CGO 2024
Sat 2 - Wed 6 March 2024 Edinburgh, United Kingdom
Dates
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Sat 2 Mar

Displayed time zone: London change

08:00 - 08:30
08:00
30m
Coffee break
Coffee Break
Main Conference

Sun 3 Mar

Displayed time zone: London change

07:30 - 08:00
07:30
30m
Coffee break
Coffee Break
Main Conference

18:00 - 20:00
Reception - only for attendees who registered for the full conference (Mon-Wed)Main Conference at Strathblane Hall

Mon 4 Mar

Displayed time zone: London change

07:45 - 08:15
Registration and Arrival CoffeeMain Conference at Strathblane Hall
07:45
30m
Coffee break
Coffee Break
Main Conference

08:15 - 08:30
OpeningMain Conference at Pentland Suite
Chair(s): Tobias Grosser University of Edinburgh, Boris Grot University of Edinburgh, UK, Michel Steuwer TU Berlin; University of Edinburgh
08:15
15m
Day opening
Opening
Main Conference

09:30 - 10:00
09:30
30m
Coffee break
Coffee Break
Main Conference

10:00 - 11:00
Compilers for machine learningMain Conference at Tinto
Chair(s): Fabrice Rastello University Grenoble Alpes - Inria - CNRS - Grenoble INP - LIG
10:00
20m
Talk
A Tensor Algebra Compiler for Sparse Differentiation
Main Conference
Amir Shaikhha University of Edinburgh, Mathieu Huot University of Oxford, Shideh Hashemian University of Edinburgh
10:20
20m
Talk
Energy-Aware Tile Size Selection for Affine Programs on GPUs
Main Conference
Malith Jayaweera Northeastern University, Martin Kong Ohio State University, Yanzhi Wang Northeastern University, David Kaeli Northeastern University
Pre-print
10:40
20m
Talk
PolyTOPS: Reconfigurable and Flexible Polyhedral Scheduler
Main Conference
Gianpietro Consolaro Huawei Technologies; Mines Paris-PSL, Zhen Zhang Huawei Technologies, Harenome Razanajato Huawei Technologies, Nelson Lossing Huawei Technologies, Nassim Tchoulak Huawei Technologies, Adilla Susungi Huawei Technologies, Artur Cesar Araujo Alves Huawei Technologies, Renwei Zhang Huawei Technologies, Denis Barthou Huawei Technologies, Corinne Ancourt Mines Paris-PSL, Cédric Bastoul Huawei Technologies
Pre-print
11:00 - 11:30
11:00
30m
Coffee break
Coffee Break
Main Conference

11:30 - 12:50
Machine-Learning Guided OptimizationsMain Conference at Tinto
Chair(s): Zheng Wang University of Leeds
11:30
20m
Talk
AskIt: Unified Programming Interface for Programming with Large Language Models
Main Conference
Katsumi Okuda Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Mitsubishi Electric Corporation, Saman Amarasinghe Massachusetts Institute of Technology
11:50
20m
Talk
Revealing Compiler Heuristics through Automated Discovery and Optimization
Main Conference
Volker Seeker Meta AI Research, Chris Cummins Meta AI Research, Murray Cole University of Edinburgh, Björn Franke University of Edinburgh, Kim Hazelwood Meta AI Research, Hugh Leather Meta AI Research
12:10
20m
Talk
SLaDe: A Portable Small Language Model Decompiler for Optimized Assembly
Main Conference
Jordi Armengol-Estapé University of Edinburgh, Jackson Woodruff University of Edinburgh, Chris Cummins Meta AI Research, Michael F. P. O'Boyle University of Edinburgh
Pre-print
12:30
20m
Talk
TapeFlow: Streaming Gradient Tapes in Automatic Differentiation
Main Conference
Milad Hakimi Simon Fraser University, Arrvindh Shriraman Simon Fraser University
Media Attached
12:50 - 14:20
12:50
90m
Lunch
Lunch
Main Conference

