Abstract

This paper is devoted to the study of a resource-constrained scheduling problem, the Process Move Programming problem, which arises in relation to the operability of certain high availability real-time distributed systems. Informally, this problem consists, starting from an arbitrary initial distribution of processes on the processors of a distributed system, in finding the least disruptive sequence of operations (non-impacting process migrations or temporary process interruptions) at the end of which the system ends up in another predefined arbitrary state. The main constraint is that the capacity of the processors must not be exceeded during the reconfiguration. After a brief survey of the literature, we prove the NP-hardness of the problem and exhibit a few polynomial special cases. We then present a branch-and-bound algorithm for the general case along with computational results demonstrating its practical relevance. The paper is concluded by a discussion on further research.

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