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Blog Entry (29.01.2021): A Deeper Look at States

In issue348 we changed one of our most fundamental classes - the representation of states. In this blog post, we want to explain the details of the state class, some design choices, and how to efficiently work with states.

The State Class

States internally store the following data (reordered slightly to match the order of discussion here):

   1 class State {
   2     const AbstractTask *task;
   3     int num_variables;
   4 
   5     mutable std::shared_ptr<std::vector<int>> values;
   6 
   7     const StateRegistry *registry;
   8     StateID id;
   9     const PackedStateBin *buffer;
  10     const int_packer::IntPacker *state_packer;
  11 }

General Data

Every state belongs to a task, which is stored internally as a pointer to an AbstractTask. This class is a private implementation detail and not accessible outside, so through the public interface (State::get_task()), the task is available only as a TaskProxy.

Next up is the number of variables. We store this in each state for faster access but this might not be necessary and will possibly disappear in the future.

Unpacked Data

Finally, the next two blocks are related to the actual data of the states. Our states can have data associated with them in two ways. The most straight-forward way is a vector of integers where position i contains the value of variable i. We store this data behind a shared pointer, so states remain light-weight and cheap to copy. The use of mutable is probably surprising but we will discuss this later.

Packed Data

The alternative to a vector is packed data where values of multiple variables can be represented in one byte (for example, 8 boolean state variables fit into a single byte). This packed representation is used internally by the StateRegistry which stores states for long term storage. The idea is that State objects usually do not live too long (say only for one expansion) and we never store a large amount of them. When storing millions of states, the overhead of storing an additional pointer for each of them becomes very noticeable. This concerns explicit elements such as const AbstractTask *task but also the pointers hidden inside the vector class. This is why we store only packed data in a very compact way in the registry for such states. The state class then offers a nice public-facing interface to this data. Such states store their data in a registry (identified by registry) at a specific position (identified by id). To avoid looking up the position of the data every time, the state also stores the memory position of the actual data (pointed to by buffer). Finally, the state_packer encapsulates the bit magic that is required to access the value of a variable from the packed representation.

Three Kinds of States

As we have two kinds of possible data representations, there are three kinds of states: those that have only unpacked data, those that have only packed data, and those that have both (the fourth case of a state without data doesn't require an object).

States derived from a registry (registered states) always have packed data available but can be unpacked (with State::unpack) to have both kinds of data available. Unpacking the data requires accessing every packed value once but afterwards, accessing the unpacked data is faster than accessing the packed data. This makes sense in cases where many values of the state need to be accessed multiple times. Calling state::unpack on state that is already unpacked is allowed and cheap.

States that are created without a registry (unregistered states) never have packed data available and always use unpacked data only.

The subscript operator (State::operator[]) automatically uses the fastest way available to access the data and unifies the interface to all three kinds of states.

Immutable States through Mutable Pointers

Our states are meant to be immutable in the sense that a given state object will not change its identity but you can assign a new state to a State variable. A variable representing the state [1,2,3] cannot be changed to represent the state [1,1,1] except by assignment. Technically, this means that all methods of the class are const except for the (copy and move) assignment operators.

The method State::unpack seems to contradict this paradigm because it modifies the pointer values. We use the (maybe somewhat controversial) keyword mutable on the pointer to still allow the method to be considered const. The argument for this is that unpacking the data does not change the logical identity of the state. If it represents [1,2,3] before the operation, it still does so after unpacking.

Working with States

In this section, we want to go over the most important steps for working with State objects.

Constructing States

Registered states can be created with StateRegistry::get_initial_state and StateRegistry::get_successor_state. As these are the only ways to create registered states, such states are always reachable and always use duplicate detection (each state is represented in the registry at most once and creating a state along two paths will yield states with the same IDs).

Unregistered states can be created in a similar way with TaskProxy::get_initial_state and State::get_unregistered_successor. In addition, they can also be created from arbitrary values using TaskProxy::create_state.

The other two overloads of TaskProxy::create_state (the ones involving pointers to packed data) should only be used by the StateRegistry and should otherwise be considered private.

Passing States Around

States are relatively light-weight, copying them only copies a handful of pointers and possibly updates the reference count of the shared pointer. But even if this copy is cheap, it is not free. We recommend passing states around by const reference where possible but copying them should not kill performance unless this happens in a very tight loop.

Accessing States

In most circumstances, accessing state values with State::operator[] should be the right thing. If many values are requested from a registered state, it might pay off to call State::unpack first but this should be profiled. Also note that within heuristics all states are already unpacked at the moment.

In extreme circumstances where performance is absolutely critical, State::get_unpacked_values can be used after unpacking the state to get a reference to the internal vector. Passing this vector to a function instead of the state saves one level of indirection when accessing the data and one if statement during the access. In very tight loops this can make a difference but this should only be done after identifying the issue with a profile.

Comparing and Hashing States

Two states are considered equal if they contain the same values. However, mixing registered and unregistered states or registered states from different registries is likely unintentional and thus comparing them is considered an error. We currently have no use case where such a comparison would be necessary. If you do, contact us.

We provide a hash function (feed(HashState &hash_state, const State &state)) for our implementation of hash maps (utils::HashMap) and hash sets (utils::HashSet). This function is meant for hashing unregistered states. Hashing registered states is considered an error for two reasons: first it is not possible to implement an efficient hash function that computes the same value for logically equal packed and unpacked states without unpacking the packed state. Second, when hashing registered states, it is much more efficient to hash their IDs instead of the state data, so we consider hashing the state data a performance bug.

How Not to Use a State

Certain usage patters of a state are considered errors and will stop the planner with a critical error. In the future, these tests may disappear (leading to silent corruption) in release builds for performance reasons, which is already the case for many other similar checks in the planner. So we recommend thoroughly testing your code with debug builds, switching to the more efficient release builds once you trust your code.

  1. Accessing packed data through State::get_buffer is an error on unregistered states (they do not have a buffer). You can use if (s.get_registry()) to check if the state is registered.

  2. Accessing unpacked data through State::get_unpacked_values() is an error if the state has no unpacked data. We never implicitly unpack a state as this is an expensive operation. Call s.unpack(); if you work with states where you are unsure if they have unpacked data available.

  3. Creating unregistered successor states through State::get_unregistered_successor also requires access to unpacked data and thus leads to an error if the state doesn't have it available.

  4. As described above, hashing a registered state is considered an error.