Abstract

We present a dynamic voltage scaling (DVS) technique that minimizes system-wide energy consumption for both periodic and sporadic tasks. It is known that a system consists of processors and a number of other components. Energy-aware processors can be run in different speed levels; components like memory and I/O subsystems and network interface cards can be in a standby state when they are active, but idle. Processor energy optimization solutions are not necessarily efficient from the perspective of systems. Current system-wide energy optimization studies are often limited to periodic tasks with heuristics in getting approximated solutions. In this paper, we develop an exact dynamic programming algorithm for periodic tasks on processors with practical discrete speed levels. The algorithm determines the lower bound of energy expenditure in pseudopolynomial time. An approximation algorithm is proposed to provide performance guarantee with a given bound in polynomial running time. Because of their time efficiency, both the optimization and approximation algorithms can be adapted for online scheduling of sporadic tasks with irregular task releases. We prove that system-wide energy optimization for sporadic tasks is NP-hard in the strong sense. We develop (pseudo-) polynomial-time solutions by exploiting its inherent properties.

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