On extremal service disciplines in single-stage queueing systems

1990 ◽  
Vol 27 (2) ◽  
pp. 409-416 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rhonda Righter ◽  
J. George Shanthikumar ◽  
Genji Yamazaki

It is shown that among all work-conserving service disciplines that are independent of the future history, the first-come-first-served (FCFS) service discipline minimizes [maximizes] the average sojourn time in a G/GI/1 queueing system with new better [worse] than used in expectation (NBUE[NWUE]) service time distribution. We prove this result using a new basic identity of G/GI/1 queues that may be of independent interest. Using a relationship between the workload and the number of customers in the system with different lengths of attained service it is shown that the average sojourn time is minimized [maximized] by the least-attained-service time (LAST) service discipline when the service time has the decreasing [increasing] mean residual life (DMRL[IMRL]) property.

1990 ◽  
Vol 27 (02) ◽  
pp. 409-416 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rhonda Righter ◽  
J. George Shanthikumar ◽  
Genji Yamazaki

It is shown that among all work-conserving service disciplines that are independent of the future history, the first-come-first-served (FCFS) service discipline minimizes [maximizes] the average sojourn time in a G/GI/1 queueing system with new better [worse] than used in expectation (NBUE[NWUE]) service time distribution. We prove this result using a new basic identity of G/GI/1 queues that may be of independent interest. Using a relationship between the workload and the number of customers in the system with different lengths of attained service it is shown that the average sojourn time is minimized [maximized] by the least-attained-service time (LAST) service discipline when the service time has the decreasing [increasing] mean residual life (DMRL[IMRL]) property.


Mathematics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (8) ◽  
pp. 1277
Author(s):  
Evsey Morozov ◽  
Michele Pagano ◽  
Irina Peshkova ◽  
Alexander Rumyantsev

The motivation of mixing distributions in communication/queueing systems modeling is that some input data (e.g., service time in queueing models) may follow several distinct distributions in a single input flow. In this paper, we study the sensitivity of performance measures on proximity of the service time distributions of a multiserver system model with two-component Pareto mixture distribution of service times. The theoretical results are illustrated by numerical simulation of the M/G/c systems while using the perfect sampling approach.


1986 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
pp. 256-260 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert D. Foley

We present some non-stationary infinite-server queueing systems with stationary Poisson departure processes. In Foley (1982), it was shown that the departure process from the Mt/Gt/∞ queue was a Poisson process, possibly non-stationary. The Mt/Gt/∞ queue is an infinite-server queue with a stationary or non-stationary Poisson arrival process and a general server in which the service time of a customer may depend upon the customer's arrival time. Mirasol (1963) pointed out that the departure process from the M/G/∞ queue is a stationary Poisson process. The question arose whether there are any other Mt/Gt/∞ queueing systems with stationary Poisson departure processes. For example, if the arrival rate is periodic, is it possible to select the service-time distribution functions to fluctuate in order to compensate for the fluctuations of the arrival rate? In this situation and in more general situations, it is possible to select the server such that the system yields a stationary Poisson departure process.


1990 ◽  
Vol 27 (02) ◽  
pp. 465-468 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arie Harel

We show that the waiting time in queue and the sojourn time of every customer in the G/G/1 and G/D/c queue are jointly convex in mean interarrival time and mean service time, and also jointly convex in mean interarrival time and service rate. Counterexamples show that this need not be the case, for the GI/GI/c queue or for the D/GI/c queue, for c ≧ 2. Also, we show that the average number of customers in the M/D/c queue is jointly convex in arrival and service rates. These results are surprising in light of the negative result for the GI/GI/2 queue (Weber (1983)).


1997 ◽  
Vol 34 (03) ◽  
pp. 800-805 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vyacheslav M. Abramov

This paper consists of two parts. The first part provides a more elementary proof of the asymptotic theorem of the refusals stream for an M/GI/1/n queueing system discussed in Abramov (1991a). The central property of the refusals stream discussed in the second part of this paper is that, if the expectations of interarrival and service time of an M/GI/1/n queueing system are equal to each other, then the expectation of the number of refusals during a busy period is equal to 1. This property is extended for a wide family of single-server queueing systems with refusals including, for example, queueing systems with bounded waiting time.


