PIRL 2019: Benchmarking Persistent Range Indexes (Lucas Lersch, TU Dresden)
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Last year, the University of California San Diego (UCSD) Non-Volatile Systems Lab (NVSL) teamed with the Storage Networking Industry Association (SNIA) to launch a new conference, Persistent Programming In Real Life (PIRL). While not an effort to set the record for acronyms in a conference announcement, we did consider it a side-goal. The PIRL conference…
This year, PIRL is offering the chance to host working meetings for persistent-memory related projects. If you’re involved in such a project, we’d love to have you hold your face-to-face near the beach at PIRL. Last year, several PIRL participants suggested co-located “working meetings” for software (or other) projects related to persistent memory. The idea…
Due to COVID-19, PIRL 2020 has been delayed. Probably until October. We are working on the details and will post updates when we have them. Stay safe! The planning for PIRL 2020 is well underway. It’ll be held at UC San Diego on July 13-14. We are expecting a bigger turnout and a more diverse…
JOY ARULRAJ, Georgia Institute of TechnologyDAVID COHEN, Intel §1. CLOUD-NATIVE DATABASE SYSTEMS The availability of cost-effective, highly-available, performant cloud computing platforms (e.g., Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure) over the last decade has given rise to a new class of cloud-native database management systems (DBMSs) [12]. These systems differ from their traditional counterparts in the following…
shull1Thomas Shull is a PhD candidate at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign advised by Josep Torrellas. His research focuses on software and hardware improvements for managed language runtimes. More information about him can be found on his personal website.
“How can one check a large routine in the sense of making sure that it’s right? The programmer should make a number of definite assertions which can be checked individually, and from which the correctness of the whole program easily follows.” – Alan Turing Programming for persistent memory is hard Persistent memory unifies the functionality…
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