269 research outputs found
A survey of scheduling problems with setup times or costs
Author name used in this publication: C. T. NgAuthor name used in this publication: T. C. E. Cheng2007-2008 > Academic research: refereed > Publication in refereed journalAccepted ManuscriptPublishe
Algorithms for Scheduling Problems
This edited book presents new results in the area of algorithm development for different types of scheduling problems. In eleven chapters, algorithms for single machine problems, flow-shop and job-shop scheduling problems (including their hybrid (flexible) variants), the resource-constrained project scheduling problem, scheduling problems in complex manufacturing systems and supply chains, and workflow scheduling problems are given. The chapters address such subjects as insertion heuristics for energy-efficient scheduling, the re-scheduling of train traffic in real time, control algorithms for short-term scheduling in manufacturing systems, bi-objective optimization of tortilla production, scheduling problems with uncertain (interval) processing times, workflow scheduling for digital signal processor (DSP) clusters, and many more
Order Acceptance and Scheduling: A Taxonomy and Review
Over the past 20 years, the topic of order acceptance has attracted considerable attention from those who study scheduling and those who practice it. In a firm that strives to align its functions so that profit is maximized, the coordination of capacity with demand may require that business sometimes be turned away. In particular, there is a trade-off between the revenue brought in by a particular order, and all of its associated costs of processing. The present study focuses on the body of research that approaches this trade-off by considering two decisions: which orders to accept for processing, and how to schedule them. This paper presents a taxonomy and a review of this literature, catalogs its contributions and suggests opportunities for future research in this area
Optimal Algorithms for Scheduling under Time-of-Use Tariffs
We consider a natural generalization of classical scheduling problems in
which using a time unit for processing a job causes some time-dependent cost
which must be paid in addition to the standard scheduling cost. We study the
scheduling objectives of minimizing the makespan and the sum of (weighted)
completion times. It is not difficult to derive a polynomial-time algorithm for
preemptive scheduling to minimize the makespan on unrelated machines. The
problem of minimizing the total (weighted) completion time is considerably
harder, even on a single machine. We present a polynomial-time algorithm that
computes for any given sequence of jobs an optimal schedule, i.e., the optimal
set of time-slots to be used for scheduling jobs according to the given
sequence. This result is based on dynamic programming using a subtle analysis
of the structure of optimal solutions and a potential function argument. With
this algorithm, we solve the unweighted problem optimally in polynomial time.
For the more general problem, in which jobs may have individual weights, we
develop a polynomial-time approximation scheme (PTAS) based on a dual
scheduling approach introduced for scheduling on a machine of varying speed. As
the weighted problem is strongly NP-hard, our PTAS is the best possible
approximation we can hope for.Comment: 17 pages; A preliminary version of this paper with a subset of
results appeared in the Proceedings of MFCS 201
Advances and Novel Approaches in Discrete Optimization
Discrete optimization is an important area of Applied Mathematics with a broad spectrum of applications in many fields. This book results from a Special Issue in the journal Mathematics entitled ‘Advances and Novel Approaches in Discrete Optimization’. It contains 17 articles covering a broad spectrum of subjects which have been selected from 43 submitted papers after a thorough refereeing process. Among other topics, it includes seven articles dealing with scheduling problems, e.g., online scheduling, batching, dual and inverse scheduling problems, or uncertain scheduling problems. Other subjects are graphs and applications, evacuation planning, the max-cut problem, capacitated lot-sizing, and packing algorithms
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