USENIX ATC '24 Call for Papers

Sponsored by USENIX, the Advanced Computing Systems Association.

The 2024 USENIX Annual Technical Conference will be co-located with the 18th USENIX Symposium on Operating Systems Design and Implementation (OSDI '24) and take place on July 10–12, 2024, at the Hyatt Regency Santa Clara in Santa Clara, CA, USA.

Important Dates

  • Abstract registrations due: Tuesday, January 9, 2024, 11:59 pm UTC
  • Submissions due: Tuesday, January 16, 2024, 11:59 pm UTC
  • Authors' response period: Thursday, April 18–Saturday, April 20, 2024, 11:59 pm UTC
  • Notification to authors: Tuesday, April 30, 2024
  • Final papers due: Thursday, June 6, 2024

Conference Organizers

Program Co-Chairs

Saurabh Bagchi, Purdue University
Yiying Zhang, University of California, San Diego

Program Committee

Irfan Ahmad, Magnition
Ram Alagappan, University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign
Omid Alipourfard, Jane Street
Deniz Altinbuken, Google
Ali Anwar, University of Minnesota
Lixiang Ao, Databricks
Venkat Arun, The University of Texas at Austin
Yungang Bao, Chinese Academy of Sciences
Dinesh Bharadia, University of California, San Diego
Rodrigo Bruno, INESC-ID, IST, University of Lisboa
Anton Burtsev, University of Utah
Kirk Cameron, Virginia Tech
Zhichao Cao, Arizona State University
Somali Chaterji, Purdue University
Rong Chen, Shanghai Jiao Tong University
Sunav Choudhary, Adobe Research
Aakanksha Chowdhery, Google
Marcello Cinque, University of Naples
Nabanita Das, Indian Statistical Institute
Mallesham Dasari, Northeastern University
Eyal de Lara, University of Toronto
Yi Ding, Purdue University
Fred Douglis, Peraton Labs
Wan Du, University of California, Merced
Abhinav Duggal, Amazon Web Services
Sameh Elnikety, Microsoft Research
Xinwei Fu, Amazon
Massimo Gallo, Huawei Technologies
Anshul Gandhi, Stony Brook University
Aishwarya Ganesan, University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign and VMware Research
Aniruddha Gokhale, Vanderbilt University
Redha Gouicem, Aachen University
Ronghui Gu, Columbia University
Arobinda Gupta, Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur
Indranil Gupta, University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign
Chris Gutierrez, Intel Corporation
Michio Honda, University of Edinburgh
Liting Hu, University of California, Santa Cruz
Yu Hua, Huazhong University of Science and Technology
Haochen Huang, Whova
Ryan Huang, University of Michigan
Anand Iyer, Georgia Institute of Technology
Abhilash Jindal, Indian Institute of Technology Delhi
Sang-Woo Jun, University of California, Irvine
Rohan Kadekodi, University of Washington
Kostis Kaffes, Columbia University
Vasiliki Kalavri, Boston University
Shiva Kasiviswanathan, Amazon
Tanvir Ahmed Khan, Columbia University
Daehyeok Kim, The University of Texas at Austin
Purushottam Kulkarni, Indian Institute of Technology Bombay
Youngjin Kwon, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST)
Fan Lai, University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign and Google
Michael Le, IBM Research
Yin Li, University of Wisconsin
Yu Liang, ETH Zurich
Peng Liu, The Pennsylvania State University
Sachin Lodha, Tata Consultancy Services
Chang Lou, University of Virginia
Haonan Lu, University at Buffalo
Lanyue Lu, Snowflake
Youyou Lu, Tsinghua University
Aravind Machiry, Purdue University
Ashraf Mahgoub, Cruise
Aastha Mehta, University of British Columbia
Amirsaman Memaripour, MongoDB
Subrata Mitra, Adobe Research
Apoorve Mohan, IBM Research
Sibin Mohan, The George Washington University
Mainack Mondal, Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur
Shuai Mu, Stony Brook University
Khanh Nguyen, Texas A&M University
Sam H. Noh, Virginia Tech
Arthi Padmanabhan, Harvey Mudd College
Roberto Palmieri, Lehigh University
Abhisek Pan, Microsoft Research
Ashish Panwar, Microsoft Research
Kexin Pei, The University of Chicago and Columbia University
Vijayan Prabhakaran, Databricks
Feng Qian, University of Southern California
Andrew Quinn, University of California, Santa Cruz
Murali Krishna Ramanathan, Amazon
Jan Rellermeyer, Leibniz University Hannover
Vinay Ribeiro, Indian Institute of Technology Bombay
Suranga Seneviratne, University of Sydney
Aashaka Shah, Microsoft Research
Mohammad Shahrad, University of British Columbia
Yizhou Shan, Huawei Cloud
Mark Silberstein, Technion—Israel Institute of Technology
Linhai Song, The Pennsylvania State University
Theano Stavrinos, University of Washington
Patrick Stuedi, Meta
Ryan Stutsman, University of Utah
Swami Sundararaman, IBM Research
Md Mehrab Tanjin, Adobe Research
Vasily Tarasov, IBM Research
Animesh Trivedi, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Theodore Ts'o, Google
Dmitrii Ustiugov, Nanyang Technological University
Marco Vieira, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Keval Vora, Simon Fraser University
Mythili Vutukuru, Indian Institute of Technology Bombay
Chenxi Wang, Institute of Computing Technology (ICT), Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS)
Jingbo Wang, Purdue University
Stephanie Wang, University of California, Berkeley, and University of Washington
Yida Wang, Amazon
Yu Wang, Tsinghua University
Jason Waterman, Vassar College
Michael Wei, VMware
Dan Williams, Virginia Tech
Emmett Witchel, The University of Texas at Austin
Timothy Wood, George Washington University
Kan Wu, Google
Yubin Xia, Shanghai Jiao Tong University
Tianyin Xu, University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign
Ming-Chang Yang, The Chinese University of Hong Kong
Suli Yang, Google
Eiko Yoneki, University of Cambridge
Cliff Young, Google
Hao Zhang, University of California, San Diego
Jiaqi Zhang, Snowflake
Minjia Zhang, Microsoft Research
Tieying Zhang, ByteDance Inc.
Yongle Zhang, Purdue University
Yibo Zhu, ByteDance Inc.

