In the online checkpointing problem, the task is to continuously maintain a set of k checkpoints that allow to rewind an ongoing computation faster than by a full restart. The only operation allowed is to replace an old checkpoint by the current state. Our aim are checkpoint placement strategies that minimize rewinding cost, i.e., such that at all times T when requested to rewind to some time t ≤ T the number of computation steps that need to be redone to get to t from a checkpoint before t is as small as possible. In particular, we want that the closest checkpoint earlier than t is not further away from t than q k times the ideal distance T/(k + 1), where qk is a small constant. Improving over earlier work showing 1 + 1/k ≤ qk ≤ 2, we show that qk can be chosen asymptotically less than 2. We present algorithms with asymptotic discrepancy qk ≤ 1.59 + o(1) valid for all k and qk ≤ ln (4) + o(1) ≤ 1.39 + o(1) valid for k being a power of two. Experiments indicate the uniform bound pk ≤ 1.7 for all k. For small k, we show how to use a linear programming approach to compute good checkpointing algorithms. This gives discrepancies of less than 1.55 for all k < 60. We prove the first lower bound that is asymptotically more than one, namely qk ≥ 1.30 - o(1). We also show that optimal algorithms (yielding the infimum discrepancy) exist for all k. © 2013 Springer-Verlag.
CITATION STYLE
Bringmann, K., Doerr, B., Neumann, A., & Sliacan, J. (2013). Online checkpointing with improved worst-case guarantees. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 7965 LNCS, pp. 255–266). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-39206-1_22
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