
TL;DR
This paper introduces pass-and-swap queues, extending order-independent queues by allowing customers to swap positions based on a graph, and proves they have a product-form stationary distribution with applications in load distribution.
Contribution
It extends order-independent queues with a swap mechanism governed by a graph, proving product-form stationary distribution and stability conditions.
Findings
P&S queues have a product-form stationary distribution.
Derived a necessary and sufficient stability condition.
Applied to load-distribution protocols in machine clusters.
Abstract
Order-independent (OI) queues, introduced by Berezner, Kriel, and Krzesinski in 1995, expanded the family of multi-class queues that are known to have a product-form stationary distribution by allowing for intricate class-dependent service rates. This paper further broadens this family by introducing pass-and-swap (P&S) queues, an extension of OI queues where, upon a service completion, the customer that completes service is not necessarily the one that leaves the system. More precisely, we supplement the OI queue model with an undirected graph on the customer classes, which we call a swapping graph, such that there is an edge between two classes if customers of these classes can be swapped with one another. When a customer completes service, it passes over customers in the remainder of the queue until it finds a customer it can swap positions with, that is, a customer whose class is a…
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