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Benchmarks for basic scheduling problems

TLDR
This paper proposes 260 randomly generated scheduling problems whose size is greater than that of the rare examples published, and the objective is the minimization of the makespan.
About
This article is published in European Journal of Operational Research.The article was published on 1993-01-22 and is currently open access. It has received 2173 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Flow shop scheduling & Job shop scheduling.

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Citations
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Restart strategies in optimization: parallel and serial cases

TL;DR: This paper addresses the problem of minimizing the average running time of the Las Vegas type algorithm, both in serial and parallel setups, and clarifies the counter-intuitive empirical observations of super linear speedup and relate parallel speedup with the restart properties of serial algorithms.
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Permutation flow shop scheduling with earliness and tardiness penalties

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors considered the permutation flow shop scheduling problem with earliness and tardiness penalties (E/T) and common due date for jobs, and proposed a heuristic based approach for solving the problem over the entire range of due dates.
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Applying simulated annealing to the open shop scheduling problem

TL;DR: In this article, a neighborhood search algorithm based on the simulated annealing technique is proposed to solve the problem of scheduling a non-preemptive open shop with the objective of minimizing makespan.
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A hybrid genetic algorithm for solving no-wait flowshop scheduling problems.

TL;DR: In this article, a hybrid genetic algorithm is proposed to minimize the makespan and the total flowtime in the no-wait flowshop scheduling problem, which is known to be NP-hard for more than two machines.
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An agent model for incentive-based production scheduling

TL;DR: The organizational model is based on economic concepts, uses market rules and an incentive mechanism, and integrates dynamic order processing, advance least-commitment scheduling and dispatching.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Tabu Search—Part II

TL;DR: The elements of staged search and structured move sets are characterized, which bear on the issue of finiteness, and new dynamic strategies for managing tabu lists are introduced, allowing fuller exploitation of underlying evaluation functions.
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OR-Library: Distributing Test Problems by Electronic Mail

TL;DR: A system (OR-Library) that distributes test problems by electronic mail (e-mail) that has available test problems drawn from a number of different areas of operational research.
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A Guide to Simulation.

TL;DR: Despite the brevity of the book, its mathematical notation, and the problems which it poses without solutions, the textbook is imbued with a feeling for theitty-gritty practical aspects of simulation.
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A Computational Study of the Job-Shop Scheduling Problem

TL;DR: The optimization procedure, combining the heuristic method and the combinatorial branch and bound algorithm, solved the well-known 10×10 problem of J. F. Thomson in under 7 minutes of computation time on a Sun Sparcstation 1.
Related Papers (5)
Frequently Asked Questions (7)
Q1. What have the authors contributed in "Basic scheduling problems" ?

In this paper, the authors propose 260 scheduling problems whose size is greater than that of the rare examples published. The types of problems that the authors propose are: the permutation flow shop, the job shop and the open shop scheduling problems. 

let us mention5 that an iteration of taboo search needs about 4.10-6.n2.m seconds on a “Silicon Graphics” personal workstation (10 Mips). 

The machine Mij on which the jth operation of job i has to be performed is given by the following procedure :0) Mij := j (1 L Q M P 1) For i = 1 to nFor j = 1 to m Swap Mij and MiU[j,m]Let us note the use of another initial seed for the choice of the machines : Machine seed. 

The proportion of problems for which the authors found a solution for which the makespan was equal to the lower bound (or equal to the lower bound augmented by 2% for the 500-job 20-machine problems). 

This implementation uses only 32-bit integers and provides a uniformly distributed sequence of numbers between 0 and 1 (not contained) :3 0) Initial seed and X0 (0 < X0 < 231- 1) constants : a = 16 807, b = 127 773, c = 2 836, m = 231 - 11) Modification of k := Xi/b the seed : Xi+1 := a(Xi mod b) - kcIf Xi+1 < 0 then let Xi+1 := Xi+1 + m2) New value of the seed : Xi+1 Current value of the generator : Xi+1/mBelow, the authors shall denote by U(0,1) the pseudorandom number that this generator provides. 

The random number generator Let us recall the implementation of the linear congruential generator the authors have used which is based on the recursive formula Xi+1 = (16 807 Xi) mod (231 - 1). 

In order to implement the integer random procedure only with 32-bit integers, the problems have been chosen in such a way that one never has to deal with a seed X such that :a + P DE; )1( +−⋅ ≠ a + )1( +−