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This is an open access book. Important tasks must be completed on
time and with guaranteed quality; that is the consensus reached by
system designers and users. However, for too long, important tasks
have often been given unnecessary urgency, and people intuitively
believe that important tasks should be executed first so that their
performance can be guaranteed. Actually, in most cases, their
performance can be guaranteed even if they are executed later, and
the "early" resources can be utilized for other, more urgent tasks.
Therefore, confusing importance with urgency hinders the proper use
of system resources. In 2007, mixed criticality was proposed to
indicate that a system may contain tasks of various importance
levels. Since then, system designers and users have distinguished
between importance and urgency. In the industrial field, due to the
harsh environment they operate in, industrial wireless networks'
quality of service (QoS) has always been a bottleneck restricting
their applications. Therefore, this book introduces criticality to
label important data, which is then allocated more transmission
resources, ensuring that important data's QoS requirements can be
met to the extent possible. To help readers understand how to apply
mixed-criticality data to industrial wireless networks, the content
is divided into three parts. First, we introduce how to integrate
the model of mixed-criticality data into industrial wireless
networks. Second, we explain how to analyze the schedulability of
mixed-criticality data under existing scheduling algorithms. Third,
we present a range of novel scheduling algorithms for
mixed-criticality data. If you want to improve the QoS of
industrial wireless networks, this book is for you.
This is an open access book. Important tasks must be completed on
time and with guaranteed quality; that is the consensus reached by
system designers and users. However, for too long, important tasks
have often been given unnecessary urgency, and people intuitively
believe that important tasks should be executed first so that their
performance can be guaranteed. Actually, in most cases, their
performance can be guaranteed even if they are executed later, and
the "early" resources can be utilized for other, more urgent tasks.
Therefore, confusing importance with urgency hinders the proper use
of system resources. In 2007, mixed criticality was proposed to
indicate that a system may contain tasks of various importance
levels. Since then, system designers and users have distinguished
between importance and urgency. In the industrial field, due to the
harsh environment they operate in, industrial wireless networks'
quality of service (QoS) has always been a bottleneck restricting
their applications. Therefore, this book introduces criticality to
label important data, which is then allocated more transmission
resources, ensuring that important data's QoS requirements can be
met to the extent possible. To help readers understand how to apply
mixed-criticality data to industrial wireless networks, the content
is divided into three parts. First, we introduce how to integrate
the model of mixed-criticality data into industrial wireless
networks. Second, we explain how to analyze the schedulability of
mixed-criticality data under existing scheduling algorithms. Third,
we present a range of novel scheduling algorithms for
mixed-criticality data. If you want to improve the QoS of
industrial wireless networks, this book is for you.
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