B2SAT: Difference between revisions

 
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* propagation of the SAT solution to B, by progressively grounding the B values and predicates linked to the propositional variables.
* propagation of the SAT solution to B, by progressively grounding the B values and predicates linked to the propositional variables.
* complete constraint solving, solving the pending constraints in B by now performing the regular non-deterministic propagations and enumerations of ProB.
* complete constraint solving, solving the pending constraints in B by now performing the regular non-deterministic propagations and enumerations of ProB.




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=== B2SAT in the REPL ===
=== B2SAT in the REPL ===


The following four commands are now available in REPL of probcli (start with <tt>probcli --repl</tt>):
The following four commands are now available in REPL of [[Using_the_Command-Line_Version_of_ProB|probcli]] (start with <tt>probcli --repl</tt>):
* :sat PRED
* :sat PRED
* :sat-z3 PRED
* :sat-z3 PRED
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=== B2SAT for PROPERTIES ===
=== B2SAT for PROPERTIES ===


The new preference SOLVER_FOR_PROPERTIES can be used  to specify solver for PROPERTIES (axioms) when setting up constants.
The new preference <tt>SOLVER_FOR_PROPERTIES</tt> can be used  to specify solver for PROPERTIES (axioms) when setting up constants.
The valid settings are: prob (the default), kodkod, z3, z3cns, z3axm, cdclt, sat, sat-z3.
The valid settings are: prob (the default), kodkod, z3, z3cns, z3axm, cdclt, sat, sat-z3.


The last two will use B2SAT, {\tt sat} with Glucose as SAT solver and {\tt sat-z3} with Z3 as SAT solver.
The last two will use B2SAT, <tt>sat</tt> with Glucose as SAT solver and <tt>sat-z3</tt> with Z3 as SAT solver.
 
Here is an example using this preference to compute a dominating set of a graph:


Here is an example using this preference:
<pre>
<pre>
MACHINE IceCream_Generic
MACHINE IceCream_Generic
// Dominating set example:
// Dominating set example:
// place ice cream vans so that every house (node) is at most one block away from a van
// place ice cream vans so that every house (node) is at most one block away from a van
// a version which can be solved by B2SAT
DEFINITIONS
DEFINITIONS
N == 24;
  N == 24;
CUSTOM_GRAPH == rec(layout:"dot", rankdir:"TB",
  CUSTOM_GRAPH == rec(layout:"dot", rankdir:"TB",
                     nodes: {j•j:NODES |
                     nodes: {j•j:NODES |
                               rec(value:j, style:"filled",
                               rec(value:j, style:"filled",
Line 63: Line 62:
                     );
                     );
       bi_edge == (edge \/ edge~);
       bi_edge == (edge \/ edge~);
  SET_PREF_SMT == TRUE;
  SET_PREF_TIME_OUT == 50000;
  SET_PREF_SOLVER_STRENGTH == 300;
   SET_PREF_SOLVER_FOR_PROPERTIES == "sat";
   SET_PREF_SOLVER_FOR_PROPERTIES == "sat";
SETS
SETS
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Here is the graphical rendering of a solution using the custom graph definition above:
Here is the graphical rendering of a solution using the custom graph definition above:


[[File:IceCream_Generic.pdf|500px|center]]
[[File:IceCream_Generic.png|500px|center]]




By choosing "Show Source Code Coverage" in the Debug menu of ProB Tcl/Tk you can see which parts of the properties were translated to SAT (in green) and which were processed entirely by ProB (in red-orange):
By choosing "Show Source Code Coverage" in the Debug menu of ProB Tcl/Tk you can see which parts of the properties were translated to SAT (in green) and which were processed entirely by ProB (in red-orange):


[[File:IceCreamCoverage.png|600px|center]]


Here is the graphical rendering of a solution using the custom graph definition above:
On the console you can also see feedback about which parts were translated and which ones not.
 
[[File:IceCreamCoverage.png|500px|center]]


=== B2SAT in Jupyter Notebooks ===
=== B2SAT in Jupyter Notebooks ===


The solve command in the ProB Jupyter kernel now supports <tt>sat</tt> and <tt>satz3</tt> as solvers.
The solve command in the [https://gitlab.cs.uni-duesseldorf.de/general/stups/prob2-jupyter-kernel ProB Jupyter kernelnow supports <tt>sat</tt> and <tt>satz3</tt> as solvers.
They use B2SAT with Glucose and Z3 as SAT solvers respectively.
They use B2SAT with Glucose and Z3 as SAT solvers respectively.


