A capacity sharing and stealing strategy for open real-time systems
| Data(s) |
12/02/2014
12/02/2014
2010
|
|---|---|
| Resumo |
This paper focuses on the scheduling of tasks with hard and soft real-time constraints in open and dynamic real-time systems. It starts by presenting a capacity sharing and stealing (CSS) strategy that supports the coexistence of guaranteed and non-guaranteed bandwidth servers to efficiently handle soft-tasks’ overloads by making additional capacity available from two sources: (i) reclaiming unused reserved capacity when jobs complete in less than their budgeted execution time and (ii) stealing reserved capacity from inactive non-isolated servers used to schedule best-effort jobs. CSS is then combined with the concept of bandwidth inheritance to efficiently exchange reserved bandwidth among sets of inter-dependent tasks which share resources and exhibit precedence constraints, assuming no previous information on critical sections and computation times is available. The proposed Capacity Exchange Protocol (CXP) has a better performance and a lower overhead when compared against other available solutions and introduces a novel approach to integrate precedence constraints among tasks of open real-time systems. |
| Identificador | |
| Idioma(s) |
eng |
| Publicador |
Elsevier |
| Relação |
Journal of Systems Architecture; Vol. 56, Issues 4-6 http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1383762110000123 |
| Direitos |
openAccess |
| Palavras-Chave | #Open real-time systems #Dynamic scheduling #Resource reservation #Residual capacity reclaiming #Reserved capacity stealing #Shared resources #Precedence constraints |
| Tipo |
article |