Thermal-Aware Schedulability Analysis for Fixed-Priority Non-preemptive Real-Time Systems

Technology advances in microprocessor design have resulted in high device density and performance during the last decades. More components are fabricated on the chip die and millions, if not billions, of instructions can now be executed within microseconds. A consequence of this advancement is heat...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inProceedings - Real-Time Systems Symposium pp. 154 - 166
Main Authors Perez Rodriguez, Javier, Meumeu Yomsi, Patrick
Format Conference Proceeding
LanguageEnglish
Published IEEE 01.12.2019
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text
ISSN2576-3172
DOI10.1109/RTSS46320.2019.00024

Cover

More Information
Summary:Technology advances in microprocessor design have resulted in high device density and performance during the last decades. More components are fabricated on the chip die and millions, if not billions, of instructions can now be executed within microseconds. A consequence of this advancement is heat dissipation by the microprocessors. In this context, elevated on-chip temperature issues have become an important subject for the design of future generations of microprocessors, especially in avionics and automotive industries. In this paper, we address the scheduling problem of non-preemptive periodic tasks on a single processor platform under thermal-aware design. We assume that the tasks are scheduled by following any Fixed-Task-Priority (FTP) scheduler (e.g., Rate Monotonic (RM) or Deadline Monotonic (DM)) and we propose a unique framework wherein we capture both the temporal and thermal behavior of the system. Then, we present two new thermal-aware scheduling strategies, referred to as NP-HBC and NP-CBH, to keep the system temperature within specified parameters and we derive their respective schedulability analysis. Finally, we evaluate the performance of the proposed theoretical results through intensive simulations.
ISSN:2576-3172
DOI:10.1109/RTSS46320.2019.00024