2016 ◽  
Vol 2016 ◽  
pp. 1-15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sławomir Hanczewski ◽  
Adam Kaliszan ◽  
Maciej Stasiak

This article presents an approximate convolution model of a multiservice queueing system with the continuous FIFO (cFIFO) service discipline. The model makes it possible to service calls sequentially with variable bit rate, determined by unoccupied (free) resources of the multiservice server. As compared to the FIFO discipline, the cFIFO queue utilizes the resources of a multiservice server more effectively. The assumption in the model is that the queueing system is offered a mixture of independent multiservice Bernoulli-Poisson-Pascal (BPP) call streams. The article also discusses the results of modelling a number of queueing systems to which different, non-Poissonian, call streams are offered. To verify the accuracy of the model, the results of the analytical calculations are compared with the results of simulation experiments for a number of selected queueing systems. The study has confirmed the accuracy of all adopted theoretical assumptions for the proposed analytical model.


1992 ◽  
Vol 29 (4) ◽  
pp. 967-978 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rhonda Righter ◽  
J. George Shanthikumar

We show that using the FIFO service discipline at single server stations with ILR (increasing likelihood ratio) service time distributions in networks of monotone queues results in stochastically earlier departures throughout the network. The converse is true at stations with DLR (decreasing likelihood ratio) service time distributions. We use these results to establish the validity of the following comparisons:(i) The throughput of a closed network of FIFO single-server queues will be larger (smaller) when the service times are ILR (DLR) rather than exponential with the same means.(ii) The total stationary number of customers in an open network of FIFO single-server queues with Poisson external arrivals will be stochastically smaller (larger) when the service times are ILR (DLR) rather than exponential with the same means.We also give a surprising counterexample to show that although FIFO stochastically maximizes the number of departures by any time t from an isolated single-server queue with IHR (increasing hazard rate, which is weaker than ILR) service times, this is no longer true for networks of more than one queue. Thus the ILR assumption cannot be relaxed to IHR.Finally, we consider multiclass networks of exponential single-server queues, where the class of a customer at a particular station determines its service rate at that station, and show that serving the customer with the highest service rate (which is SEPT — shortest expected processing time first) results in stochastically earlier departures throughout the network, among all preemptive work-conserving policies. We also show that a cµ rule stochastically maximizes the number of non-defective service completions by any time t when there are random, agreeable, yields.


2007 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 81-106 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Vlasiou ◽  
U. Yechiali

We consider a polling system where a group of an infinite number of servers visits sequentially a set of queues. When visited, each queue is attended for a random time. Arrivals at each queue follow a Poisson process, and the service time of each individual customer is drawn from a general probability distribution function. Thus, each of the queues comprising the system is, in isolation, anM/G/∞-type queue. A job that is not completed during a visit will have a new service-time requirement sampled from the service-time distribution of the corresponding queue. To the best of our knowledge, this article is the first in which anM/G/∞-type polling system is analyzed. For this polling model, we derive the probability generating function and expected value of the queue lengths and the Laplace–Stieltjes transform and expected value of the sojourn time of a customer. Moreover, we identify the policy that maximizes the throughput of the system per cycle and conclude that under the Hamiltonian-tour approach, the optimal visiting order isindependentof the number of customers present at the various queues at the start of the cycle.


1990 ◽  
Vol 22 (03) ◽  
pp. 764-767 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ludolf E. Meester ◽  
J. George Shanthikumar

We consider a tandem queueing system with m stages and finite intermediate buffer storage spaces. Each stage has a single server and the service times are independent and exponentially distributed. There is an unlimited supply of customers in front of the first stage. For this system we show that the number of customers departing from each of the m stages during the time interval [0, t] for any t ≧ 0 is strongly stochastically increasing and concave in the buffer storage capacities. Consequently the throughput of this tandem queueing system is an increasing and concave function of the buffer storage capacities. We establish this result using a sample path recursion for the departure processes from the m stages of the tandem queueing system, that may be of independent interest. The concavity of the throughput is used along with the reversibility property of tandem queues to obtain the optimal buffer space allocation that maximizes the throughput for a three-stage tandem queue.


1991 ◽  
Vol 23 (2) ◽  
pp. 431-435 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. George Shanthikumar ◽  
Couchen Wu

In this paper we show that the waiting and the sojourn times of a customer in a single-stage, multiple-server, G/G/c queueing system are increasing and starshaped with respect to the mean service time. Usefulness of this result in the design of the optimal service speed in the G/G/c queueing system is also demonstrated.


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