Abstract
This study addresses a two-machine job-shop scheduling problem with fixed lower and upper bounds on the job processing times. An exact value of the job duration remains unknown until completing the job. The objective is to minimize a schedule length (makespan). It is investigated how to best execute a schedule, if the job processing time may be equal to any real number from the given (closed) interval. Scheduling decisions consist of the off-line phase and the on-line phase of scheduling. Using the fixed lower and upper bounds on the job processing times available at the off-line phase, a scheduler may determine a minimal dominant set of schedules (minimal DS), which is based on the proven sufficient conditions for a schedule dominance. The DS optimally covers all possible realizations of the uncertain (interval) processing times, i.e., for each feasible scenario, there exists at least one optimal schedule in the minimal DS. The DS enables a scheduler to make the on-line scheduling decision, if a local information on completing some jobs becomes known. The stability approach enables a scheduler to choose optimal schedules for most feasible scenarios. The on-line scheduling algorithms have been developed with the asymptotic complexity O(n2) for n given jobs. The computational experiment shows the effectiveness of these algorithms.
Subject
General Mathematics,Engineering (miscellaneous),Computer Science (miscellaneous)
Cited by
5 articles.
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