Skip to content

Benchmark framework for quantum annealing machines, Ising machines, and mathematical optimization solvers.

License

MIT, Unknown licenses found

Licenses found

MIT
LICENSE
Unknown
license.sh
Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

fixstars/amplify-benchmark

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

43 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Fixstars Amplify Benchmark

Fixstars Fixstars Amplify README-ja.md

What is Amplify Benchmark?

Fixstars Amplify Benchmark is a framework for benchmarking the performances of solvers for quadratic unconstrained binary optimization problems (QUBO). It provides a command line interface to perform benchmarking and a definition of the benchmark problem.

The Fixstars Amplify SDK is used as the backend, allowing benchmarks to be run with many solvers such as quantum annealing machines, Ising machines, and mathematical optimization solvers. Benchmarks are run based on a job set file that defines the target problems, the number of runs, and the solvers to be used, making it easy to automate the process from benchmark execution to analyzing results.

The results of this library run can be loaded into the Amplify Benchmark Viewer to visualize the results in a web browser. A demo of the benchmark results for Amplify AE is here.

Features

  • Easy to run
  • Parallel execution
  • Automatic evaluation and analysis
  • Benchmark result viewer is provided
  • Customizable solver and problem parameters
  • Formulations for several benchmark sets are pre-defined
  • User-define problems can be added

Pre-defined benchmark sets:

  • Traveling Salesperson Problem: TSPLIB
  • Quadratic Assignment Problem: QAPLIB
  • Max-CUT Problem: Gset
  • Capacitated Vehicle Routing Problem: CVRPLIB
  • Quadratic Problem: QPLIB
  • Sudoku (logic-based combinatorial number-placement puzzle)

Supported solvers powered by Amplify SDK:

Gallery

Objective value for execution time Time To Solution (TTS)
Probability of obtaining a feasible solution Probability of obtaining the best solution Rate
Table DATA

Getting started

Installation

Amplify benchmark is provided as a Python (>=3.8) library. It can be installed with pip as follows:

$ pip install amplify-bench

Run example job set

After installation, the amplify-bench command is enabled.

$ amplify-bench --help
Usage: amplify-bench [OPTIONS] COMMAND [ARGS]...

Options:
  --help  Show this message and exit.

Commands:
  download  Download all supported instance files in the specified...
  run       QUBO Benchmark
  stats     Generate QUBO benchmark stats data.

To run a benchmark, you have to create a benchmark definition ("job set") file. The example/benchmark.yml file contains a sample job set file.

example/benchmark.yml

jobs:
  - problem:
      class: Tsp
      instance: eil51
    client:
      - FixstarsClient
      - token: INPUT_API_TOKEN
        parameters:
          timeout: 3000
    num_samples: 2

The benchmark job set file contains a list of benchmark jobs in YAML or JSON file format. The jobs consist of the number of runs, a list of problems to solve, and parameter values passed to the Client class to run. For this job set, it consists of the following benchmark jobs:

  • target problem:
    • TSPLIB: eil51 instance
  • number of runs: 2
  • FixstarsClient
    • token: INPUT_API_TOKEN
    • parameter.timeout: 3000

Now to start the benchmark using this job set file, run the amplify-bench command with the run subcommand with the path to the job set file.

Note Replace INPUT_API_TOKEN with your API token. If you do not have an API token, go to Amplify WEB site and create an account.

$ amplify-bench run benchmark.yml
input_json: benchmark.yml
label: 20230803_223440
output: None
parallel: 1
aws_profile: None
dry_run: False
cli_benchmark_impl() 20230803_223440
2023-08-03 22:34:41,308 [pid:94470] [INFO]:    542.49 ms in amplify_bench.cli.parser.parse_input_data
2023-08-03 22:34:41,309 [pid:94470] [INFO]: make model of eil51
2023-08-03 22:34:41,519 [pid:94470] [INFO]:    209.08 ms in amplify_bench.problem.tsp.make_tsp_model
total jobs:  2
success jobs:  2
error jobs:  0
Jobs not yet started:  0

When execution completes a JSON file is output as the result of the execution in the same directory. The file name is appended with the execution time by default. The output file path can be changed with the --output <path> option.

Open the result with Amplify Benchmark Viewer

The results can be visualized using the Amplify Benchmark Viewer. To analyze for the viewer, give the stats subcommand with the path to a directory or a result file to the amplify-bench command.

$ amplify-bench stats preset_20230803_223440.json

By default, a report/data.json file is created in the current directory. The path directory of the output file can be changed with the --output option.

Then, drag and drop the created report/data.json file into the Amplify Benchmark Viewer GitHub pages to visualize the results.

Note The data is analyzed only on the browser and is not stored on the external server.

Drag and Drop data.json file Show the evaluated problem list The detailed evaluation for each problem

Advanced usage

job set file in details

PresetObject

A job set file consisted of JSON objects with the following keys. The schema of the job set file is described in amplify_bench/cli/schemas.

key type description
jobs array[JobObject] list of benchmark jobs
variables object definitions of variables used in jobs (Optional)
imports array[string] User-defined problem file path (Optional)

Strings in the file that begin with $ are treated as variable names. Variables are first expanded by the environment variables at runtime, then the variable definitions given in the variables key are referenced in jobs. This is useful, for example, to specify a setting that is commonly used in multiple jobs

variables:
  CLIENT:
    - FixstarsClient
    - parameters:
        timeout: 3000
jobs:
  - problem:
      class: Tsp
      instance: eil51
    client: $CLIENT
    num_samples: 2
  - problem:
      class: Tsp
      instance: burma14
    client: $CLIENT
    num_samples: 1

imports specifies the list of paths to the user-defined problem file. Enter the path as a relative path from a job set file, a relative path from the current directory, or an absolute path. For details on user-defined question files, see Create your own benchmark problems.

