European Conference on Computer Systems

EuroSys 2021


Computing Systems



The European Conference on Computer Systems (EuroSys) is a premier international forum for presenting computer systems research.
Edinburgh, Scotland, UK
26th—29th April 2021
Important dates
Abstract submission: 1 October 2020
Paper submission: 9 October 2020
Author response: 6-8 January 2020
Notification of conditional accept / revise / reject: 20 January 2021
Revision submission (selected papers): 17 February 2021
Notification of conditional accept/reject for revisions: 3 March 2021
Shepherding decisions: 23 March 2021
Camera-ready submission: 26 March 2021
All deadline times are 23:59 hrs UTC.
EuroSys 2021 seeks papers on all areas of computer systems research, including:
Operating systems
Distributed systems
Cloud computing and data center systems
File and storage systems
Networked systems
Language support and runtime systems
Systems security and privacy
Dependable systems
Analysis, testing, and verification of systems
Database systems and data analytics frameworks
Virtualization and virtualized systems
Systems for machine learning/machine learning for systems
Mobile and pervasive systems
Parallelism, concurrency, and multicore systems
Real-time, embedded, and cyber-physical systems
We encourage papers that span multiple topics and communities. Papers will be judged on novelty, significance, correctness, and clarity. The program committee seeks papers that address a significant problem with an interesting and compelling solution whose validity and practicality are clearly demonstrated. A good paper will draw appropriate conclusions, honestly, present related prior work, acknowledge its own limitations, and clearly articulate the advances it offers over prior work.
New additions
There are three new features in this year’s Eurosys reviewing process.
#1: Author response
As has been standard practice in OSDI and SOSP in recent years, we will allow authors to submit quick responses to PC reviews: they will be made available to the PC before the final online discussion and PC meeting.
#2: Revision stage
Papers that are deemed to broadly meet the criteria for acceptance except in several clearly-identified aspects will be asked to submit a revised version for re-evaluation. We will use a similar model to the one used by SIGMOD (with the text below taken from the SIGMOD website, with permission). The program committee will invite revisions at their discretion. Authors will have less than a month to prepare their revision. The revision process is intended to be a constructive partnership between reviewers and authors. To this end, reviewers will be instructed to request revisions only in constructive scenarios with specific requests. In turn, authors bear the responsibility of attempting to meet those requests within the stated time frame, or of withdrawing the paper from submission. Common revision requests can include ''justify a crucial assumption'', ''present a real(istic) scenario where the defined problem occurs'', ''clean up notation'', ''tighten presentation'', ''compare against some relevant previous system'', ''show experimental results with better data, such as at larger scale or from a real system''. Revisions will not be requested to address lack of technical depth or novelty or where the revised paper will address a substantially different problem from the original.
Note:
Papers asked to submit revisions for reevaluation are not tentatively accepted: by default they are rejected. Though they will be reconsidered upon resubmission, there is absolutely no guarantee of final acceptance.
All accepted papers are to be understood as provisionally accepted: final acceptance will be subject to shepherding by a member of the program committee.
Authors should take note that 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 the conference. The official publication date affects the deadline for any patent filings related to published work.
#3: Artifact Evaluation (AE)
EuroSys 2021 will also introduce the inaugural Artifact Evaluation (AE) process at EuroSys. The goal of AE is to promote the reproducibility of experimental results and to encourage authors to provide useful artifacts that help the community quickly validate and compare alternative approaches. This submission is voluntary and will not influence the final decision regarding the papers. AE will be run by a separate committee whose task is to assess how the artifacts support the work described in the papers. Additional information is available on the EuroSys 2021 AE page (coming soon).
Misc
Posters: In addition to paper presentations, EuroSys 2021 will have a poster session. Submissions for posters will open closer to the conference deadline. Accepted papers will automatically qualify for the poster session, and authors will be strongly encouraged to participate.
Awards: EuroSys grants awards for the best and best student papers. In addition, EuroSys will also present the best artifact award this year.
Submission instructions
Anonymity
Reviewing is double-blind, meaning that the authors‘ identities will be hidden from the reviewers and vice versa. Authors must make a good faith effort to anonymize their submissions, and they should not identify themselves either explicitly or by implication (e.g., through the references or acknowledgments). Authors should be listed as
Anonymous Author(s)
Submission Id: (Paper-ID)
where the (Paper-ID) is the ID assigned after abstract registration.
Use care in referring to your own related work. Do not omit references to your prior work, as this would make it difficult for reviewers to place your submission in its proper context. Instead, reference your past work in the third person, just as you would any other piece of related work. For example, you might say “Our system modifies the XYZ operating system built by Smith et al. [17]”.
In some cases, you may consider it inappropriate to refer to your related work in the third person. For example, your submission may extend a previous workshop paper, or it may relate to a submission currently under review. In these cases, you must still explain the differences between your present submission and the other work, but you should cite the other work anonymously and e-mail the deanonymized work to the PC chairs.
Submissions violating the detailed formatting and anonymization rules will not be considered for review. EuroSys applies ACM‘s policies for plagiarism, conflicts of interest, submission confidentiality, reviewer anonymity, and prior and concurrent paper submission. If you are uncertain about how to anonymize your submission, whether or not your submissions meet these guidelines, or have specific questions about the guidelines, please contact the program co-chairs, pc-chairs-2021@eurosys.org, well in advance of the submission deadline.
Conflicts
When registering and submitting your paper, you will need to provide information about conflicts with PC members. Use the following guidelines to determine conflicts:
Institution: You are currently employed at the same institution, have been previously employed at the same institution within the past two years, or are going to begin employment at the same institution.
Advisor or Collaboration: You have a past or present association as thesis advisor or advisee, or you have a collaboration on a project, publication, grant proposal, or editorship within the past two years (2019 or later), or reasonably expect one within the next year.
More details on the conflict of interest policy can be found at the ACM website
The PC chairs will review paper conflicts to ensure the integrity of the reviewing process, adding conflicts if necessary. Similarly, if there is no basis for conflicts provided by authors, such conflicts will be removed Improperly identifying PC members as a conflict in an attempt to avoid having an individual review your paper may lead to the submission being rejected without review. If you have any questions about conflicts, please contact the program co-chairs (pc-chairs-2021@eurosys.org).
Page limit and formatting
Submissions may have at most 12 pages of technical content, including all text, figures, tables, appendices, etc. Bibliographic references are not included in the 12-page limit. Use A4 or US letter paper size, with all text and figures fitting inside a 178 x 229 mm (7 x 9 in) block centered on the page, using two columns separated by ≥8 mm (0.33″) of whitespace. Use ≥10-point font (typeface Times Roman, Linux Libertine, etc.) on ≥12-point (single-spaced) leading. Graphs and figures should be readable when printed in grayscale, without magnification. All pages should be numbered. Authors are encouraged to hyperlink their references.
Most of these rules are automatically applied when using the official SIGPLAN Latex or MS Word templates from here. For Latex, we recommend you use (where (PAPER_ID) is the paper ID you received after abstract registration):
\documentclass[sigplan,review,anonymous]{acmart}
\acmSubmissionID{(PAPER_ID)}
\renewcommand\footnotetextcopyrightpermission[1]{}
...
Submission website
Submit your paper at: https://eurosys21.hotcrp.com/
Contact
For any further information, please contact the PC chairs: pc-chairs-2021@eurosys.org
Lorenzo Alvisi (Cornell University)
Cristian Cadar (Imperial College London)