* CFP: Linux 2007 File System & IO Workshop @ 2006-10-17 0:40 Ric Wheeler 2006-10-17 22:40 ` James Bottomley 0 siblings, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread From: Ric Wheeler @ 2006-10-17 0:40 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-fsdevel, linux-ext4, xfs, reiserfs-list, ext2-devel, linux-ide, ocfs2-devel, linux-scsi Cc: lsf07pc On February 12-13, we have put together a combined Linux file system & IO 2-day workshop in San Jose, CA. Note that the USENIX File System and Storage Technologies conference follows us in the same venue, so we hope to get some interaction between the two groups as well as leverage the USENIX people to help us get this done. For more information, please see: http://www.usenix.org/events/lsf07/ Please direct question to the program committee members. If you want to hit all of us in one go, you can use: lsf07pc@usenix.org Regards, ric * * ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
* Re: CFP: Linux 2007 File System & IO Workshop 2006-10-17 0:40 CFP: Linux 2007 File System & IO Workshop Ric Wheeler @ 2006-10-17 22:40 ` James Bottomley 2006-10-17 23:25 ` Luben Tuikov 0 siblings, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread From: James Bottomley @ 2006-10-17 22:40 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Ric Wheeler Cc: linux-fsdevel, linux-ext4, xfs, reiserfs-list, ext2-devel, linux-ide, ocfs2-devel, linux-scsi, lsf07pc On Mon, 2006-10-16 at 20:40 -0400, Ric Wheeler wrote: > On February 12-13, we have put together a combined Linux file system & > IO 2-day workshop in San Jose, CA. Note that the USENIX File System and > Storage Technologies conference follows us in the same venue, so we hope > to get some interaction between the two groups as well as leverage the > USENIX people to help us get this done. > > For more information, please see: > > http://www.usenix.org/events/lsf07/ Just to clarify, this event is a follow on to the Vancouver Storage summit. Although USENIX is helping us to run it, you don't have to be a USENIX member to submit a position paper. The idea of the position papers is to give the limited number of places (for storage we've got about 20-25 and about the same again for fs) to people who have interesting topics they need to discuss---so if you submit, be prepared to make a presentation of it. James ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
* Re: CFP: Linux 2007 File System & IO Workshop 2006-10-17 22:40 ` James Bottomley @ 2006-10-17 23:25 ` Luben Tuikov 2006-10-18 0:00 ` James Bottomley 0 siblings, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread From: Luben Tuikov @ 2006-10-17 23:25 UTC (permalink / raw) To: James Bottomley, Ric Wheeler Cc: linux-fsdevel, linux-ext4, xfs, reiserfs-list, ext2-devel, linux-ide, ocfs2-devel, linux-scsi, lsf07pc --- James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@SteelEye.com> wrote: > On Mon, 2006-10-16 at 20:40 -0400, Ric Wheeler wrote: > > On February 12-13, we have put together a combined Linux file system & > > IO 2-day workshop in San Jose, CA. Note that the USENIX File System and > > Storage Technologies conference follows us in the same venue, so we hope > > to get some interaction between the two groups as well as leverage the > > USENIX people to help us get this done. > > > > For more information, please see: > > > > http://www.usenix.org/events/lsf07/ > > Just to clarify, this event is a follow on to the Vancouver Storage > summit. The only mentioning of "Vancouver Storage summit" in the web content therein was, quoting from http://www.usenix.org/events/lsf07/cfp/ : ... * Progress reports on implementation of features discussed at the Vancouver Storage Summit ... So by "follow on" you mean "progress report" only? Or will this event also accept and/or discuss new material? > Although USENIX is helping us to run it, you don't have to be > a USENIX member to submit a position paper. The idea of the position > papers is to give the limited number of places (for storage we've got > about 20-25 and about the same again for fs) to people who have > interesting topics they need to discuss---so if you submit, be prepared > to make a presentation of it. Can I make a presentation of this paper: Serial Attached SCSI, An Architecture For Linux --------------------------------- This paper would start with an overview of SCSI (SCSI-3, that is), its object oriented nature and why such is the direction of SCSI. Then an introduction to SAS from this SCSI point of view will be given, i.e. where it fits in the object oriented model, why and how. There may be very little SAS technical introduction--a couple of sentences, something anyone would understand and something sufficient for the latter sections of the paper. Then an introduction to SAS as an architecture in a SCSI stack would follow. A layered, object oriented model will be presented, similar to the one found in my code. This will be accompanied with a SCSI "architectural roadmap", the how and why the architecture. Then an overview of pure-SCSI drivers would be given (at this point the paper talks about implementations at each layer of the storage software stack). Those are implementations which hide the transport layer completely in their firmware, and present a pure SCSI "picture", a la SAM, to the OS. How and why they do it and why it is better. Then the paper would talk about what unifies those implementations, how it can be done, and why it should be done this way. An introduction to SDI, SCSI Driver Interface, would be presented. There would be a section on a SCSI/ATA Translation, SAT, and a SAT Layer (SATL). Where it fits, how and why. What its interface is and why. The paper would include pictures and figures as necessary to show layers, object oriented concepts and the like. ---------------------------------------- The thread is here: http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?t=114197580200002&r=1&w=2 Luben ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
