Title :
Scheduling divisible loads on heterogeneous linear daisy chain networks with arbitrary processor release times
Author :
Veeravalli, Bharadwaj ; Wong Han Min
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Nat. Univ. of Singapore, Singapore
fDate :
3/1/2004 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
The problem of distributing and processing a divisible load in a heterogeneous linear network of processors with arbitrary processors release times is considered. A divisible load is very large in size and has computationally intensive CPU requirements. Further, it has the property that the load can be partitioned arbitrarily into any number of portions and can be scheduled onto processors independently for computation. The load is assumed to arrive at one of the farthest end processors, referred to as boundary processors, for processing. The processors in the network are assumed to have nonzero release times, i.e., the time instants from which the processors are available for processing the divisible load. Our objective is to design a load distribution strategy by taking into account the release times of the processors in such a way that the entire processing time of the load is a minimum. We consider two generic cases in which all processors have identical release times and when all processors have arbitrary release times. We adopt both the single and multiinstallment strategies proposed in the divisible load scheduling literature in our design of load distribution strategies, wherever necessary, to achieve a minimum processing time. Finally, when optimal strategies cannot be realized, we propose two heuristic strategies, one for the identical case, and the other for nonidentical release times case, respectively. Several conditions are derived to determine whether or not optimal load distribution exists and illustrative examples are provided for the ease of understanding.
Keywords :
communication complexity; computer networks; parallel processing; processor scheduling; resource allocation; communication delays; divisible loads; heterogeneous linear daisy chain network; load distribution strategy; processor finish time; processor release time; processor scheduling; Biological control systems; Biological system modeling; Biology computing; Communication system control; Computational modeling; Computer networks; Control system synthesis; Distribution strategy; Large-scale systems; Processor scheduling;
Journal_Title :
Parallel and Distributed Systems, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TPDS.2004.1264811