4 releases (breaking)
new 0.9.0 | Nov 20, 2024 |
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0.8.0 | Oct 14, 2024 |
0.7.0 | Jun 5, 2024 |
0.6.0 | Apr 11, 2024 |
#12 in #oxi-dd
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OxiDD
OxiDD is a highly modular decision diagram framework written in Rust. The most prominent instance of decision diagrams is provided by (reduced ordered) binary decision diagrams (BDDs), which are succinct representations of Boolean functions 𝔹n → 𝔹. Such BDD representations are canonical and thus, deciding equality of Boolean functions—in general a co-NP-complete problem—can be done in constant time. Further, many Boolean operations on two BDDs f,g are possible in 𝒪(|f| · |g|) (where |f| denotes the node count in f). There are various other kinds of decision diagrams for which OxiDD aims to be a framework enabling high-performance implementations with low effort.
Features
- Several kinds of (reduced ordered) decision diagrams are already implemented:
- Binary decision diagrams (BDDs)
- BDDs with complement edges (BCDDs)
- Zero-suppressed BDDs (ZBDDs, aka ZDDs/ZSDDs)
- Multi-terminal BDDs (MTBDDs, aka ADDs)
- Ternary decision diagrams (TDDs)
- Extensibility: Due to OxiDD’s modular design, one can implement new kinds of decision diagrams without having to reimplement core data structures.
- Concurrency: Functions represented by DDs can safely be used in multi-threaded contexts. Furthermore, apply algorithms can be executed on multiple CPU cores in parallel.
- Performance: Compared to other popular BDD libraries (e.g., BuDDy, CUDD, and Sylvan), OxiDD is already competitive or even outperforms them.
- Support for Reordering: OxiDD can reorder a decision diagram to a given variable order. Support for dynamic reordering, e.g., via sifting, is about to come.
Getting Started
Constructing a BDD for the formula (x₁ ∧ x₂) ∨ x₃ works as follows:
// Create a manager for up to 2048 nodes, up to 1024 apply cache entries, and
// use 8 threads for the apply algorithms. In practice, you would choose higher
// capacities depending on the system resources.
let manager_ref = oxidd::bdd::new_manager(2048, 1024, 8);
let (x1, x2, x3) = manager_ref.with_manager_exclusive(|manager| {(
BDDFunction::new_var(manager).unwrap(),
BDDFunction::new_var(manager).unwrap(),
BDDFunction::new_var(manager).unwrap(),
)});
// The APIs are designed such that out-of-memory situations can be handled
// gracefully. This is the reason for the `?` operator.
let res = x1.and(&x2)?.or(&x3)?;
println!("{}", res.satisfiable());
(We will add a more elaborate guide in the future.)
Project Structure
The main code is located in the crates directory. The framework is centered around a bunch of core traits, found in the oxidd-core
crate. These traits are the abstractions enabling to easily swap one component by another, as indicated by the dependency graph below. The data structure in which DD nodes are stored is mostly defined by the oxidd-manager-index
crate. There is also the oxidd-manager-pointer
crate, which contains an alternative implementation (here, the edges are represented by pointers instead of 32 bit indices). Implementations of the apply cache can be found in the oxidd-cache
crate. Reduction rules and main algorithms of the various DD kinds are implemented in the oxidd-rules-*
crates. There are different ways how all the components can be “plugged” together. The oxidd
crate provides sensible default instantiations for the end user. There are a few more crates, but the aforementioned are the most important ones.
Besides the Rust code, there are also bindings for C/C++ and Python (located in the bindings
directory with the corresponding Rust part in crates/oxidd-ffi-*
). The bindings do not expose the entire API that can be used from Rust, but it is sufficient to, e.g., create BDDs and apply various logical operators on them. In principle, you can use the C FFI from any language that can call C functions. However, there are also more ergonomic C++ bindings built on top of the C FFI. To use them, you can just use include this repository using CMake. For Python, the easiest way is to use the package on PyPI.
FAQ
Q: What about bindings for language X?
As mentioned above, OxiDD already supports C/C++ and Python. C# and Java bindings might follow later this year. If you want to use OxiDD from a different language, please contact us. We would really like to support you and your use-case.
Q: What about dynamic/automatic reordering?
OxiDD already supports reordering in the sense of establishing a given variable order. Implementing this without introducing unsafe code in the algorithms applying operators, adding rather expensive synchronization mechanisms, or disabling concurrency entirely was a larger effort. More details on that can be found in our paper. But now, adding reordering heuristics such as sifting is a low-hanging fruit. Next up, we will also work on dynamic reordering (i.e., aborting operations for reordering and restarting them afterwards) and automatic reordering (i.e., heuristics that identify points in time where dynamic reordering is beneficial).
Licensing
OxiDD is licensed under either MIT or Apache 2.0 at your opinion.
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in this project by you, as defined in the Apache 2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.
Publications
The seminal paper presenting OxiDD was published at TACAS'24. If you use OxiDD, please cite us as:
Nils Husung, Clemens Dubslaff, Holger Hermanns, and Maximilian A. Köhl: OxiDD: A safe, concurrent, modular, and performant decision diagram framework in Rust. In: Proceedings of the 30th International Conference on Tools and Algorithms for the Construction and Analysis of Systems (TACAS’24)
@inproceedings{oxidd24,
author = {Husung, Nils and Dubslaff, Clemens and Hermanns, Holger and K{\"o}hl, Maximilian A.},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 30th International Conference on Tools and Algorithms for the Construction and Analysis of Systems (TACAS'24)},
title = {{OxiDD}: A Safe, Concurrent, Modular, and Performant Decision Diagram Framework in {Rust}},
year = {2024},
doi = {10.1007/978-3-031-57256-2_13}
}
Acknowledgements
This work is partially supported by the German Research Foundation (DFG) under the projects TRR 248 (see https://perspicuous-computing.science, project ID 389792660) and EXC 2050/1 (CeTI, project ID 390696704, as part of Germany’s Excellence Strategy).
Dependencies
~50KB