ISMM 2023 - International Symposium on Memory Management - ISMM 2023 (original) (raw)

Welcome to the home page of the 2023 ACM SIGPLAN International Symposium on Memory Management (ISMM 2023)!

ISMM is the premier forum dedicated to research in memory management, covering the areas of memory performance, allocator design, garbage collection, architectural support for memory management, persistent memories, emerging memory technologies, and more.

ISMM’23 will held in-person as part of FCRC’23, sharing the venue and activities with ten other top computer science conferences.

Code of Conduct

ISMM follows the ACM Policy Against Harassment at ACM Activities. Please familiarize yourself with the policy and guide for reporting unacceptable behavior.

The program is currently displayed in (GMT-04:00) Eastern Time (US & Canada).

**Use conference time zone: (GMT-04:00) Eastern Time (US & Canada)**Select other time zone

The GMT offsets shown reflect the offsets at the moment of the conference.

By setting a time band, the program will dim events that are outside this time window. This is useful for (virtual) conferences with a continuous program (with repeated sessions).
The time band will also limit the events that are included in the personal iCalendar subscription service.

Display full programSpecify a time band

-

You're viewing the program in a time zone which is different from your device's time zone change time zone

10:20 - 11:00 ISMM: Session 2 - Application ScalabilityISMM 2023 at Magnolia 22 Chair(s): Steve Blackburn Google and Australian National University#ismm-1020-session2-magnolia22 Discord icon small YouTube icon small
10:2020mTalk **Scaling Up Performance of Managed Applications on NUMA Systems**ISMM 2023Orion Papadakis The University of Manchester, Andreas Andronikakis The University of Manchester, Nikos Foutris The University of Manchester, Michail Papadimitriou OctoML, Athanasios Stratikopoulos The University of Manchester, Foivos Zakkak Red Hat, Inc., Polychronis Xekalakis Nvidia, Christos Kotselidis Pierer Innovation / The University of Manchester, Foivos Zakkak Red Hat, Inc. DOI
10:4020mTalk **Analyzing and Improving the Scalability of In-Memory Indices for Managed Search Engines**ISMM 2023Aditya Chilukuri Australian National University, Shoaib Akram Australian National University DOI
11:20 - 12:30 ISMM: Session 3 - Intellectual AbstractsISMM 2023 at Magnolia 22 Chair(s): Michael D. Bond Ohio State University, USA#ismm-1120-session3-magnolia22 Discord icon small YouTube icon small
11:2020mTalk **Memory Consistency Models for Program Transformations: An Intellectual Abstract**ISMM 2023Akshay Gopalakrishnan McGill University, Clark Verbrugge McGill University, Canada, Mark Batty University of Kent, Clark Verbrugge McGill University, Canada DOI
11:4020mTalk **Predicting Dynamic Properties of Heap Allocations using Neural Networks Trained on Static Code: An Intellectual Abstract**ISMM 2023Christian Navasca UCLA, Martin Maas Google, Petros Maniatis Google, Hyeontaek Lim Google, Harry Xu University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) DOI
12:0020mTalk **The Unexpected Efficiency of Bin Packing Algorithms for Dynamic Storage Allocation in the Wild: An Intellectual Abstract**ISMM 2023Christos Lamprakos National Technical University of Athens, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Sotirios Xydis National Technical University of Athens, Francky Catthoor IMEC, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Dimitrios Soudris National Technical University of Athens DOI
12:2010mAwards **Best Paper Award**ISMM 2023
14:00 - 15:20 ISMM: Session 4 - Allocations and Garbage CollectionISMM 2023 at Magnolia 22 Chair(s): Tony Hosking Australian National University#ismm-1400-session4-magnolia22 Discord icon small YouTube icon small
14:0020mTalk **Concurrent GCs and Modern Java Workloads: A Cache PerspectiveBest Paper Award**ISMM 2023Maria Carpen-Amarie Huawei Zurich Research Center, Switzerland, Georgios Vavouliotis Huawei Zurich Research Center, Switzerland, Konstantinos Tovletoglou Huawei Zurich Research Center, Switzerland, Boris Grot University of Edinburgh, UK, Rene Mueller Huawei Zurich Research Center, Switzerland DOI
14:2020mTalk **Wait-Free Weak Reference Counting**ISMM 2023Matthew J. Parkinson Azure Research, Microsoft, UK, Sylvan Clebsch Azure Research, Ben Simner DOI
14:4020mTalk **NUMAlloc: A Faster NUMA Memory Allocator**ISMM 2023Hanmei Yang University of Massachusetts Amherst, Xin Zhao University of Massachusetts Amherst, Jin Zhou University of Massachusetts Amherst, Wei Wang University of Texas at San Antonio, USA, Sandip Kundu University of Massachusetts Amherst, Bo Wu Colorado School of Mines, Hui Guan University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Tongping Liu University of Massachusetts at Amherst DOI
15:0020mTalk **Picking a CHERI Allocator: Security and Performance Considerations**ISMM 2023Jacob Bramley Arm, Dejice Jacob University of Glasgow, UK, Andrei Lascu King's College London, Jeremy Singer University of Glasgow, Laurence Tratt King's College London, Andrei Lascu King's College London DOI Pre-print
16:00 - 17:20 ISMM: Session 5 - MiscellaneousISMM 2023 at Magnolia 22 Chair(s): Martin Maas Google#ismm-1600-session5-magnolia22 Discord icon small YouTube icon small
16:0020mTalk **Blast from the Past: Least Expected Use (LEU) Cache Replacement with Statistical History**ISMM 2023Sayak Chakraborti University of Rochester, Zhizhou (Chris) Zhang Uber Technologies, Noah Bertram Cornell University, Sandhya Dwarkadas University of Rochester, Chen Ding University of Rochester DOI
16:2020mTalk **OMRGx: Programmable and Transparent Out-of-Core Graph Partitioning and Processing**ISMM 2023Gurneet Kaur University of California, Riverside, Rajiv Gupta UC Riverside DOI
16:4020mTalk **ZipKV: In-Memory Key-Value Store with Built-In Data Compression**ISMM 2023Linsen Ma Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Rui Xie Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Tong Zhang Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute DOI
17:0020mTalk **Flexible and Effective Object Tiering for Heterogeneous Memory Systems**ISMM 2023Brandon Kammerdiener University of Tennessee, Jeffrey Zachariah McMichael University of Tennessee, Michael Jantz University of Tennessee, Kshitij Doshi Intel Corporation, Terry Jones Oak Ridge National Laboratory DOI

