Proposed Microconferences

We are pleased to announce the first batch of proposed microconferences at the Linux Plumbers Conference (LPC) 2022:

  • LinuxBoot is deployed at scale; what’s next?
  • linux/arch
  • Confidential Computing Microconference
  • Kernel Testing & Dependability
  • Containers and Checkpoint/Restore
  • Service Management and systemd
  • Zoned Storage Devices (SMR HDDs & ZNS SSDs)
  • RISC-V
  • Compute Express Link
  • Kernel Memory Management

The call for microconferences proposal will close on Saturday, 2. April 2022. The slots are filling up fast so we strongly encourage everyone thinking about submitting a microconference to do so as soon as possible!

LPC 2022 is currently planned to take place in Dublin, Ireland from 12 September to 14 September. For details about the location, co-location with other events see our website and social media for updates.

We do hope that LPC 2022 will be mainly an in-person event. Ideally, microconference runners should be willing and able to attend in person.

CFP Open – Refereed Presentations

The Call for Refereed Presentation Proposals for the 2022 edition of the Linux Plumbers Conference (LPC) is now open.  We plan to hold LPC in Dublin, Ireland on September 12-14 in conjunction with The Linux Foundation Open Source Summit. 

If an in-person conference should prove to be impossible due to the circumstances at that time, Linux Plumbers will switch to a virtual-only conference. Submitters should ideally be able to give their presentation in person if circumstances permit, although presenting remotely will be possible in either case. Please see our website or social media for regular updates.

Refereed Presentations are 45 minutes in length and should focus on a specific aspect of the “plumbing” in a Linux system. Examples of Linux plumbing include core kernel subsystems, init systems, core libraries, windowing systems, management tools, device support, media creation/playback, and so on. The best presentations are not about finished work, but rather problem statements, proposals, or proof-of-concept solutions that require face-to-face discussions and debate.

The Refereed Presentations track will be running throughout all three days of the conference. Note that the current Linux Plumbers Refereed track may overlap with the Open Source Summit.

Linux Plumbers Conference Program Committee members will be reviewing all submitted proposals.  High-quality submissions that cannot be accepted due to the limited number of slots will be forwarded to both the Open Source Summit and to organizers of suitable Linux Plumbers Microconferences for further consideration.

To submit a Refereed Track Presentation proposal follow the instructions here [1]

Submissions are due on or before 11:59PM UTC on Sunday, June 12, 2022.

[1] https://lpc.events/event/16/abstracts/

CFP Open – Microconferences

We are pleased to announce the call for papers (cfp) for microconferences at the Linux Plumbers Conference (LPC) 2022.

LPC 2022 is currently planned to take place in Dublin, Ireland from 12 September to 14 September. For details about the location, co-location with other events see our website and social media for updates.

We do hope that LPC 2022 will be mainly an in-person event. Ideally, microconference runners should be willing and able to attend in person.

As the name suggests, LPC is concerned with Linux plumbing encompassing topics from kernel and userspace. A microconference is a set of sessions organized around a particular topic. The topic can be a kernel subsystem or a specific problem area in either kernel or userspace.

A microconference is supposed to be research and development in action and an abstract for a microconference should be thought of as a set of research questions and problem statements.

The sessions in each microconference are expected to address specific problems and should generate new ideas, solutions, and patches. Sessions should be focussed on discussion. Presentations should always aim to aid or kick off a discussion. If your presentation feels like a talk we would recommend to consider submitting to the LPC refereed track.

In past years microconferences were organized around topics such as security, scalability, energy efficiency, toolchains, containers, printing, system boot, Android, scheduling, filesystems, tracing, or real-time. The LPC microconference track is open to a wide variety of topics as long as it is focussed, concerned with interesting problems, and is related to open source and the wider Linux ecosystem. We are happy about a wide range of topics!

A microconference submission should outline the overall topic and list key people and problems which can be discussed. The list of problems and specific topics in a microconference can be continously updated until fairly late. This will allow microconferences to cover topics that pop up after submission and to address new developments or problems.

Microconferences that have been at previous LPCs should list results and accomplishments in the submission and should make sure to cover follow-up work and new topics.

After a microconference has been accepted, microconference organizers are expected to write a short blogpost for the LPC website to announce and advertise their topic.

Welcome to the 2022 Linux Plumbers Conference

Planning for the 2022 Linux Plumbers Conference is well underway. The hope is to be in Dublin co-located with OSS EU (although with hopefully non-overlapping dates). However, the Linux Foundation is still negotiating for a suitable venue so we can’t fully confirm the location yet.

There is an outside (and hopefully receding) chance that we may have to go back to being fully on-line this year, but if that happens, we’ll be sure to alert you through the usual channels of this blog and twitter.

Welcome to LPC 2021 — Registration Closed

Hi,
thank you for attending LPC 2021!
We have now reached our limit for attendees. Registration is now closed.
If you are still intending to watch the conference you can do this by watching on YouTube.

Get ready for LPC 2021!

The LPC 2021 conference is just around the corner. We wanted to share the logistics on how to participate and watch the virtual conference.

