It has been experimentally observed that LRU and variants thereof are the preferred strategies for on-line paging. However, under most proposed performance measures for on-line algorithms the performance of LRU is the same as that of many other strategies which are inferior in practice. In this paper we first show that any performance measure which does not include a partition or implied distribution of the input sequences of a given length is unlikely to distinguish between any two lazy paging algorithms as their performance is identical in a very strong sense. This provides a theoretical justification for the use of a more refined measure. Building upon the ideas of concave analysis by Albers et al. [AFG05], we prove strict separ...
We study a generalization of the classic paging problem that allows the amount of available memory t...
Paging (caching) is the problem of managing a two-level memory hierarchy in order to minimize the ti...
The paging problem is defined as follows: we are given a two-level memory system, in which one level...
It has been experimentally observed that LRU and variants thereof are the preferred strategies for o...
In evaluating an algorithm, worst-case analysis can be overly pessimistic. Average-case analysis can...
AbstractIn this paper, we give a finer separation of several known paging algorithms using a new tec...
AbstractThe relative worst-order ratio, a relatively new measure for the quality of on-line algorith...
We present a competitive analysis of the LRFU paging algorithm, a hybrid of the LRU (Least Recently...
It is well known that competitive analysis yields too pessimistic re-sults when applied to the pagin...
Recall our three goals for the mathematical analysis of algorithms — the Explanation Goal, the Compa...
AbstractMotivated by the fact that competitive analysis yields too pessimistic results when applied ...
In this paper we explore the effects of locality on the performance of paging algorithms. Traditiona...
AbstractThe Sleator-Tarjan competitive analysis of paging (Comm. ACM28 (1985), 202-208) gives us the...
The paging problem is that of deciding which pages to keep in a memory of k pages in order to minimi...
Reconsider the competitiveness ofon-line strategies using k servers versus the optimal off-line stra...
We study a generalization of the classic paging problem that allows the amount of available memory t...
Paging (caching) is the problem of managing a two-level memory hierarchy in order to minimize the ti...
The paging problem is defined as follows: we are given a two-level memory system, in which one level...
It has been experimentally observed that LRU and variants thereof are the preferred strategies for o...
In evaluating an algorithm, worst-case analysis can be overly pessimistic. Average-case analysis can...
AbstractIn this paper, we give a finer separation of several known paging algorithms using a new tec...
AbstractThe relative worst-order ratio, a relatively new measure for the quality of on-line algorith...
We present a competitive analysis of the LRFU paging algorithm, a hybrid of the LRU (Least Recently...
It is well known that competitive analysis yields too pessimistic re-sults when applied to the pagin...
Recall our three goals for the mathematical analysis of algorithms — the Explanation Goal, the Compa...
AbstractMotivated by the fact that competitive analysis yields too pessimistic results when applied ...
In this paper we explore the effects of locality on the performance of paging algorithms. Traditiona...
AbstractThe Sleator-Tarjan competitive analysis of paging (Comm. ACM28 (1985), 202-208) gives us the...
The paging problem is that of deciding which pages to keep in a memory of k pages in order to minimi...
Reconsider the competitiveness ofon-line strategies using k servers versus the optimal off-line stra...
We study a generalization of the classic paging problem that allows the amount of available memory t...
Paging (caching) is the problem of managing a two-level memory hierarchy in order to minimize the ti...
The paging problem is defined as follows: we are given a two-level memory system, in which one level...