wiki:APRAGENI/GREE2013

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The Second GENI Research and Educational Experiment Workshop (GREE2013)

March 21-22, 2013, Salt Lake City, Utah

Registration

Thanks to the generous support of BBN-GENI Office/NSF, there is no registration fee. But to help us best plan for the workshop, Please register here.

Technical Program

GREE2013 Program

Survey

Your feedback is very important to us. Please take a survey here at the end of the workshop. If you need to leave early, we appreciate that you fill in the survey before you leave. While filling in the survey, please feel free to skip the questions that are not applicable to you.

Final Paper Guidelines

Guidelines for final camera-ready version can be found here. Please submit your paper and revision summary to GREEworkshop@gmail.com, with the subject line as [GREE2013 final] <title of your paper>.

Overview

The Global Environment for Network Innovation (GENI) infrastructure is becoming a mature virtual laboratory for exploring future Internet at-scale. It supports at-scale experimentation on shared and heterogeneous GENI resources among multiple users, permits users to do deep programmability throughout the network, and offers collaborative and exploratory environments for innovative research and education. More and more researchers, educators, and students have started or are starting to conduct research and educational experiments on the GENI infrastructure. NSF has sponsored more than 15 GENI experiment projects since September 2010.

Following the successful first GENI Research and Educational Experiment Workshop (GREE2012), the second GREE Workshop will be a one-day workshop (GREE2013), from noon March 21 to noon March 22, co-located with GEC 16 at the University of Utah. It will report recent progress and shed lights on future direction of GENI from an experimenter’s point of view, and will inspire researchers and students to conduct experiments on multiple GENI resources. Furthermore, it will provide a communication channel among GENI experimenters, as well as between GENI developers and GENI experimenters, for a better understanding of multiple GENI resources. It is expected that the workshop would include a keynote speech, paper presentations, an experimenter panel/open discussion, and tutorials and demos on GENI components.

We strongly encourage participations not only from current GENI developers and experimenters, but also from researchers and students not previously involved in GENI but are interested in participating future GENI projects to build a larger community of researchers and students using the GENI infrastructure. The workshop will benefit GENI developers for better shaping their GENI development plans, will benefit existing GENI experimenters for a better understanding of GENI resources, and will benefit new comers for future GENI projects and funding.

While papers that use GENI wireless resources are particularly welcome in the workshop, we solicit GENI related research and educational papers in any area of computer science as well as GENI resource tutorials. The research papers may be regular papers that report research results based on GENI experiments or short papers that report work-in-progress that use GENI resources. The educational papers may include, but are not limited to, curriculum and lab developments to use GENI infrastructure. GENI resource tutorials will guide experimenters to use existing and new GENI resources. All papers will go through a thorough review process by experienced researchers that will provide constructive feedbacks. Furthermore, all accepted papers will be submitted for indexing by Conference Publishing Services (CPS). We will also offer a best paper award.

Partial travel support from BBN-GPO/NSF may be available.

Important Dates

Paper submission deadline: 1/14/2013 (extended)

Acceptance notification: 2/20/2013 (extended)

Final version: 3/15/2013

Workshop: noon March 21 to noon March 22, 2013 (co-located with GEC 16)

Submission Instructions

Format of Manuscript: All submissions should follow the IEEE 8.5’’ x 11’’ Two-Column Format. Research/education regular paper submissions should not exceed 8 pages, while short paper submissions should not exceed 4 pages. Tutorial submissions should not exceed 2 pages.

Please submit your paper to GREEworkshop@gmail.com (i.e., attach your paper), with the subject line as [GREE2013] <title of your paper>

Keynote Speaker

Dr. Dipankar Raychaudhuri, Director of WINLAB, Rutgers University

Workshop Co-organizers

Kaiqi Xiong (Rochester Institute of Technology)

Yong Guan (Iowa State University)

Yin Pan (Rochester Institute of Technology)

Bing Wang (University of Connecticut)

Mark Berman (BBN-GPO)

Niky Riga (BBN-GPO)

Workshop Committee

Jay Aikat (UNC)

Jeannie Albrecht (Williams College)

Mark Berman (BBN-GPO)

Yong Guan (Iowa State University)

Rick McGeer (HP Labs)

Yin Pan (Rochester Institute of Technology)

Niky Riga (BBN-GPO)

Bing Wang (University of Connecticut)

Kuang-Ching Wang (Clemson University)

Kaiqi Xiong (Rochester Institute of Technology)

Michael Zink (UMass, Amherst)

ExoGENI Tutorial

  1. ExoGENI and tool overview: Flukes, APIs
  2. Experiment 1: Create a slice: simple virtual topology: intra- and inter-domain topologies
  3. Experiment 2: Using postboot script templete: Create and run a small Condor cluster
  4. Experiment 3: Modify a slice: addd/remove nodes
  5. Experiment 4 (Optional): Create and experiment with a Openflow slice

Workshop sponsors

BBN-GENI Program Office/National Science Foundation

Contact Information

Kaiqi Xiong (kxxics@rit.edu)

Yong Guan (yguan@iastate.edu‎)

Yin Pan (yxpvks@rit.edu)

Bing Wang (bing@engr.uconn.edu)

Please send inquiries to GREEworkshop@gmail.com.

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