14:20 - 15:40
Compilers for GPUsMain Conference at Tinto
Chair(s): Roland Leißa University of Mannheim, School of Business Informatics and Mathematics
14:20
20m
Talk
A Framework for Fine-Grained Synchronization of Dependent GPU Kernels
Main Conference
Abhinav Jangda Microsoft Research, Saeed Maleki Microsoft Research, Maryam Mehri Dehnavi University of Toronto, Madan Musuvathi Microsoft Research, Olli Saarikivi Microsoft Research
Pre-print
14:40
20m
Talk
Enhancing Performance through Control-Flow Unmerging and Loop Unrolling on GPUs
Main Conference
Alnis Murtovi TU Dortmund, Giorgis Georgakoudis Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Konstantinos Parasyris Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Chunhua Liao Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Ignacio Laguna Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Bernhard Steffen TU Dortmund
15:00
20m
Talk
Retargeting and Respecializing GPU Workloads for Performance Portability
Main Conference
Ivan Radanov Ivanov Tokyo Institute of Technology; RIKEN R-CCS, Oleksandr Zinenko Google DeepMind, Jens Domke RIKEN R-CCS, Toshio Endo Tokyo Institute of Technology, William S. Moses University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Google DeepMind
15:20
20m
Talk
Seer: Predictive Runtime Kernel Selection for Irregular Problems
Main Conference
Pre-print
15:40 - 16:10
15:40
30m
Coffee break
Coffee Break
Main Conference

16:10 - 17:30
Custom ProcessorsMain Conference at Tinto
Chair(s): Rodrigo C. O. Rocha Huawei
16:10
20m
Talk
AXI4MLIR: User-Driven Automatic Host Code Generation for Custom AXI-Based Accelerators
Main Conference
Nicolas Bohm Agostini Northeastern University; Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Jude Haris University of Glasgow, Perry Gibson University of Glasgow, Malith Jayaweera Northeastern University, norm rubin Northeastern University, Antonino Tumeo Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, José L. Abellán University of Murcia, José Cano University of Glasgow, David Kaeli Northeastern University
Pre-print
16:30
20m
Talk
Ecmas: Efficient Circuit Mapping and Scheduling for Surface Code
Main Conference
Mingzheng Zhu University of Science and Technology of China, Hao Fu University of Science and Technology of China, Jun Wu University of Science and Technology of China, Chi Zhang University of Science and Technology of China, Wei Xie University of Science and Technology of China, Xiang-Yang Li University of Science and Technology of China
Pre-print
16:50
20m
Talk
PresCount: Effective Register Allocation for Bank Conflict Reduction
Main Conference
Xiaofeng Guan Shanghai Jiao Tong University; Shanghai Enflame Technology, Hao Zhou Shanghai Enflame Technology, Guoqing Bao Shanghai Enflame Technology, Handong Li Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Liang Zhu Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Jianguo Yao Shanghai Jiao Tong University; Shanghai Enflame Technology
Pre-print
17:10
20m
Talk
Tackling the Matrix Multiplication Micro-kernel Generation with Exo
Main Conference
Adrián Castelló Universitat Politècnica de València, Julian Bellavita Cornell University, Grace Dinh University of California at Berkeley, Yuka Ikarashi Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Héctor Martínez Universidad de Córdoba
Pre-print
18:00 - 20:30
Business MeetingsMain Conference at Tinto

Tue 5 Mar

Displayed time zone: London change

08:00 - 08:30
Registration and Arrival CoffeeMain Conference at Strathblane Hall
08:00
30m
Coffee break
Coffee Break
Main Conference

09:30 - 10:00
09:30
30m
Coffee break
Coffee Break
Main Conference

10:00 - 11:00
Compiler ConstructionMain Conference at Tinto
Chair(s): Jose Nelson Amaral University of Alberta
10:00
20m
Talk
One Automaton to Rule Them All: Beyond Multiple Regular Expressions Execution
Main Conference
Luisa Cicolini Politecnico di Milano, Filippo Carloni Politecnico di Milano, Marco D. Santambrogio Politecnico di Milano, Davide Conficconi Politecnico di Milano
Pre-print Media Attached
10:20
20m
Talk
Whose Baseline Compiler Is It Anyway?
Main Conference
Ben L. Titzer Carnegie Mellon University
Pre-print
10:40
20m
Talk
Enabling Fine-Grained Incremental Builds by Making Compiler Stateful
Main Conference
Ruobing Han Georgia Institute of Technology, Jisheng Zhao Georgia Institute of Technology, Hyesoon Kim Georgia Institute of Technology
Pre-print
11:00 - 11:30
11:00
30m
Coffee break
Coffee Break
Main Conference

