Title :
Global schedulability analysis of a synchronization protocol based on replenishment-bounded overrun for compositional real-time systems
Author :
Cranen, Sjoerd ; Bril, Reinder J.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Math. & Comput. Sci., Eindhoven Univ. of Technol., Eindhoven, Netherlands
Abstract :
Hierarchical scheduling frameworks (HSFs) provide means for composing complex real-time systems from well-defined independently developed and analyzed subsystems. To support shared logical resources requiring mutual exclusive access in two-level HSFs, overrun without payback has been proposed as a mechanism to prevent budget depletion during resource access arbitrated by the stack resource policy (SRP). The same mechanism can be applied to support scheduling techniques, such as fixed-priority scheduling with deferred preemption (FPDS), that aim at a reduction of the architecture-related preemption costs and may improve the feasibility of a system. Whereas the blocking times and overrun budgets for shared logical resources will typically be much smaller than the normal budget, these values may significantly increase for scheduling techniques such as FPDS. In this paper, we therefor consider replenishment-bounded overrun, i.e. the overrun ends upon a replenishment, because the normal budget becomes available again, which allows for larger overrun budgets. We show that the global schedulability analysis for this special kind of overrun has a number of anomalies: (i) the usual theorem for critical instant does not hold, (ii) maximal blocking does not necessarily lead to a maximal response time, and (iii) it is not sufficient to analyse a fixed amount of time (say, a number of hyperperiods). We present analysis for two subsystems.
Keywords :
protocols; real-time systems; scheduling; synchronisation; architecture related preemption cost; budget depletion; complex real time system; compositional realtime system; deferred preemption; fixed priority scheduling; global schedulability analysis; hierarchical scheduling framework; maximal blocking; maximal response time; replenishment bounded overrun; resource access; shared logical resources; stack resource policy; synchronization protocol; Job shop scheduling; Processor scheduling; Real-time systems; Silicon; Synchronization; Terminology; Time factors; Fixed priority preemptive scheduling; Real time systems; Satisfiability Modulo Theories; Schedulability analysis;
Conference_Titel :
Industrial Embedded Systems (SIES), 2012 7th IEEE International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Karlsruhe
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-2685-8
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4673-2683-4
DOI :
10.1109/SIES.2012.6356568