DocumentCode
105803
Title
The Impact of Queue Length Information on Buffer Overflow in Parallel Queues
Author
Jagannathan, Krishna ; Modiano, Eytan
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Indian Inst. of Technol. Madras, Chennai, India
Volume
59
Issue
10
fYear
2013
fDate
Oct. 2013
Firstpage
6393
Lastpage
6404
Abstract
We consider a system consisting of N parallel queues, served by one server. Time is slotted, and the server serves one of the queues in each time slot, according to some scheduling policy. We first characterize the exponent of the buffer overflow probability and the most likely overflow trajectories under the Longest Queue First (LQF) scheduling policy. Under statistically identical arrivals to each queue, we show that the buffer overflow exponents can be simply expressed in terms of the total system occupancy exponent of m parallel queues, for some m ≤ N. We next turn our attention to the rate of queue length information needed to operate a scheduling policy, and its relationship to the buffer overflow exponents. It is known that queue length blind policies such as processor sharing and random scheduling perform worse than the queue aware LQF policy, when it comes to buffer overflow probability. However, we show that the overflow exponent of the LQF policy can be preserved with arbitrarily infrequent queue length updates.
Keywords
probability; queueing theory; scheduling; LQF scheduling policy; buffer overflow probability; longest queue first scheduling policy; parallel queues; queue length information; statistically identical arrivals; Indexes; Processor scheduling; Queueing analysis; Scheduling; Servers; Topology; Trajectory; Buffer overflow probability; large deviations; queue length-based scheduling;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Information Theory, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9448
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TIT.2013.2268926
Filename
6532320
Link To Document