Papers
Topics
Authors
Recent
Assistant
AI Research Assistant
Well-researched responses based on relevant abstracts and paper content.
Custom Instructions Pro
Preferences or requirements that you'd like Emergent Mind to consider when generating responses.
Gemini 2.5 Flash
Gemini 2.5 Flash 157 tok/s
Gemini 2.5 Pro 49 tok/s Pro
GPT-5 Medium 35 tok/s Pro
GPT-5 High 31 tok/s Pro
GPT-4o 97 tok/s Pro
Kimi K2 218 tok/s Pro
GPT OSS 120B 450 tok/s Pro
Claude Sonnet 4.5 35 tok/s Pro
2000 character limit reached

Improving Nonpreemptive Multiserver Job Scheduling with Quickswap (2509.01893v1)

Published 2 Sep 2025 in cs.PF

Abstract: Modern data center workloads are composed of multiserver jobs, computational jobs that require multiple CPU cores in order to run. A data center server can run many multiserver jobs in parallel, as long as it has sufficient resources to meet their demands. However, multiserver jobs are generally stateful, meaning that job preemptions incur significant overhead from saving and reloading the state associated with running jobs. Hence, most systems try to avoid these costly job preemptions altogether. Given these constraints, a scheduling policy must determine what set of jobs to run in parallel at each moment in time to minimize the mean response time across a stream of arriving jobs. Unfortunately, simple non-preemptive policies such as FCFS may leave many cores idle, resulting in high mean response times or even system instability. Our goal is to design and analyze non-preemptive scheduling policies for multiserver jobs that maintain high system utilization to achieve low mean response time. One well-known non-preemptive policy, Most Servers First (MSF), prioritizes jobs with higher core requirements and achieves high resource utilization. However, MSF causes extreme variability in job waiting times, and can perform significantly worse than FCFS in practice. To address this, we propose and analyze a class of scheduling policies called MSF-Quick Swap (MSFQ) that performs well. MSFQ reduces the variability of job waiting times by periodically granting priority to other jobs in the system. We provide both stability results and an analysis of mean response time under MSFQ to prove that our policy dramatically outperforms MSF in the case where jobs request one core or all the cores. In more complex cases, we evaluate MSFQ in simulation. We show that, with some additional optimization, variants of the MSFQ policy can greatly outperform MSF and FCFS on real-world multiserver job workloads.

Summary

We haven't generated a summary for this paper yet.

Lightbulb Streamline Icon: https://streamlinehq.com

Continue Learning

We haven't generated follow-up questions for this paper yet.

List To Do Tasks Checklist Streamline Icon: https://streamlinehq.com

Collections

Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.