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Competitive on-line scheduling of continuous-media streams

Garofalakis Minos, Ioannidis, Yannis, Özden Banu , Silberschatz Avi

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URI: http://purl.tuc.gr/dl/dias/26624F19-FEBE-40A7-AA37-D80C07A8D93C
Year 2002
Type of Item Peer-Reviewed Journal Publication
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Bibliographic Citation M. Garofalakis, Y. Ioannidis, B. Özden and A. Silberschatz, "Competitive on-line scheduling of continuous-media streams", J. Comput. Syst. Sci., vo. 64, no. 2, pp. 219-248, Mar. 2002. doi:10.1006/jcss.2001.1799 https://doi.org/10.1006/jcss.2001.1799
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Summary

Multimedia applications require a guaranteed level of service for accessing continuous-media data. To obtain such guarantees, the database server where the data are residing must employ an admission control scheme to limit the number of clients that can be served concurrently. We investigate the problem of on-line admission control, where the decision of whether to accept or reject a request must be made without any knowledge about future requests. Employing competitive analysis techniques, we address the problem in its most general form with the following key contributions: (1) We prove a tight upper bound on the competitive ratio of the conventional Work-Conserving (W/C) policy, showing that it is within a factor 1+Δ/1-ρ of the optimal clairvoyant strategy, where Δ is the ratio of the maximum to minimum request length (i.e., time duration), and ρ is the maximum fraction of the server's bandwidth that a request can demand; (2) we prove a lower bound of Ω(log Δ\1-ρ) on the competitive ratio of any deterministic or randomized admission control scheme, demonstrating an exponential gap between greedy and optimal on-line solutions; (3) we propose simple deterministic schemes based on the idea of bandwidth prepartitioning that guarantee competitive ratios within a small constant factor of log Δ (i.e., they are provably near-optimal) if ρ < 1/⌈log Δ⌉ and (4) we introduce a novel admission control policy that partitions the server bandwidth based on the expected popularities of different request lengths and experimentally demonstrate its benefits compared to W C.

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