Accepted Papers

Title
Analyzing and Improving the Scalability of In-Memory Indices for Managed Search EnginesISMM 2023Aditya Chilukuri, Shoaib Akram DOI
Blast from the Past: Least Expected Use (LEU) Cache Replacement with Statistical HistoryISMM 2023Sayak Chakraborti, Zhizhou (Chris) Zhang, Noah Bertram, Sandhya Dwarkadas, Chen Ding DOI
Concurrent GCs and Modern Java Workloads: A Cache PerspectiveBest Paper AwardISMM 2023Maria Carpen-Amarie, Georgios Vavouliotis, Konstantinos Tovletoglou, Boris Grot, Rene Mueller DOI
Flexible and Effective Object Tiering for Heterogeneous Memory SystemsISMM 2023Brandon Kammerdiener, Jeffrey Zachariah McMichael, Michael Jantz, Kshitij Doshi, Terry Jones DOI
Memory Consistency Models for Program Transformations: An Intellectual AbstractISMM 2023Akshay Gopalakrishnan, Clark Verbrugge, Mark Batty, Clark Verbrugge DOI
NUMAlloc: A Faster NUMA Memory AllocatorISMM 2023Hanmei Yang, Xin Zhao, Jin Zhou, Wei Wang, Sandip Kundu, Bo Wu, Hui Guan, Tongping Liu DOI
OMRGx: Programmable and Transparent Out-of-Core Graph Partitioning and ProcessingISMM 2023Gurneet Kaur, Rajiv Gupta DOI
Picking a CHERI Allocator: Security and Performance ConsiderationsISMM 2023Jacob Bramley, Dejice Jacob, Andrei Lascu, Jeremy Singer, Laurence Tratt, Andrei Lascu DOI Pre-print
Predicting Dynamic Properties of Heap Allocations using Neural Networks Trained on Static Code: An Intellectual AbstractISMM 2023Christian Navasca, Martin Maas, Petros Maniatis, Hyeontaek Lim, Harry Xu DOI
Scaling Up Performance of Managed Applications on NUMA SystemsISMM 2023Orion Papadakis, Andreas Andronikakis, Nikos Foutris, Michail Papadimitriou, Athanasios Stratikopoulos, Foivos Zakkak, Polychronis Xekalakis, Christos Kotselidis, Foivos Zakkak DOI
The Unexpected Efficiency of Bin Packing Algorithms for Dynamic Storage Allocation in the Wild: An Intellectual AbstractISMM 2023Christos Lamprakos, Sotirios Xydis, Francky Catthoor, Dimitrios Soudris DOI
Wait-Free Weak Reference CountingISMM 2023Matthew J. Parkinson, Sylvan Clebsch, Ben Simner DOI
ZipKV: In-Memory Key-Value Store with Built-In Data CompressionISMM 2023Linsen Ma, Rui Xie, Tong Zhang DOI

