Real-Time Lunch

RT Lunch is a weekly seminar focussed on current research in real-time systems and related fields. It is open to all and a great way to get to know UNC's Real-Time Systems group. Y'all should come!

Mailing List

RT Lunch is coordinated via our mailing list rtlunch@listserv.unc.edu. This list is also used to share other relevant news and to coordinate upcoming events. All members of the Real-Time Systems group should subscribe to this list.

Time and Location

Meetings are held each Wednesday from 12:30 to 1:30 in FB 120.

Fall 2009

Date Presenter Topic
9/16/2009 Cong Liu Supporting Pipelines In Soft Real-Time Multiprocessor Systems
9/9/2009 Björn Brandenburg Introduction to Sporadic Tasks and Real-Time Synchronization

Spring 2009

Date Presenter Topic
March 2009 Björn Brandenburg Tutorial: Getting Started with LITMUSRT Development
2/23/2009 John Calandrino On the Design and Implementation of a Cache-Aware Multicore Scheduler
2/16/2009 Björn Brandenburg Recap of the Transactional Memory Workshop held in conjunction with PPoPP'09
2/2/2009 Cong Liu Supporting Pipelines in Soft Real-Time Multiprocessor Systems

Note: Listing is incomplete.

Fall 2008

Date Presenter Topic
11/12/2008 Stephen Olivier A Brief Introduction to a Concise Overview to Transactional Memory
10/22/2008 Sanjoy Baruah Demand Bound Function Related Schedulability Tests
10/8/2008 Björn Brandenburg A Partial Overview of Real-Time Synchronization (Part 3)
10/1/2008 Björn Brandenburg A Partial Overview of Real-Time Synchronization (Part 2)
9/24/2008 Björn Brandenburg A Partial Overview of Real-Time Synchronization (Part 1)
9/17/2008 John Calandrino LinSched: The Linux Scheduler Simulator
9/10/2008 Björn Brandenburg An Overview of Litmus
9/3/2008 Hennadiy Leontyev Flexible Support for Soft Real-Time Multiprocessing Systems
8/27/2008 John Calandrino Cache-Aware Real-Time Scheduling on Multicore Platforms

Pre 2008

Real-Time Lunch has been around forever (i.e., longer than the current grad student generation), but the old schedules have been lost in the sands of time. Rumor has it that the talks were great, though. ;-)