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IEEE/ACM International Symposium on Code Generation and Optimization (CGO)
co-located with PPoPP, CC and HPCA.
San Diego, CA, USA
February 22 - 26, 2020
http://cgo.org/

The International Symposium on Code Generation and Optimization (CGO) provides a premier venue to bring together researchers and practitioners working at the interface of hardware and software on a wide range of optimization and code generation techniques and related issues. The conference spans the spectrum from purely static to fully dynamic approaches, and from pure software-based methods to specific architectural features and support for code generation and optimization.

IMPORTANT DATES
Abstract Submission: August 30, 2019
Paper Submission: September 6, 2019
Author Rebuttal Period: October 9 - 10, 2019
Paper Notification: October 22, 2019

Original contributions are solicited on, but not limited to, the following topics: - Code Generation, Translation, Transformation, and Optimization for performance, energy, virtualization, portability, security, or reliability concerns, and architectural support
- Efficient execution of dynamically typed and higher-level languages
- Optimization and code generation for emerging programming models, platforms, domain-specific languages - Dynamic/static, profile-guided, feedback-directed, and machine learning based optimization - Static, Dynamic, and Hybrid Analysis for performance, energy, memory locality, throughput or latency, security, reliability, or functional debugging
- Program characterization methods
- Efficient profiling and instrumentation techniques; architectural support
- Novel and efficient tools
- Compiler design, practice and experience
- Compiler abstraction and intermediate representations
- Vertical integration of language features, representations, optimizations, and runtime support for parallelism
- Solutions that involve cross-layer (HW/OS/VM/SW) design and integration
- Deployed dynamic/static compiler and runtime systems for general purpose, embedded system and Cloud/HPC platforms
- Parallelism, heterogeneity, and reconfigurable architectures
- Optimizations for heterogeneous or specialized targets, GPUs, SoCs, CGRA
- Compiler support for vectorization, thread extraction, task scheduling, speculation, transaction, memory management, data distribution and synchronization

The Artifact Evaluation process is run by a separate committee whose task is to assess how the artifacts support the work described in the papers. Authors of accepted papers have the option of submitting their artifacts for evaluation within two weeks of paper acceptance. To ease the organization of the AE committee, we kindly ask authors to indicate at the time they submit the paper, whether they are interested in submitting an artifact. Papers that go through the Artifact Evaluation process successfully will receive a seal of approval printed on the papers themselves. Additional information is available on the CGO AE web page. Authors of accepted papers are encouraged, but not required, to make these materials publicly available upon publication of the proceedings, by including them as “source materials” in the ACM Digital Library.

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This year, CGO has a special category of papers called “tools and practical experience”. Such a paper is subject to the same page length guidelines, except that it must give a clear account of its functionality and a summary about the practice experience with realistic case studies, and describe all the supporting artifacts available.

The selection criteria are:
- Originality: Papers should present CGO-related technologies applied to real-world problems with scope or characteristics that set them apart from previous solutions. - Usability: The presented Tools or compilers should have broad usage or applicability. They are expected to assist in CGO-related research, or could be extended to investigate or demonstrate new technologies. If significant components are not yet implemented, the paper will not be considered. - Documentation: The tool or compiler should be presented on a web-site giving documentation and further information about the tool. - Benchmark Repository: A suite of benchmarks for testing should be provided. - Availability: Preferences will be given to tools or compilers that are freely available (at either the source or binary level). Exceptions may be made for industry and commercial tools that cannot be made publicly available for business reasons. - Foundations: Papers should incorporate the principles underpinning Code Generation and Optimization (CGO). However, a thorough discussion of theoretical foundations is not required; a summary of such should suffice.

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Authors should carefully consider the difference in focus with the co-located conferences when deciding where to submit a paper. CGO will make the proceedings freely available via the ACM DL platform during the period from two weeks before to two weeks after the conference. This option will facilitate easy access to the proceedings by conference attendees, and it will also enable the community at large to experience the excitement of learning about the latest developments being presented in the period surrounding the event itself.


ORGANIZERS
General Chairs
  Jason Mars, University of Michigan
  Lingjia Tang, University of Michigan

Program Chairs
  Jingling Xue, UNSW Sydney
  Peng Wu, Futurewei Technologies

Program Committee
  Aaron Smith, Microsoft/University of Edinburgh
  Andrew Adams, Facebook
  Antonia Zhai, University of Minnesota
  Ben Hardekopf, UCSB
  Björn Franke, University of Edinburgh
  Bruce R. Childers, University of Pittsburgh
  Changhee Jung, Purdue University
  Christophe Dubach, University of Edinburgh
  Damian Dechev, University of Central Florida
  Derek Bruening, Google
  Erik Altman, IBM
  Fabrice Rastello, Inria
  Fredrik Kjolstad, MIT
  Gennady Pekhimenko, University of Toronto
  Guilherme Ottoni, Facebook
  Guoyang Chen, Alibaba Group US Inc
  Huimin Cui, Chinese Academy of Sciences
  Jaejin Lee, Seoul National University
  J Nelson Amaral, University of Alberta
  Lisa Wu, UC Berkeley
  Louis-Noël Pouchet, Colorado State University
  Mahmut T. Kandemir, Pennsylvania State University
  Maria Garzaran, Intel/UIUC
  Michel Steuwer, University of Glasgow
  Pen-Chung Yew, University of Minnesota
  Raj Barik, Uber
  Rajiv Gupta, UC Riverside
  Sanjay Rajopadhye, Colorado State University
  Simone Campanoni, Northwestern University
  Snehasish Kumar, Google
  Sreepathi Pai, University of Rochester
  Svilen Kanev, Google
  Teresa Johnson, Google
  Timothy M. Jones, University of Cambridge
  Tobias Grosser, ETH Zurich
  Vijay Janapa Reddi, Harvard University
  Walter Binder, University of Lugano
  Xipeng Shen, North Carolina State University
  Xu Liu, College of William and Mary
  Zheng Wang, Lancaster University

Paper Submission URL: https://cgo20.hotcrp.com/

For detailed submission requirements, please see the CGO’20 website.

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