-------- Original Message -------- Subject: [Tccc] Call for Papers IISW'04 Date: Fri, 9 Jul 2004 15:27:58 +0200 (CEST) From: Calin Curescu calcu@ida.liu.se To: tccc@cs.columbia.edu
Dear Colleagues,
On behalf of the program committee for the International Infrastructure Survivability Workshop (IISW04) to be held in conjunction with the 25th IEEE Real-time Systems Symposium, we would like to invite you to consider the workshop for a paper submission.
Selected papers from the workshop will be published in the International Journal of Critical Infrastructures (IJCIS), and reviewed by three members of the distinguished program committee.
Submission deadline: 4th September. For more details please refer to: www.ida.liu.se/~calcu/iisw04
Regards, Simin Nadjm-Tehrani and Calin Curescu
Please accept our apologies if you receive multiple copies.
CALL FOR PAPERS:
International Infrastructure Survivability Workshop (IISW'04) """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" Overloads, Attacks and Failures: the Trade-off against Time
To be held in conjunction with the 25th IEEE International Real-Time Systems Symposium (RTSS04) December 5-8, 2004 Lisbon, Portugal
SCOPE: Society today is increasingly dependent on critical infrastructures that constitute the backbone for delivery of its essential services. Many critical services such as power supplies, public transport, telecommunications, banking and finance, and defence will be increasingly relying on information infrastructures, not only for management and control but also for monitoring outages and recovery. Combinations of wireless and ad hoc networks with fixed networks are becoming a reality in many domains.
Traditional solutions in dependable systems build in robustness at the production stage. Using redundancy, feedback mechanisms, and careful sensitivity analysis the system is shown to stay in its characterised operational profile and shows graceful degradation when components fail. In today's networked infrastructures it is more difficult to achieve these goals due to the following developments: * New infrastructures are built as partial overlays with old infrastructures making the emerging system of systems irregular in its architecture. * Introduction of new services, emerging trends and deregulation contribute to unbalancing phenomena: operational conditions may change abruptly creating traffic/flow patterns not foreseen by operators. * Prevalence of software brings with it the weaknesses of COTS, making systems more susceptible to "normal" failures and malicious attempts to bring down a service. * Tomorrow's networked systems will have to face the challenge of survivability: delivering critical services in a timely manner in presence of overloads, attacks and failures.
In this workshop we intend to bring together research that addresses the above issues by incorporating metrics that represent the use of scarce resources, reflecting timing performance, anticipating outages and mobilising system reconfigurations to stall outages or recover from partial failures. Practical experience reports are highly encouraged. Papers that describe original unpublished work are solicited and selected papers will be published in a special issue of the International Journal on Critical Infrastructures (IJCIS). The topics of interest cover, but are not limited to, the following areas: * Models and architectures for network survivability * Network fault-tolerance: wireless networks, sensor networks, IP networks * Interoperability between hybrid wireline/wireless networks * Fraud and intrusion Detection, Prediction, and Countermeasures * Survivable architectures for e-commerce * Security and availability of web services * Support for QoS * Adaptive systems theory and practice * Quality metrics in open systems * Availability/Performance trade-offs * Security/Performance trade-offs * Case studies and experimental studies
WORKSHOP CHAIR: Simin Nadjm-Tehrani, Linköping University, Sweden, simin@ida.liu.se
ORGANISATION CHAIR: Calin Curescu, Linköping University, Sweden, calcu@ida.liu.se
Program Committee: Calin Curescu, Linköping University, Sweden Marc Dacier, Eurécom, France Teresa A. Dahlberg, UNC Charlotte, USA Luiz A. DaSilva, VirginiaTech, USA Valérie Issarny, INRIA, France John Knight, University of Virginia, USA Håkan Kvarnström, TeliaSonera, Sweden Simin Nadjm-Tehrani, Linköping University, Sweden Heinz Thielmann, Fraunhofer SIT, Germany Lonnie Welch, Ohio University, USA
IMPORTANT DATES: Submission deadline: 4 September 2004 Acceptance notification: 4 October 2004 Final version due: 4 November 2004
SUBMISSION GUIDELINES: Original work not published and not subject to review elsewhere is solicited. Papers should be of length 8-10 pages in standard IEEE format, including: abstract, 3-5 keywords, and corresponding author's e-mail.
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