Revisiting Restarts of CDCL: Should the Search Information be Preserved?
SAT solvers are indispensable in formal verification for hardware and software with many important applications. CDCL is the most widely used framework for modern SAT solvers, and restart is an essential technique of CDCL. When restarting, CDCL solvers cancel the current variable assignment while ma...
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Zusammenfassung: | SAT solvers are indispensable in formal verification for hardware and
software with many important applications. CDCL is the most widely used
framework for modern SAT solvers, and restart is an essential technique of
CDCL. When restarting, CDCL solvers cancel the current variable assignment
while maintaining the branching order, variable phases, and learnt clauses.
This type of restart is referred to as warm restart in this paper. Although
different restart policies have been studied, there is no study on whether such
information should be kept after restarts. This work addresses this question
and finds some interesting observations.
This paper indicates that under this popular warm restart scheme, there is a
substantial variation in run-time with different randomized initial orders and
phases, which motivates us to forget some learned information periodically to
prevent being stuck in a disadvantageous search space. We propose a new type of
restart called cold restart, which differs from previous restarts by forgetting
some of the learned information. Experiments show that modern CDCL solvers can
benefit from periodically conducting cold restarts. Based on the analysis of
the cold-restart strategies, we develop a parallel SAT solver. Both the
sequential and parallel versions of cold restart are more suitable for
satisfiable instances, which suggests that existing CDCL heuristics for
information management should be revised if one hopes to construct a
satisfiable-oriented SAT solver. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2404.16387 |