Makespan Minimization with OR-Precedence Constraints
We consider a variant of the NP-hard problem of assigning jobs to machines to minimize the completion time of the last job. Usually, precedence constraints are given by a partial order on the set of jobs, and each job requires all its predecessors to be completed before it can start. In his seminal...
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          | Main Author | |
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| Format | Journal Article | 
| Language | English | 
| Published | 
          
        18.07.2019
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| Online Access | Get full text | 
| DOI | 10.48550/arxiv.1907.08111 | 
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| Summary: | We consider a variant of the NP-hard problem of assigning jobs to machines to
minimize the completion time of the last job. Usually, precedence constraints
are given by a partial order on the set of jobs, and each job requires all its
predecessors to be completed before it can start. In his seminal paper, Graham
(1966) presented a simple 2-approximation algorithm, and, more than 40 years
later, Svensson (2010) proved that 2 is essentially the best approximation
ratio one can hope for in general. In this paper, we consider a different type
of precedence relation that has not been discussed as extensively and is called
OR-precedence. In order for a job to start, we require that at least one of its
predecessors is completed - in contrast to all its predecessors. Additionally,
we assume that each job has a release date before which it must not start. We
prove that Graham's algorithm has an approximation guarantee of 2 also in this
setting, and present a polynomial-time algorithm that solves the problem to
optimality, if preemptions are allowed. The latter result is in contrast to
classical precedence constraints, for which Ullman (1975) showed that the
preemptive variant is already NP-hard. Our algorithm generalizes a result of
Johannes (2005) who gave a polynomial-time algorithm for unit processing time
jobs subject to OR-precedence constraints, but without release dates. The
performance guarantees presented here match the best-known ones for special
cases where classical precedence constraints and OR-precedence constraints
coincide. | 
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| DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.1907.08111 |