English

L\'evy-driven polling systems and continuous-state branching processes

Probability 2015-05-22 v4

Abstract

In this paper we consider a ring of N1N\ge 1 queues served by a single server in a cyclic order. After having served a queue (according to a service discipline that may vary from queue to queue), there is a switch-over period and then the server serves the next queue and so forth. This model is known in the literature as a \textit{polling model}. Each of the queues is fed by a non-decreasing L\'evy process, which can be different during each of the consecutive periods within the server's cycle. The NN-dimensional L\'evy processes obtained in this fashion are described by their (joint) Laplace exponent, thus allowing for non-independent input streams. For such a system we derive the steady-state distribution of the joint workload at embedded epochs, i.e. polling and switching instants. Using the Kella-Whitt martingale, we also derive the steady-state distribution at an arbitrary epoch. Our analysis heavily relies on establishing a link between fluid (L\'evy input) polling systems and multi-type Ji\v{r}ina processes (continuous-state discrete-time branching processes). This is done by properly defining the notion of the \textit{branching property} for a discipline, which can be traced back to Fuhrmann and Resing. This definition is broad enough to contain the most important service disciplines, like exhaustive and gated.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1006.0384,
  title  = {L\'evy-driven polling systems and continuous-state branching processes},
  author = {Onno Boxma and Jevgenijs Ivanovs and Kamil Marcin Kosiński and Michel Mandjes},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1006.0384},
  year   = {2015}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-21T15:31:00.196Z