop in electronic form. It is
planned to also publish a post-workshop proceedings in the Springer Lecture
Notes on Computer Science series, as was done in previous years (pending
approval from Springer).

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Workshop organizers
Walfredo Cirne, Google
Narayan Desai, Ericsson

Program Committee
Henri Casanova, University of Hawaii at Manoa
Julita Corbalan, Technical University of Catalonia
Hyeonsang Eom, Seoul National University
Dick Epema, Delft University of Technology
Dror G. Feitelson, The Hebrew University
Liana Fong, IBM T. J. Watson Research Center
Eitan Frachtenberg, Facebook
Alfredo Goldman, USP
Allan Gottlieb, NYU
Alexandru Iosup, Delft University of Technology
Morris Jette, SchedMD LLC
Srikanth Kandula, Microsoft
Rajkumar Kettimuthu, Argonne National Lab
Dalibor Klusáček, Masaryk University
Madhukar Korupolu, Google
Zhiling Lan, Illinois Institute of Technology
Bill Nitzberg, Altair
P-O Östberg, Umeå University
Larry Rudolph, MIT
Uwe Schwiegelshohn, TU Dortmund University
Leonel Sousa, Universidade Técnica de Lisboa
Mark Squillante, IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center
Wei Tang, Argonne National Laboratory
Ramin Yahyapour, GWDG – University Göttingen
--
Morris "Moe" Jette
CTO, SchedMD LLC
Commercial Slurm Development and Support

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