scholarly journals Multi-Resource List Scheduling of Moldable Parallel Jobs under Precedence Constraints

Author(s):  
Lucas Perotin ◽  
Hongyang Sun ◽  
Padma Raghavan
1999 ◽  
Vol 10 (03) ◽  
pp. 313-327 ◽  
Author(s):  
AXEL W. KRINGS ◽  
MOSHE DROR

This paper introduces a new graph theoretical concept called strong precedence which is used to address the problem of scheduling instability is non-preemptive static list scheduling. Scheduling instability occurs when a reduction in task duration of one or more tasks causes other tasks to miss their deadline. This problem has been addressed in the past by introducing additional precedence constraints into the precedence graph representing the workload, or by limiting the depth the dispatchers scan at run-time. We present an alternative stabilization approach based on the concept of strong and weak precedence. By defining a strong precedence relation on selected subgraphs, the workload becomes inherently stable without requiring the introduction of new edges into the graph.


Constraints ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jana Koehler ◽  
Josef Bürgler ◽  
Urs Fontana ◽  
Etienne Fux ◽  
Florian Herzog ◽  
...  

AbstractCable trees are used in industrial products to transmit energy and information between different product parts. To this date, they are mostly assembled by humans and only few automated manufacturing solutions exist using complex robotic machines. For these machines, the wiring plan has to be translated into a wiring sequence of cable plugging operations to be followed by the machine. In this paper, we study and formalize the problem of deriving the optimal wiring sequence for a given layout of a cable tree. We summarize our investigations to model this cable tree wiring problem (CTW). as a traveling salesman problem with atomic, soft atomic, and disjunctive precedence constraints as well as tour-dependent edge costs such that it can be solved by state-of-the-art constraint programming (CP), Optimization Modulo Theories (OMT), and mixed-integer programming (MIP). solvers. It is further shown, how the CTW problem can be viewed as a soft version of the coupled tasks scheduling problem. We discuss various modeling variants for the problem, prove its NP-hardness, and empirically compare CP, OMT, and MIP solvers on a benchmark set of 278 instances. The complete benchmark set with all models and instance data is available on github and was included in the MiniZinc challenge 2020.


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