6533b7dcfe1ef96bd12716cc

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Scheduling on Two Types of Resources: a Survey

Bertrand SimonClement MommessinGiorgio LucarelliLoris MarchalOlivier BeaumontLionel Eyraud-duboisLouis-claude CanonDenis Trystram

subject

FOS: Computer and information sciences020203 distributed computingScheduleGeneral Computer ScienceComputer scienceDistributed computingmedia_common.quotation_subject0102 computer and information sciences02 engineering and technology01 natural sciencesTheoretical Computer ScienceScheduling (computing)Computer Science - Distributed Parallel and Cluster Computing010201 computation theory & mathematics0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringQuality (business)Distributed Parallel and Cluster Computing (cs.DC)[INFO.INFO-DC]Computer Science [cs]/Distributed Parallel and Cluster Computing [cs.DC]Implementationmedia_common

description

International audience; We study the problem of executing an application represented by a precedence task graph on a parallel machine composed of standard computing cores and accelerators. Contrary to most existing approaches, we distinguish the allocation and the scheduling phases and we mainly focus on the allocation part of the problem: choose the most appropriate type of computing unit for each task. We address both off-line and on-line settings and design generic scheduling approaches. In the first case, we establish strong lower bounds on the worst-case performance of a known approach based on Linear Programming for solving the allocation problem. Then, we refine the scheduling phase and we replace the greedy List Scheduling policy used in this approach by a better ordering of the tasks. Although this modification leads to the same approximability guarantees, it performs much better in practice. We also extend this algorithm to more types of computing units, achieving an approximation ratio which depends on the number of different types. In the on-line case, we assume that the tasks arrive in any, not known in advance, order which respects the precedence relations and the scheduler has to take irrevocable decisions about their allocation and execution. In this setting, we propose the first on-line scheduling algorithm which takes into account precedences. Our algorithm is based on adequate rules for selecting the type of processor where to allocate the tasks and it achieves a constant factor approximation guarantee if the ratio of the number of CPUs over the number of GPUs is bounded. Finally, all the previous algorithms for hybrid architectures have been experimented on a large number of simulations built on actual libraries. These simulations assess the good practical behavior of the algorithms with respect to the state-of-the-art solutions, whenever these exist, or baseline algorithms.

10.1145/3387110https://inria.hal.science/hal-02432381