Library prosa.results.ovh.edf.fully_preemptive

RTA for Fully Preemptive EDF Scheduling on Uniprocessors with Overheads

In the following, we derive a response-time analysis for EDF schedulers, assuming a workload of fully preemptive sporadic real-time tasks, characterized by arbitrary arrival curves, executing upon a uniprocessor subject to scheduling overheads. To this end, we instantiate the sequential variant of abstract Restricted-Supply Analysis (aRSA) as provided in the prosa.analysis.abstract.restricted_supply module.

Defining the System Model

Before any formal claims can be stated, an initial setup is needed to define the system model under consideration. To this end, we next introduce and define the following notions using Prosa's standard definitions and behavioral semantics:
  • the processor model,
  • tasks, jobs, and their parameters,
  • the task set and the task under analysis,
  • the sequence of job arrivals,
  • the absence of self-suspensions,
  • an arbitrary schedule of the task set, and finally,
  • an upper bound on overhead-induced delays.

Processor Model

Consider a unit-speed uniprocessor subject to scheduling overheads.
  #[local] Existing Instance overheads.processor_state.

Tasks and Jobs

Consider tasks characterized by a WCET task_cost, relative deadline task_deadline, and an arrival curve max_arrivals, ...
... and their associated jobs, where each job has a corresponding task job_task, an execution time job_cost, and an arrival time job_arrival.
  Context {Job : JobType} `{JobTask Job Task} `{JobCost Job} `{JobArrival Job}.

We assume that jobs and tasks are fully preemptive.
  #[local] Existing Instance fully_preemptive_job_model.
  #[local] Existing Instance fully_preemptive_task_model.
  #[local] Existing Instance fully_preemptive_rtc_threshold.

The Task Set and the Task Under Analysis

Consider an arbitrary task set ts, and ...
  Variable ts : seq Task.

... let tsk be any task in ts that is to be analyzed.
  Variable tsk : Task.
  Hypothesis H_tsk_in_ts : tsk \in ts.

The Job Arrival Sequence

Allow for any possible arrival sequence arr_seq consistent with the parameters of the task set ts. That is, arr_seq is a valid arrival sequence in which each job's cost is upper-bounded by its task's WCET, every job stems from a task in ts, and the number of arrivals respects each task's max_arrivals bound.
Additionally, we assume that all jobs in arr_seq have positive execution costs. This requirement is not fundamental to the analysis approach itself but reflects an artifact of the current proof structure specific to upper bounds on the total duration of overheads.

Absence of Self-Suspensions

We assume the classic (i.e., Liu & Layland) model of readiness without jitter or self-suspensions, wherein pending jobs are always ready.
  #[local] Existing Instance basic_ready_instance.

The Schedule

Consider a work-conserving, valid uniprocessor schedule with explicit overheads that corresponds to the given arrival sequence arr_seq (and hence the given task set ts).
We assume that the schedule respects the given EDF scheduling policy.
Furthermore, we require that the schedule has no superfluous preemptions; that is, preemptions occur only when strictly required by the scheduling policy (specifically, a job is never preempted by another job of equal priority).

Bounding the Total Overhead Duration

We assume that the scheduling overheads encountered in the schedule sched are bounded by the following upper bounds:
  • the maximum dispatch overhead is bounded by DB,
  • the maximum context-switch overhead is bounded by CSB, and
  • the maximum cache-related preemption delay is bounded by CRPDB.
To conservatively account for the maximum cumulative delay that task tsk may experience due to scheduling overheads, we introduce an overhead bound. This term upper-bounds the maximum cumulative duration during which processor cycles are "lost" to dispatch, context-switch, and preemption-related delays in a given interval.
For EDF scheduling, we use a generic JLFP bound, where the bound in an interval of length Δ is determined by the total number of arrivals in the system. In this case, up to n such arrivals can lead to at most 1 + 2n segments without a schedule change, each potentially incurring dispatch, context-switch, and preemption-related overhead.

Maximum Length of a Busy Interval

In order to apply aRSA, we require a bound on the maximum busy-window length. To this end, let L be any positive solution of the busy-interval "recurrence" (i.e., inequality) overhead_bound L + total_request_bound_function ts L L, as defined below.
As the lemma busy_intervals_are_bounded_rs_jlfp shows, under EDF scheduling, this condition is sufficient to guarantee that the maximum busy-window length is at most L, i.e., the length of any busy interval is bounded by L.

Response-Time Bound

Having established all necessary preliminaries, it is finally time to state the claimed response-time bound R.
A value R is a response-time bound for task tsk if, for any given offset A in the search space (w.r.t. the busy-window bound L), the response-time bound "recurrence" (i.e., inequality) has a solution F not exceeding R.
  Definition rta_recurrence_solution L R :=
     (A : duration),
      is_in_search_space ts tsk L A
       (F : duration),
        F overhead_bound F
              + task_request_bound_function tsk (A + ε)
              + bound_on_athep_workload ts tsk A F
         A + R F.

Finally, using the sequential variant of abstract restricted-supply analysis, we establish that, given a bound on the maximum busy-window length L, any such R is indeed a sound response-time bound for task tsk under fully-preemptive EDF scheduling on a unit-speed uniprocessor subject to scheduling overheads.