From pangjun at gmail.com Mon Oct 4 07:49:45 2021 From: pangjun at gmail.com (Jun PANG) Date: Mon, 4 Oct 2021 09:49:45 +0200 Subject: [Haskell] FM 2021 - Call for Participation Message-ID: [Please distribute, apologies for multiple postings.] FM 2021 is the 24th international symposium in a series organized by Institute of Software, Chinese Academy of Sciences, under the auspices of Formal Methods Europe (FME), held on-line during November 20-26, 2021. -- ABOUT FM FM 2021 is the 24th international symposium in a series organized by Formal Methods Europe (FME), an independent association whose aim is to stimulate the use of, and research on, formal methods for software development. FM 2021 will highlight the development and application of formal methods in a wide range of domains including software, cyber-physical systems and integrated computer-based systems. -- INVITED TALKS • Mingsheng Ying (University of Technology Sydney, Australia) Model Checking for Verification of Quantum Circuits • Paula Herber (University of Münster, Germany) Combine Forces - How to Formally Verify Informally Defined Embedded Systems • Clark Barrett (Stanford University, USA) Domain-Specific Reasoning with Satisfiability Modulo Theories • Assia Mahboubi (Inria Nantes, France and Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Netherlands) Formal verification of computational mathematics -- CONTRIBUTED PAPERS • A list of accepted papers can be found at https://lcs.ios.ac.cn/fm2021/accepted-papers/. • A preliminary program can be found at https://lcs.ios.ac.cn/fm2021/main_program/. -- ASSOCIATED EVENTS The FM symposium also features the following associated events: • Announcement of the new FME fellow • Industry day (a list of accepted paper can be found at https://lcs.ios.ac.cn/fm2021/i-day-accepted-papers/, and a preliminary program can be found at https://lcs.ios.ac.cn/fm2021/program/) • Doctoral Symposium • Journal First Track • Six workshops and five tutorials (see https://lcs.ios.ac.cn/fm2021/workshops-and-tutorials/) Moreover, we also have the following collocated events: • MEMOCODE 2021 - 19th ACM-IEEE International Conference on Formal Methods and Models for System Design (https://lcs.ios.ac.cn/memocode21/) • SETTA 2021 – 7th Symposium on Dependable Software Engineering Theories, Tools and Applications (https://lcs.ios.ac.cn/setta2021/) • VECoS 2021 - 15th International Conference on Verification and Evaluation of Computer and Communication Systems (http://vecos-world.org/2021/) The full program of FM 2021 and co-located events can be found at https://lcs.ios.ac.cn/fm2021/overall_program/. -- REGISTRATION Registration fee is 30 EUR (220 Yuan RMB) for all events, and 10 EUR (75 Yuan RMB) for workshops and/or tutorials. Please visit https://lcs.ios.ac.cn/fm2021/registration/ for registration. For more information, please visit the website of FM 2021 https://lcs.ios.ac.cn/fm2021/ Please contact Dr. Bohua Zhan and Dr. Shuling Wang via fm2021 at ios.ac.cn if you have any questions. From tarmo at cs.ioc.ee Mon Oct 4 19:30:26 2021 From: tarmo at cs.ioc.ee (Tarmo Uustalu) Date: Mon, 4 Oct 2021 22:30:26 +0300 Subject: [Haskell] ETAPS 2022 final call for papers Message-ID: <20211004223026.6cc2b6b4@cs.ioc.ee> Paper submission deadline: 14 Oct 2021 23:59 AoE ****************************************************************** JOINT CALL FOR PAPERS 25th European Joint Conferences on Theory and Practice of Software ETAPS 2022 Munich, Germany, 2-7 April 2022 https://etaps.org/2022 ****************************************************************** -- ABOUT ETAPS -- ETAPS is the primary European forum for academic and industrial researchers working on topics relating to software science. ETAPS, established in 1998, is a confederation of four annual conferences, accompanied by satellite workshops. ETAPS 2022 is the twenty-fifth event in the series. -- MAIN CONFERENCES (4-7 April) -- * ESOP: European Symposium on Programming (PC chair: Ilya Sergey, Yale-NUS College and National University of Singapore, Singapore) * FASE: Fundamental Approaches to Software Engineering (PC chairs:Einar Broch Johnsen, University of Oslo, Norway, and Manuel Wimmer, Johannes Kepler Universität Linz, Austria) * FoSSaCS: Foundations of Software Science and Computation Structures (PC chairs: Patricia Bouyer, CNRS, LMF, France, and Lutz Schröder, FAU Erlangen-Nürnberg, Germany) * TACAS: Tools and Algorithms for the Construction and Analysis of Systems (PC