vrp-core

Crates.iovrp-core
lib.rsvrp-core
version1.25.0
sourcesrc
created_at2020-04-09 14:01:33.668835
updated_at2024-11-10 19:32:10.932662
descriptionA core algorithms to solve a Vehicle Routing Problem
homepagehttps://github.com/reinterpretcat/vrp
repositoryhttps://github.com/reinterpretcat/vrp
max_upload_size
id227962
size1,041,200
Ilya Builuk (reinterpretcat)

documentation

README

crates.io build downloads codecov CodeScene Code Health dependency status DOI

VRP example

Description

This project provides a way to solve multiple variations of Vehicle Routing Problem known as rich VRP. It provides custom hyper- and meta-heuristic implementations, shortly described here.

If you use the project in academic work, please consider citing:

@misc{builuk_rosomaxa_2023,
    author       = {Ilya Builuk},
    title        = {{A new solver for rich Vehicle Routing Problem}},
    year         = 2023,
    doi          = {10.5281/zenodo.4624037},
    publisher    = {Zenodo},
    url          = {https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4624037}
}

Design goal

Although performance is constantly in focus, the main idea behind design is extensibility: the project aims to support a wide range of VRP variations known as Rich VRP. This is achieved through various extension points: custom constraints, objective functions, acceptance criteria, etc.

Getting started

For general installation steps and basic usage options, please check the next sections. More detailed overview of the features and full description of the usage is presented in A Vehicle Routing Problem Solver Documentation.

Probably, the easiest way to learn how to use the solver as is, would be to play with interactive tutorial, written as jupyter notebook.

Additionally, you can check vrp-core/examples to see how to use the library and extend it within a new functionality.

Installation

You can install the latest release of the vrp solver using four different ways:

Install with Python

The functionality of vrp-cli is published to pypi.org, so you can just install it using pip and use from python:

pip install vrp-cli
python examples/python-interop/example.py # run test example

Alternatively, you can use maturin tool to build solver locally. You need to enable py_bindings feature which is not enabled by default.

Additionally, to jupyter notebook mentioned above, you can find extra information in python example section of the docs. The full source code of python example is available in the repo which contains useful model wrappers with help of pydantic lib (reused by tutorial as well).

Install from Docker

Another fast way to try vrp solver on your environment is to use docker image (not performance optimized):

  • run public image from Github Container Registry:
    docker run -it -v $(pwd):/repo --name vrp-cli --rm ghcr.io/reinterpretcat/vrp/vrp-cli:1.25.0
  • build image locally using Dockerfile provided:
docker build -t vrp_solver .
docker run -it -v $(pwd):/repo --rm vrp_solver

Please note that the docker image is built using musl, not glibc standard library. So there might be some performance implications.

Install from Cargo

You can install vrp solver cli tool directly with cargo install:

cargo install vrp-cli

Ensure that your $PATH is properly configured to source the crates binaries, and then run solver using the vrp-cli command.

Install from source

Once pulled the source code, you can build it using cargo:

cargo build --release

Built binaries can be found in the ./target/release directory and can be run using vrp-cli executable, e.g.:

./target/release/vrp-cli solve solomon examples/data/scientific/solomon/C101.100.txt --log

Alternatively, you can try to run the following script from the project root (with pragmatic format only):

./solve_problem.sh examples/data/pragmatic/objectives/berlin.default.problem.json

It will build the executable and automatically launch the solver with the specified VRP definition. Results are stored in the folder where a problem definition is located.

Please note, that master branch normally contains not yet released changes.

Usage

Using from code

If you're using rust, you have multiple options for how the project can be used:

Use customization capabilities

The vrp-core provides API to compose a VRP formulation from various building blocks and even add your own. Start with basic vrp-core/examples, then check the user documentation and code for more details.

Use built-in formats

You can use vrp-scientific, vrp-pragmatic crates to solve a VRP problem defined in pragmatic or scientific format using default metaheuristic. Or you can use CLI interface for that (see below).

If you're using some other language, e.g. java, kotlin, javascript, python, please check interop section in documentation examples to see how to call the library from it (currently, limited to pragmatic format).

Using from command line

vrp-cli crate is designed to use on problems defined in scientific or custom json (aka pragmatic) format:

vrp-cli solve pragmatic problem_definition.json -m routing_matrix.json --max-time=120

Please refer to getting started section in the documentation for more details.

Contribution policy

open source, limited contribution

The goal is to reduce burnout by limiting the maintenance overhead of reviewing and validating third-party code.

Please submit an issue or discussion if you have ideas for improvement.

Status

Permanently experimental. This is my pet project, and I'm not paid for it, so expect a very limited support.

Commit count: 2911

cargo fmt