For those that are not registered for the conference, we will have live streaming of the sessions on YouTube, like last year. This is free of charge. We will provide the URLs where to watch each day, on this page. The only limitation is that you cannot participate and ask questions live with audio. However this year we will have the chat in each Big Blue Button room also available externally via the Matrix open communication network. Anyone is invited to join with their personal Matrix account.

Those who are registered for the conference will be able to log into our Big Blue Button server through our front end page, starting Monday September 20 at 7:00AM US Pacific time.
To log in to BBB, please go to meet.lpc.events. You will find a front end showing the schedule for the current day with all the active sessions you can join. Your credentials are the email address you used for registration, and the confirmation code you received in email when you registered. Please make sure you have those available in advance of trying to log in.

Please review the LPC 2021 Participant Guide before you join the conference.

Looking forward to seeing you there!

Linux Plumbers Conference 2021 is Almost Here

We are only three days away from the start of LPC 2021!

Thank you to all that made our conference possible:
– Our generous Sponsors, listed here on the right
– The Linux Foundation, which provides as always impeccable support
– Our speakers and leaders, who are providing a lot of great content and planning great discussions

As you can see, the schedule is finalized now. There are going to be seven parallel tracks each day, lasting four hours each. We have a total of 23 different tracks and Microconferences, with 191 sessions.

At this time we are closing the CfPs for all tracks. We have still room for a limited number of Birds of a Feather sessions. If you want to propose one, even during the conference, and the necessary participants are all registered, please send an email to our lpc-contact@lists.linuxplumbersconf.org mailing list.

Take a look at all the great technical content at this year virtual LPC.
You can view the schedule by main blocks , or by track, or as a complete detailed view.

Note that at the end of the first day we’ll have a plenary keynote by Jon “maddog” Hall.
Additionally, at the end of the last day we’ll have a plenary session as a wrap up for this year conference.

The conference will be entirely virtual, offered on a completely free and open software stack.

We look forward to five days filled with great discussions, and we hope that LPC 2021 will provide once again a creative and productive environment where ideas can be exchanged and problems tackled. Many great ideas have sprung in the past from these meetings, driving innovation in the Linux plumbing layer!

BOFs Call for Proposals Now Open

We have formally opened the CfP for Birds of a Feather. Select the BOFs track when submitting a BOF here.

As a reminder:

  • Submissions for Microconferences topics are still open.
  • The GNU Tools Track CfP will close in a few days, on August 31.
  • Kernel Summit track is open for late breaking topics.
  • All the other tracks are now closed for additional submissions.

 

Diversity, Equity & Inclusion Microconference Accepted into 2021 Linux Plumbers Conference

We are pleased to announce that the Diversity, Equity & Inclusion Microconference has been accepted into the 2021 Linux Plumbers Conference.

Creating diverse communities requires effort and commitment to creating inclusive and welcoming spaces. Recognizing that communities which adopt inclusive language and actions attract and retain more individuals from diverse backgrounds, the Linux kernel community adopted inclusive language in Linux 5.8 release. Understanding if this sort of change has been effective is a topic of active research. This MC will take a pulse of the Linux kernel community as it turns 30 this year and discuss some next steps. Experts from the DEI research community will share their perspectives, together with the perspectives from the Linux community members. This microconference will build on what was started at the LPC 2020 BoF session on Improving Diversity.

This year’s topics to be discussed include:

  • What are the challenges in attracting and retaining a diverse group of developers that are worth focusing on.
  • Does the Code of Conduct and Inclusive naming efforts help people of diverse groups feel at home? What else is missing?
  • How effective have the kernel mentoring initiatives been? Are there best practices emerging that help the limited pool of mentors be more effective?
  • What will be the most effective next steps for advancing Diversity, Equity and Inclusion that will improve the trends, and help us scale?

Come and join us in the discussion of how we can improve the diversity of the Linux Kernel community and help keep it vibrant for the next 30 years!

We hope to see you there.

GPU/media/AI buffer management and interop Microconference Accepted into 2021 Linux Plumbers Conference

We are pleased to announce that the GPU/media/AI buffer management and interop Microconference has been accepted into the 2021 Linux Plumbers Conference. The Linux GPU subsystem has long had three major tenets:

  • Kernel mediation, validation, submission, and scheduling of GPU jobs
  • Implicit synchronisation between multiple user space accessors
  • Open-source user space

Forthcoming hardware makes the former two difficult, if not impossible, to achieve. In order to give user space the fastest possible path to support modern complex workloads, forthcoming hardware is removing the notion of a small number of kernel-controlled job queues, replacing it with direct user space access to command queues to submit and control their own jobs.

This, and evolution in the Vulkan API, make it difficult to retain the existing implicit synchronization model, where the kernel tracks all access and ensures that the hardware executes jobs in the order of user space submission, so that multiple independent clients can reuse the same buffers without data hazards. As all of these changes impact both media and neural-network accelerators, this Linux Plumbers Conference microconference allows us to open the discussion past the graphics community and into the wider kernel community.

This year’s topics to be discussed include:

Come and join us in the discussion of keeping Linux a first class citizen
in the would of graphics and media.

We hope to see you there.

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