chairs: Dana Fisman, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel, and Grigore Rosu, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA) TACAS '22 will host the 11th Competition on Software Verification (SV-COMP). -- INVITED SPEAKERS -- * Unifying speakers: Alexandra Silva (University College London, UK / Cornell University, USA) Tomáš Vojnar (Brno University of Technology, Czechia) * FoSSaCS invited speaker: Nathalie Bertrand (Inria Rennes, France) * TACAS invited speaker: Lenore Zuck (University of Illinois at Chicago, USA) * Tutorial speakers: Stacey Jeffery (CWI and QuSoft, The Netherlands) a further tutorial speaker tba -- IMPORTANT DATES * Paper submission (also, pre-paper-acceptance artifact registration (TACAS)): 14 October 2021 23:59 AoE * Pre-paper-acceptance artifact submission (TACAS): 4 November 2021 23:59 AoE * Rebuttal (ESOP, FoSSaCS and, partially, TACAS): 7 December 00:01 AoE - 9 December 2021 23:59 AoE * Paper notification: 23 December 2021 * Post-paper-acceptance artifact submission (ESOP, FASE, TACAS): 5 January 2022 23:59 AoE * Paper final versions: 26 January 2022 * Artifact notification: 16 February 2022 -- SUBMISSION INSTRUCTIONS -- The four main conferences of ETAPS 2022 solicit contributions of the following types. All page limits are given **excluding the bibliography**. * ESOP: regular research papers of max 25 pp * FASE: regular research papers and empirical evaluation papers of max 18 pp, new ideas and emerging results (NIER) papers of max 8 pp, tool demonstration papers of max 6 pp (+ mandatory appendix of max 6 pp), * FoSSaCS: regular research papers of max 18 pp * TACAS: regular research papers, case study papers and regular tool papers of max 16 pp, tool demonstration papers of max 6 pp For definitions of the different paper types and specific instructions, where they are present, see the webpages of the individual conferences. All accepted papers will appear in the proceedings and have presentations during the conference. A condition of submission is that, if the submission is accepted, one of the authors attends the conference to give the presentation. We plan ETAPS 2022 as a hybrid conference; remote attendance and presentation will be possible. Submitted papers must be in English presenting original research. They must be unpublished and not submitted for publication elsewhere. In particular, simultaneous submission of the same contribution to multiple ETAPS conferences is also forbidden. Submissions must follow the formatting guidelines of Springer's LNCS (use the llncs.cls class) and be submitted electronically in pdf through the Easychair author interface of the respective conference. Submissions not adhering to the specified format and length may be rejected immediately. ESOP and FASE will use **double-blind reviewing**. Authors are asked to omit their names and institutions; refer to prior work in the third person, just as prior work by others; not to include acknowledgements that might identify them. ESOP and FoSSaCS will use an **author rebuttal phase**. TACAS will use rebuttal for selected submissions (those in the gray zone). Artifact submission and evaluation Regular tool paper and tool demonstration paper submissions to TACAS must be accompanied by an artifact submitted shortly after the paper. The artifact will be evaluated and the outcome will be taken into account in the acceptance decision of the paper. For research paper and case study paper submissions, pre-paper-acceptance submission of an artifact is optional; if an artifact is submitted at this point, it will be handled like described above. Alternatively, authors of papers of these categories may submit an artifact for evaluation after the paper has been accepted. The outcome of the artifact evaluation will then not change the paper acceptance decision. ESOP and FASE will also have artifact evaluation, but participation in it is voluntary; the artifact submission deadline is after the paper notification deadline. The outcome will not alter the paper acceptance decision. For specific instructions regarding artifacts, see the webpages of the individual conferences. -- PUBLICATION The proceedings will be published in the Advanced Research in Computing and Software Science (ARCoSS) subline of Springer's LNCS series. The proceedings volumes will appear in gold open access, so the published versions of all papers will be available for everyone to download from the publisher's website