Call for Papers

The 2023 ACM SIGPLAN International Symposium on Memory Management (ISMM 2023) is soliciting full-length submissions covering new work on all memory management related topics, as well as papers presenting confirmations or refutations of important prior results. In additional to regular papers, traditionally submitted to ISMM, we also invite submissions of the following kinds:

Please indicate whether the paper is a regular paper, a survey, a practitioner report, or an intellectual abstract, by using a subtitle. For example, for a regular paper, include on of the following on the line below the title line: \subtitle{This submission is a regular paper}, \subtitle{This submission is a survey}, \subtitle{This submission is a practitioner report}, or \subtitle{This submission is an intellectual abstract}.

ISMM 2023 will be colocated with PLDI 2023 at FCRC’23.

Areas of interest include but are not limited to:

The symposium welcomes industry practitioners presenting their recent practice and findings in memory management related to real-world deployments.

Formatting Instructions

All papers must be submitted on-line in Portable Document Format (PDF).

Papers should be formatted according to the two-column ACM proceedings format. Each paper should have no more than 12 pages, excluding bibliography, in 10pt font. There is no limit on the page count for references. Each reference must list all authors of the paper (do not use et al). The citations should be in numeric style, e.g., [52]. Submissions should be in PDF format and printable on US Letter and A4 sized paper. These requirements are all the same as in the previous years.

Papers that exceed the length requirement or deviate from the expected format will be rejected.

Make sure that figures and tables are legible, even after the paper is printed in gray-scale.

Appendices should not be part of the paper, but should be submitted as supplementary material. Supplementary material should also be anonymized, as described below.

As explained in more detail at http://www.sigplan.org/Resources/Author, authors should use the sigplan subformat of the acmart format. Please note the following: The first two lines should be:

\documentclass[sigplan,10pt,review,anonymous]{acmart}
\settopmatter{printfolios=true,printccs=false,printacmref=false}

The default citation style is numeric. Do not mess with the class file or settings to try to sneak in additional space. (Conversely, you may toggle the printccs and printacmref flags if you wish, but these changes will consume space.) Do not use the PACMPL files or format; ISMM is not using them. However, the template files were designed to make migrating a paper from one format to the other as simple as possible.

Double-Blind Reviewing

ISMM uses double-blind reviewing. This means that author names and affiliations must be omitted from the submission. Additionally, if the submission refers to prior work done by the authors, that reference should be made in third person. These are firm submission requirements. Any supplementary material must also be anonymized.

PLDI’s FAQ on Double-Blind Reviewing clarifies the policy for the most common scenarios. But there are many gray areas and trade-offs. If you have any doubts about how to interpret the double blind rules, please contact the Program Chair. If in any doubt you should contact the Program Chair for complex cases that are not fully covered by the FAQ.

Declaring Conflicts

When submitting the paper, you will need to declare potential conflicts. Conflicts should be declared between an adviser and an advisee (e.g., Ph.D., post-doc). Other conflicts include institutional conflicts, financial conflicts of interest, friends or relatives, or any recent co-authors on papers and proposals (last 2 years).

Please do not declare spurious conflicts: such incorrect conflicts are especially harmful if the aim is to exclude potential reviewers, so spurious conflicts can be grounds for rejection. If you are unsure about a conflict, please consult the Program Chair.

