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The Ethereal
Hardness of Interval Scheduling on Unrelated Machines
June 26, 2022 ยท The Ethereal ยท ๐ International Symposium on Parameterized and Exact Computation
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Authors
Danny Hermelin, Yuval Itzhaki, Hendrik Molter, Dvir Shabtay
arXiv ID
2206.12825
Category
cs.CC: Computational Complexity
Cross-listed
cs.DM,
cs.DS
Citations
1
Venue
International Symposium on Parameterized and Exact Computation
Last Checked
2 months ago
Abstract
We provide new (parameterized) computational hardness results for Interval Scheduling on Unrelated Machines. It is a classical scheduling problem motivated from just-in-time or lean manufacturing, where the goal is to complete jobs exactly at their deadline. We are given $n$ jobs and $m$ machines. Each job has a deadline, a weight, and a processing time that may be different on each machine. The goal is find a schedule that maximized the total weight of jobs completed exactly at their deadline. Note that this uniquely defines a processing time interval for each job on each machine. Interval Scheduling on Unrelated Machines is closely related to coloring interval graphs and has been thoroughly studied for several decades. However, as pointed out by Mnich and van Bevern [Computers \& Operations Research, 2018], the parameterized complexity for the number $m$ of machines as a parameter remained open. We resolve this by showing that Interval Scheduling on Unrelated Machines is W[1]-hard when parameterized by the number $m$ of machines. To this end, we prove W[1]-hardness with respect to $m$ of the special case where we have parallel machines with eligible machine sets for jobs. This answers Open Problem 8 of Mnich and van Bevern's list of 15 open problems in the parameterized complexity of scheduling [Computers \& Operations Research, 2018]. Furthermore, we resolve the computational complexity status of the unweighted version of Interval Scheduling on Unrelated Machines by proving that it is NP-complete. This answers an open question by Sung and Vlach [Journal of Scheduling, 2005].
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