Skills Development Systems Paper Blueprint

Systems Paper Blueprint

v20260410
systems-paper-writing
Provides paragraph-level structural blueprints and venue-specific checklists for 10–12 page systems conference submissions (OSDI/SOSP/ASPLOS/NSDI/EuroSys), covering writing patterns, reviewer guidance, LaTeX templates, and deadline tracking.
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Overview

Systems Paper Writing: Paragraph-Level Structural Blueprint

Fine-grained structural guidance for writing 10–12 page systems papers targeting top systems venues: OSDI, SOSP, ASPLOS, NSDI, and EuroSys. This skill provides page allocation per section, paragraph-level blueprints, and writing patterns distilled from authoritative guides and best-paper analysis.

When to Use This Skill

Scenario Use This Skill Use ml-paper-writing Instead
Structuring a 12-page OSDI/SOSP paper
Page budget and paragraph planning
Systems-specific evaluation structure
General ML paper writing philosophy
Citation verification workflow
LaTeX templates and formatting
NeurIPS/ICML/ICLR paper structure

Boundary: ml-paper-writing provides general writing philosophy, multi-venue templates, and citation verification. This skill focuses exclusively on paragraph-level structural blueprints for systems conferences.


Authoritative Sources

This blueprint synthesizes guidance from established systems researchers:

  1. Levin & Redell — "How (and How Not) to Write a Good Systems Paper" (SOSP'83 PC Chairs, USENIX/ACM SIGOPS)
  2. Irene Zhang (MSR/UW) — "Hints on how to write an SOSP paper" (SOSP/OSDI PC)
  3. Gernot Heiser (UNSW, seL4) — Style Guide + Paper Writing Talk
  4. Timothy Roscoe (ETH Zürich) — "Writing reviews for systems conferences"
  5. Mike Dahlin (UT Austin/Google) — "Giving a Conference Talk"
  6. Yi Ding — "How to write good systems papers?"
  7. hzwer & DingXiaoH — WritingAIPaper (GitHub 1.3k+ stars)

Full citations and URLs: see references/section-blueprints.md.


12-Page Systems Paper Blueprint

Overview: Page Allocation

Section Pages Purpose
Abstract ~0.25 150–250 words, 5-sentence structure
S1 Introduction 1.5–2 Problem → Gap → Insight → Contributions
S2 Background & Motivation 1–1.5 Terms + Production observations
S3 Design 3–4 Architecture + Module details + Alternatives
S4 Implementation 0.5–1 Prototype details, LOC, key engineering
S5 Evaluation 3–4 Setup + End-to-end + Microbenchmarks + Scalability
S6 Related Work 1 Grouped by methodology, explicit comparison
S7 Conclusion 0.5 3-sentence summary
Total ~12 Submission: 12 pages strict (USENIX) / 11 pages (ACM ASPLOS). Camera-ready: up to 14 pages (USENIX) / 13 pages (ACM). Ranges above span submission through camera-ready. Target 12 pages for initial submission. References unlimited.

Abstract (150–250 words, 5 sentences)

Sentence 1: Problem context and importance
Sentence 2: Gap in existing approaches
Sentence 3: Key insight or thesis ("X is better for Y in environment Z")
Sentence 4: Summary of approach and key results
Sentence 5: Broader impact or availability

Source: Levin & Redell — "Can you state the new idea concisely? Use them in the abstract." Irene Zhang — "The abstract is harder to write because you cannot use terms or concepts you introduced in the paper."

S1 Introduction (1.5–2 pages)

Paragraph structure:

  1. Problem statement (~0.5 page) — Establish the domain and why it matters. Use concrete numbers (cluster sizes, workload statistics, latency requirements).
  2. Gap analysis (~0.5 page) — Enumerate specific gaps G1–Gn in existing systems. Each gap is one sentence with evidence.
  3. Key insight (1 paragraph) — The thesis statement: "X is better for applications Y running in environment Z." (Irene Zhang formula)
  4. Contributions (~0.5 page) — Numbered list of 3–5 concrete contributions. Each contribution is testable and maps to a section.

