From 2b3ea97748e033beab2283fb85a1c92dc1f726a7 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eugen Betke Date: Wed, 2 Sep 2020 13:43:53 +0200 Subject: [PATCH] Minor changes --- paper/main.tex | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/paper/main.tex b/paper/main.tex index 9edd2a0..dbceaa1 100644 --- a/paper/main.tex +++ b/paper/main.tex @@ -345,7 +345,7 @@ As post-processing jobs use typically one node and the number of postprocessing The boxplots have different shapes which is an indication, that the different algorithms identify a different set of jobs -- we will analyze this later further. \paragraph{Runtime distribution.} -The \added{job} runtime of the Top\,100 jobs is shown using boxplots in \Cref{fig:runtime-job}. +The job runtime of the Top\,100 jobs is shown using boxplots in \Cref{fig:runtime-job}. While all algorithms can compute the similarity between jobs of different length, the bin algorithms and hex\_native penalize jobs of different length preferring jobs of very similar length. For Job-M and Job-L, hex\_phases is able to identify much shorter or longer jobs. For Job-L, the job itself isn't included in the chosen Top\,100 (see \Cref{fig:hist-job-L}, 393 jobs have a similarity of 100\%) which is the reason why the job runtime isn't shown in the figure itself.