Hierarchical scheduling frameworks (HSFs) provide means for composing complex real-time systems from well-defined independently developed and analyzed subsystems. To support shared logical resources requiring mutual exclusive access in two-level HSFs, overrun without payback has been proposed as a mechanism to prevent budget depletion during resource access arbitrated by the stack resource policy (SRP). The same mechanism can be applied to support scheduling techniques, such as fixed-priority scheduling with deferred preemption (FPDS), that aim at a reduction of the architecture-related preemption costs and may improve the feasibility of a system. Whereas the blocking times and overrun budgets for shared logical resources will typically be ...