TY - JOUR
T1 - Flexible Mixed-Criticality Scheduling with Dynamic Slack Management
AU - Dong, Xinyang
AU - Chen, Gang
AU - Lv, Mingsong
AU - Pang, Weiguang
AU - Yi, Wang
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 The Author(s).
PY - 2021/8
Y1 - 2021/8
N2 - Mixed-criticality (MC) system has attracted a lot of research attention in the past few years for its resource efficiency. Recent work attempted to provide a new MC model, the so-called Flexible Mixed-Criticality (FMC) task model, to relax the pessimistic assumptions in classic MC scheduling. However, in FMC, the behavior of MC tasks is still analyzed in offline stage. The run-Time behavior such as dynamic slack has not yet been studied in FMC scheduling framework. In this paper, we present a utilization-based slack scheduling framework for FMC tasks. In particular, we monitor task execution on run time and collect dynamic slacks generated by task early completion. And these slacks can then be used either by high-criticality tasks to reduce mode-switches, or by low-criticality tasks so that less suspensions are triggered with more execution time, and thus quality of service is improved. We evaluate our approach with extensive simulations, and experiment results demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed approaches.
AB - Mixed-criticality (MC) system has attracted a lot of research attention in the past few years for its resource efficiency. Recent work attempted to provide a new MC model, the so-called Flexible Mixed-Criticality (FMC) task model, to relax the pessimistic assumptions in classic MC scheduling. However, in FMC, the behavior of MC tasks is still analyzed in offline stage. The run-Time behavior such as dynamic slack has not yet been studied in FMC scheduling framework. In this paper, we present a utilization-based slack scheduling framework for FMC tasks. In particular, we monitor task execution on run time and collect dynamic slacks generated by task early completion. And these slacks can then be used either by high-criticality tasks to reduce mode-switches, or by low-criticality tasks so that less suspensions are triggered with more execution time, and thus quality of service is improved. We evaluate our approach with extensive simulations, and experiment results demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed approaches.
KW - Dynamic slack management
KW - flexible mixed-criticality system
KW - utilization-based analysis
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85114556318
U2 - 10.1142/S0218126621503060
DO - 10.1142/S0218126621503060
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85114556318
SN - 0218-1266
VL - 30
JO - Journal of Circuits, Systems and Computers
JF - Journal of Circuits, Systems and Computers
IS - 10
M1 - 2150190
ER -