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[[File:JupypterOpt3.png|700px|center]]
[[File:JupypterOpt3.png|700px|center]]
= B2SAT for TLA+, Z and Alloy =
B2SAT is also available for other state-based languages supported by ProB.
Below is the dominating set example from above as a TLA+ machine that can be loaded and solved by ProB.
The custom graph visualisation derived from CUSTOM_GRAPH is also similar.
The model cannot be run with TLC nor with Apalache as neither tool can find constants that satisfy the assumptions (Apalache reports: "The following CONSTANTS are not initialized: ice").
<pre>
---- MODULE IceCream_Generic_cst ----
EXTENDS Naturals, FiniteSets
CONSTANTS n1, n2, n3, n4, n5, n6, n7, n8, n9, n10,
          n11, n12, n13, n14, n15, n16, n17, n18, n19, n20,
          n21, n22, n23, n24,
          ice
VARIABLES vans
NODES == {n1, n2, n3, n4, n5, n6, n7, n8, n9, n10, n11, n12, n13, n14, n15, n16, n17, n18, n19, n20, n21, n22, n23, n24}
SET_PREF_TIME_OUT == 1500
SET_PREF_SOLVER_FOR_PROPERTIES == "sat"
edge == {<<n1, n2>>, <<n1, n4>>, <<n2, n3>>, <<n3, n4>>, <<n3, n5>>, <<n3, n7>>, <<n4, n7>>, <<n5, n6>>, <<n5, n9>>, <<n6, n7>>, <<n6, n8>>, <<n7, n8>>, <<n8, n10>>, <<n8, n13>>, <<n9, n10>>, <<n9, n11>>, <<n9, n12>>, <<n11, n12>>, <<n11, n14>>, <<n12, n13>>, <<n13, n16>>, <<n14, n15>>, <<n14, n17>>, <<n15, n16>>, <<n15, n17>>, <<n15, n18>>, <<n15, n21>>, <<n16, n18>>, <<n16, n19>>, <<n17, n19>>, <<n18, n19>>, <<n18, n20>>, <<n18, n21>>, <<n19, n20>>, <<n19, n21>>, <<n20, n21>>, <<n20, n22>>, <<n21, n22>>, <<n21, n23>>, <<n21, n24>>, <<n22, n23>>, <<n21, n24>>, <<n23, n24>>}
DomSet == (\A x \in NODES : (ice[x] = TRUE \/ (\E nbour \in NODES : (<<nbour,x>> \in edge \/ <<x,nbour>> \in edge) /\ ice[nbour] = TRUE)))
ASSUME ice \in [NODES -> BOOLEAN] /\ DomSet /\ Cardinality({x \in (NODES): ice[x] = TRUE}) =< 6
Init ==
vans = Cardinality({x\in NODES : ice[x]=TRUE})
Invariant ==
vans \in (0 .. 10)
Next == UNCHANGED <<ice, vans>>
CUSTOM_GRAPH == [layout |-> "dot", rankdir |-> "TB",
  nodes |-> {[value |-> j, style |-> "filled",
              fillcolor |-> (IF ice[j] = TRUE THEN "mistyrose" ELSE "white")]: j \in NODES},
  edges |-> [color |-> "gray", arrowhead |-> "odot", arrowtail |-> "odot", dir |-> "both", label |-> "edge",
            edges |-> edge]]
====
</pre>
You also need the accompanying TLA+ config file IceCream_Generic_cst.cfg:
<pre>
INIT Init
NEXT Next
CONSTANTS
n1 = n1
n2 = n2
n3 = n3
n4 = n4
n5 = n5
n6 = n6
n7 = n7
n8 = n8
n9 = n9
n10 = n10
n11 = n11
n12 = n12
n13 = n13
n14 = n14
n15 = n15
n16 = n16
n17 = n17
n18 = n18
n19 = n19
n20 = n20
n21 = n21
n22 = n22
n23 = n23
n24 = n24
</pre>

Latest revision as of 12:13, 24 April 2024

The current versions of ProB can make use of the new B2SAT backend as an alternate way of solving constraints. It translates a subset of B formulas to SAT and for solving by an external SAT solver. The new backend interleaves low-level SAT solving with high-level constraint solving performed by the default solver of ProB.

