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Flow Network Models for Online Scheduling Real-Time Tasks on Multiprocessors

Authors
Cho, HyeonjoongEaswaran, Arvind
Issue Date
2020
Publisher
IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
Keywords
Task analysis; Schedules; Program processors; Processor scheduling; Optimal scheduling; Real-time systems; Scheduling; Flow networks; maximum flow problem; minimum cost flow problem; multicores; multiprocessors; real-time scheduling
Citation
IEEE ACCESS, v.8, pp.172136 - 172151
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
IEEE ACCESS
Volume
8
Start Page
172136
End Page
172151
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/59078
DOI
10.1109/ACCESS.2020.3024692
ISSN
2169-3536
Abstract
We consider the flow network model to solve the multiprocessor real-time task scheduling problems. Using the flow network model or its generic form, linear programming (LP) formulation, for the problems is not new. However, the previous works have limitations, for example, that they are classified as offline scheduling techniques since they establish a flow network model or an LP problem considering a very long time interval. In this study, we propose how to construct the flow network model for online scheduling periodic real-time tasks on multiprocessors. Our key idea is to construct the flow network only for the active instances of tasks at the current scheduling time, while guaranteeing the existence of an optimal schedule for the future instances of the tasks. The optimal scheduling is here defined to ensure that all real-time tasks meet their deadlines when the total utilization demand of the given tasks does not exceed the total processing capacity. We then propose the flow network model-based polynomial-time scheduling algorithms. Advantageously, the flow network model allows the task workload to be collected unfairly within a certain time interval without losing the optimality. It thus leads us to designing three unfair-but-optimal scheduling algorithms on both continuous and discrete-time models. Especially, our unfair-but-optimal scheduling algorithm on a discrete-time model is, to the best of our knowledge, the first in the problem domain. We experimentally demonstrate that it significantly alleviates the scheduling overheads, i.e., the reduced number of preemptions with the comparable number of task migrations across processors, in comparison with an existing algorithm on the discrete-time model.
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