TY - GEN
T1 - Scheduling hard real-time garbage collection
AU - Kalibera, Tomas
AU - Pizlo, Filip
AU - Hosking, Antony L.
AU - Vitek, Jan
PY - 2009
Y1 - 2009
N2 - Managed languages such as Java and C# are increasingly being considered for hard real-time applications because of their productivity and software engineering advantages. Automatic memory management, or garbage collection, is a key enabler for robust, reusable libraries, yet remains a challenge for analysis and implementation of real-time execution environments. This paper comprehensively compares the two leading approaches to hard real-time garbage collection. While there are many design decisions involved in selecting a real-time garbage collection algorithm, for time-based garbage collectors researchers and practitioners remain undecided as to whether to choose periodic scheduling or slack-based scheduling. A significant impediment to valid experimental comparison is that the commercial implementations use completely different proprietary infrastructures. Here, we present Minuteman, a framework for experimenting with real-time collection algorithms in the context of a high-performance execution environment for real-time Java. We provide the first comparison of the two approaches, both experimentally using realistic workloads, and analytically in terms of schedulability.
AB - Managed languages such as Java and C# are increasingly being considered for hard real-time applications because of their productivity and software engineering advantages. Automatic memory management, or garbage collection, is a key enabler for robust, reusable libraries, yet remains a challenge for analysis and implementation of real-time execution environments. This paper comprehensively compares the two leading approaches to hard real-time garbage collection. While there are many design decisions involved in selecting a real-time garbage collection algorithm, for time-based garbage collectors researchers and practitioners remain undecided as to whether to choose periodic scheduling or slack-based scheduling. A significant impediment to valid experimental comparison is that the commercial implementations use completely different proprietary infrastructures. Here, we present Minuteman, a framework for experimenting with real-time collection algorithms in the context of a high-performance execution environment for real-time Java. We provide the first comparison of the two approaches, both experimentally using realistic workloads, and analytically in terms of schedulability.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=77649304778&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/RTSS.2009.40
DO - 10.1109/RTSS.2009.40
M3 - Conference contribution
SN - 9780769538754
T3 - Proceedings - Real-Time Systems Symposium
SP - 81
EP - 92
BT - Proceedings - Real-Time Systems Symposium, RTSS 2009
T2 - Real-Time Systems Symposium, RTSS 2009
Y2 - 1 December 2009 through 4 December 2009
ER -