Treffer: Learning-Augmented Energy-Aware List Scheduling for Precedence-Constrained Tasks

Title:
Learning-Augmented Energy-Aware List Scheduling for Precedence-Constrained Tasks
Source:
ACM Transactions on Modeling and Performance Evaluation of Computing Systems, 9(4), 1-24, (2024-12)
Publisher Information:
Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
Publication Year:
2024
Collection:
Caltech Authors (California Institute of Technology)
Document Type:
Fachzeitschrift article in journal/newspaper
Language:
English
DOI:
10.1145/3680278
Rights:
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess ; Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International ; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode
Accession Number:
edsbas.FFD8D703
Database:
BASE

Weitere Informationen

We study the problem of scheduling precedence-constrained tasks to balance between performance and energy consumption. We consider a system with multiple servers capable of speed scaling and seek to schedule precedence-constrained tasks to minimize a linear combination of performance and energy consumption. Inspired by the single-server setting, we propose the concept of pseudo-size for individual tasks, which is a measure of the externalities of a task in the precedence graph and is learned from historical workload data. We then propose a two-stage scheduling framework that uses a learned pseudo-size approximation and achieves a provable approximation bound on the linear combination of performance and energy consumption for both makespan and total weighted completion time, where the quality of the bound depends on the approximation quality of pseudo-sizes. We show experimentally that learning-based approaches consistently perform near optimally. ; © 2024 Copyright held by the owner/author(s). This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution International 4.0 License . ; Funding for the publications listed above has come in large part from the NSF through CNS-2146814, CPS-2136197, CNS2106403, NGSDI-2105648, AitF-1637598, CNS-1518941 and supported Jannie Yu, Yu Su and Adam Wierman