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Energy-efficient algorithms for non-preemptive speed-scaling

Authors :
Ioannis Milis
Claire Mathieu
Vincent Cohen-Addad
Zhentao Li
Cohen-Addad, Vincent
École normale supérieure - Paris (ENS Paris)
Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)
Department of Computer Science (Brown University)
Brown University
Department of Informatics [Athens] (CS-AUEB)
Mobile Multimedia Laboratory [Athens]
Athens University of Economics and Business (AUEB)-Athens University of Economics and Business (AUEB)
Source :
Workshop on Approximation and Online Algorithms, Workshop on Approximation and Online Algorithms, Sep 2014, Warsaw, Poland. pp.107-118, Approximation and Online Algorithms ISBN: 9783319182629, WAOA
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

We improve complexity bounds for energy-efficient speed scheduling problems for both the single processor and multi-processor cases. Energy conservation has become a major concern, so revisiting traditional scheduling problems to take into account the energy consumption has been part of the agenda of the scheduling community for the past few years. We consider the energy minimizing speed scaling problem introduced by Yao et al. where we wish to schedule a set of jobs, each with a release date, deadline and work volume, on a set of identical processors. The processors may change speed as a function of time and the energy they consume is the $\alpha$th power of its speed. The objective is then to find a feasible schedule which minimizes the total energy used. We show that in the setting with an arbitrary number of processors where all work volumes are equal, there is a $2(1+\varepsilon)(5(1+\varepsilon))^{\alpha -1}\tilde{B}_{\alpha}=O_{\alpha}(1)$ approximation algorithm, where $\tilde{B}_{\alpha}$ is the generalized Bell number. This is the first constant factor algorithm for this problem. This algorithm extends to general unequal processor-dependent work volumes, up to losing a factor of $(\frac{(1+r)r}{2})^{\alpha}$ in the approximation, where $r$ is the maximum ratio between two work volumes. We then show this latter problem is APX-hard, even in the special case when all release dates and deadlines are equal and $r$ is 4. In the single processor case, we introduce a new linear programming formulation of speed scaling and prove that its integrality gap is at most $12^{\alpha -1}$. As a corollary, we obtain a $(12(1+\varepsilon))^{\alpha -1}$ approximation algorithm where there is a single processor, improving on the previous best bound of $2^{\alpha-1}(1+\varepsilon)^{\alpha}\tilde{B}_{\alpha}$ when $\alpha \ge 25$.

Details

Language :
English
ISBN :
978-3-319-18262-9
ISBNs :
9783319182629
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Workshop on Approximation and Online Algorithms, Workshop on Approximation and Online Algorithms, Sep 2014, Warsaw, Poland. pp.107-118, Approximation and Online Algorithms ISBN: 9783319182629, WAOA
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a48ff15a62ae4d249d692e3b29ef4f5e