Title :
Effective and Efficient Scheduling of Certifiable Mixed-Criticality Sporadic Task Systems
Author :
Guan, Nan ; Ekberg, Pontus ; Stigge, Martin ; Yi, Wang
fDate :
Nov. 29 2011-Dec. 2 2011
Abstract :
An increasing trend in embedded system design is to integrate components with different levels of criticality into a shared hardware platform for better cost and power efficiency. Such mixed-criticality systems are subject to certifications at different levels of rigorousness, for validating the correctness of different subsystems on various confidence levels. The real-time scheduling of certifiable mixed-criticality systems has been recognized to be a challenging problem, where using traditional scheduling techniques may result in unacceptable resource waste. In this paper we present an algorithm called PLRS to schedule certifiable mixed-criticality sporadic tasks systems. PLRS uses fixed-job-priority scheduling, and assigns job priorities by exploring and balancing the asymmetric effects between the workload on different criticality levels. Comparing with the state-of-the-art algorithm by Li and Baruah for such systems, which we refer to as LB, PLRS is both more effective and more efficient: (i) The schedulability test of PLRS not only theoretically dominates, but also on average significantly outperforms LB´s. (ii) The run-time complexity of PLRS is polynomial (quadratic in the number of tasks), which is much more efficient than the pseudo-polynomial run-time complexity of LB.
Keywords :
computational complexity; embedded systems; polynomials; scheduling; certifiable mixed-criticality sporadic task system scheduling; embedded system design; fixed-job-priority scheduling; mixed-criticality system; polynomial; priority list reuse scheduling; real-time scheduling; run-time complexity; shared hardware platform; Complexity theory; Indexes; Polynomials; Processor scheduling; Real time systems; Schedules; Vectors; cyber-pysical system; mixed-criticality; real-time scheduling; sporadic task system;
Conference_Titel :
Real-Time Systems Symposium (RTSS), 2011 IEEE 32nd
Conference_Location :
Vienna
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4577-2000-0
DOI :
10.1109/RTSS.2011.10