19th Workshop on Virtualization in High­-Performance Cloud Computing – CFP

Giugno 4, 2024
By admin

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CALL FOR PAPERS

19th Workshop on Virtualization in High­-Performance Cloud Computing

(VHPC ’24) held in conjunction with the European Conference on

Parallel and Distributed Computing Aug 26-30, 2024, Madrid, Spain.

(Springer LNCS Proceedings)

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Paper submission deadline: June 7th, 2024 AoE (extended)

Date: August 26, 27, 2024

Workshop URL: vhpc dot org

To submit an abstract or paper, please follow the link provided

in the Call for Papers (CfP) announcement at the end of this message.

Call for Papers

Containers and virtualization technologies constitute key enabling

factors for flexible resource management in modern data centers, and

particularly in cloud environments. Cloud providers need to manage

complex infrastructures in a seamless fashion to support the highly

dynamic and heterogeneous workloads and hosted applications customers

deploy. Similarly, HPC environments have been increasingly adopting

techniques that enable flexible management of vast computing and

networking resources, close to marginal provisioning cost, which is

unprecedented in the history of scientific and commercial computing.

Various virtualization-containerization technologies contribute to

the overall picture in different ways: machine virtualization, with

its capability to enable consolidation of multiple under­utilized

servers with heterogeneous software and operating systems (OSes),

and its capability to live­-migrate a fully operating virtual machine

(VM) with a very short downtime, enables novel and dynamic ways to

manage physical servers; OS-­level virtualization (i.e.,

containerization), with its capability to isolate multiple user­-space

environments and to allow for their co­-existence within the same OS

kernel, promises to provide many of the advantages of machine

virtualization with high levels of responsiveness and performance;

lastly, unikernels provide for manyvirtualization benefits with a

minimized OS/library surface. I/O virtualization, in turn, allows

physical network interfaces to exchange traffic with multiple VMs

or containers; network virtualization, with its capability to create

logical network overlays independently from the underlying physical

topology, is another fundamental enabling technology for Cloud/HPC

infrastructures. Last, storage virtualization needs to evolve to

support increasingly demanding requirements in terms of performance

and reliability for the managed application data.

Publication

Accepted papers will be published in a Springer LNCS proceedings volume.

Topics of Interest

The VHPC program committee solicits original, high-quality

submissions related to virtualization across the entire software

stack with a special focus on the intersection of HPC, containers/

virtualization and cloud computing.

Each topic encompasses aspects related to design/architecture,

management, performance management, modeling and\

configuration/tooling:

Design / Architecture:

– Containers and OS-level virtualization (LXC, Docker/Podman,

Nitro/Firecracke, Singularity)

– Hypervisor support for heterogeneous resources (GPUs, NPUs,

co-processors, FPGAs, etc.)

– GPU hypervisor memory virtualization in support of high-memory LLM

training workloads

– Hypervisor extensions to mitigate side-channel attacks

([micro-]architectural timing attacks, privilege escalation)

– Use of Risc-V related technologies for cloud, virtualized and HPC

use-cases

– VM & Container trust and security models

– Multi-environment coupling, system software supporting in-situ

analysis with HPC simulation

– Cloud reliability, fault-tolerance and high-availability

– Cloud-based quantum compute services

– Energy-efficient and power-aware virtualization

– Containers inside VMs with hypervisor isolation

– Virtualization support for emerging memory and storage technologies

– Lightweight/specialized operating systems in conjunction with

virtual machines

– Unikernels and use cases for virtualized HPC environments

– Formal definition and verification of hypervisors and virtualization

system properties

– ARM-based hypervisors, ARM virtualization extensions

Management:

– Container and VM management for HPC and cloud environments

– Virtualized/Cloudified instances to support Lambda / Function-as-a-

Service (FaaS) Paradigms

– HPC services integration, services to support HPC

– Service and on-demand scheduling & resource management

– Dedicated workload management with VMs or containers

– Workflow coupling with VMs and containers

– Unikernels and lightweight VM application management

– Environments and tools for operating containerized environments

(batch, orchestration)

– Models for non-HPC workload provisioning on HPC resources

Performance Measurements and Modeling:

– Performance improvements for or driven by unikernels

– Optimizations of virtual machine monitor platforms and hypervisors

– Scalability analysis of VMs and/or containers at large scale

– Performance measurement, modeling and monitoring of virtualized/

cloud workloads

– Virtualization in supercomputing environments, HPC clusters,

HPC in the cloud with an emphasis on AI GPUs/TPUs/NPUs

– Energy-efficient deployment of high-performance, ultra-low

latency and real-time workloads in cloud infrastructures

– Modeling, control and isolation of end-to-end performance for

parallel & distributed cloud/HPC applications, including the use of

cloud functions / FaaS

Configuration / Tooling:

