In recent years, a wide range of static analysis tools have emerged, some of which are currently in industrial use or are well beyond the advanced prototype level. Many impressive practical results have been obtained, which allow complex properties to be proven or checked in a fully or semi-automatic way, even in the context of complex software developments. In parallel, the techniques to design and implement static analysis tools have improved significantly, and much effort is being put into engineering the tools. This workshop is intended to promote discussions and exchange experience between specialists in all areas of program analysis design and implementation and static analysis tool users.
Previous workshops have been held in Perpignan, France (2010), Venice, Italy (2011), Deauville, France (2012), Seattle, WA, USA (2013), Munich, Germany (2014), Saint-Malo, France (2015), Edinburgh, UK (2016) and New York, NY, USA (2017).
TAPAS 2018 will be co-located with SAS 2018.
The technical program of TAPAS 2018 will consist of invited lectures together with presentations based on submitted extended abstracts.
Submissions can cover any aspect of program analysis tools including, but not limited to the following:
Program Chair
•Andreas Podelski (University of Freiburg, Germany)
Program Committee
•Domagoj Babic (Google Inc., USA)
•Sam Blackshear (Facebook, USA)
•Marc Brockschmidt (Microsoft Research, UK)
•Swarat Chaudhuri (Rice University, USA)
•Bor-Yuh Evan Chang (University of Colorado Boulder, USA)
•Jérôme Feret (INRIA/ENS/CNRS, France)
•Ashutosh Gupta (TIFR, India)
•Nicolas Halbwachs (Verimag/CNRS, France)
•Lukáš Holík (Brno University of Technology, Czech Republic)
•Barbara König (University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany)
•Boris Köpf (IMDEA Software Institute, Spain)
•Shuvendu Lahiri (Microsoft Research, USA)
•Hakjoo Oh (Korea University, South Korea)
•Sylvie Putot (École Polytechnique, France)
•Francesco Ranzato (University of Padova, Italy)
•Jakob Rehof (TU Dortmund University, Germany)
•Xavier Rival (CNRS/ENS/INRIA, France)
•Sriram Sankaranarayanan (University of Colorado Boulder, USA)
•Harald Søndergaard (The University of Melbourne, Australia)
•Alexander J. Summers (ETH Zurich, Switzerland)
•Ashish Tiwari (SRI International, USA)
•Caterina Urban (ETH Zurich, Switzerland)
•Lenore Zuck (University of Illinois at Chicago, USA)
•Damien Zufferey (MPI-SWS, Germany)
•Florian Zuleger (TU Wien, Austria)
Artifact Evaluation Chair
•Xavier Rival (CNRS/ENS/INRIA, France)
Artifact Evaluation Committee
•Ahmad Salim Al Sibahi (University of Copenhagen, Denmark)
•Frédéric Besson (Inria/Univ Rennes/CNRS/IRISA, France)
•Liqian Chen (NUDT, China)
•Gidon Ernst (National Institute of Informatics, Japan)
•George Fourtounis (University of Athens, Greece)
•Kihong Heo (University of Pennsylvania, USA)
•Huisong Li (CNRS/ENS/INRIA, France)
•Sergio Mover (University of Colorado Boulder, USA)
•Hakjoo Oh (Korea University, South Korea)
•Oded Padon (Tel Aviv University, Israel)
•Jihyeok Park (KAIST, South Korea)
•Marie Pelleau (University Nice/Sophia Antipolis, France)
•Markus Schordan (Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, USA)
•Fausto Spoto (University of Verona/Julia Srl, Italy)
•David Sprunger (National Institute of Informatics, Japan)
•Caterina Urban (ETH Zurich, Switzerland)
•Jules Villard (Facebook)
Publicity Chair
•Caterina Urban (ETH Zurich, Switzerland)
The technical program for SAS 2018 will consist of invited lectures and presentations of refereed papers. Contributions are welcomed on all aspects of static analysis, including, but not limited to:
Abstract domains
Automated deduction
Debugging
Emerging applications
Program optimizations and transformations
Program verification
Tool environments and architectures
Type checking
Abstract interpretation
Data flow analysis
Deductive methods
Model checking
Program synthesis
Security analysis
Theoretical frameworks
Submissions can address any programming paradigm including concurrent, constraint, functional, imperative, logic, object-oriented, aspect, multi-core, distributed, and GPU programming. Papers must describe original work, be written and presented in English, and must not substantially overlap with papers that have been published or that are simultaneously submitted to a journal or a conference with refereed proceedings. Submitted papers will be judged on the basis of significance, relevance, correctness, originality, and clarity. They should clearly identify what has been accomplished and why it is significant. Paper submissions should not exceed 15 pages in Springer's Lecture Notes in Computer Science LNCS format, excluding bibliography and well-marked appendices (we may admit additional pages for the final version). Program Committee members are not required to read the appendices, and thus papers must be intelligible without them.
08月28日
2018
会议日期
初稿截稿日期
初稿录用通知日期
注册截止日期
留言