* Re: CFP: Linux 2007 File System & IO Workshop 2006-10-17 23:25 ` Luben Tuikov @ 2006-10-18 0:00 ` James Bottomley 2006-10-18 0:50 ` Luben Tuikov 0 siblings, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread From: James Bottomley @ 2006-10-18 0:00 UTC (permalink / raw) To: ltuikov Cc: Ric Wheeler, linux-fsdevel, linux-ext4, xfs, reiserfs-list, ext2-devel, linux-ide, ocfs2-devel, linux-scsi, lsf07pc On Tue, 2006-10-17 at 16:25 -0700, Luben Tuikov wrote: > The only mentioning of "Vancouver Storage summit" in the web content > therein was, quoting from http://www.usenix.org/events/lsf07/cfp/ : > ... > * Progress reports on implementation of features discussed at the > Vancouver Storage Summit > ... > So by "follow on" you mean "progress report" only? Or will this > event also accept and/or discuss new material? That was only one of the topics ... there are several other suggestions in the list you pulled that quote from. > > Although USENIX is helping us to run it, you don't have to be > > a USENIX member to submit a position paper. The idea of the position > > papers is to give the limited number of places (for storage we've got > > about 20-25 and about the same again for fs) to people who have > > interesting topics they need to discuss---so if you submit, be prepared > > to make a presentation of it. > > Can I make a presentation of this paper: You can submit it as your position paper, certainly. However, the object of this event is not to collect a list of papers to be presented: it's not a conference with hundreds of attendees (if you want to present to an audience, you should submit to FAST, which is such a conference, with which we're co-located). It's a roundtable type discussion with 20-25 people in the field; plus some plenary sessions to get input and ideas from people working on the filesystem layer. The object is to stimulate discussion of important issues (which may be guided by papers or other materials). The position paper thing is only to ensure people actually have things they want to discuss (and to allow the programme committee to pick the attendees if there would be too many). James ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
* Re: CFP: Linux 2007 File System & IO Workshop 2006-10-18 0:00 ` James Bottomley @ 2006-10-18 0:50 ` Luben Tuikov 0 siblings, 0 replies; 5+ messages in thread From: Luben Tuikov @ 2006-10-18 0:50 UTC (permalink / raw) To: James Bottomley Cc: Ric Wheeler, linux-fsdevel, linux-ext4, xfs, reiserfs-list, ext4, linux-ide, ocfs2-devel, linux-scsi, lsf07pc --- James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@SteelEye.com> wrote: > You can submit it as your position paper, certainly. It is not a "position" paper. There is too much SCSI Architecture Model (SAM) in it. But from linux-scsi point of view I guess it is. > However, the object of this event is not to collect a list of papers to > be presented: it's not a conference with hundreds of attendees (if you > want to present to an audience, you should submit to FAST, which is such > a conference, with which we're co-located). It's a roundtable type > discussion with 20-25 people in the field; plus some plenary sessions to > get input and ideas from people working on the filesystem layer. The > object is to stimulate discussion of important issues (which may be > guided by papers or other materials). The position paper thing is only > to ensure people actually have things they want to discuss (and to allow > the programme committee to pick the attendees if there would be too > many). Ok, so this is targeted at the same 20-25 Linux people who attended the "Vancouver Storage summit" and you're just using FAST to co-locate. I incorrectly assumed that this was targeted at storage professionals not necessarily Linux related, but with Linux exposure so as to hear new ideas and pathways. I also missed to see the "by-invitation" clause at the top. Thanks for the explanation! Luben ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2006-10-18 0:50 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 5+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2006-10-17 0:40 CFP: Linux 2007 File System & IO Workshop Ric Wheeler 2006-10-17 22:40 ` James Bottomley 2006-10-17 23:25 ` Luben Tuikov 2006-10-18 0:00 ` James Bottomley 2006-10-18 0:50 ` Luben Tuikov
This is a public inbox, see mirroring instructions for how to clone and mirror all data and code used for this inbox; as well as URLs for NNTP newsgroup(s).