Call for Regular Papers

The annual ACM/IFIP/USENIX Middleware conference is a major forum for the discussion of innovations and recent scientific advances of middleware systems with a focus on the design, implementation, deployment, and evaluation of distributed systems, platforms and architectures for computing, storage, and communication. Highlights of the conference will include a high quality single-track technical program, invited speakers, an industrial track, panel discussions involving academic and industry leaders, poster and demonstration presentations, a doctoral symposium, tutorials and workshops.

Important Dates

Abstract Submission May 11, 2018
Paper Submission May 18, 2018[Hard Deadline]
Author Rebuttal August 2-6, 2018
Notification Due August 24, 2018
Final Version Due Septembre 14, 2018

Topics

Original submissions of research papers on a diversity of topics are sought, particularly those identifying new research directions. The topics of the conference include, but are not limited to:

Platforms and Usage Models:

  • Cloud, fog, edge computing and data centers
  • Data-intensive computing (big data) and data analytics
  • Mobile devices and services
  • Ubiquitous and pervasive computing
  • Networking, network function virtualization, software-defined networking
  • Internet applications and multimedia
  • Internet-of-Things, cyber-physical systems, smart cities
  • Machine learning

Systems and Engineering Issues:

  • Scalability and performance
  • Reliability and fault tolerance
  • Consistency, availability, and replication
  • Blockchain, Security and privacy
  • Virtualization, auto-scaling, provisioning, and scheduling
  • Real-time solutions and quality-of-service
  • Energy- and power-aware techniques

Design Principles and Programming Support:

  • Programming abstractions and paradigms for middleware
  • Methodologies and tools for the design, implementation, verification, and evaluation
  • Event-based, publish/subscribe, and peer-to-peer solutions
  • Reconfigurable, adaptable, and reflective approaches
  • Reviews of middleware paradigms, e.g., object models, aspect orientation, etc.

Original papers of three types are sought:

  • Research Papers: These papers report original research on the above topics, and will be evaluated on significance of the problem, novelty of the solution, advancement beyond prior work, sufficient supporting evidence and clarity of the presentation.
  • Experimentation and Deployment Papers: These papers describe complete systems, platforms, and/or comprehensive experimental evaluations of alternative designs and solutions to well-known problems. The emphasis during the evaluation of these papers will be less on the novelty and more on the demonstrated usefulness and potential impact of the contributions, the extensive experimentation involved, and the quality and weight of the lessons learned.
  • Big Ideas Papers: These are papers that have the potential for opening up new research directions. For such papers, the potential to motivate new research is more important than full experimental evaluation, though some preliminary evidence of the effectiveness of the approach or idea is important.

Submission Guidelines

Submitted papers must have at most 12 pages of technical content, including text, figures, and appendices, but excluding any number of additional pages for bibliographic references. Note that submissions must be double-blind: authors’ names must not appear, and authors must make a good faith attempt to anonymize their submissions. Submitted papers must adhere to the formatting instructions of the ACM SIGPLAN style, which can found on the ACM template page. A sample Latex template using the correct ACM SIGPLAN style can be found here. Please note that it is preferable, although not mandatory, to use a 10pt font instead of 9pt one.

All papers should be submitted through HotCRP.

The Middleware 2018 conference proceedings will be published in the ACM Digital Library. The official publication date will be the date the proceedings are made available in the ACM Digital Library which may be up to two weeks prior to the first day of the Middleware conference. Note that the official publication date affects the deadline for any patent filings related to published work.

Software and Data Artifact Availability for Accepted Papers

The authors of accepted papers will be invited to submit supporting materials to be made publicly available as “source materials” in the ACM Digital Library. The materials will be vetted by the Artifact Availability Evaluation process run by a separate committee. This submission is voluntary but encouraged and will not influence the final decision regarding the papers. Papers that go through the Artifact Availability Evaluation process successfully and are made available in the ACM Digital Library will receive a badge printed on the papers themselves.