11:30 - 12:50
Custom EnvironmentsMain Conference at Tinto
Chair(s): João P. L. De Carvalho Qualcomm Canada Inc
11:30
20m
Talk
Compile-Time Analysis of Compiler Frameworks for Query Compilation
Main Conference
Alexis Engelke TU Munich, Tobias Schwarz TU Munich
Pre-print
11:50
20m
Talk
DrPy: Pinpointing Inefficient Memory Usage in Multi-Layer Python Applications
Main Conference
Jinku Cui North Carolina State University, Qidong Zhao North Carolina State University, Yueming Hao North Carolina State University, Xu Liu North Carolina State University
12:10
20m
Talk
SCHEMATIC: Compile-Time Checkpoint Placement and Memory Allocation for Intermittent Systems
Main Conference
Hugo Reymond Université de Rennes - Inria - CNRS - IRISA, Jean-Luc Béchennec Nantes Université - École Centrale Nantes - CNRS - LS2N - UMR 6004, Mikaël Briday Nantes Université - École Centrale Nantes - CNRS - LS2N - UMR 6004, Sébastien Faucou Nantes Université - École Centrale Nantes - CNRS - LS2N - UMR 6004, Isabelle Puaut Université de Rennes - Inria - CNRS - IRISA, Erven Rohou Université de Rennes - Inria - CNRS - IRISA
Pre-print Media Attached
12:30
20m
Talk
Latent Idiom Recognition for a Minimalist Functional Array Language using Equality Saturation
Main Conference
Jonathan Van der Cruysse McGill University, Christophe Dubach McGill University
Pre-print
12:50 - 14:20
12:50
90m
Lunch
Lunch
Main Conference

14:20 - 15:40
Static/Dynamic AnalysesMain Conference at Tinto
Chair(s): Laure Gonnord Univ. Grenoble Alpes, Grenoble INP, LCIS, Valence, France
14:20
20m
Talk
BEC: Bit-Level Static Analysis for Reliability against Soft Errors
Main Conference
Yousun Ko Yonsei University, Bernd Burgstaller Yonsei University
Pre-print
14:40
20m
Talk
Boosting the Performance of Multi-solver IFDS Algorithms with Flow-Sensitivity Optimizations
Main Conference
Haofeng Li Institute of Computing Technology at Chinese Academy of Sciences, Jie Lu Institute of Computing Technology at Chinese Academy of Sciences, Haining Meng Institute of Computing Technology at Chinese Academy of Sciences; University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Liqing Cao Institute of Computing Technology at Chinese Academy of Sciences; University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Lian Li Institute of Computing Technology at Chinese Academy of Sciences; University of Chinese Academy of Sciences; Zhongguancun Laboratory, Lin Gao TianqiSoft
Pre-print
15:00
20m
Talk
Representing Data Collections in an SSA Form
Main Conference
Tommy McMichen Northwestern University, Nathan Greiner Northwestern University, Peter Zhong Northwestern University, Federico Sossai Northwestern University, Atmn Patel Northwestern University, Simone Campanoni Northwestern University
Pre-print
15:20
20m
Talk
Revamping Sampling-Based PGO with Context-Sensitivity and Pseudo-instrumentation
Main Conference
Wenlei He Meta, Hongtao Yu Meta, Lei Wang Meta, Taewook Oh Meta
15:40 - 16:10
15:40
30m
Coffee break
Coffee Break
Main Conference

