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The problem of scheduling G groups of jobs on m parallel machines is considered. Each group consists of several identical jobs. We have to find splittings of groups into batches (i.e. sets of jobs to be processed contiguously) and to schedule the batches on the machines. It is possible for different batches of the same group to be processed concurrently on different machines. However, at any time, a batch can be processed on at most one machine. A sequence-independent machine set-up time is required immediately before a batch of a group is processed. A deadline is associated with each group. The objective is to find a schedule which is feasible with respect to deadlines. The problem is shown to be NP-hard even for the case of two identical machines, unit processing times, unit set-up times and a common deadline. It is strongly NP-hard if machines are uniform, the number of jobs in each group is equal and processing times, set-up times and deadlines are unit. Special cases which are polynomially solvable are discussed. For the general problem, a family of approximation algorithms is constructed. A new dynamic rounding technique is used to develop these algorithms.

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This page is a summary of: , Annals of Operations Research, January 1998, Springer Science + Business Media,
DOI: 10.1023/a:1018912114491.
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