These are the official rules for the MiniZinc Challenge 2012.
Version 1.0.
These rules were last updated on 9 February 2012.
The MiniZinc Challenge 2012 will test solvers on problems written in MiniZinc 1.5.
Let name be the name of the solver system in what follows.
An entrant in the challenge is a constraint solver submitted in either
source code or binary format.
Constraint solvers that have several variants, for example that can alternatively
use copying or trailing, may submit one entry per variant although the organizers
reserve the right to reject such variations if they not sufficiently interesting,
(e.g. multiple copies of the same solver with differing parameters).
Binary format submissions must be compatible
with the competition hardware and operating system.
Each entrant must provide a gzipped tarball containing the following:
a README file explaining how to (compile and) install the solver.
a text file named DESCRIPTION, that contains a short
(1-2 pages) description of the system.
This should include a list of all authors of the
system and their present institutional affiliations.
It should also describe any algorithms or data structures that are not standardly used in such
systems.
System descriptions will be posted on the MiniZinc Challenge 2012 website.
fzn_name -- an executable file that invokes a FlatZinc solver handling FlatZinc
version 1.5 or XML-FlatZinc version 1.5
This executable will be invoked from the command line as follows:
fzn_name [<options>] file.fzn
The argument file.fzn is the name of a FlatZinc 1.5 model instance to evaluate.
The executable must support the following command line options:
a directory named globals containing any solver-specific definitions of the
global constraints in the MiniZinc library.
This directory may also contain a file named redefinitions.mzn that contains
redefinitions of FlatZinc built-ins required by the solver.
Installation and execution of solvers must not require root access.
Binaries should be statically linked.
The organizers will make reasonable efforts to install each system, including communication with the submitters of the system in case of difficulties. Nevertheless, the organizers reserve the right to reject an entrant if its compilation or installation process proves overly difficult.
The results will be announced at CP2012. Entrants are encouraged to physically attend CP2012, but are not required to in order to participate or win.
There will be three competition CLASSES:
The README file included in the entry must specify which competition CLASS(es) the entry is to be entered in.
The problem format will be MiniZinc 1.5.
There will be some restrictions on the problems tested in MiniZinc challenge.
array[1..3] of set of 1..3: a = [{1,2}, {3}, {1,3}];
var 1..3: i;
constraint card(a[i]) > 1;
var 1..5: x;
var 1..5: y;
var 1..5: z;
constraint x <= y /\ y <= z;
solve :: int_search([x, y, z], input_order, indomain, complete)
satisfy;
is correct but not
solve :: int_search([x,z], input_order, indomain, complete)
satisfy;
even though most FD solvers would know the second was satisfiable.
var 1..5: x;
var 1..10: y;
constraint x > 1 -> y > 7;
constraint x = 1 -> y < 3;
solve :: int_search([x, y], first_fail, indomain_min, complete)
maximize y;
will first label x = 1
and find maximum value y = 2
eventually on
backtracking to the choice x = 1
, then setting x >= 2
in most FD
solvers will have domains for x :: 2..5
and y :: 8..10
and this time y
will be selected as the next variable to label.
A full specification of the available choices is given in the
FlatZinc 1.5 specification.
Output from entries must conform to the FlatZinc 1.5 specification. For optimization problems, if the time limit is exceeded before the final solution is printed then the last complete approximate solution printed will be considered to be the solution for that entry. Note that is important that entries flush the output stream after printing each approximate solution.
During the MiniZinc Challenge 2012 all programs will run on machines with the following specification:
If your system requires other compilers or tools please contact us and we will try to make them available.
The above machines support both 32- and 64-bit environments. Binaries may be compiled for either.
Except in the Parallel search class, only a single core of one processor will be used for each entrant.
The benchmarks for MiniZinc Challenge 2012 (as well as for the qualification rounds) will be selected by the judges to try to examine some of the breadth of characteristics of FD solvers:
To obtain benchmarks of suitable difficulty we will select only such instances that can be solved by at least one of the participating solvers in a sensible time-frame. For the qualification rounds no such restriction applies.
In order to collect good benchmarks each entrant is
strongly encouraged to submit
one or two MiniZinc 1.5 models, making use of only the global constraints
included in the MiniZinc 1.5 library, as well as some (preferably 20)
instance files for each model.
The instances should range from easy (about a minute)
to hard (about 15 minutes) if possible.
Note that the model must conform to the problem format restrictions above.
Submitted benchmarks must be placed in the public domain.
There will be an initial submission round, which will provide the organizers with an opportunity to provide feedback on entries' compatibility with the competition hardware, compliance with the FlatZinc specification and any other matters that may arise. Submission in the initial round is not required in order to qualify for the final round, but it is strongly encouraged.
The challenge will require solvers to process 100 MiniZinc models
with a run-time limit of 15 minutes (process time) per problem.
The MiniZinc to FlatZinc conversion time will not be included in this,
but the organizers reserve the right to penalize entries that use
massively complicated globals definitions in order to reduce solving time.
The conversion time from FlatZinc to XML-FlatZinc will also not be included.
Each solver s is run on problem p and the following information is collected.
The scoring calculations will be done once for each class: FD search, Free search, and Parallel search.
The organizers may well run entrants in the FD search class on a series of smaller problems to test that they indeed are following the given search strategy. These problems will not accrue points, but may disqualify an entry from the FD search class.
The solvers will be ranked on total points awarded. There will be prizes for the three solvers with the highest scores in each of the classes: FD search, Free search, and Parallel search. The organizers may also award prizes to the best solvers on a particular category of problems.
The organizers reserve the right to enter their own systems--or other systems of interest--to the competition, but these will not be eligible for prizes, but still will modify the scoring results.
Return to the MiniZinc Challenge 2012 home page.