freely, from the date of online publication, perpetually. The copyright of the papers will remain with the authors. -- BEST PAPER AWARDS The strongest papers of the four conferences will be nominated for the ETAPS best paper awards of EAPLS, EASST and EATCS. The ETAPS test of time award recognizes outstanding papers published at ETAPS more than 10 years in the past. -- SATELLITE EVENTS (2-3 April) -- A number of satellite workshops and other events will take place before the main conferences: CMCS, COOP, HCVS, LiVe, MARS, MSFP, PLACES, QAVS, RRRR, Rust Workshop, SynCop, VerifyThis, VPT, WRLA Also in the satellite events program is a Mentoring Workshop. For closer information, check https://etaps.org/2022/workshops . -- CITY AND HOST INSTITUTION -- Munich, Germany, is the capital and most populous city of Bavaria. Nowadays, the city is a global center of art, science, technology, finance, publishing, culture, innovation, education, business, and tourism. It is home to Ludwig Maximilian's University (LMU) and Technische Universität München (TUM), many scientific institutions, and world-class technology and science museums such as Deutsches Museum and BMW Museum. Iconic places to visit in Munich include the Munich Residenz, Marienplatz, the Old Town Hall, the famous Glockenspiel on the New Town Hall, the Frauenkirche, the English Garden, the Olympic Park and Nymphenburg Palace. The conference will be hosted by Technische Universität München. -- ORGANIZERS -- General chair: Jan Křetínský (Technische Universität München, Germany) Workshops chair: Dirk Beyer (Ludwig-Maximilians Universität München, Germany) From jonathan.protzenko at gmail.com Tue Oct 5 20:47:04 2021 From: jonathan.protzenko at gmail.com (Jonathan Protzenko) Date: Tue, 5 Oct 2021 13:47:04 -0700 Subject: [Haskell] Second and Final Call for Presentations: PriSC 2022 @ POPL 2022 Message-ID: All details are on the PriSC site . ================================================ Call for Presentations: PriSC 2022 @ POPL 2022 ================================================ The emerging field of secure compilation aims to preserve security properties of programs when they have been compiled to low-level languages such as assembly, where high-level abstractions don’t exist, and unsafe, unexpected interactions with libraries, other programs, the operating system and even the hardware are possible. For unsafe source languages like C, secure compilation requires careful handling of undefined source-language behavior (like buffer overflows and double frees). Formally, secure compilation aims to protect high-level language abstractions in compiled code, even against adversarial low-level contexts, thus enabling sound reasoning about security in the source language. A complementary goal is to keep the compiled code efficient, often leveraging new hardware security features and advances in compiler design. Other necessary components are identifying and formalizing properties that secure compilers must possess, devising efficient security mechanisms (both software and hardware), and developing effective verification and proof techniques. Research in the field thus puts together advances in compiler design, programming languages, systems security, verification, and computer architecture. 6th Workshop on Principles of Secure Compilation (PriSC 2022) ============================================================= The Workshop on Principles of Secure Compilation (PriSC) is a relatively new, informal 1-day workshop without any proceedings. The goal is to bring together researchers interested in secure compilation and to identify interesting research directions and open challenges. The 6th edition of PriSC will be held on January 22, together with the ACM SIGPLAN Symposium on Principles of Programming Languages (POPL), 2022. We hope to hold the workshop in person with for support for dial-in attendees. Keynote ======= This year's keynote will be "BPF and Spectre: Mitigating transient execution attacks", by Piotr Krysiuk (Symantec, Threat Hunter Team), Benedict Schlüter (Ruhr University Bochum), Daniel Borkmann (Isovalent, co-maintainer eBPF). Important Dates =============== * Thu 28 Oct 2021: Submission Deadline * Thu 18 Nov 2021: Acceptance Notification * Sat 22 Jan 2022: Workshop Presentation Proposals and Attending the Workshop ================================================= Anyone interested in presenting at the workshop should submit an extended abstract (up to 2 pages, details below) covering past, ongoing, or future work. Any topic that could be of interest to secure compilation is in scope. Secure compilation should be interpreted very broadly to include any work in security, programming languages, architecture, systems or their combination that can be leveraged to preserve security properties of programs when they are compiled or to eliminate low-level vulnerabilities. Presentations that provide a useful outside view or challenge the community are also welcome. This includes presentations on new attack vectors such as microarchitectural side-channels, whose defenses could benefit from compiler techniques. Specific topics of interest include but are not limited to: * Attacker models for secure compiler chains. * Secure compiler properties: fully abstract compilation and similar properties, memory safety, control-flow integrity, preservation of safety, information flow and other (hyper-)properties against adversarial contexts, secure multi-language interoperability. * Secure interaction between different programming languages: foreign function interfaces, gradual types, securely combining different memory management strategies. * Enforcement mechanisms and low-level security primitives: static checking, program verification, typed assembly languages, reference monitoring, program rewriting, software-based isolation/hiding techniques (SFI, crypto-based, randomization-based, OS/hypervisor-based), security-oriented architectural features such as Intel’s SGX, MPX and MPK, capability machines, side-channel defenses, object capabilities. * Experimental evaluation and applications of secure compilers. * Proof methods relevant to compilation: (bi)simulation, logical relations, game semantics, trace semantics, multi-language semantics, embedded interpreters. * Formal verification of secure compilation chains (protection mechanisms, compilers, linkers, loaders), machine-checked proofs, translation validation, property-based testing. Guidelines for Submitting Extended Abstracts ============================================ Extended abstracts should be submitted in PDF format and not exceed 2 pages (references not including). They should be formatted in two-column layout, 10pt font, and be printable on A4 and US Letter sized paper. We recommend using the new acmart LaTeX style in sigplan mode. Submissions are not anonymous and should provide sufficient detail to be assessed by the program committee. Presentation at the workshop does not preclude publication elsewhere. Submission website: https://prisc22.hotcrp.com/ Program Committee ================= Owen Arden, UC Santa Cruz Arthur Azevedo de Amorim, Carnegie Mellon University Iulia Bastys, Chalmers University of Technology Roberto Blanco, Max Planck Institute for Security and Privacy Tegan Brennan, Stevens Institute of Technology Matteo Busi, Università di Pisa - Dipartimento di Informatica Sunjay Cauligi, University of California at San Diego Marco Guarnieri, IMDEA Software Institute (co-chair) Armaël Guéneau, Aarhus University Johannes Kinder, Bundeswehr University Munich Adrien Koutsos, INRIA Paris Elisavet Kozyri, Arctic University of Norway Scott Moore, Galois Toby Murray, University of Melbourne Andrew C. Myers, Cornell University David Pichardie, Facebook Jonathan Protzenko, Microsoft Research (co-chair) Christine Rizkallah, UNSW Sydney Zhong Shao, Yale University Éric Tanter, University of Chile Danfeng Zhang, Pennsylvania State University Contact and More Information ============================ You can find more information on the workshop website: https://popl22.sigplan.org/home/prisc-2022 For questions please contact the workshop chairs, Jonathan Protzenko and Marco Guarnieri . From jonathan.protzenko at gmail.com Tue Oct 5 20:53:39 2021 From: jonathan.protzenko at gmail.com (Jonathan Protzenko) Date: Tue, 5 Oct 2021 13:53:39 -0700 Subject: [Haskell] Second and Final Call for Submissions: Programming Languages and the Law (ProLaLa) Message-ID: -----------------------------------------------------------------------    ProLaLa 2022 -- 1st Workshop on Programming Languages and the Law                        Sunday Jan 16th, 2022                          Philadelphia, PA                      co-located with POPL 2022 -----------------------------------------------------------------------                     (please forward to anyone who might be interested!) We are pleased to announce ProLaLa'22, a