16:10 - 17:30
Supporting ToolsMain Conference at Tinto
Chair(s): Ayal Zaks Mobileye
16:10
20m
Talk
Compiler Testing with Relaxed Memory Models
Main Conference
Luke Geeson University College London, Lee Smith Arm
16:30
20m
Talk
High-Throughput, Formal-Methods-Assisted Fuzzing for LLVM
Main Conference
Yuyou Fan University of Utah, John Regehr University of Utah
16:50
20m
Talk
EasyTracker: A Python Library for Controlling and Inspecting Program Execution
Main Conference
Théo Barollet University Grenoble Alpes - Inria - CNRS - Grenoble INP - LIG, Christophe Guillon University Grenoble Alpes - Inria - CNRS - Grenoble INP - LIG, Manuel Selva University Grenoble Alpes - Inria - CNRS - Grenoble INP - LIG, François Broquedis University Grenoble Alpes - Inria - CNRS - Grenoble INP - LIG, Florent Bouchez-Tichadou University Grenoble Alpes - Inria - CNRS - Grenoble INP - LIG, Fabrice Rastello University Grenoble Alpes - Inria - CNRS - Grenoble INP - LIG
Pre-print
17:10
20m
Talk
OptiWISE: Combining Sampling and Instrumentation for Granular CPI Analysis
Main Conference
Yuxin Guo University of Cambridge, Alex W. Chadwick University of Cambridge, Marton Erdos University of Cambridge, Utpal Bora University of Cambridge, Ilias Vougioukas Arm, Giacomo Gabrielli Arm, Timothy M. Jones University of Cambridge
Pre-print Media Attached

Wed 6 Mar

Displayed time zone: London change

08:00 - 08:30
Registration and Arrival CoffeeMain Conference at Strathblane Hall
08:00
30m
Coffee break
Coffee Break
Main Conference

09:30 - 10:00
09:30
30m
Coffee break
Coffee Break
Main Conference

10:00 - 11:00
Practice and ExperienceMain Conference at Tinto
Chair(s): Corinne Ancourt Mines Paris-PSL
10:00
20m
Talk
EasyView: Bringing Performance Profiles into Integrated Development Environments
Main Conference
Qidong Zhao North Carolina State University, Milind Chabbi Scalable Machines Research, Xu Liu North Carolina State University
Pre-print
10:20
20m
Talk
Experiences Building an MLIR-Based SYCL Compiler
Main Conference
Ettore Tiotto Intel Corporation, Victor Perez Codeplay Software, Whitney Tsang Intel Corporation, Lukas Sommer Codeplay Software, Julian Oppermann Codeplay Software, Victor Lomüller Codeplay Software, Mehdi Goli Codeplay Software, James Brodman Intel Corporation
Pre-print
10:40
20m
Talk
Unveiling and Vanquishing Goroutine Leaks in Enterprise Microservices: A Dynamic Analysis Approach
Main Conference
Georgian-Vlad Saioc Aarhus University; Uber Technologies, Dmitriy Shirchenko Uber Technologies, Milind Chabbi Uber Technologies
Pre-print Media Attached
11:00 - 11:30
11:00
30m
Coffee break
Coffee Break
Main Conference

11:30 - 12:50
Acceleration TechniquesMain Conference at Tinto
Chair(s): Amir Shaikhha University of Edinburgh
11:30
20m
Talk
A System-Level Dynamic Binary Translator using Automatically-Learned Translation Rules
Main Conference
Jinhu Jiang Fudan University, Chaoyi Liang Fudan University, Rongchao Dong Fudan University, Zhaohui Yang Fudan University, Zhongjun Zhou Fudan University, Wenwen Wang University of Georgia, Pen-Chung Yew University of Minnesota at Twin Cities, Weihua Zhang Fudan University
Pre-print
11:50
20m
Talk
Instruction Scheduling for the GPU on the GPU
Main Conference
Ghassan Shobaki California State University, Pınar Muyan-Özçelik California State University, Josh Hutton California State University, Bruce Linck California State University, Vladislav Malyshenko California State University, Austin Kerbow Advanced Micro Devices, Ronaldo Ramirez-Ortega California State University, Vahl Scott Gordon California State University
12:10
20m
Talk
JITSPMM: Just-in-Time Instruction Generation for Accelerated Sparse Matrix-Matrix Multiplication
Main Conference
Qiang Fu Advanced Micro Devices, Thomas B. Rolinger NVIDIA, H. Howie Huang George Washington University
Pre-print
12:30
20m
Talk
oneDNN Graph Compiler: A Hybrid Approach for High-Performance Deep Learning Compilation
Main Conference
Jianhui Li Intel, Zhennan Qin Intel, Yijie Mei Intel, Jingze Cui Intel, Yunfei Song Intel, Ciyong Chen Intel, Yifei Zhang Intel, Longsheng Du Intel, Xianhang Cheng Intel, Baihui Jin Intel, Yan Zhang Intel, Jason Ye Intel, Eric Lin Intel, Dan Lavery Intel
Pre-print
12:50 - 13:20
Awards SessionMain Conference at Tinto
13:20 - 13:30

