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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Chaff: engineering an efficient SAT solver

TLDR
The development of a new complete solver, Chaff, is described which achieves significant performance gains through careful engineering of all aspects of the search-especially a particularly efficient implementation of Boolean constraint propagation (BCP) and a novel low overhead decision strategy.
Abstract
Boolean satisfiability is probably the most studied of the combinatorial optimization/search problems. Significant effort has been devoted to trying to provide practical solutions to this problem for problem instances encountered in a range of applications in electronic design automation (EDA), as well as in artificial intelligence (AI). This study has culminated in the development of several SAT packages, both proprietary and in the public domain (e.g. GRASP, SATO) which find significant use in both research and industry. Most existing complete solvers are variants of the Davis-Putnam (DP) search algorithm. In this paper we describe the development of a new complete solver, Chaff which achieves significant performance gains through careful engineering of all aspects of the search-especially a particularly efficient implementation of Boolean constraint propagation (BCP) and a novel low overhead decision strategy. Chaff has been able to obtain one to two orders of magnitude performance improvement on difficult SAT benchmarks in comparison with other solvers (DP or otherwise), including GRASP and SATO.

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Book ChapterDOI

When boolean satisfiability meets gaussian elimination in a simplex way

TL;DR: This paper integrates SAT solving tightly with Gaussian elimination in the style of Dantzig's simplex method and shows promising performance improvements and efficient derivation of compact interpolants, which are otherwise unobtainable.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Formalizing the metatheory of logical calculi and automatic provers in Isabelle/HOL (invited talk)

TL;DR: This paper describes and reflects on three verification subprojects to which I contributed: a first-order resolution prover, an imperative SAT solver, and generalized term orders for λ-free higher-order logic.
Book ChapterDOI

From propositional satisfiability to satisfiability modulo theories

TL;DR: This paper introduces several SAT-based SMT solving methods that in many applications have outperformed classical decision methods and describes several combination strategies and their impact on scalability and performance of the overall solver in different settings and applications.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bounded Model Debugging

TL;DR: The proposed bounded model debugging methodology that iteratively analyzes bounded sequences of the error trace can find the actual error in 79% of cases with the first technique and 100% of Cases with the second technique.
Proceedings Article

Finding Contradictions in Feature Models

TL;DR: The emphasis of this paper is to explore the possibility of finding contradictions statically using model checking and an incremental consistency algorithm.
References
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Book

Computers and Intractability: A Guide to the Theory of NP-Completeness

TL;DR: The second edition of a quarterly column as discussed by the authors provides a continuing update to the list of problems (NP-complete and harder) presented by M. R. Garey and myself in our book "Computers and Intractability: A Guide to the Theory of NP-Completeness,” W. H. Freeman & Co., San Francisco, 1979.
Book

Genetic Algorithms

Journal ArticleDOI

Tabu Search—Part II

TL;DR: The elements of staged search and structured move sets are characterized, which bear on the issue of finiteness, and new dynamic strategies for managing tabu lists are introduced, allowing fuller exploitation of underlying evaluation functions.
Book ChapterDOI

Optimization and Approximation in Deterministic Sequencing and Scheduling: a Survey

TL;DR: In this article, the authors survey the state of the art with respect to optimization and approximation algorithms and interpret these in terms of computational complexity theory, and indicate some problems for future research and include a selective bibliography.
Book

A machine program for theorem-proving

TL;DR: The programming of a proof procedure is discussed in connection with trial runs and possible improvements.