new workshop concerned with the intersection of PL (Programming Languages) techniques and the law. We are particularly concerned with the following topics: - language design for legal matters; - static analysis of legal texts; - program synthesis and repair for legal software components; - formal modeling of legal semantics; - non-standard logics in support of legal reasoning; - program verification for legal expert systems. If you have explored any of these areas, we encourage you to submit a short abstract. We are hoping to solidify around this workshop what we believe is a nascent community. As such, the workshop will be informal, and we strongly encourage you to submit ongoing or already-published work in the form of a brief 3-page submission for a long talk, or a 1-page submission for a short talk. Full details: https://popl22.sigplan.org/home/prolala-2022#Call-for-submissions ### Venue ProLaLa will be colocated with POPL'22. If POPL'22 goes virtual, we will be virtual too. If POPL'22 happens in-person, we will support hybrid (in-person and remote) participation. ### Submission details We accept two kinds of submissions. - Long talks: 3 pages excluding references - Short talks: 1 page excluding references No formatting requirements. We recommend using SIGPLAN's two-column LaTeX format if possible. Submission site: https://prolala22.hotcrp.com/ ### Important dates - Thu 28 Oct 2021: Submission deadline - Thu 11 Nov 2021: Notification of acceptance - Sun 16 Jan 2022: Workshop ## Program committee - Timos Antonopoulos, Yale University - Joaquin Arias, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid and IMDEA Software Institute, Spain - Shrutarshi Basu, Cornell University, USA - Nate Foster, Cornell University, USA - James Grimmelmann, Cornell University, USA - Sarah Lawsky (Co-Chair), Northwestern University, USA - Denis Merigoux, INRIA, France - Ruzica Piskac, Yale University, USA - Jonathan Protzenko (Co-Chair), Microsoft Research, USA - Giovanni Sartor, University of Bologna, Italy - Ken Satoh, National Institute of Informatics, Japan - Kanae Tsushima, National Institute of Informatics, Japan - Meng Weng Wong, Singapore Management University, Singapore From jeremy.gibbons at cs.ox.ac.uk Wed Oct 6 15:03:52 2021 From: jeremy.gibbons at cs.ox.ac.uk (Jeremy Gibbons) Date: Wed, 6 Oct 2021 16:03:52 +0100 Subject: [Haskell] Online seminars in Tensor Computation, October to December Message-ID: Department of Computer Science, University of Oxford Seminar Series on Tensor Computation http://www.cs.ox.ac.uk/seminars/Programming%20Languages/ The following seminars on tensor computation will take place at 4pm UK time on Fridays this coming term. (Note that the clocks change in the UK part way through the series!) The seminars will be held online, via Zoom. Registration instructions are on the webpage above. All are welcome. [Dr Albert Cohen](https://research.google/people/106208/ ), Google 15 Oct: *Herding Tensor Compilers* [Professor Jonathan Ragan Kelley](http://people.csail.mit.edu/jrk/ ), MIT 22 Oct: *Halide* [provisional title] [Dr Conal Elliott](http://conal.net/ ) 29 Oct: *Can Tensor Programming Be Liberated from the Fortran Data Paradigm?* **clocks change: UK moves from BST=UTC+1 to GMT=UTC** [Professor Markus Püschel](https://acl.inf.ethz.ch/people/markusp/ ), ETH Zürich 5 Nov: *Program Generation for Small Scale Linear Algebra* [Professor Martin Elsman](https://elsman.com/ ), Copenhagen 12 Nov: *Futhark* [provisional title] [Rohan Yadav](https://rohany.github.io/ ), Stanford 19 Nov: *Compilation of Sparse Array Programming Models* [provisional title] [Professor Gabrielle Keller](https://www.uu.nl/medewerkers/GKKeller ), Utrecht 26 Nov: *Accelerate: High-Performance Computing in Haskell* [Dr Dimitrios Vytiniotis](https://dimitriv.github.io/ ), Google 3 Dec: *Automating Tensor Partitioning on Meshes of Accelerators* [provisional title] Seminar conveners: [Jeremy Gibbons](http://www.cs.ox.ac.uk/people/jeremy.gibbons/ ) [Peter Braam](https://www.braam.io/ ) Jeremy.Gibbons at cs.ox.ac.uk Oxford University Department of Computer Science, Wolfson Building, Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3QD, UK. +44 1865 283521 http://www.cs.ox.ac.uk/people/jeremy.gibbons/ -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From Sam.Lindley at ed.ac.uk Thu Oct 7 11:40:10 2021 From: Sam.Lindley at ed.ac.uk (Sam Lindley) Date: Thu, 7 Oct 2021 12:40:10 +0100 Subject: [Haskell] post-doctoral