Accepted Papers

Title
A Framework for Fine-Grained Synchronization of Dependent GPU Kernels
Main Conference
Pre-print
AskIt: Unified Programming Interface for Programming with Large Language Models
Main Conference
A System-Level Dynamic Binary Translator using Automatically-Learned Translation Rules
Main Conference
Pre-print
A Tensor Algebra Compiler for Sparse Differentiation
Main Conference
AXI4MLIR: User-Driven Automatic Host Code Generation for Custom AXI-Based Accelerators
Main Conference
Pre-print
BEC: Bit-Level Static Analysis for Reliability against Soft Errors
Main Conference
Pre-print
Boosting the Performance of Multi-solver IFDS Algorithms with Flow-Sensitivity Optimizations
Main Conference
Pre-print
Coffee Break
Main Conference

Compiler Testing with Relaxed Memory Models
Main Conference
Compile-Time Analysis of Compiler Frameworks for Query Compilation
Main Conference
Pre-print
DrPy: Pinpointing Inefficient Memory Usage in Multi-Layer Python Applications
Main Conference
EasyTracker: A Python Library for Controlling and Inspecting Program Execution
Main Conference
Pre-print
EasyView: Bringing Performance Profiles into Integrated Development Environments
Main Conference
Pre-print
Ecmas: Efficient Circuit Mapping and Scheduling for Surface Code
Main Conference
Pre-print
Enabling Fine-Grained Incremental Builds by Making Compiler Stateful
Main Conference
Pre-print
Energy-Aware Tile Size Selection for Affine Programs on GPUs
Main Conference
Pre-print
Enhancing Performance through Control-Flow Unmerging and Loop Unrolling on GPUs
Main Conference
Experiences Building an MLIR-Based SYCL Compiler
Main Conference
Pre-print
High-Throughput, Formal-Methods-Assisted Fuzzing for LLVM
Main Conference
Instruction Scheduling for the GPU on the GPU
Main Conference
JITSPMM: Just-in-Time Instruction Generation for Accelerated Sparse Matrix-Matrix Multiplication
Main Conference
Pre-print
Latent Idiom Recognition for a Minimalist Functional Array Language using Equality Saturation
Main Conference
Pre-print
Lunch
Main Conference

One Automaton to Rule Them All: Beyond Multiple Regular Expressions Execution
Main Conference
Pre-print Media Attached
oneDNN Graph Compiler: A Hybrid Approach for High-Performance Deep Learning Compilation
Main Conference
Pre-print
Opening
Main Conference

OptiWISE: Combining Sampling and Instrumentation for Granular CPI Analysis
Main Conference
Pre-print Media Attached
PolyTOPS: Reconfigurable and Flexible Polyhedral Scheduler
Main Conference
Pre-print
PresCount: Effective Register Allocation for Bank Conflict Reduction
Main Conference
Pre-print
Representing Data Collections in an SSA Form
Main Conference
Pre-print
Retargeting and Respecializing GPU Workloads for Performance Portability
Main Conference
Revamping Sampling-Based PGO with Context-Sensitivity and Pseudo-instrumentation
Main Conference
Revealing Compiler Heuristics through Automated Discovery and Optimization
Main Conference
SCHEMATIC: Compile-Time Checkpoint Placement and Memory Allocation for Intermittent Systems
Main Conference
Pre-print Media Attached
Seer: Predictive Runtime Kernel Selection for Irregular Problems
Main Conference
Pre-print
SLaDe: A Portable Small Language Model Decompiler for Optimized Assembly
Main Conference
Pre-print
Tackling the Matrix Multiplication Micro-kernel Generation with Exo
Main Conference
Pre-print
TapeFlow: Streaming Gradient Tapes in Automatic Differentiation
Main Conference
Media Attached
Unveiling and Vanquishing Goroutine Leaks in Enterprise Microservices: A Dynamic Analysis Approach
Main Conference
Pre-print Media Attached
Whose Baseline Compiler Is It Anyway?
Main Conference
Pre-print

