Artículos de revistas
Scheduling in a random environment: stability and asymptotic optimality
Fecha
2013-02Registro en:
Ayesta, U.; Erauskin, M.; Jonckheere, Matthieu Thimothy Samson; Verloop, M.; Scheduling in a random environment: stability and asymptotic optimality; Institute Of Electrical And Electronics Engineers; Ieee-acm Transactions On Networking; 21; 1; 2-2013; 258-271
1063-6692
Autor
Ayesta, U.
Erauskin, M.
Jonckheere, Matthieu Thimothy Samson
Verloop, M.
Resumen
We investigate the scheduling of a common resource between several concurrent users when the feasible transmission rate of each user varies randomly over time. Time is slotted and users arrive and depart upon service completion. This may model for example the flow-level behavior of end-users in a narrowband HDR wireless channel (CDMA 1xEV-DO). As performance criteria we consider the stability of the system and the mean delay experienced by the users. Given the complexity of the problem we investigate the fluid-scaled system, which allows to obtain important results and insights for the original system: (1) We characterize for a large class of scheduling policies the stability conditions and identify a set of maximum stable policies, giving in each time slot preference to users being in their best possible channel condition. We find in particular that many opportunistic scheduling policies like Score-Based [8], Proportionally Best [1] or Potential Improvement [4] are stable under the maximum stability conditions, whereas the opportunistic scheduler Relative-Best [9] or the c-rule are not. (2) We show that choosing the right tie-breaking rule is crucial for the performance (e.g. average delay) as perceived by a user. We prove that a policy is asymptotically optimal if it is maximum stable and the tie-breaking rule gives priority to the user with the highest departure probability. We will refer to such tiebreaking rule as myopic. (3) We derive the growth rates of the number of users in the system in overload settings under various policies, which give additional insights on the performance. (4) We conclude that simple priority-index policies with the myopic tie-breaking rule, are stable and asymptotically optimal. All our findings are validated with extensive numerical experiments.