// -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
// Copyright (C) 2009, 2011, 2013 Laboratoire de Recherche et
// Développement de l'Epita (LRDE).
// Copyright (C) 2003, 2004 Laboratoire d'Informatique de Paris 6
// (LIP6), département Systèmes Répartis Coopératifs (SRC), Université
// Pierre et Marie Curie.
//
// This file is part of Spot, a model checking library.
//
// Spot is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
// under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
// the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
// (at your option) any later version.
//
// Spot is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
// ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY
// or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public
// License for more details.
//
// You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
// along with this program. If not, see .
#ifndef SPOT_TGBA_STATE_HH
# define SPOT_TGBA_STATE_HH
#include "misc/common.hh"
#include
#include
#include
#include
#include
#include "misc/casts.hh"
#include "misc/hash.hh"
namespace spot
{
/// \ingroup tgba_essentials
/// \brief Abstract class for states.
class SPOT_API state
{
public:
/// \brief Compares two states (that come from the same automaton).
///
/// This method returns an integer less than, equal to, or greater
/// than zero if \a this is found, respectively, to be less than, equal
/// to, or greater than \a other according to some implicit total order.
///
/// This method should not be called to compare states from
/// different automata.
///
/// \sa spot::state_ptr_less_than
virtual int compare(const state* other) const = 0;
/// \brief Hash a state.
///
/// This method returns an integer that can be used as a
/// hash value for this state.
///
/// Note that the hash value is guaranteed to be unique for all
/// equal states (in compare()'s sense) for only has long has one
/// of these states exists. So it's OK to use a spot::state as a
/// key in a \c hash_map because the mere use of the state as a
/// key in the hash will ensure the state continues to exist.
///
/// However if you create the state, get its hash key, delete the
/// state, recreate the same state, and get its hash key, you may
/// obtain two different hash keys if the same state were not
/// already used elsewhere. In practice this weird situation can
/// occur only when the state is BDD-encoded, because BDD numbers
/// (used to build the hash value) can be reused for other
/// formulas. That probably doesn't matter, since the hash value
/// is meant to be used in a \c hash_map, but it had to be noted.
virtual size_t hash() const = 0;
/// Duplicate a state.
virtual state* clone() const = 0;
/// \brief Release a state.
///
/// Methods from the tgba or tgba_succ_iterator always return a
/// new state that you should deallocate with this function.
/// Before Spot 0.7, you had to "delete" your state directly.
/// Starting with Spot 0.7, you should update your code to use
/// this function instead. destroy() usually call delete, except
/// in subclasses that destroy() to allow better memory management
/// (e.g., no memory allocation for explicit automata).
virtual void destroy() const
{
delete this;
}
protected:
/// \brief Destructor.
///
/// Note that client code should call
/// s->destroy();
instead of delete s;
.
virtual ~state()
{
}
};
/// \ingroup tgba_essentials
/// \brief Strict Weak Ordering for \c state*.
///
/// This is meant to be used as a comparison functor for
/// STL \c map whose key are of type \c state*.
///
/// For instance here is how one could declare
/// a map of \c state*.
/// \code
/// // Remember how many times each state has been visited.
/// std::map seen;
/// \endcode
struct state_ptr_less_than:
public std::binary_function
{
bool
operator()(const state* left, const state* right) const
{
assert(left);
return left->compare(right) < 0;
}
};
/// \ingroup tgba_essentials
/// \brief An Equivalence Relation for \c state*.
///
/// This is meant to be used as a comparison functor for
/// an \c unordered_map whose key are of type \c state*.
///
/// For instance here is how one could declare
/// a map of \c state*.
/// \code
/// // Remember how many times each state has been visited.
/// std::unordered_map seen;
/// \endcode
struct state_ptr_equal:
public std::binary_function
{
bool
operator()(const state* left, const state* right) const
{
assert(left);
return 0 == left->compare(right);
}
};
/// \ingroup tgba_essentials
/// \ingroup hash_funcs
/// \brief Hash Function for \c state*.
///
/// This is meant to be used as a hash functor for
/// an \c unordered_map whose key are of type \c state*.
///
/// For instance here is how one could declare
/// a map of \c state*.
/// \code
/// // Remember how many times each state has been visited.
/// std::unordered_map seen;
/// \endcode
struct state_ptr_hash:
public std::unary_function
{
size_t
operator()(const state* that) const
{
assert(that);
return that->hash();
}
};
typedef std::unordered_set state_set;
// Functions related to shared_ptr.
//////////////////////////////////////////////////
typedef std::shared_ptr shared_state;
inline void shared_state_deleter(state* s) { s->destroy(); }
/// \ingroup tgba_essentials
/// \brief Strict Weak Ordering for \c shared_state
/// (shared_ptr).
///
/// This is meant to be used as a comparison functor for
/// STL \c map whose key are of type \c shared_state.
///
/// For instance here is how one could declare
/// a map of \c shared_state.
/// \code
/// // Remember how many times each state has been visited.
/// std::map seen;
/// \endcode
struct state_shared_ptr_less_than:
public std::binary_function
{
bool
operator()(shared_state left,
shared_state right) const
{
assert(left);
return left->compare(right.get()) < 0;
}
};
/// \ingroup tgba_essentials
/// \brief An Equivalence Relation for \c shared_state
/// (shared_ptr).
///
/// This is meant to be used as a comparison functor for
/// un \c unordered_map whose key are of type \c shared_state.
///
/// For instance here is how one could declare
/// a map of \c shared_state
/// \code
/// // Remember how many times each state has been visited.
/// std::unordered_map seen;
/// \endcode
struct state_shared_ptr_equal:
public std::binary_function
{
bool
operator()(shared_state left,
shared_state right) const
{
assert(left);
return 0 == left->compare(right.get());
}
};
/// \ingroup tgba_essentials
/// \ingroup hash_funcs
/// \brief Hash Function for \c shared_state (shared_ptr).
///
/// This is meant to be used as a hash functor for
/// an \c unordered_map whose key are of type
/// \c shared_state.
///
/// For instance here is how one could declare
/// a map of \c shared_state.
/// \code
/// // Remember how many times each state has been visited.
/// std::unordered_map seen;
/// \endcode
struct state_shared_ptr_hash:
public std::unary_function
{
size_t
operator()(shared_state that) const
{
assert(that);
return that->hash();
}
};
typedef std::unordered_set shared_state_set;
}
#endif // SPOT_TGBA_STATE_HH