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Tactical Fixed Job Scheduling with Spread-Time Constraints

We address the tactical fixed job scheduling problem with spread-time constraints. In such a problem, there are a fixed number of classes of machines and a fixed number of groups of jobs. Jobs of the same group can only be processed by machines of a given set of classes. All jobs have their fixed start and end times. Each machine is associated with a cost according to its machine class. Machines have spread-time constraints, with which each machine is only available for $L$ consecutive time units from the start time of the earliest job assigned to it. The objective is to minimize the total cost of the machines used to process all the jobs. For this strongly NP-hard problem, we develop a branch-and-price algorithm, which solves instances with up to $300$ jobs, as compared with CPLEX, which cannot solve instances of $100$ jobs. We further investigate the influence of machine flexibility by computational experiments. Our results show that limited machine flexibility is sufficient in most situations.

preprint2014arXivOpen access
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