15,828 research outputs found
Approximation Results for Preemptive Stochastic Online Scheduling
We present first constant performance guarantees for preemptive stochastic scheduling to minimize the sum of weighted completion times. For scheduling jobs with release dates on identical parallel machines we derive policies with a guaranteed performance ratio of 2 which matches the currently best known result for the corresponding deterministic online problem. Our policies apply to the recently introduced stochastic online scheduling model inwhich jobs arrive online over time. In contrast to the previously considered nonpreemptivesetting, our preemptive policies extensively utilize information on processing time distributions other than the first (and second) moments. In order to derive our results we introduce a new nontrivial lower bound on the expected value of an unknown optimal policy that we derive from an optimal policy for the basic problem on a single machine without release dates. This problem is known to be solved optimally by a Gittins index priority rule. This priority index also inspires the design of our policies.computer science applications;
Greed Works -- Online Algorithms For Unrelated Machine Stochastic Scheduling
This paper establishes performance guarantees for online algorithms that
schedule stochastic, nonpreemptive jobs on unrelated machines to minimize the
expected total weighted completion time. Prior work on unrelated machine
scheduling with stochastic jobs was restricted to the offline case, and
required linear or convex programming relaxations for the assignment of jobs to
machines. The algorithms introduced in this paper are purely combinatorial. The
performance bounds are of the same order of magnitude as those of earlier work,
and depend linearly on an upper bound on the squared coefficient of variation
of the jobs' processing times. Specifically for deterministic processing times,
without and with release times, the competitive ratios are 4 and 7.216,
respectively. As to the technical contribution, the paper shows how dual
fitting techniques can be used for stochastic and nonpreemptive scheduling
problems.Comment: Preliminary version appeared in IPCO 201
Stochastic scheduling on unrelated machines
Two important characteristics encountered in many real-world scheduling problems are heterogeneous machines/processors and a certain degree of uncertainty about the actual sizes of jobs. The first characteristic entails machine dependent processing times of jobs and is captured by the classical unrelated machine scheduling model.The second characteristic is adequately addressed by stochastic processing times of jobs as they are studied in classical stochastic scheduling models. While there is an extensive but separate literature for the two scheduling models, we study for the first time a combined model that takes both characteristics into account simultaneously. Here, the processing time of job on machine is governed by random variable , and its actual realization becomes known only upon job completion. With being the given weight of job , we study the classical objective to minimize the expected total weighted completion time , where is the completion time of job . By means of a novel time-indexed linear programming relaxation, we compute in polynomial time a scheduling policy with performance guarantee . Here, is arbitrarily small, and is an upper bound on the squared coefficient of variation of the processing times. We show that the dependence of the performance guarantee on is tight, as we obtain a lower bound for the type of policies that we use. When jobs also have individual release dates , our bound is . Via , currently best known bounds for deterministic scheduling are contained as a special case
Lower bounds for Smith's rule in stochastic machine scheduling
We consider the problem to minimize the weighted sum of completion times in nonpreemptive parallel machine scheduling. In a landmark paper from 1986, Kawaguchi and Kyan [5] showed that scheduling the jobs according to the WSPT rule -also known as Smith's rule- has a performance guarantee of . They also gave an instance to show that this bound is tight. We consider the stochastic variant of this problem in which the processing times are exponentially distributed random variables. We show,somehow counterintuitively, that the performance guarantee of the WSEPT rule, the stochastic analogue of WSPT, is not better than 1.229. This constitutes the first lower bound for WSEPT in this setting, and in particular, it shows that even with exponentially distributed processing times, stochastic scheduling has somewhat nastier worst-case examples than deterministic scheduling. In that respect, our analysis sheds new light on the fundamental differences between deterministic and stochastic scheduling
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