Job Scheduling Strategies for Parallel Processing [electronic resource] : 18th International Workshop, JSSPP 2014, Phoenix, AZ, USA, May 23, 2014. Revised Selected Papers / edited by Walfredo Cirne, Narayan Desai.
Material type:
TextSeries: Theoretical Computer Science and General Issues ; 8828 | Lecture Notes in Computer Science ; 8828Publisher: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2015Edition: 1st ed. 2015Description: X, 169 p. 60 illus. online resourceContent type: - text
- computer
- online resource
- 9783319157894
- Software engineering
- Computer communication systems
- Algorithms
- Application software
- Computer simulation
- Software Engineering/Programming and Operating Systems
- Computer Communication Networks
- Algorithm Analysis and Problem Complexity
- Information Systems Applications (incl. Internet)
- Simulation and Modeling
- 005.1 23
- QA76.758
E-BOOKS
| Home library | Call number | Materials specified | URL | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IMSc Library | Link to resource | Available | EBK15102 |
Bubble Task: A Dynamic Execution Throttling Method for Multi-core Resource Management -- Real-World Clustering for Task Graphs on Shared Memory Systems -- Experimental Analysis of the Tardiness of Parallel Tasks in Soft Real-time Systems -- Multi-Resource Aware Fairsharing for Heterogeneous Systems -- Priority Operators for Fairshare Scheduling -- User-Aware Metrics for Measuring Quality of Parallel Job Schedules -- Prediction of Queue Waiting Times for Metascheduling on Parallel Batch Systems -- Dynamically Scheduling a Component-Based Framework in Clusters -- How to Design a Job Scheduling Algorithm.
This book constitutes the thoroughly refereed post-conference proceedings of the 18th International Workshop on Job Scheduling Strategies for Parallel Processing, JSSPP 2014, held in Phoenix, AZ, USA, in May 2014. The 9 revised full papers presented were carefully reviewed and selected from 24 submissions. The papers cover the following topics: single-core parallelism; moving to distributed-memory, larger-scale systems, scheduling fairness; and parallel job scheduling.
There are no comments on this title.