Call for Papers

IEEE/ACM International Symposium on Code Generation and Optimization (CGO)

Co-located with PPoPP, HPCA and CC

Edinburgh, UK

March 2nd – March 6th, 2024

The International Symposium on Code Generation and Optimization (CGO’24) will happen in Edinburgh, UK, from March 2nd to March 6th, 2024. CGO is the premier venue to bring together researchers and practitioners working at the interface of hardware and software on a wide range of optimization and code generation techniques and related issues. The conference spans the spectrum from purely static to fully dynamic approaches, and from pure software-based methods to specific architectural features and support for code generation and optimization.


This year, CGO is introducing an earlier second submission deadline in May 2023.
This follows the model established by other conferences in our field in recent years, such as ASPLOS and OOPSLA.

Papers submitted to the first round can either be directly accepted, rejected, or invited to submit a revised version of the paper to the second round. For papers invited to submit a revised version, authors will be given a list of revisions that should be acted on to improve the paper. We will make every effort to ensure that the revised paper will be reviewed by the same referees, who will assess whether the revisions have been implemented appropriately. If so, the paper will be accepted. If a paper is rejected, the authors may still submit a revised version in a subsequent round, which will be treated as a new submission.


First Submission Deadline

  • Paper Submission: May 19th, 2023
  • Author Rebuttal Period: July 5th - 7th, 2023
  • Paper Notification: July 17th, 2023
  • Artifact Evaluation Submission: August 10th, 2023
  • Artifact Evaluation Notification: September 7th, 2023

Contact for the first submission round:

Second Submission Deadline

  • Paper Submission: September 1st, 2023
  • Author Rebuttal Period: October 19th - October 23rd, 2023
  • Paper Notification: November 6th, 2023
  • Artifact Evaluation Submission: November 24th, 2023
  • Artifact Evaluation Notification: December 19th, 2023

Contact for the second submission round:


AUTHORS TAKE NOTE: The official publication date is the date the proceedings are made available in the IEEE Xplore Platform. 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.


Topics

Original contributions are solicited on, but not limited to, the following topics:

  • Code Generation, Translation, Transformation, and Optimization for performance, energy, virtualization, portability, security, or reliability concerns, and architectural support
  • Efficient execution of dynamically typed and higher-level languages
  • Optimization and code generation for emerging programming models, platforms, domain-specific languages
  • Dynamic/static, profile-guided, feedback-directed, and machine learning-based optimization
  • Static, Dynamic, and Hybrid Analysis for performance, energy, memory locality, throughput or latency, security, reliability, or functional debugging
  • Program characterization methods
  • Profiling and instrumentation techniques; architectural support
  • Novel and efficient tools
  • Compiler design, practice and experience
  • Compiler abstraction and intermediate representations
  • Vertical integration of language features, representations, optimizations, and runtime support for parallelism
  • Solutions that involve cross-layer (HW/OS/VM/SW) design and integration
  • Deployed dynamic/static compiler and runtime systems for general purpose, embedded system and Cloud/HPC platforms
  • Parallelism, heterogeneity, and reconfigurable architectures
  • Optimizations for heterogeneous or specialized targets, GPUs, SoCs, CGRA and Quantum Computers
  • Compiler support for vectorization, thread extraction, task scheduling, speculation, transaction, memory management, data distribution and synchronization

Standard research papers must be written in the IEEE double column format, and may have up to 10 pages, references excluded.


Call for Tool and Practical Experience Papers

CGO has a second category of papers called “Tools and Practical Experience”. Papers in this category must either give a clear account of a tool’s functionality or summarize a practical experience with realistic case studies.

