Title :
A model of hierarchical real-time virtual resources
Author :
Feng, Xiang ; Mok, Aloysius K.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Texas Univ., Austin, TX, USA
Abstract :
A real-time virtual resource is an abstraction for resource sharing where application task groups must meet timing constraints and knowledge of all the timing requirements may not be available for a global schedulability analysis, such as is the case in the open system environment. In a 2001 paper, we introduced the notion of a real-time virtual resource which operates at a fraction of the rate of the shared physical resource and whose rate of service provision varies with time but is bounded. The shared resource is partitioned into real-time virtual resources by a resource-level scheduler such that each real-time virtual resource is accessible only by an individual application task group; tasks within the same task group are scheduled by an application-task-level scheduler that is specialized to the real-time requirements of the tasks in the group. In this paper we propose a hierarchical real-time virtual resource model that permits resource partitioning to be extended to multiple levels. Through this model, partitions on each level are scheduled as if they had access to a dedicated resource and there is minimal interference between neighboring partition levels. We also investigate the partitioning of real-time virtual resources subject to scheduling quantum requirements.
Keywords :
open systems; processor scheduling; real-time systems; timing; application task groups; global schedulability analysis; hierarchical real-time virtual resource model; open system environment; resource sharing; resource-level scheduler; scheduling quantum requirements; service provision rate; shared resource partitioning; timing constraints; timing requirements; Application software; Delay; Interference; Jitter; Open systems; Processor scheduling; Programming profession; Real time systems; Resource management; Timing;
Conference_Titel :
Real-Time Systems Symposium, 2002. RTSS 2002. 23rd IEEE
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-1851-6
DOI :
10.1109/REAL.2002.1181559