The SIGOPS Hall of Fame Award was instituted in 2005 to recognize the most influential
Operating Systems papers that have appeared in the peer-reviewed literature at least ten
years in the past.
Nominations will be solicited of the SIGOPS membership via email. The Hall of Fame Award
Committee will choose which nominated paper wins the award. The decision will be based on a
discussion that considers the impact the paper (and more generally of the research described
in the paper) has had on the field of operating systems research. The Award committee will
prepare a short statement that describes why the paper was selected.
The award winners will be announced at the SOSP or OSDI conference by the current program
chair. The program chair will read the statement prepared by the Award committee that
describes why the paper was selected. The authors of the award winning paper will be given
a plaque, naming the paper, the authors, the conference or journal the paper appeared in,
and the conference in which the award was made. This certificate will be signed by the
program chair and the current chair of SIGOPS. A list of the winners of the award will be
maintained on the SIGOPS website.
The Hall of Fame Award Committee consists of the program chairs from each of the four
most recent SOSPs, and one co-chair from each of the four most recent OSDIs, with
appropriate substitutions if someone is unable to serve.
Nomination Procedure
For 2007, anyone may send nominations via email to HOFnominations@sosp2007.org, on or before
Sept. 10, 2007. Please provide the full citation information for the paper being nominated,
and a brief statement describing the reasons for the nomination. The Subject line of the
email message should include the title of the nominated paper.
2007 Awards
- Leslie Lamport, Time,
Clocks, and the Ordering of Events in a Distributed System, Communications of the
ACM 21(7):558-565, July 1978.
Perhaps the first true "distributed systems" paper, it introduced the concept
of "causal ordering", which turned out to be useful in many settings. The paper
proposed the mechanism it called "logical clocks", but everyone now calls these
"Lamport clocks."
- Andrew D. Birrell and Bruce Jay Nelson, Implementing
Remote Procedure Calls, ACM Transactions on Computer Systems 2(1):39-59, February 1984.
This is the paper on RPC, which has become the standard for remote
communication in distributed systems and the Internet. The paper does an excellent job
laying out the basic model for RPC and the implementation options.
- J. H. Saltzer, D. P. Reed, and D. D. Clark, End-To-End
Arguments in System Design, ACM Transactions on Computer Systems 2(4):277-288, November
1984.
This paper gave system designers, and especially Internet designers, an elegant
framework for making sound decisions. A paper that launched a revolution and, ultimately,
a religion.
- Michael Burrows, Martin Abadi, and Roger Needham, A
Logic of Authentication, ACM Transactions on Computer Systems 8(1):18-36, February 1990.
This paper introduced to the systems community a logic-based notation for
authentication protocols to precisely describe certificates, delegations, etc. With
this precise description a designer can easily reason whether a protocol is correct
or not, and avoid the security flaws that have plagued protocols. "Speaks-for"
and "says" are now standard tools for system designers.
- Fred B. Schneider, Implementing
Fault-Tolerant Services Using the State Machine Approach: a tutorial, ACM Computing
Surveys 22(4):299-319, December 1990.
The paper that explained how we should think about replication ... a model that turns
out to underlie Paxos, Virtual Synchrony, Byzantine replication, and even Transactional
1-Copy Serializability.
2006 Awards
- George C. Necula and Peter Lee, Safe
Kernel Extensions Without Run-Time Checking, Proceedings of the Second
USENIX Symposium on Operating Systems Design and Implementation, October 1996, Seattle,
WA.
This paper introduced the notion of proof carrying code (PCC) and showed how it could
be used for ensuring safe execution by kernel extensions without incurring run-time overhead.
PCC turns out to be a general approach for relocating trust in a system; trust is gained in
a component by trusting a proof checker (and using it to check a proof the component
behaves as expected) rather than trusting the component per se. PCC has become one of the
cornerstones of language-based security.
2005 Awards
- Edsger W. Dijkstra, The
Structure of the THE Multiprogramming System, Proceedings of the First
ACM Symposium on Operating Systems Principles, October 1967, Gatlinburg, TN, USA.
The first paper to suggest that an operating system be built in a structured way.
That structure was a series of layers, each a virtual machine that introduced abstractions
built using the functionality of lower layer. The paper stimulated a great deal of
subsequent work in building operating systems as structured systems.
- Peter J. Denning, The
Working Set Model for Program Behavior, Proceedings of the First
ACM Symposium on Operating Systems Principles, October 1967, Gatlinburg, TN, USA.
This paper introduced the working set model, which has became a key concept in
understanding of locality of memory references and for implementing virtual memory. Most
paging algorithms can trace their roots back to this work.
- Dennis M. Ritchie and Ken Thompson, The
UNIX Time-Sharing System, Proceedings of the Fourth
ACM Symposium on Operating Systems Principles, October 1973, Yorktown Heights, NY, USA.
At a time when operating systems were trending towards complexity, UNIX emerged as a
hallmark of elegance and simplicity.
- Butler Lampson, Hints
for Computer System Design, Proceedings of the Ninth
ACM Symposium on Operating Systems Principles, pp. 33-48, October 1983, Bretton Woods,
NH, USA.
A classic study of experience building large systems, distilled into a cookbook of
wisdom for the operating systems researcher. As time has passed, the value of these hints
has only grown and the range of systems to which they apply enlarged.
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