1 /******************************************************************************* 2 * SAT4J: a SATisfiability library for Java Copyright (C) 2004, 2012 Artois University and CNRS 3 * 4 * All rights reserved. This program and the accompanying materials 5 * are made available under the terms of the Eclipse Public License v1.0 6 * which accompanies this distribution, and is available at 7 * http://www.eclipse.org/legal/epl-v10.html 8 * 9 * Alternatively, the contents of this file may be used under the terms of 10 * either the GNU Lesser General Public License Version 2.1 or later (the 11 * "LGPL"), in which case the provisions of the LGPL are applicable instead 12 * of those above. If you wish to allow use of your version of this file only 13 * under the terms of the LGPL, and not to allow others to use your version of 14 * this file under the terms of the EPL, indicate your decision by deleting 15 * the provisions above and replace them with the notice and other provisions 16 * required by the LGPL. If you do not delete the provisions above, a recipient 17 * may use your version of this file under the terms of the EPL or the LGPL. 18 * 19 * Based on the original MiniSat specification from: 20 * 21 * An extensible SAT solver. Niklas Een and Niklas Sorensson. Proceedings of the 22 * Sixth International Conference on Theory and Applications of Satisfiability 23 * Testing, LNCS 2919, pp 502-518, 2003. 24 * 25 * See www.minisat.se for the original solver in C++. 26 * 27 * Contributors: 28 * CRIL - initial API and implementation 29 *******************************************************************************/ 30 package org.sat4j.core; 31 32 import java.io.Serializable; 33 import java.lang.reflect.InvocationTargetException; 34 import java.lang.reflect.Method; 35 import java.util.ArrayList; 36 import java.util.List; 37 38 import org.sat4j.specs.ISolver; 39 40 /** 41 * A solver factory is responsible for providing prebuilt solvers to the end 42 * user. 43 * 44 * @author bourgeois 45 */ 46 public abstract class ASolverFactory<T extends ISolver> implements Serializable { 47 48 /** 49 * 50 */ 51 private static final long serialVersionUID = 1L; 52 53 /** 54 * This methods returns names of solvers to be used with the method 55 * getSolverByName(). 56 * 57 * @return an array containing the names of all the solvers available in the 58 * library. 59 * @see #createSolverByName(String) 60 */ 61 public String[] solverNames() { 62 List<String> l = new ArrayList<String>(); 63 Method[] solvers = this.getClass().getDeclaredMethods(); 64 for (Method solver : solvers) { 65 if (solver.getParameterTypes().length == 0 66 && solver.getName().startsWith("new")) { //$NON-NLS-1$ 67 l.add(solver.getName().substring(3)); 68 } 69 } 70 String[] names = new String[l.size()]; 71 l.toArray(names); 72 return names; 73 } 74 75 /** 76 * create a solver from its String name. the solvername Xxxx must map one of 77 * the newXxxx methods. 78 * 79 * @param solvername 80 * the name of the solver 81 * @return an ISolver built using newSolvername. <code>null</code> if the 82 * solvername doesn't map one of the method of the factory. 83 */ 84 @SuppressWarnings("unchecked") 85 public T createSolverByName(String solvername) { 86 try { 87 Class<?>[] paramtypes = {}; 88 Method m = this.getClass() 89 .getMethod("new" + solvername, paramtypes); //$NON-NLS-1$ 90 return (T) m.invoke(null, (Object[]) null); 91 } catch (SecurityException e) { 92 System.err.println(e.getLocalizedMessage()); 93 } catch (IllegalArgumentException e) { 94 System.err.println(e.getLocalizedMessage()); 95 } catch (NoSuchMethodException e) { 96 System.err.println(e.getLocalizedMessage()); 97 } catch (IllegalAccessException e) { 98 System.err.println(e.getLocalizedMessage()); 99 } catch (InvocationTargetException e) { 100 System.err.println(e.getLocalizedMessage()); 101 } 102 return null; 103 } 104 105 /** 106 * To obtain the default solver of the library. The solver is suitable to 107 * solve huge SAT benchmarks. It should reflect state-of-the-art SAT 108 * technologies. 109 * 110 * For solving small/easy SAT benchmarks, use lightSolver() instead. 111 * 112 * @return a solver from the factory 113 * @see #lightSolver() 114 */ 115 public abstract T defaultSolver(); 116 117 /** 118 * To obtain a solver that is suitable for solving many small instances of 119 * SAT problems. 120 * 121 * The solver is not using sophisticated but costly reasoning and avoids to 122 * allocate too much memory. 123 * 124 * For solving bigger SAT benchmarks, use defaultSolver() instead. 125 * 126 * @return a solver from the factory 127 * @see #defaultSolver() 128 */ 129 public abstract T lightSolver(); 130 }