The successful evaluation of an artifact is mandatory for a Tool Paper.
Therefore, authors of work conditionally accepted as Tool Papers must submit an artifact to the Artifact Evaluation Committee. The successful evaluation of the artifact is a requirement for final acceptance.

Practical experience papers are encouraged, but not required, to submit an artifact to the Artifact Evaluation process.

The selection criteria for papers in this category are:

  • Originality: Papers should present CGO-related technologies applied to real-world problems with scope or characteristics that set them apart from previous solutions.
  • Usability: The presented Tools or compilers should have broad usage or applicability. They are expected to assist in CGO-related research, or could be extended to investigate or demonstrate new technologies. If significant components are not yet implemented, the paper will not be considered.
  • Documentation: The tool or compiler should be presented on a web-site giving documentation and further information about the tool.
  • Benchmark Repository: A suite of benchmarks for testing should be provided.
  • Availability: The tool or compiler should be available for public use.
  • Foundations: Papers should incorporate the principles underpinning Code Generation and Optimization (CGO). However, a thorough discussion of theoretical foundations is not required; a summary of such should suffice.
  • Artifact Evaluation: The submitted artifact must be functional and support the claims made in the paper. Submission of an artifact is mandatory for papers presenting a tool.

Tool and Practical Experience papers abide by the same limit of 10 pages in the IEEE double column format, references excluded, and are not distinguished in the final proceedings. We encourage shorter submissions that give account of how scientific ideas have been incorporated and used in practice.


Geographic Diversity and Inclusion

Authors of papers accepted for CGO 2024 are encouraged to present their work in person. However, to foster the participation of students and professionals from everywhere, CGO 2024 will allow the remote presentation of papers, if their authors are unable to travel to the conference venue for reasons beyond their control (e.g. visa issues). Additionally, the conference organization will try to make attendance of CGO 2024 affordable for as many people as possible, with a specific focus on students from universities located in under-represented countries who are paper authors.


Artifact Evaluation

The Artifact Evaluation process is run by a separate committee whose task is to assess how the artifacts support the work described in the papers. This process contributes to improved reproducibility in research that should be a great concern to all of us. There is also some evidence that papers with a supporting artifact receive higher citations than papers without (Artifact Evaluation: Is It a Real Incentive? by B. Childers and P. Chrysanthis).

Authors of accepted papers at CGO have the option of submitting their artifacts for evaluation within two weeks of paper acceptance. To ease the organization of the AE committee, we kindly ask authors to indicate at the time they submit the paper, whether they are interested in submitting an artifact. Papers that go through the Artifact Evaluation process successfully will receive a seal of approval printed on the papers themselves. Additional information is available on the CGO AE web page. Authors of accepted papers are encouraged, but not required, to make these materials publicly available upon publication of the proceedings.


Authors should carefully consider the difference in focus between the co-located conferences when deciding where to submit a paper. CGO will make the proceedings freely available via the IEEE Xplore platform during the period from two weeks before to two weeks after the conference. This option will facilitate easy access to the proceedings by conference attendees, and it will also enable the community at large to experience the excitement of learning about the latest developments being presented in the period surrounding the event itself.


Distinguished Paper Awards

Up to 10% of papers accepted at CGO 2024 will be designated as Distinguished Papers, following the ACM policy. This award is open to both regular and tool papers.

Submission Site

Papers can be submitted at https://cgo24.hotcrp.com.

Submission Guidelines

Please make sure that your paper satisfies ALL of the following requirements before it is submitted:

  • The paper must be original material that has not been previously published in another conference or journal, nor is currently under review by another conference or journal. Note that you may submit material presented previously at a workshop without copyrighted proceedings.

  • Your submission is limited to ten (10) letter-size (8.5″x11″), single-spaced, double-column pages, using 10pt or larger font, not including references. There is no page limit for references. We strongly encourage the use of the IEEE Conference Template. Submissions not adhering to these submission guidelines may be outright rejected at the discretion of the program chairs. (Please make sure your paper prints satisfactorily on letter-size (8.5″x11″) paper: this is especially important for submissions from countries where A4 paper is standard.)

