Abstract

Despite the significant interest, in the last years, in probabilistic scheduling and probabilistic timing analysis, the interrelation between them has been scarcely addressed. Probabilistic scheduling approaches typically build on a series of assumptions on the probabilistic behavior of each task - or single jobs activations - that have not been shown to be entirely fulfilled by the distributions computed with probabilistic timing analysis. This paper aims at providing a clear understanding of probabilistic Worst-Case Execution Time distributions (pWCET) as a common concept of probabilistic timing and schedulability analysis. We focus on independence of pWCET estimates as the main concern in the application of probabilistic scheduling, with particular emphasis on measurement-based probabilistic timing analyses, for which independence across pWCET estimates may not be guaranteed. We relate pWCET (in)dependence to the platform-induced timing dependencies that occur among tasks, and even jobs of the same task. We conclude that independent pWCET distributions can be obtained, even if dependencies exist, by either controlling the measurement protocol, or by deriving distinct pWCET estimates for particular instances of a task.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call