==================================================================== WARP: 6th Workshop on Architectural Research Prototyping ==================================================================== Co-Located with the 43rd Int'l Symposium on Computer Architecture Sunday, June 14th, 2015 -- Portland, Oregon http://www.csl.cornell.edu/warp2015 Building prototype systems can be one of the best ways to validate assumptions, gain intuition about practical design issues, and provide platforms for future software research. While the research ideas behind these prototypes can be published in top-tier conferences, there are not many venues suitable for focusing on the actual prototype itself. At the same time, building an FPGA, ASIC, or full-custom computer architecture prototype is a non-trivial endeavor and requires a significant financial and time commitment. This workshop is intended as a forum for the builders in our community to share their practical on-the-ground experiences, to provide a status update on their progress, and to convey insights for those considering prototyping their ideas. This half-day workshop will be held on Sunday, June 14th, 2015, co-located with ISCA-42 in Portland, OR. The workshop will primarily include presentations selected by the technical program committee based on extended abstract submissions. We invite submissions on all aspects of building prototype systems for computer architecture research. Submissions can be based on new or pending prototypes that have not been discussed in any other venue, or submissions can focus on the practical prototyping implications of a previously published research paper. Submissions more in the spirit of a short position paper are also encouraged. Topics of particular interest include, but are not limited to: - Status updates on FPGA, ASIC, or full-custom prototypes that have been recently constructed or are under construction - Implementation technology trade-offs (FPGAs, ASICs, full-custom) - Practical guidance on what works and what doesn't, including strategies for: + High-level specification + Register-transfer-level implementation + Pre- and post-construction verification + Packaging and board design + Managing complex electronic design automation toolflows - Practical advice on managing the increasing design complexity inherent in building computer architecture research prototypes that integrate general-purpose processors and memory systems with specialized accelerators - How to balance the often conflicting goals of prototypes as research vehicles containing novel architectural mechanisms vs. prototypes as high-performance software development platforms - How to balance student's thesis goals vs. engineering work - How to secure funding for building prototypes Participation is encouraged for all members of the computer architecture community, including those considering embarking on a prototyping effort or those who strongly disagree with the need to build prototypes. *** Submission Details *** Participants are invited to submit an extended abstract of up to two pages (single or double column, 10pt, single spaced). Please include the authors' names, affiliations, and clearly reference any previous publications that were based on the prototype. Submissions must be in PDF format and submitted according to the instructions posted on the WARP website. Participants may also include an appendix of any length. However, we will not promise to read the appendix, so the extended abstract should stand alone as a coherent description of what you will discuss in your talk. The appendix can provide additional details such as device micrographs or more detailed results. Extended abstracts and presentation slides will only be posted on the workshop website with permission of the authors. Authors should feel free to submit work in progress or work under review (where permitted) without fear of double publication issues. *** Important Dates *** - Submission Deadline: April 10, 2015 - Notification of Selection: April 20, 2015 - Final Abstract Submission: May 22, 2015 *** Workshop Organizers *** - Christopher Batten, Cornell University - Dave Wentzlaff, Princeton University *** Program Committee *** - David Brooks, Harvard University - Steve Keckler, NVIDIA/University of Texas at Austin - Mark Oskin, University of Washington - Jose Renau, University of California, Santa Cruz