research position - Effect Handler Oriented Programming - Edinburgh Message-ID: Hi, I have an opening for a post-doctoral research position at The University of Edinburgh on Effect Handler Oriented Programming (EHOP) funded by a UKRI Future Leaders Fellowship. Candidates should have a background in programming languages with experience of functional programming, formal semantics, and type theory. Some experience with effect handlers and algebraic effects is desirable, but not essential. The role will involve theory (e.g. developing and reasoning about novel effect type systems and algebraic theories) and practice (e.g. designing, implementing, and evaluating implementations and applications of effect handlers), and ample opportunity to engage with our project partners. The position is for three years starting in February 2022. The EHOP project: https://effect-handlers.org/ Job application details: https://elxw.fa.em3.oraclecloud.com/hcmUI/CandidateExperience/en/sites/CX_1001/job/2087/ If you are interested then feel free to contact me (application deadline: 1 November 2021). Sam The University of Edinburgh is a charitable body, registered in Scotland, with registration number SC005336. Is e buidheann carthannais a th’ ann an Oilthigh Dhùn Èideann, clàraichte an Alba, àireamh clàraidh SC005336. From jeroen at chordify.net Tue Oct 12 09:10:51 2021 From: jeroen at chordify.net (Jeroen Bransen) Date: Tue, 12 Oct 2021 11:10:51 +0200 Subject: [Haskell] Chordify is looking for Haskell developers Message-ID: Hi, Chordify [1] is looking for Haskell developers to strengthen our team in the Utrecht, The Netherlands office. Our mission at Chordify is to make it as easy as possible for musicians of various skill levels to learn to play their favorite music. Our apps and website are powered by a distributed Haskell back-end. For more information and to apply, visit https://jobs.chordify.net/functional-programmer-2/en The application deadline is the 31th of October and we believe that we are a friendly and open group of people, so everyone is more than welcome to apply. Note that permanently working remotely is not a possibility, we are looking for developers that are willing to move to (or commute to) Utrecht. Cheers, Jeroen [1] https://chordify.net/ -- From jonathan.protzenko at gmail.com Sat Oct 30 01:39:20 2021 From: jonathan.protzenko at gmail.com (Jonathan Protzenko) Date: Fri, 29 Oct 2021 20:39:20 -0500 Subject: [Haskell] Deadline Extension! Call for Presentations: PriSC 2022 @ POPL 2022 Message-ID: <5f224610-3b81-02f7-93d9-51620e5b4d69@gmail.com> Update: the deadline has been extended to Mon Nov 8th. Please submit! All details are on the PriSC site . ================================================ Call for Presentations: PriSC 2022 @ POPL 2022 ================================================ The emerging field of secure compilation aims to preserve security properties of programs when they have been compiled to low-level languages such as assembly, where high-level abstractions don’t exist, and unsafe, unexpected interactions with libraries, other programs, the operating system and even the hardware are possible. For unsafe source languages like C, secure compilation requires careful handling of undefined source-language behavior (like buffer overflows and double frees). Formally, secure compilation aims to protect high-level language abstractions in compiled code, even against adversarial low-level contexts, thus enabling sound reasoning about security in the source language. A complementary goal is to keep the compiled code efficient, often leveraging new hardware security features and advances in compiler design. Other necessary components are identifying and formalizing properties that secure compilers must possess, devising efficient security mechanisms (both software and hardware), and developing effective verification and proof techniques. Research in the field thus puts together advances in compiler design, programming languages, systems security, verification, and computer architecture. 