Publication Date

AUTHORS TAKE NOTE: The official publication date is the date the proceedings are made available in the ACM Digital Library. This date may be up to two weeks prior to the first day of your conference. The official publication date affects the deadline for any patent filings related to published work. (For those rare conferences whose proceedings are published in the ACM Digital Library after the conference is over, the official publication date remains the first day of the conference.)

The author response process will occur in April 2023 (see Important Dates on the main page), and will give the authors an opportunity to respond to factual errors in reviews before the Program Committee meets to make its decisions. The committee may, but need not, respond to the author response or revise reviews at or after the committee meeting.

Acknowledgements

This call-for-papers is an adaptation and evolution of content from previous instances of ISMM and PLDI. We are grateful to prior organizers for their work, which is reused here.

ISMM’23 Speaker’s Guide

This document is for those presenting a paper at ISMM’23.

Congratulations on having your paper accepted at ISMM’23! This document will help ensure your presentation runs smoothly and has the best possible audience impact. Please read it in its entirety.

Checklist

Before ISMM:

Before your talk:

After your talk:

Preparing Your Talk

Your work will have a greater impact if you’re well prepared.

It is very important that you run to schedule. The ISMM’23 schedule is extremely tight, with hard stops imposed by FCRC scheduling. Session chairs have been asked to stick rigidly to the schedule.

Guidelines

  1. Your talk should run for no more than 16 minutes , uninterrupted. This gives you about three minutes for questions and one minute for speaker change-over.
  2. Your talk should be prepared for the standard 16:9 widescreen ratio. If your talk is in a different ratio, at best it will be pillarboxed, wasting screen real estate and diminishing impact, and at worst, it won’t display correctly.
  3. You will present your talk from a lectern, using a fixed lectern mic.
  4. You will need to provide your talk ahead of time in either pdf or powerpoint.
  5. If you have an embedded video in your presentation, please inform the video team during your mandatory video check before your session.

Uploading Your Presentation

As an insurance against technical failures, we ask all speakers to make a backup copy of their presentation available to the video team by uploading it the day before the session. You’re welcome to upload fresh copies at any time.

This requirement gives you assurance that if some major technical problem were to arise (such as a failure of your laptop), you will still be able to give your talk. If you do not make your presentation available in advance, and significant technical problems arise, we may have to shorten your presentation to keep to our tight schedule.

The requirement for you to use pdf or powerpoint for your backup copy is a pragmatic tradeoff. These slides will only be used in case of a technical emergency. We want to have the highest possible assurance that they will work without fuss on a third party device should such an emergency occur. If you use Google slides, Keynote, or some other software, please use the export feature to create either powerpoint or pdf backups.

If you elect not to upload a backup copy, please understand that this limits our volunteers’ capacity to assist you if a technical problem arises when you give your presentation.

Advice

There are many excellent sources of advice on giving good talks, including from Simon Peyton Jones, Michael Hicks, Michael Ernst, Ranjit Jhala, and Derek Dreyer. Make good use of these!

Mandatory Video Check

All speakers are required to be in the room and check in with their session chair and the video team no later than 5 minutes before their session starts. Please note that due to our very tight schedule, speakers who fail to upload their talk in advance and/or fail to attend the video check 5 minutes before their session may have their talk cut short if technical issues arise.

Q&A

If you stick to the above schedule you will have about 3 minutes for questions. The in-room audience will be able to ask questions via a queue at a single microphone on a mic stand in the center of the room. In-room attendees and remote attendees will also be able to ask questions via Discord. Your session chair will monitor questions on Discord and might ask questions as they see them appearing there.

It is good practice, as the speaker, to repeat your understanding of the question before providing your answer. This is particularly important when time is tight because it reduces opportunities for time being wasted on account of a misunderstanding.

Once your talk is finished, please go on to Discord and respond to any questions or follow-up questions that appear there.

Remote Audience

Your talk will be streamed to Discord and YouTube. Your remote audience will be able to write questions in the Discord channel created for your session (they won’t be able to ask questions via audio or video). They should see your slides, and a video feed of you speaking. As mentioned above, your session chair may relay questions from Discord.

Remote Presenters

ISMM’23 authors are expected to be present at the conference.