Title :
Task-Oriented Queueing: An Analysis Tool for Software Design of Communication Processing Systems
Author_Institution :
Rochester Univ., Rochester, NY
fDate :
3/1/1986 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Jobs associated with messages arriving to a communication processing system (CPS) can be described as ordered sets of prioritized tasks, where each task represents the execution of some part of the system´s software. The service system of the CPS consists of a collection of queues, one for each distinct priority, serviced by a single server under a preemptive resume discipline. The routing of the job through this collection of queues is defined by a job´s priority vector which specifies the priority at which each task in the job is to execute. For example, if a two-task job´s priority vector is (3, 2), then the job first joins the priority 3 queue, obtains service for the first task, then joins the priority 2 queue. In a previous paper, the author and a colleague described a method through which average delays in such task-oriented processing systems could be computed for the special case in which all jobs have identical structure. This paper presents a substantially simplified version of the analysis methodology presented previously and extends that work to the case of a finite number of job classes, each job class having a finite number of tasks.
Keywords :
Communication system software; Queued communications; Communication system software; Communications Society; Delay; Power system modeling; Queueing analysis; Resumes; Routing; Software design; Software systems; Telecommunication computing;
Journal_Title :
Communications, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TCOM.1986.1096523