=========================================== pycryptosat: bindings to the CryptoMiniSat SAT solver =========================================== This directory provides Python bindings to CryptoMiniSat on the C++ level, i.e. when importing pycryptosat, the CryptoMiniSat solver becomes part of the Python process itself. Compiling ----- The pycryptosat python package compiles while compiling CryptoMiniSat. It cannotbe compiled on its own, it must be compiled at the same time as CryptoMiniSat. You will need the python development libraries in order to compile: ``` apt-get install python-dev ``` After this, cmake then indicate that pycryptosat will be compiled: ``` cd cryptominisat mkdir build cd build cmake .. [...] -- Found PythonInterp: /usr/bin/python2.7 (found suitable version "2.7.9", minimum required is "2.7") -- Found PythonLibs: /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libpython2.7.so (found suitable version "2.7.9", minimum required is "2.7") -- PYTHON_EXECUTABLE:FILEPATH=/usr/bin/python2.7 -- PYTHON_LIBRARY:FILEPATH=/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libpython2.7.so -- PYTHON_INCLUDE_DIR:FILEPATH=/usr/include/python2.7 -- PYTHONLIBS_VERSION_STRING=2.7.9 -- OK, found python interpreter, libs and header files -- Building python interface [...] ``` It will then generate the pycryptosat library and install it when calling `make install`. Usage ----- The ``pycryptosat`` module has one object, ``Solver`` that has two functions ``solve`` and ``add_clause``. The funcion ``add_clause()`` takes an iterable list of literals such as ``[1, 2]`` which represents the truth ``1 or 2 = True``. For example, ``add_clause([1])`` sets variable ``1`` to ``True``. The function ``solve()`` solves the system of equations that have been added with ``add_clause()``: >>> from pycryptosat import Solver >>> s = Solver() >>> s.add_clause([1, 2]) >>> sat, solution = s.solve() >>> print sat True >>> print solution (None, True, True) The return value is a tuple. First part of the tuple indicates whether the problem is satisfiable. In this case, it's ``True``, i.e. satisfiable. The second part is a tuple contains the solution, preceded by None, so you can index into it with the variable number. E.g. ``solution[1]`` returns the value for variable ``1``. The ``solve()`` method optionally takes an argument ``assumptions`` that allows the user to set values to specific variables in the solver in a temporary fashion. This means that in case the problem is satisfiable but e.g it's unsatisfiable if variable 2 is FALSE, then ``solve([-2])`` will return UNSAT. However, a subsequent call to ``solve()`` will still return a solution. If instead of an assumption ``add_clause()`` would have been used, subsequent ``solve()`` calls would have returned unsatisfiable. ``Solver`` takes the following keyword arguments: * ``time_limit``: the time limit (integer) * ``confl_limit``: the propagation limit (integer) * ``verbose``: the verbosity level (integer) Both ``time_limit`` and ``confl_limit`` set a budget to the solver. The former is based on time elapsed while the former is based on number of conflicts met during search. If the solver runs out of budget, it returns with ``(None, None)``. If both limits are used, the solver will terminate whenever one of the limits are hit (whichever first). Warning: Results from ``time_limit`` may differ from run to run, depending on compute load, etc. Use ``confl_limit`` for more reproducible runs. Example ------- Let us consider the following clauses, represented using the DIMACS `cnf `_ format:: p cnf 5 3 1 -5 4 0 -1 5 3 4 0 -3 -4 0 Here, we have 5 variables and 3 clauses, the first clause being (x\ :sub:`1` or not x\ :sub:`5` or x\ :sub:`4`). Note that the variable x\ :sub:`2` is not used in any of the clauses, which means that for each solution with x\ :sub:`2` = True, we must also have a solution with x\ :sub:`2` = False. In Python, each clause is most conveniently represented as a list of integers. Naturally, it makes sense to represent each solution also as a list of integers, where the sign corresponds to the Boolean value (+ for True and - for False) and the absolute value corresponds to i\ :sup:`th` variable:: >>> import pycryptosat >>> solver = pycryptosat.Solver() >>> solver.add_clause([1, -5, 4]) >>> solver.add_clause([-1, 5, 3, 4]) >>> solver.add_clause([-3, -4]) >>> solver.solve() (True, (None, True, False, False, True, True)) This solution translates to: x\ :sub:`1` = x\ :sub:`4` = x\ :sub:`5` = True, x\ :sub:`2` = x\ :sub:`3` = False