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1{ 2 "id": "https://mort.io/blog/tdis-accepted/", 3 "title": "Not one but two accepted papers and a Ph.D.", 4 "link": "https://mort.io/blog/tdis-accepted/", 5 "updated": "2025-03-30T00:00:00", 6 "published": "2025-03-30T00:00:00", 7 "summary": "<p>As I find myself once more on a train to parts unknown (to me at least), a brief\nupdate :)</p>\n<p>The parts unknown in question is Rotterdam, NL (so really quite well-known to\nquite a lot of people, just not me) for <a href=\"https://2025.eurosys.org/\">EURO/SYS\n2025</a> (being held jointly with <a href=\"https://www.asplos-conference.org/asplos2025\">ASPLOS\n2025</a>, although I can’t stay for\nthe whole thing unfortunately) and specifically the <a href=\"https://tdis.gitlab.io/tdis25/\">3rd International Workshop\nof Testing Distributed Internet of Things Systems\n(TDIS)</a>.</p>\n<p>Why? Happily the programme committee decided to accept two papers from my\n(ex-)students – which is nice :) The two in question are</p>\n<ol>\n<li>\n<p><strong><a href=\"https://doi.org/10.1145/3719159.3721222\">Reckon-ing Kubernetes at the Edge using Emulated\nClusters</a></strong> with Alessandro Sassi\n(University of Cambridge / Politecnico di Milano) and Christopher Jensen\n(University of Cambridge / Microsoft Research). This describes Alessandro’s\nM.Sc. research project undertaken as a visitor with my group. He built on\nChris’ earlier work on <a href=\"https://doi.org/10.1145/3447851.3458739\">Reckon, an emulator setup for examining consensus\nsystem behaviour</a>. Alessandor\nextended this to use ContainerNet enabling it to emulate Kubernetes clusters\non a single node, and used this to examine Kubernetes performance in some\nedge network scenarios. Source available on GitHub at\n<a href=\"https://github.com/AleSassi/reckon-k8s\">https://github.com/AleSassi/reckon-k8s</a>.</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p><strong><a href=\"https://doi.org/10.1145/3719159.3721221\">LoRaLive: Efficient LoRaWAN Traffic\nGeneration</a></strong> with Vadim Safronov\n(University of Oxford / University of Cambridge). This reports a component of\nVadim’s Ph.D. work where he built a system to enable dense deployment LoRaWAN\ntrace-playback using a minimal number of nodes while respecting legal\nconstraints on duty cycles. Source available on GitHub at\n<a href=\"https://github.com/LoRaLive/LoRaLive\">https://github.com/LoRaLive/LoRaLive</a>.</p>\n</li>\n</ol>\n<p>Both nice tools that we hope might be of community interest!</p>\n<p>The Ph.D. in question is Chris Jensen’s – happily he passed his viva on\nThursday just gone, titled “Separating conflict-recovery from failure-recovery\nin distributed consensus”, examined by <a href=\"https://timharris.uk/\">Tim Harris</a> and\n<a href=\"https://charap.co/\">Aleksey Charapko</a>. Other recent passes include Al-Amjad\nTawfiq Isstaif, titled “Contention-resilient overcommitment for serverless\ndeployments” and Andrew Jeffery, titled “Modelling orchestration”. The race<a href=\"https://mort.io/blog/tdis-accepted/#1\">1</a>\nis now on for the first to <a href=\"https://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/techreports/\">tech\nreport</a>…</p>\n<div>1\n<p>It’s not really a race. That would be weird.</p>\n</div>", 8 "content": "<p>As I find myself once more on a train to parts unknown (to me at least), a brief\nupdate :)</p>\n<p>The parts unknown in question is Rotterdam, NL (so really quite well-known to\nquite a lot of people, just not me) for <a href=\"https://2025.eurosys.org/\">EURO/SYS\n2025</a> (being held jointly with <a href=\"https://www.asplos-conference.org/asplos2025\">ASPLOS\n2025</a>, although I can’t stay for\nthe whole thing unfortunately) and specifically the <a href=\"https://tdis.gitlab.io/tdis25/\">3rd International Workshop\nof Testing Distributed Internet of Things Systems\n(TDIS)</a>.</p>\n<p>Why? Happily the programme committee decided to accept two papers from my\n(ex-)students – which is nice :) The two in question are</p>\n<ol>\n<li>\n<p><strong><a href=\"https://doi.org/10.1145/3719159.3721222\">Reckon-ing Kubernetes at the Edge using Emulated\nClusters</a></strong> with Alessandro Sassi\n(University of Cambridge / Politecnico di Milano) and Christopher Jensen\n(University of Cambridge / Microsoft Research). This describes Alessandro’s\nM.Sc. research project undertaken as a visitor with my group. He built on\nChris’ earlier work on <a href=\"https://doi.org/10.1145/3447851.3458739\">Reckon, an emulator setup for examining consensus\nsystem behaviour</a>. Alessandor\nextended this to use ContainerNet enabling it to emulate Kubernetes clusters\non a single node, and used this to examine Kubernetes performance in some\nedge network scenarios. Source available on GitHub at\n<a href=\"https://github.com/AleSassi/reckon-k8s\">https://github.com/AleSassi/reckon-k8s</a>.</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p><strong><a href=\"https://doi.org/10.1145/3719159.3721221\">LoRaLive: Efficient LoRaWAN Traffic\nGeneration</a></strong> with Vadim Safronov\n(University of Oxford / University of Cambridge). This reports a component of\nVadim’s Ph.D. work where he built a system to enable dense deployment LoRaWAN\ntrace-playback using a minimal number of nodes while respecting legal\nconstraints on duty cycles. Source available on GitHub at\n<a href=\"https://github.com/LoRaLive/LoRaLive\">https://github.com/LoRaLive/LoRaLive</a>.</p>\n</li>\n</ol>\n<p>Both nice tools that we hope might be of community interest!</p>\n<p>The Ph.D. in question is Chris Jensen’s – happily he passed his viva on\nThursday just gone, titled “Separating conflict-recovery from failure-recovery\nin distributed consensus”, examined by <a href=\"https://timharris.uk/\">Tim Harris</a> and\n<a href=\"https://charap.co/\">Aleksey Charapko</a>. Other recent passes include Al-Amjad\nTawfiq Isstaif, titled “Contention-resilient overcommitment for serverless\ndeployments” and Andrew Jeffery, titled “Modelling orchestration”. The race<a href=\"https://mort.io/blog/tdis-accepted/#1\">1</a>\nis now on for the first to <a href=\"https://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/techreports/\">tech\nreport</a>…</p>\n<div>1\n<p>It’s not really a race. That would be weird.</p>\n</div>", 9 "content_type": "html", 10 "author": { 11 "name": "Unknown", 12 "email": null, 13 "uri": null 14 }, 15 "categories": [], 16 "source": "https://mort.io/atom.xml" 17}