6th Workshop on Principles of Secure Compilation (PriSC 2022) ============================================================= The Workshop on Principles of Secure Compilation (PriSC) is a relatively new, informal 1-day workshop without any proceedings. The goal is to bring together researchers interested in secure compilation and to identify interesting research directions and open challenges. The 6th edition of PriSC will be held on January 22, together with the ACM SIGPLAN Symposium on Principles of Programming Languages (POPL), 2022. We hope to hold the workshop in person with for support for dial-in attendees. Keynote ======= This year's keynote will be "BPF and Spectre: Mitigating transient execution attacks", by Piotr Krysiuk (Symantec, Threat Hunter Team), Benedict Schlüter (Ruhr University Bochum), Daniel Borkmann (Isovalent, co-maintainer eBPF). Important Dates =============== * Mon 8 Nov 2021: Submission Deadline * Sat 22 Jan 2022: Workshop Presentation Proposals and Attending the Workshop ================================================= Anyone interested in presenting at the workshop should submit an extended abstract (up to 2 pages, details below) covering past, ongoing, or future work. Any topic that could be of interest to secure compilation is in scope. Secure compilation should be interpreted very broadly to include any work in security, programming languages, architecture, systems or their combination that can be leveraged to preserve security properties of programs when they are compiled or to eliminate low-level vulnerabilities. Presentations that provide a useful outside view or challenge the community are also welcome. This includes presentations on new attack vectors such as microarchitectural side-channels, whose defenses could benefit from compiler techniques. Specific topics of interest include but are not limited to: * Attacker models for secure compiler chains. * Secure compiler properties: fully abstract compilation and similar properties, memory safety, control-flow integrity, preservation of safety, information flow and other (hyper-)properties against adversarial contexts, secure multi-language interoperability. * Secure interaction between different programming languages: foreign function interfaces, gradual types, securely combining different memory management strategies. * Enforcement mechanisms and low-level security primitives: static checking, program verification, typed assembly languages, reference monitoring, program rewriting, software-based isolation/hiding techniques (SFI, crypto-based, randomization-based, OS/hypervisor-based), security-oriented architectural features such as Intel’s SGX, MPX and MPK, capability machines, side-channel defenses, object capabilities. * Experimental evaluation and applications of secure compilers. * Proof methods relevant to compilation: (bi)simulation, logical relations, game semantics, trace semantics, multi-language semantics, embedded interpreters. * Formal verification of secure compilation chains (protection mechanisms, compilers, linkers, loaders), machine-checked proofs, translation validation, property-based testing. Guidelines for Submitting Extended Abstracts ============================================ Extended abstracts should be submitted in PDF format and not exceed 2 pages (references not including). They should be formatted in two-column layout, 10pt font, and be printable on A4 and US Letter sized paper. We recommend using the new acmart LaTeX style in sigplan mode. Submissions are not anonymous and should provide sufficient detail to be assessed by the program committee. Presentation at the workshop does not preclude publication elsewhere. Submission website: https://prisc22.hotcrp.com/ Program Committee ================= Owen Arden, UC Santa Cruz Arthur Azevedo de Amorim, Carnegie Mellon University Iulia Bastys, Chalmers University of Technology Roberto Blanco, Max Planck Institute for Security and Privacy Tegan Brennan, Stevens Institute of Technology Matteo Busi, Università di Pisa - Dipartimento di Informatica Sunjay Cauligi, University of California at San Diego Marco Guarnieri, IMDEA Software Institute (co-chair) Armaël Guéneau, Aarhus University Johannes Kinder, Bundeswehr University Munich Adrien Koutsos, INRIA Paris Elisavet Kozyri, Arctic University of Norway Scott Moore, Galois Toby Murray, University of Melbourne Andrew C. Myers, Cornell University David Pichardie, Facebook Jonathan Protzenko, Microsoft Research (co-chair) Christine Rizkallah, UNSW Sydney Zhong Shao, Yale University Éric Tanter, University of Chile Danfeng Zhang, Pennsylvania State University Contact and More Information ============================ You can find more information on the workshop website: https://popl22.sigplan.org/home/prisc-2022 For questions please contact the workshop chairs, Jonathan Protzenko and Marco Guarnieri .