JobObject

key type description
num_samples int the number of runs
client array client name and parameters
problem ProblemObject the problem definition
matrix object[array] the definitions of variable patterns (Optional)

If num_samples is an integer greater than 1, it will be run multiple times with the same settings. The matrix key is given with the patterns of variables explained later.

The client key is given an array of length 2. The first element of the array is the name of the client class, and the second element is an object with the property values of the client. For example, the following client configuration in the Amplify SDK

from amplify.client import FixstarsClient

client = FixstarsClient()
client.token = "INPUT_API_TOKEN"
client.parameters.timeout = 1000

should be specified as follows in the job set file.

jobs:
  - client:
      - FixstarsClient
      - token: INPUT_API_TOKEN
        parameters:
          timeout: 1000

Note See the documentation for the available properties for each Client class.

ProblemObject

The problem key has an object consisting of the following keys:

key type description
class string The name of the problem class
instance string Instance name
parameters object Constructor parameters of the problem class

The class is the name of the problem class contained in amplify_bench/problem. The predefined problem classes are Tsp (TSPLIB), Qap (QAPLIB), Cvrp (CVRPLIB), MaxCut (GSET), Sudoku and Qplib (QPLIB). The instance is the name of the instance in the problem set corresponding to each problem class. See amplify_bench/problem/data for details. Problem classes may have formulation parameters that can be passed to the constructor, which can be specified by parameter key.

Using a matrix for your jobs

Multiple jobs can be automatically generated for all combinations of multiple variable patterns given in a single job definition. For example, to run for all combinations of multiple instances and multiple runtimes, the following job set file can be used.

variables:
  NUM_SAMPLES: 100
  FIXSTARS:
    - FixstarsClient
    - token: INPUT_API_TOKEN
      parameters:
        timeout: $TIMEOUT
jobs:
  - problem:
      class: Qap
      instance: $INSTANCE
    client: $FIXSTARS
    num_samples: $NUM_SAMPLES
    matrix:
      INSTANCE:
        - esc32a
        - sko56
      TIMEOUT:
        - 10000
        - 30000

The matrix is an array of values with the variable names as keys. In this case, jobs with timeout of 10000 and 30000 will be created for esc32a and sko56 respectively. Note that you can refer to the variables you pass to matrix in the variables defined in variables.

Note Variables are referenced recursively, but an infinite loop will fail.

Create your own benchmark problems

User-defined formulations can be added as benchmark problems that are recognized in Amplify Benchmark.

The following example runs a benchmark against the MyTsp class defined in the mytsp.py file. Setting a list of Python file paths to the imports key will load additional probem classes defined in the files. A file path must be specified as an absolute path or relative to the job set file or the current directory.

imports:
  - mytsp.py
jobs:
  - problem:
      class: MyTsp
      instance: random8

Note User-defined class names should not duplicate the built-in problem classes.

The problem class must extend the Problem class and implement the constructor (__init__) and the methods make_model and evaluate. The make_model method formulates the problem in Amplify SDK and the evaluate method evaluates the formulated model with the solution as input.

The following code snippet is an example of a MyTsp problem class.

mytsp.py

class MyTsp(Problem):
    def __init__(
        self,
        instance: str,
        constraint_weight: float = 1.0,
        seed: int = 0,
        path: Optional[str] = None,
    ):
        super().__init__()
        self._instance: str = instance
        self._problem_parameters["constraint_weight"] = constraint_weight
        if instance.startswith("random"):
            self._problem_parameters["seed"] = seed
        self._symbols = None

        ncity, distances, locations, best_known = self.__load(self._instance, seed, path)
        self._ncity = ncity
        self._distances = distances
        self._locations = locations  # not used
        self._best_known = best_known

    def make_model(self):
        symbols, model = make_tsp_model(self._ncity, self._distances, self._problem_parameters["constraint_weight"])
        self._symbols = symbols
        self._model = model

    def evaluate(self, solution: SolverSolution) -> Dict[str, Union[None, float, str]]:
        value: Optional[float] = None
        path: str = ""

        if solution.is_feasible:
            spins = solution.values
            variables = np.array(self._symbols.decode(spins))  # type: ignore
            index = np.where(variables == 1)[1]
            index_str = [str(idx) for idx in index]
            value = calc_tour_dist(list(index), self._distances)
            path = " ".join(index_str)
        else:
            pass

        return {"label": "total distances", "value": value, "path": path}
...

Constructor

def __init__(self, instance: str, **kwargs) -> None

The constructor must accept at least an instance: str argument. Otherwise, if you add constraint_weight: float to the constructor arguments for example, the parameters key in ProblemObject can have a constraint_weight.

make_model method

def make_model(self) -> None

The make_model method is responsible for formulating and storing an instance of the amplify.BinaryQuadraticModel class in self._model.

evaluate method

def evaluate(self, solution: amplify.SolverSolution) -> Dict[str, Union[None, float, str]]

The evaluate method takes and evaluates a amplify.SolverSolution. The return value can be any key and value as Dict[str, Union[None, float, str]]. The return value is output to the objective_value key in the JSON file of the benchmark result.

Contributing

Amplify Benchmark is an open source project. Contributions are welcome, including bug reports, feature additions, documentation improvements, etc.

Developed by

The Amplify benchmark project ties together:

About

Benchmark framework for quantum annealing machines, Ising machines, and mathematical optimization solvers.

Topics

Resources

License

MIT, Unknown licenses found

Licenses found

MIT
LICENSE
Unknown
license.sh

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Contributors 3

  •  
  •  
  •