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The open shop scheduling problem with a given sequence of jobs on one machine
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1998
Year
Mathematical ProgrammingEngineeringIndustrial EngineeringSmart ManufacturingComputational ComplexityOperations ResearchSystems EngineeringLogisticsCombinatorial OptimizationQuantitative ManagementPolynomial Approximation SchemeLinear OptimizationOpen ShopJob SchedulerManufacturing PlanningScheduling (Computing)Supply Chain ManagementComputer ScienceInteger ProgrammingPseudopolynomial TimeScheduling AnalysisScheduling ProblemProduction SchedulingBusinessScheduling (Production Processes)
The paper considers the open shop scheduling problem to minimize the make-span, provided that one of the machines has to process the jobs according to a given sequence. We show that in the preemptive case the problem is polynomially solvable for an arbitrary number of machines. If preemption is not allowed, the problem is NP-hard in the strong sense if the number of machines is variable, and is NP-hard in the ordinary sense in the case of two machines. For the latter case we give a heuristic algorithm that runs in linear time and produces a schedule with the makespan that is at most 5/4 times the optimal value. We also show that the two-machine problem in the nonpreemptive case is solvable in pseudopolynomial time by a dynamic programming algorithm, and that the algorithm can be converted into a fully polynomial approximation scheme. © 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Naval Research Logistics 45: 705–731, 1998