B2SAT solving consists of the following phases:

  • the deterministic propagation phase(s) of ProB's solver: it performs deterministic propagations and can expand quantifiers and total functions.
  • a compilation phase, whereby static values are inlined.
  • the B to CNF conversion proper, which can translate a subset of B to propositional logic in conjunctive normal form. This phase currently supports:
    • equalities and inequalities between boolean variables and constants,
    • all logical connectives and
    • some cardinality constraints.
    • Subformulas that cannot be solved are sent to ProB's default solver and linked to the CNF via an auxiliary propositional variable.
  • solving phase, where the generated CNF is sent to an external SAT solver.
  • propagation of the SAT solution to B, by progressively grounding the B values and predicates linked to the propositional variables.
  • complete constraint solving, solving the pending constraints in B by now performing the regular non-deterministic propagations and enumerations of ProB.


Using B2SAT

B2SAT in the REPL

The following four commands are now available in REPL of probcli (start with probcli --repl):

  • :sat PRED
  • :sat-z3 PRED
  • :sat-double-check PRED
  • :sat-z3-double-check PRED

Here is a simple example:

 >>> :sat f:1..n --> BOOL & n=3 & f(1)=TRUE & !i.(i:2..n => f(i) /= f(i-1))
 PREDICATE is TRUE
 Solution: 
        f = {(1|->TRUE),(2|->FALSE),(3|->TRUE)} &
        n = 3

B2SAT for PROPERTIES

The new preference SOLVER_FOR_PROPERTIES can be used to specify solver for PROPERTIES (axioms) when setting up constants. The valid settings are: prob (the default), kodkod, z3, z3cns, z3axm, cdclt, sat, sat-z3.

The last two will use B2SAT, sat with Glucose as SAT solver and sat-z3 with Z3 as SAT solver.

Here is an example using this preference to compute a dominating set of a graph:

MACHINE IceCream_Generic
// Dominating set example:
// place ice cream vans so that every house (node) is at most one block away from a van
DEFINITIONS
  N == 24;
  CUSTOM_GRAPH == rec(layout:"dot", rankdir:"TB",
                     nodes: {j•j:NODES |
                               rec(value:j, style:"filled",
                                fillcolor:IF ice(j)=TRUE THEN "mistyrose" ELSE "white" END
                                  )},
                    edges:rec(color:"gray", arrowhead:"odot",
                              arrowtail:"odot", dir:"both",
                              label:"edge",   edges: edge)
                    );
      bi_edge == (edge \/ edge~);
  SET_PREF_SOLVER_FOR_PROPERTIES == "sat";
SETS
  NODES = {n1,n2,n3,n4,n5,n6,n7,n8,n9,n10,
           n11,n12,n13,n14,n15,n16,n17,n18,n19,n20,n21,n22,n23,n24}
CONSTANTS edge, ice, vans, neighbours
PROPERTIES
 edge: NODES <-> NODES &
 edge = { n1|->n2, n1|->n4,
          n2|->n3,
          n3|->n4, n3|->n5, n3|->n7,
          n4|->n7,
          n5|->n6, n5|->n9,
          n6|->n7, n6|->n8,
          n7|->n8,
          n8|->n10, n8|->n13,
          n9|->n10, n9|->n11, n9|->n12,
          n11|->n12, n11|->n14,
          n12|->n13,
          n13|->n16,
          n14|->n15, n14|->n17,
          n15|->n16, n15|->n17, n15|->n18, n15|->n21,
          n16|->n18, n16|->n19,
          n17|->n19,
          n18|->n19, n18|->n20, n18|->n21,
          n19|->n20, n19|->n21,
          n20|->n21, n20|->n22,
          n21|->n22, n21|->n23, n21|->n24,
          n22|->n23, n21|->n24,
          n23|->n24
          } &
 ice : NODES--> BOOL &
 neighbours = %x.(x:NODES|bi_edge[{x}]) &
 !x.(x:NODES =>
      (ice(x)=TRUE or
        #neighbour.(neighbour: neighbours(x) & ice(neighbour)=TRUE)
                 )
    )
 & vans = card(ice~[{TRUE}])
 & card({x|x:NODES & ice(x)=TRUE})<=6  /* minimal solution requires 6 vans */
OPERATIONS
  v <-- NrVans = BEGIN v := vans END;
  xx <-- Get(yy) = PRE yy:NODES THEN xx:= ice(yy) END;
  v <-- Vans = BEGIN v:= ice~[{TRUE}] END
END

Here is the graphical rendering of a solution using the custom graph definition above:

IceCream Generic.png


By choosing "Show Source Code Coverage" in the Debug menu of ProB Tcl/Tk you can see which parts of the properties were translated to SAT (in green) and which were processed entirely by ProB (in red-orange):

IceCreamCoverage.png

On the console you can also see feedback about which parts were translated and which ones not.

