Proceedings of the Twenty-Fifth Annual ACM Symposium on Parallelism in Algorithms and Architectures 2013
DOI: 10.1145/2486159.2486169
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Non-monetary fair scheduling

Abstract: We consider a multi-organizational system in which each organization contributes processors to the global pool but also jobs to be processed on the common resources. The fairness of the scheduling algorithm is essential for the stability and even for the existence of such systems (as organizations may refuse to join an unfair system).We consider on-line, non-clairvoyant scheduling of sequential jobs. The started jobs cannot be stopped, canceled, preempted, or moved to other processors. We consider identical pr… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1

Citation Types

0
1
0

Year Published

2014
2014
2019
2019

Publication Types

Select...
5
1

Relationship

0
6

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 20 publications
(1 citation statement)
references
References 44 publications
0
1
0
Order By: Relevance
“…Results are trace-based simulations over a period of one month, but the study is performed in a clairvoyant context. (Skowron & Rzadca, 2013) proposed an online and non-clairvoyant algorithm to schedule sequential jobs on distributed systems. They consider a non-clairvoyant model where job's processing time is unknown until the job completes.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Results are trace-based simulations over a period of one month, but the study is performed in a clairvoyant context. (Skowron & Rzadca, 2013) proposed an online and non-clairvoyant algorithm to schedule sequential jobs on distributed systems. They consider a non-clairvoyant model where job's processing time is unknown until the job completes.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%