Writing pattern: hzwer Move 1 (Establish territory) → Move 2 (Find niche) → Move 3 (Occupy niche).

Source: Irene Zhang — "clearly state your target environment (Z) and application (Y)" + "clearly state why previous systems do not meet the needs"; Levin & Redell — "What exactly is the problem being solved?"

S2 Background & Motivation (1–1.5 pages)

Paragraph structure:

  1. Technical background (~0.5 page) — Define terms and systems the reader needs. Follow Gernot Heiser's "define-before-use" principle.
  2. Production observations (~0.5–1 page) — Present Observation 1, 2, 3 from real data or measurements. Each observation leads to a design insight.

Source: Irene Zhang — "clearly motivate Y and Z. Why is application Y important?"; Gernot Heiser — "define-before-use."

S3 Design (3–4 pages)

Paragraph structure:

  1. System architecture overview (~0.5 page) — Architecture diagram first (Yi Ding: "draw a picture first"). One-paragraph walkthrough of major components and data flow.
  2. Module-by-module design (~2–2.5 pages) — Each subsection: what the module does, the design choice made, alternatives considered, and why this choice wins.
  3. Design alternatives and trade-offs (~0.5–1 page) — For each major decision, explicitly discuss what was not chosen and why.

Source: Irene Zhang — "Every design choice made in X should be discussed with alternatives and the reasons for the choice"; Levin & Redell — "What were the alternatives considered at various points, and why were the choices made?"

S4 Implementation (0.5–1 page)

  1. Prototype description — Language, framework, LOC, integration with existing systems.
  2. Key engineering decisions — Non-obvious implementation choices worth documenting.

Source: Levin & Redell — "Does the paper describe something that has actually been implemented?"; Irene Zhang — "explain how you constructed a prototype to test your hypothesis."

S5 Evaluation (3–4 pages)

Paragraph structure:

  1. Experimental setup (~0.5 page) — Hardware, baselines, workloads, metrics. Enough detail to reproduce.
  2. End-to-end comparison (~1–1.5 pages) — X vs baselines for application Y on environment Z. Main performance results.
  3. Microbenchmarks / Ablation (~1–1.5 pages) — Isolate each design decision's contribution. Ablation experiments decompose the gains.
  4. Scalability (~0.5 page) — Show behavior as problem size, cluster size, or load increases.

Critical rule (Irene Zhang): State every experimental conclusion three times:

  • Section opening: hypothesis ("We expect X to outperform Y because...")
  • Section closing: conclusion ("Results show X outperforms Y by Z%")
  • Figure caption: evidence ("Figure N shows X achieves Z% better throughput than Y")

Two experiment types:

  • Type 1: X vs baselines for Y on Z (end-to-end comparison)
  • Type 2: Ablation — remove each design component to measure its individual impact

S6 Related Work (1 page)

  • Group by methodology or approach, not by individual papers.
  • For each group: what they do, what limitation remains, how your work differs.
  • Use a comparison table when comparing 4+ systems on specific dimensions.

Source: Levin & Redell — "Are comparisons with previous work clear and explicit?"; Irene Zhang — use comparison tables.

S7 Conclusion (0.5 page)

Three sentences (Irene Zhang formula):

  1. The hypothesis / problem addressed
  2. The solution approach
  3. The key result

Writing Patterns

Four reusable patterns for structuring systems papers. See references/writing-patterns.md for detailed examples.

Pattern 1: Gap Analysis (Lucid, ASPLOS'23)

Enumerate gaps G1–Gn in Introduction → map to answers A1–An in Design. Creates a clear contract with the reader.

Pattern 2: Observation-Driven (GFS, arXiv 2025)

Present production observations (O1–O3) in Motivation → derive design insights → build system around insights. Effective when you have real workload data.

Pattern 3: Contribution List (Blox, EuroSys'24; Sia, SOSP'23)

Numbered contributions in Introduction, each mapping to a section. Readers (and reviewers) can track claims through the paper.

Pattern 4: Thesis Formula (Irene Zhang)

Structure the entire paper around: "X is better for applications Y running in environment Z." Introduction states it, Design explains how, Evaluation proves it.


