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  2. CURE algorithm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CURE_algorithm

    To avoid the problems with non-uniform sized or shaped clusters, CURE employs a hierarchical clustering algorithm that adopts a middle ground between the centroid based and all point extremes. In CURE, a constant number c of well scattered points of a cluster are chosen and they are shrunk towards the centroid of the cluster by a fraction α.

  3. Completely Fair Scheduler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Completely_Fair_Scheduler

    The algorithm puts parent processes in the same task group as child processes. [7] (Task groups are tied to sessions created via the setsid() system call. [8]) This solved the problem of slow interactive response times on multi-core and multi-CPU systems when they were performing other tasks that use many CPU-intensive threads in those tasks.

  4. Clique percolation method - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clique_Percolation_Method

    The clique percolation method [1] is a popular approach for analyzing the overlapping community structure of networks.The term network community (also called a module, cluster or cohesive group) has no widely accepted unique definition and it is usually defined as a group of nodes that are more densely connected to each other than to other nodes in the network.

  5. mlpack - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mlpack

    mlpack contains a wide range of algorithms that are used to solved real problems from classification and regression in the Supervised learning paradigm to clustering and dimension reduction algorithms. In the following, a non exhaustive list of algorithms and models that mlpack supports: Collaborative Filtering; Decision stumps (one-level ...

  6. Starvation (computer science) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Starvation_(computer_science)

    The scheduling algorithm, which is part of the kernel, is supposed to allocate resources equitably; that is, the algorithm should allocate resources so that no process perpetually lacks necessary resources. Many operating system schedulers employ the concept of process priority. A high priority process A will run before a low priority process B.

  7. O(1) scheduler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/O(1)_scheduler

    Location of the "O(1) scheduler" (a process scheduler) in a simplified structure of the Linux kernel. An O(1) scheduler (pronounced "O of 1 scheduler", "Big O of 1 scheduler", or "constant time scheduler") is a kernel scheduling design that can schedule processes within a constant amount of time, regardless of how many processes are running on the operating system.

  8. Cigarette smokers problem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cigarette_smokers_problem

    According to Allen B. Downey, the first restriction makes sense, because if the agent represents an operating system, it would be unreasonable or impossible to modify it every time a new application came along. [4] However, Parnas argues that the second restriction is unjustified:

  9. Aging (scheduling) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aging_(scheduling)

    In computer science for Operating systems, aging (US English) or ageing is a scheduling technique used to avoid starvation. Fixed priority scheduling is a scheduling discipline, in which tasks queued for utilizing a system resource are assigned a priority each. A task with a high priority is allowed to access a specific system resource before a ...