A Note on the EDF Preemption Behavior in “Rate Monotonic Versus EDF: Judgment Day” PROJECT TITLE :A Note on the EDF Preemption Behavior in “Rate Monotonic Versus EDF: Judgment Day”ABSTRACT:In G. C. Buttazzo, Real-Time Syst., vol. 29, no. one, pp. five-26, 2005, the author empirically compared earliest deadline initial (EDF) and rate monotonic (RM) scheduling algorithms and made some EDF preemption behavior observations based on data obtained from the primary a thousand time units of scheduling activities. However, primarily based on check settings given in (G. C. Buttazzo, Real-Time Syst., vol. 29, no. 1, pp. 5-26, 2005), the first one thousand time units occupies solely a tiny share of the complete task set's hyper-amount. We have a tendency to extend EDF preemption behavior study by extending scheduling activities from the first small share of a hyper-period of a given task to the entire hyper-amount. The extended experiments indicate that the number of preemptions occurred at the start of a task set's hyper-amount will not essentially represent the trend for the entire hyper-period. Hence, comparisons and conclusions made primarily based on a little share of a scheduling interval over a task set's hyper-period may not be accurate. Second, the full range of preemptions within a task set's hyper-amount will not decrease when the task set total utilization increases which is different from the observation obtained in (G. C. Buttazzo, Real-Time Syst., vol. 29, no. 1, pp. 5-26, 2005). We tend to also investigate the impact of execution time differences among tasks on the preemption behavior. Did you like this research project? To get this research project Guidelines, Training and Code... Click Here facebook twitter google+ linkedin stumble pinterest Nonfragile Distributed Filtering for T–S Fuzzy Systems in Sensor Networks Scatter reduction of the 50-60 Hz breakdown voltage test for insulating liquids