Conference Differences

Warning: Venue rules change yearly. Always verify against the current year's CFP before submission.

Venue Format Submission Limit Camera-Ready References
OSDI USENIX 12 pages 14 pages Unlimited
NSDI USENIX 12 pages 14 pages Unlimited
SOSP ACM SIGOPS 12 pages (tech content) Unlimited
ASPLOS ACM SIGPLAN 11 pages 13 pages Unlimited
EuroSys ACM 12 pages Unlimited

Based on 2025/2026 CFPs. Verify current limits before submission.


Writing Philosophy

Manage Reader State (Gernot Heiser)

Treat the reader's cognitive load like an OS managing process state. Never introduce a concept without context. Never reference something defined later without a forward pointer.

Six-Dimensional Quality (Levin & Redell)

Self-check against: Original Ideas, Reality (is it built?), Lessons (what did you learn?), Choices (alternatives discussed?), Context (related work fair?), Presentation (clear writing?).

Page-One Figure (hzwer)

Include a figure on the first page that captures the core idea. Reviewers form first impressions from the title, abstract, and page-one figure.


Academic Integrity Requirements

Citation Discipline

  • Never generate citations from memory. Use ml-paper-writing's citation verification workflow (Semantic Scholar / DBLP / CrossRef APIs).
  • Mark unverified references as [CITATION NEEDED].

Prohibition of Fabrication

  • Do NOT fabricate production observations, traces, deployment experiences, or experimental results.
  • Do NOT generate fake venue rules, paper metadata, or best-paper claims.
  • Do NOT copy paragraph-level text from reference papers. This blueprint provides structural guidance, not copy-paste templates.

LLM Disclosure

  • Some venues require disclosure of substantial LLM use in writing or ideation. Check each venue's AI policy in the current CFP.

Attribution

  • When structures are inspired by specific papers (e.g., Lucid's gap-analysis pattern), cite the inspiration.
  • Cross-repository references (e.g., ARIS paper-slides structure) are attributed, not copied.

Temporal Validity

  • Venue rules (page limits, format, AI policies) change annually. All venue information in this skill is based on 2025/2026 CFPs. Always verify against the current year's CFP.

Workflow: Structuring a New Systems Paper

Step 1: Read this SKILL.md for page allocation overview
Step 2: Read references/section-blueprints.md for per-section paragraph templates
Step 3: Choose a writing pattern from references/writing-patterns.md
Step 4: Draft section by section following the blueprint
Step 5: Run the checklist from references/checklist.md before submission
Step 6: Use ml-paper-writing for citation verification and LaTeX formatting

Quick Checklist

  • Thesis statement follows "X is better for Y in Z" formula
  • Introduction has numbered contributions (3–5)
  • Each contribution maps to a paper section
  • Design discusses alternatives for every major choice
  • Every eval conclusion stated 3 times (hypothesis, result, caption)
  • Related work grouped by methodology, not individual papers
  • Page budget within venue limits
  • All citations verified programmatically (no hallucinated references)

Common Issues and Solutions

Issue Solution
Paper feels like a "feature list" Restructure around thesis formula: X better for Y in Z
Evaluation lacks depth Add ablation experiments isolating each design decision
Reviewers say "incremental" Strengthen gap analysis: make G1–Gn crisper with evidence
Design section too long Move implementation details to S4, keep S3 at design level
Motivation feels weak Add production observations with concrete numbers
Related work reads like a bibliography Group by approach, add explicit differentiation

References

Writing Guidance

Venue-Specific

  • references/checklist.md — 7-stage pre-submission checklist covering structure, writing quality, evaluation rigor, design quality, academic integrity, venue-specific requirements (OSDI/NSDI/ASPLOS/SOSP/EuroSys), and final pass
  • references/systems-conferences.md — Conference overview, deadlines, track descriptions, formatting requirements, submission rules, and format conversion guides
  • references/reviewer-guidelines.md — How systems conference reviewers evaluate papers, with venue-specific criteria and common concerns

LaTeX Templates

Info
Category Development
Name systems-paper-writing
Version v20260410
Size 60.4KB
Updated At 2026-04-14
Language