  • Papers are to be submitted for double-blind review. Blind reviewing of papers will be done by the program committee, assisted by outside referees. Author names as well as hints of identity are to be removed from the submitted paper. Use care in naming your files. Source file names, e.g., Joe.Smith.dvi, are often embedded in the final output as readily accessible comments. In addition, do not omit references to provide anonymity, as this leaves the reviewer unable to grasp the context. Instead, if you are extending your own work, you need to reference and discuss the past work in third person, as if you were extending someone else’s research. We realize in doing this that for some papers it will still be obvious who the authors are. In this case, the submission will not be penalized as long a concerted effort was made to reference and describe the relationship to the prior work as if you were extending someone else’s research. For example, if your name is Joe Smith:

    In previous work [1,2], Smith presented a new branch predictor for …. In this paper, we extend their work by …

    Bibliography

    [1] Joe Smith, “A Simple Branch Predictor for …,” Proceedings of CGO 2019.

    [2] Joe Smith, “A More Complicated Branch Predictor for…,” Proceedings of CGO 2019.

  • Your submission must be formatted for black-and-white printers and not color printers. This is especially true for plots and graphs in the paper.
  • Please make sure that the labels on your graphs are readable without the aid of a magnifying glass. Typically the default font sizes on the graph axes in a program like Microsoft Excel are too small.
  • Please number the pages.
  • The paper must be written in English.
  • The paper must be submitted in PDF. We cannot accept any other format, and we must be able to print the document just as we receive it. We strongly suggest that you use only the four widely-used printer fonts: Times, Helvetica, Courier and Symbol.
  • Please make sure that the output has been formatted for printing on LETTER size paper. If generating the paper using “dvips”, use the option “-P cmz -t letter”, and if that is not supported, use “-t letter”.
  • The Artifact Evaluation process is run by a separate committee whose task is to assess how the artifacts support the work described in the papers. Authors of accepted papers have the option of submitting their artifacts for evaluation within one week of paper acceptance. To ease the organization of the AE committee, we kindly ask authors to indicate at the time they submit the paper, whether they are interested in submitting an artifact. Papers that go through the Artifact Evaluation process successfully will receive a seal of approval printed on the papers themselves. Additional information is available on the CGO AE web page. Authors of accepted papers are encouraged, but not required, to make these materials publicly available upon publication of the proceedings.
  • Authors must register all their conflicts on the paper submission site. Conflicts are needed to ensure appropriate assignment of reviewers. If a paper is found to have an undeclared conflict that causes a problem OR if a paper is found to declare false conflicts in order to abuse or “game” the review system, the paper may be rejected.

  • Please declare a conflict of interest with the following people for any author of your paper:

    • Your Ph.D. advisor(s), post-doctoral advisor(s), Ph.D. students, and post-doctoral advisees, forever.
    • Family relations by blood or marriage, or their equivalent, forever (if they might be potential reviewers).
    • People with whom you have collaborated in the last FIVE years, including:
    • Co-authors of accepted/rejected/pending papers.
    • Co-PIs on accepted/rejected/pending grant proposals.
    • Funders (decision-makers) of your research grants, and researchers whom you fund.
    • People (including students) who shared your primary institution(s) in the last FIVE years.
    • Other relationships, such as close personal friendship, that you think might tend to affect your judgment or be seen as doing so by a reasonable person familiar with the relationship.
    • “Service” collaborations such as co-authoring a report for a professional organization, serving on a program committee, or co-presenting tutorials, do not themselves create a conflict of interest. Co-authoring a paper that is a compendium of various projects with no true collaboration among the projects does not constitute a conflict among the authors of the different projects.
    • On the other hand, there may be others not covered by the above with whom you believe a COI exists, for example, an ongoing collaboration that has not yet resulted in the creation of a paper or proposal. Please report such COIs; however, you may be asked to justify them. Please be reasonable. For example, you cannot declare a COI with a reviewer just because that reviewer works on topics similar to or related to those in your paper. The PC Chair may contact co-authors to explain a COI whose origin is unclear.
    • We hope to draw most reviewers from the PC and the ERC, but others from the community may also write reviews. Please declare all your conflicts (not just restricted to the PC and ERC). When in doubt, contact the program co-chairs.