– Tool support for unikernels: configuration/build environments,

debuggers, profilers

– Job scheduling/control/policy and container placement in

virtualized environments

– Measuring and controlling “OS/Virtualization noise”

– Operating MPI in containers/VMs and Unikernels

– GPU virtualization operationalization

This year, we are calling the timely topic of virtualization in support

of high-memory LLM training workloads including, but not limited to:

– GPU hypervisor memory virtualization: Techniques for virtualizing GPU

memory to allow flexible and efficient allocation across multiple

workloads, enabling higher utilization of GPU resources

– Flat CPU/GPU memory page tables/TLB: Unified virtual memory spaces

and page table structures that allow both GPUs to address CPU memory

mapped to accelerator global memory space

– Storage/filesystem to virtual memory mapped approaches

– Distributed memory virtualization

– Memory compression and reduction techniques: approaches for

compressing model parameters, activations, and gradients to reduce

memory requirements during training

– Out-of-core training algorithms

– Efficient memory allocation and management: Techniques for optimizing

memory allocation, reducing fragmentation, and improving memory

utilization during training

– Memory-efficient data formats and processing: Data formats and

processing techniques that minimize memory overhead while maintaining

training efficiency

– Benchmarking and profiling tools: Tools and methodologies for

measuring, analyzing, and optimizing memory usage in

LLM training workloads

– Case studies and applications: Real-world examples and applications of

virtualization techniques in LLM training scenarios

The Workshop on Virtualization in High­-Performance Cloud Computing

(VHPC) aims to bring together researchers and industrial practitioners

facing the challenges posed by virtualization in order to foster

discussion, collaboration, mutual exchange of knowledge and

experience, enabling research to ultimately provide novel solutions

for virtualized computing systems of tomorrow.

The workshop will be one day in length, composed of 20 min paper

presentations, each followed by 10 min discussion sections, plus

lightning talks that are limited to 5 minutes. Presentations may be

accompanied by interactive demonstrations.

Important Dates

Rolling abstract submission

Jun 7th, 2024 AoE (extended) – Paper submission deadline

Jun 20th, 2024 – Acceptance notification

Jul 1st, 2024 – Camera-ready due

Aug 26th-27th, 2024 – Workshop Day(s)

Chair

Michael Alexander (chair), Austrian Academy of Sciences

Anastassios Nanos (co-chair), Nubificus Ltd., UK

Tommaso Cucinotta (co-chair), Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna, Italy

Publicity chair

Remo Andreoli, Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna, Italy

Technical Program Committee

– Stergios Anastasiadis, University of Ioannina, Greece

– Gabriele Ara, Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna

– Jakob Blomer, CERN, Switzerland

– Eduardo César, Universidad Autonoma de Barcelona, Spain

– Taylor Childers, Argonne National Laboratory, USA

– François Diakhaté, CEA DAM, France

– Roberto Giorgi, University of Siena, Italy

– Kyle Hale, Northwestern University, USA

– Giuseppe Lettieri, University of Pisa, Italy

– Nikos Parlavantzas, IRISA, France

– Amer Qouneh, Western New England University, USA

– Carlos Reaño, Queen’s University Belfast, UK

– Riccardo Rocha, CERN, Switzerland

– Lutz Schubert, University of Ulm, Germany

– Jonathan Sparks, Cray, USA

– Kurt Tutschku, Blekinge Institute of Technology, Sweden

– John Walters, USC ISI, USA

– Yasuhiro Watashiba, Osaka University, Japan

– Chao-Tung Yang, Tunghai University, Taiwan

Paper Submission-Publication

Papers submitted to the workshop will be reviewed by at least two

members of the program committee and external reviewers. Submissions

should include abstract, keywords, the e-mail address of the

corresponding author, and must not exceed 12 pages, including tables

and figures at a main font size no smaller than 11 points.

Submission of a paper should be regarded as a commitment that, should

the paper be accepted, at least one of the authors will register and

attend the conference to present the work.

Accepted papers will be published in a Springer LNCS volume. Initial

submissions are in PDF; authors of accepted papers will be requested

to provide source files.

Lightning Talks

Lightning Talks are in a non-paper track, synoptical in nature and are

strictly limited to 5 minutes. They can be used to gain early feedback

on ongoing research, for demonstrations, to present research results,

early research ideas, perspectives and positions of interest to the

community. Submit abstracts via the main submission link.

General Information

The workshop will be held in conjunction with the International European

Conference on Parallel and Distributed Computing on Aug 26-30, 2024,

Madrid, Spain.

Please contact ahead of time for presenting remotely via video.

Abstract, Paper Submission Link:

https://edas.info/newPaper.php?c=31582

LNCS Format Guidelines:

https://www.springer.com/gp/computer-science/lncs/conference-proceedings-guidelines

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