Steering Committee

Irina Calciu, VMware Research
Ada Gavrilovska, Georgia Institute of Technology
Casey Henderson-Ross, USENIX Association
Arvind Krishnamurthy, University of Washington
Geoff Kuenning, Harvey Mudd College
Brian Noble, University of Michigan
Jiri Schindler, Tranquil Data
Hakim Weatherspoon, Cornell University
Erez Zadok, Stony Brook University
Noa Zilberman, University of Oxford

Overview

The 2024 USENIX Annual Technical Conference seeks original, high-quality submissions that improve and further the knowledge of computing systems, with an emphasis on implementations and experimental results. We are interested in systems of all scales, from small embedded mobile devices to data centers and clouds. The scope of USENIX ATC covers all practical aspects related to computer systems, including but not limited to: operating systems; runtime systems; parallel and distributed systems; storage; networking; security and privacy; virtualization; software-hardware interactions; performance evaluation and workload characterization; reliability, availability, and scalability; energy and power management; and bug-finding, tracing, analyzing, and troubleshooting.

We value submissions more highly if they are accompanied by clearly defined artifacts not previously available, including traces, original data, source code, or tools developed as part of the submitted work. We particularly encourage new ideas and approaches.

Submissions must contain original unpublished material that is not under review at any other forum, including journals, conferences, and workshops with proceedings. They will be judged on relevance, novelty, technical merit, correctness, and clarity. An idea or a design that the PC deems flawed can be grounds for rejection.

USENIX ATC '24 will employ double-blind reviewing. Papers that are not properly anonymized may be rejected without review.

Papers need to be registered and their abstracts submitted by the abstract registration deadline. Papers with an empty abstract at the time of the abstract registration deadline will be rejected.

There will be an optional artifact evaluation process for accepted papers.

Submission Type: Full vs. Short

USENIX ATC accepts both full and short submissions. Full submissions must not exceed 12 pages, and short submissions must not exceed 6 pages. In both cases, the page limit excludes references and appendices but includes all text, figures, tables, footnotes, etc. Both types are reviewed to the same standards and differ primarily in scope. A short paper presents a complete idea that is properly evaluated, just like in a full-length submission. Optionally, authors can include an appendix to provide material that may be of interest to some reviewers, such as algorithm details, proofs, and code snippets, but is not central to the contributions of the paper. For further details, see the submission instructions.

Deployed Systems Track

USENIX ATC '24 solicits papers that describe the design, implementation, analysis, and experience with real-world deployment of systems and networks. Papers for the deployed systems track (occasionally referred to as the operational systems track in other USENIX conferences) need not present new ideas or results to be accepted but should convey practical insights. Note that the rules regarding submission and anonymization are different for deployed systems track papers. The final program will explicitly identify papers accepted to the deployed systems track to distinguish them from papers accepted to the regular track.

Authors' Response Period

USENIX ATC '24 will provide an opportunity for authors of papers that are not early rejected to respond to the reviews prior to the final consideration of the submissions at the program committee meeting according to the schedule detailed above.

Confidentiality

All submissions will be treated as confidential prior to publication on the USENIX ATC '24 website. Rejected submissions will be permanently treated as confidential.

Questions?

Please direct any questions to the program co-chairs at atc24chairs@usenix.org or to the USENIX office at submissionspolicy@usenix.org.

Go to Submission Instructions