----------------------------------------------------------------------------- -- | -- Module : Documentation.SBV.Examples.BitPrecise.MultMask -- Copyright : (c) Levent Erkok -- License : BSD3 -- Maintainer: erkokl@gmail.com -- Stability : experimental -- -- An SBV solution to the bit-precise puzzle of shuffling the bits in a -- 64-bit word in a custom order. The idea is to take a 64-bit value: -- -- @1.......2.......3.......4.......5.......6.......7.......8.......@ -- -- And turn it into another 64-bit value, that looks like this: -- -- @12345678........................................................@ -- -- We do not care what happens to the bits that are represented by dots. The -- problem is to do this with one mask and one multiplication. -- -- Apparently this operation has several applications, including in programs -- that play chess of all things. We use SBV to find the appropriate mask and -- the multiplier. -- -- Note that this is an instance of the program synthesis problem, where -- we "fill in the blanks" given a certain skeleton that satisfy a certain -- property, using quantified formulas. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- {-# OPTIONS_GHC -Wall -Werror #-} module Documentation.SBV.Examples.BitPrecise.MultMask where import Data.SBV import Data.SBV.Control -- | Find the multiplier and the mask as described. We have: -- -- >>> maskAndMult -- Satisfiable. Model: -- mask = 0x8080808080808080 :: Word64 -- mult = 0x0002040810204081 :: Word64 -- -- That is, any 64 bit value masked by the first and multipled by the second -- value above will have its bits at positions @[7,15,23,31,39,47,55,63]@ moved -- to positions @[56,57,58,59,60,61,62,63]@ respectively. -- -- NB. Depending on your z3 version, you might also get the following -- multiplier as the result: 0x8202040810204081. That value works just fine as well! -- -- Note that we have to send z3 custom configuration for this problem as -- otherwise it takes too long. See <http://github.com/Z3Prover/z3/issues/2075> -- for details. maskAndMult :: IO () maskAndMult = print =<< satWith z3{printBase=16} find where find = do -- The magic incantations that make z3 go faster on this setOption $ OptionKeyword ":smt.auto_config" ["false"] setOption $ OptionKeyword ":smt.relevancy" ["0"] mask <- exists "mask" mult <- exists "mult" inp <- forall "inp" let res = (mask .&. inp) * (mult :: SWord64) solve [inp `sExtractBits` [7, 15 .. 63] .== res `sExtractBits` [56 .. 63]]