JKQ QCEC - A JKQ tool for Quantum Circuit Equivalence Checking
Project description
JKQ QCEC - A JKQ tool for Quantum Circuit Equivalence Checking
A JKQ tool for quantum circuit equivalence checking by the Institute for Integrated Circuits at the Johannes Kepler University Linz based on methods proposed in [1], [2].
[1] L. Burgholzer and R. Wille. "Advanced Equivalence Checking for Quantum Circuits". IEEE Transactions on Computer Aided Design of Integrated Circuits and Systems (TCAD), 2021 (pre-print arXiv:2004.08420)
[2] L. Burgholzer, R. Raymond, and R. Wille. "Verifying Results of the IBM Qiskit Quantum Circuit Compilation Flow". In International Conference on Quantum Computing and Engineering (QCE), 2020 (pre-print arXiv:2009.02376)
This tool can be used for checking the equivalence of two quantum circuits provided in any of the following formats:
Real
(e.g. from RevLib),OpenQASM
(e.g. used by IBM's Qiskit),TFC
(e.g. from Reversible Logic Synthesis Benchmarks Page)QC
(e.g. from Feynman)
with the following available methods:
- Reference - Construct and compare the DD for both circuits [1, Section III.B],
- - Starting from the identity I, either apply gates from G or (inverted) gates from G' according to one of the following strategies [1, Section IV.A]
- Naive - Alternate between applications of G and G' [1, Section V.A],
- Proportional - Proportionally apply gates according to the gate count ratio of G and G' [1, Section V.B],
- Lookahead - Always apply the gate yielding the smaller DD [1, Section V.C],
- Simulation - Conduct simulation runs to prove non-equivalence or give a strong indication of equivalence [1, Section IV.B],
- Verification of compilation results - A dedicated scheme for verifying results of the IBM Qiskit Compilation Flow explicitly exploiting certain knowledge about the compilation process. [2]
The tool builds upon our decision diagram (DD) package as well as our quantum functionality representation (QFR). For more information, please visit iic.jku.at/eda/research/quantum_verification. If you want to visually explore decision diagrams for quantum computing, check out our installation-free web-tool JKQ DDVis.
If you have any questions, feel free to contact us via iic-quantum@jku.at or by creating an issue on GitHub.
Usage
This tool can either be used as a standalone executable with command-line interface, or as a library for the incorporation in other projects. Python bindings are available since version 1.4.5.
-
The standalone executable is launched in the following way:
qcec_app <PATH_TO_FILE_1> <PATH_TO_FILE_2> (--method <method>)
where <method> is one of
- reference
- naive
- proportional (default)
- lookahead
- simulation
- compilationflow
An optional parameter
--tol e
allows to specify the numerical tolerance e (default: 1e-13) used during the computation.
Thesimulation
method has two optional parameters--nsims r
and--fid F
, controlling the maximum number of simulations r (default: 16) and the considered fidelity limit F (default 0.999), respectively.The executable performs the equivalence check and prints its result to the standard output. Per default, this produces JSON formatted output. Additional statistics (e.g., verification time, maximum number of nodes, required simulations, etc.) can be obtained by additionally providing the
--ps
flag. If the--csv
flag is present, a CSV entry according to the following header is printedfilename1;nqubits1;ngates1;filename2;nqubits2;ngates2;expectedEquivalent;equivalent;method;time;maxActive;nsims
-
Internally the library works in the following way
- Import both input files into a
qc::QuantumComputation
objectstd::string file1 = "<PATH_TO_FILE_1>"; qc::QuantumComputation qc1(file1); std::string file2 = "<PATH_TO_FILE_2>"; qc::QuantumComputation qc2(file2);
- Instantiate an
ec::EquivalenceChecker
object with both circuitsec::Method method = ec::{ Reference | Naive | Proportional | Lookahead }; auto eq = ec::ImprovedDDEquivalenceChecker(qc1, qc2, method);
orauto eq = ec::PowerOfSimulationEquivalenceChecker(qc1, qc2);
orauto eq = ec::CompilationFlowEquivalenceChecker(qc1, qc2);
- Perform the actual equivalence check
eq.check();
- Print the results
eq.printResult();
or access them through theeq.results
member.
- Import both input files into a
System requirements
Building (and running) is continuously tested under Linux (Ubuntu 20.04) using gcc-9.3 and clang-11, MacOS (Catalina 10.15) using AppleClang and gcc-10, and Windows using Microsoft Visual Studio 2017. However, the implementation should be compatible with any current C++ compiler supporting C++14 and a minimum CMake version of 3.10.
Configure, Build, and Install
In order to build the library execute the following in the project's main directory
-
Configure CMake
cmake -S . -B build -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release
Windows users using Visual Studio and the MSVC compiler may try
cmake -S . -B build -G "Visual Studio 15 2017" -A x64 -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release
Older CMake versions not supporting the above syntax (< 3.13) may be used with
mkdir build && cd build cmake .. -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release
-
Build the respective target.
cmake --build ./build --config Release --target <target>
The following CMake targets are available
qcec_app
: The commandline executableqcec
: The standalone libraryqcec_example
: A small commandline demo exampleqcec_test
: Unit tests using GoogleTest
-
Optional: The QCEC library and tool may be installed on the system by executing
cmake --build ./build --config Release --target install
It can then also be included in other projects using the following CMake snippet
find_package(qcec) target_link_libraries(${TARGET_NAME} PRIVATE JKQ::qcec)
Python Bindings
Running pip install .
in the main project directory creates Python bindings for the JKQ QCEC tool. Then, using it in Python is as simple as:
from jkq import qcec
qcec.verify({"file1": "<PATH_TO_FILE_1>", "file2:": "<PATH_TO_FILE_2>"})
The full list of parameters as described in Usage which can be passed to qcec.verify(...)
as a Python dictionary, are:
instance = {
"file1": "<PATH_TO_FILE_1>", # required
"file2": "<PATH_TO_FILE_2>", # required
"method": "proportional",
"tolerance": 1e-13,
"nsims": 16,
"fidelity": 0.999,
"statistics": False,
"csv": False,
}
Reference
If you use our tool for your research, we will be thankful if you refer to it by citing the appropriate publication:
[1] L. Burgholzer and R. Wille. "Advanced Equivalence Checking for Quantum Circuits". IEEE Trans. on CAD of Integrated Circuits and Systems (TCAD), 2021
@article{burgholzer2020advanced,
author = {Burgholzer, Lukas and Wille, Robert},
title = {Advanced Equivalence Checking for Quantum Circuits},
year = 2021,
journaltitle = {{IEEE} Trans. on {CAD} of Integrated Circuits and Systems}
}
[2] L. Burgholzer, R. Raymond, and R. Wille. "Verifying Results of the IBM Qiskit Quantum Circuit Compilation Flow". In International Conference on Quantum Computing and Engineering (QCE), 2020
@inproceedings{burgholzer2020verifyingResultsIBM,
title = {Verifying results of the {{IBM Qiskit}} quantum circuit compilation flow},
booktitle = {International Conference on Quantum Computing and Engineering},
author = {Burgholzer, Lukas and Raymond, Rudy and Wille, Robert},
year = {2020}
}
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