Title :
A Practical Approach for Maximally Permissive Liveness-Enforcing Supervision of Complex Resource Allocation Systems
Author :
Nazeem, Ahmed ; Reveliotis, Spyros
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Ind. & Syst. Eng., Georgia Inst. of Technol., Atlanta, GA, USA
Abstract :
Past works towards the effective deployment of the maximally permissive liveness-enforcing supervisor (LES) for sequential resource allocation systems (RAS) have been stalled by: (i) the NP-Hardness of the computation of this policy for the majority of the considered RAS classes and (ii) the inability of the adopted more compact representations of the underlying RAS dynamics to provide an effective representation of the target policy for all RAS instantiations. This paper proposes a novel approach to the aforementioned problem, that can be perceived as a two-stage process: The first stage computes the maximally permissive LES by employing an automaton-based representation of the RAS behavior and techniques borrowed from the Ramadge & Wonham (R&W) Supervisory Control framework. The second stage seeks the development of a more compact representation for the dichotomy into admissible and inadmissible-or “safe” and “unsafe”-subspaces of the RAS state space, that is effected by the LES developed in the first stage. This compact representation is obtained by: (i) taking advantage of certain properties of the underlying subspaces and (ii) the employment of pertinent data structures. The resulting approach is also “complete,” i.e., it will return an effectively implementable LES for any given RAS instantiation. Numerical experimentation demonstrates the efficacy of the approach and establishes its ability to support the deployment of maximally permissive LES for RAS with very large structure and state spaces.
Keywords :
computational complexity; resource allocation; NP-hard problem; Ramadge and Wonham supervisory control framework; automaton-based RAS representation; maximally permissive liveness-enforcing supervision; sequential resource allocation systems; Data structures; Discrete event systems; NP-hard problem; Process control; Resource management; Supervisory control; Discrete-event systems; TRIE data structures; liveness enforcing supervision (LES); nonblocking supervisory control; resource allocation systems (RAS);
Journal_Title :
Automation Science and Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TASE.2011.2159112