B2SAT in Jupyter Notebooks

The solve command in the ProB Jupyter kernel now supports sat and satz3 as solvers. They use B2SAT with Glucose and Z3 as SAT solvers respectively.

Here is a simple example to solve a constraint:

JupyterSolveSat.png


This shows how you can use cardinality constraints to iteratively find a minimal dominating set D of a graph g:

JupypterOpt1.png
JupypterOpt2.png
JupypterOpt3.png

B2SAT for TLA+, Z and Alloy

B2SAT is also available for other state-based languages supported by ProB.

Below is the dominating set example from above as a TLA+ machine that can be loaded and solved by ProB. The custom graph visualisation derived from CUSTOM_GRAPH is also similar.

The model cannot be run with TLC nor with Apalache as neither tool can find constants that satisfy the assumptions (Apalache reports: "The following CONSTANTS are not initialized: ice").

---- MODULE IceCream_Generic_cst ----
EXTENDS Naturals, FiniteSets
CONSTANTS n1, n2, n3, n4, n5, n6, n7, n8, n9, n10, 
          n11, n12, n13, n14, n15, n16, n17, n18, n19, n20,
          n21, n22, n23, n24,
          ice
VARIABLES vans
NODES == {n1, n2, n3, n4, n5, n6, n7, n8, n9, n10, n11, n12, n13, n14, n15, n16, n17, n18, n19, n20, n21, n22, n23, n24}

SET_PREF_TIME_OUT == 1500
SET_PREF_SOLVER_FOR_PROPERTIES == "sat"

edge == {<<n1, n2>>, <<n1, n4>>, <<n2, n3>>, <<n3, n4>>, <<n3, n5>>, <<n3, n7>>, <<n4, n7>>, <<n5, n6>>, <<n5, n9>>, <<n6, n7>>, <<n6, n8>>, <<n7, n8>>, <<n8, n10>>, <<n8, n13>>, <<n9, n10>>, <<n9, n11>>, <<n9, n12>>, <<n11, n12>>, <<n11, n14>>, <<n12, n13>>, <<n13, n16>>, <<n14, n15>>, <<n14, n17>>, <<n15, n16>>, <<n15, n17>>, <<n15, n18>>, <<n15, n21>>, <<n16, n18>>, <<n16, n19>>, <<n17, n19>>, <<n18, n19>>, <<n18, n20>>, <<n18, n21>>, <<n19, n20>>, <<n19, n21>>, <<n20, n21>>, <<n20, n22>>, <<n21, n22>>, <<n21, n23>>, <<n21, n24>>, <<n22, n23>>, <<n21, n24>>, <<n23, n24>>}

DomSet == (\A x \in NODES : (ice[x] = TRUE \/ (\E nbour \in NODES : (<<nbour,x>> \in edge \/ <<x,nbour>> \in edge) /\ ice[nbour] = TRUE)))

ASSUME ice \in [NODES -> BOOLEAN] /\ DomSet /\ Cardinality({x \in (NODES): ice[x] = TRUE}) =< 6

Init == 
	vans = Cardinality({x\in NODES : ice[x]=TRUE})

Invariant == 
	vans \in (0 .. 10)

Next == UNCHANGED <<ice, vans>>

CUSTOM_GRAPH == [layout |-> "dot", rankdir |-> "TB", 
  nodes |-> {[value |-> j, style |-> "filled", 
              fillcolor |-> (IF ice[j] = TRUE THEN "mistyrose" ELSE "white")]: j \in NODES}, 
  edges |-> [color |-> "gray", arrowhead |-> "odot", arrowtail |-> "odot", dir |-> "both", label |-> "edge",
             edges |-> edge]]
====

You also need the accompanying TLA+ config file IceCream_Generic_cst.cfg:

INIT Init
NEXT Next
CONSTANTS
n1 = n1
n2 = n2
n3 = n3
n4 = n4
n5 = n5
n6 = n6
n7 = n7
n8 = n8
n9 = n9
n10 = n10
n11 = n11
n12 = n12
n13 = n13
n14 = n14
n15 = n15
n16 = n16
n17 = n17
n18 = n18
n19 = n19
n20 = n20
n21 = n21
n22 = n22
n23 = n23
n24 = n24