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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Kuro kolonėlių valdymo sistemos tyrimas / The analysis of fuel pump management system

Vaičys, Vytautas 25 May 2006 (has links)
This document is a master’s thesis analyzing an automated fuel pump management system. In the first chapters we take a general overview of the system and the main problems that we will be facing during the planning and design phases of the project. Later we propose and analyze possible solutions for these problems. Technical system information is revealed in the later chapters. Functional and non functional requirements are discussed along with the main UML diagrams. The research phase of the thesis provides detailed system analysis and software quality reports which later are used to create proposed changes to the system. These changes are analyzed, designed and coded in the final - experimental part of the thesis. The main proposal is to convert the system architecture from flow driven to event driven. This change helps to solve several uncovered architectural problems as well as improve the general quality of the system. These changes are tested and analyzed in the experimental chapter of the thesis and finally the conclusions are made. The main conclusion is that the proposed architectural changes were chosen correctly. This is also supported by the experimental data.
2

Group-EDF: A New Approach and an Efficient Non-Preemptive Algorithm for Soft Real-Time Systems

Li, Wenming 08 1900 (has links)
Hard real-time systems in robotics, space and military missions, and control devices are specified with stringent and critical time constraints. On the other hand, soft real-time applications arising from multimedia, telecommunications, Internet web services, and games are specified with more lenient constraints. Real-time systems can also be distinguished in terms of their implementation into preemptive and non-preemptive systems. In preemptive systems, tasks are often preempted by higher priority tasks. Non-preemptive systems are gaining interest for implementing soft-real applications on multithreaded platforms. In this dissertation, I propose a new algorithm that uses a two-level scheduling strategy for scheduling non-preemptive soft real-time tasks. Our goal is to improve the success ratios of the well-known earliest deadline first (EDF) approach when the load on the system is very high and to improve the overall performance in both underloaded and overloaded conditions. Our approach, known as group-EDF (gEDF), is based on dynamic grouping of tasks with deadlines that are very close to each other, and using a shortest job first (SJF) technique to schedule tasks within the group. I believe that grouping tasks dynamically with similar deadlines and utilizing secondary criteria, such as minimizing the total execution time can lead to new and more efficient real-time scheduling algorithms. I present results comparing gEDF with other real-time algorithms including, EDF, best-effort, and guarantee scheme, by using randomly generated tasks with varying execution times, release times, deadlines and tolerances to missing deadlines, under varying workloads. Furthermore, I implemented the gEDF algorithm in the Linux kernel and evaluated gEDF for scheduling real applications.
3

A Study Of Genetic Representation Schemes For Scheduling Soft Real-Time Systems

Bugde, Amit 13 May 2006 (has links)
This research presents a hybrid algorithm that combines List Scheduling (LS) with a Genetic Algorithm (GA) for constructing non-preemptive schedules for soft real-time parallel applications represented as directed acyclic graphs (DAGs). The execution time requirements of the applications' tasks are assumed to be stochastic and are represented as probability distribution functions. The performance in terms of schedule lengths for three different genetic representation schemes are evaluated and compared for a number of different DAGs. The approaches presented in this research produce shorter schedules than HLFET, a popular LS approach for all of the sample problems. Of the three genetic representation schemes investigated, PosCT, the technique that allows the GA to learn which tasks to delay in order to allow other tasks to complete produced the shortest schedules for a majority of the sample DAGs.

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