Difference between revisions of "Problem Format"
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*.txt - optional data file description | *.txt - optional data file description | ||
include/ | include/ | ||
− | - any files that should be included with all submissions | + | <language>/ |
+ | - any files that should be included with all submissions in <language> | ||
submissions/ | submissions/ | ||
accepted/ | accepted/ |
Revision as of 22:08, 21 August 2012
Contents
Overview
This document describes a standard for distributing and sharing problems for algorithmic programming contests.
All problems must have a "short name" consisting solely of lower case letters a-z and digits 0-9. All files related to a given problem are provided in a directory named after the short name of the problem.
All file names must match the following regexp
[a-zA-Z0-9][a-zA-Z0-9_.-]*[a-zA-Z0-9]
I.e., it must be of length at least 2, consist solely of lower or upper case letters a-z, A-Z, digits 0-9, period, dash or underscore, but must not begin or end with period, dash or underscore.
All text files for a problem must be UTF-8 encoded and not have a byte order mark.
Problem Metadata
Metadata about the problem (e.g., source, license, limits) are provided in a UTF-8 encoded YAML file named <short-name>/problem.yaml.
The following keys are defined as below. Any unknown keys should be ignored.
Key | Type | Comments | |
---|---|---|---|
author | String or sequence of strings, optional | Who should get author credits. This would typically be the people that came up with the idea, wrote the problem specification and created the test data. This is sometimes omitted when authors choose to instead only give source credit, but both may be specified. | |
source | String, optional | Who should get source credit. This would typically be the name (and year) of the event where the problem was first used or created for. | |
license | String, optional | License under which the problem may be used. | |
rights_owner | String, mandatory | Owner of the copyright of the problem. | |
keywords | optional | ||
difficulty | optional | ||
limits | Sequence of mappings with keys as defined below | ||
validator | String, optional | set of values from the following (delimited by spaces):
|
limits
A sequence of mappings with the following keys:
Key | Comments | Example |
---|---|---|
time_multiplier | optional, defaults to 5 | 3.5 |
time_safety_margin | optional, defaults to 2 | 1.5 |
memory | optional, in Mb, defaults to 2048 | 3072 |
output | optional, in Mb, defaults to 8 | 4 |
compilation_time | optional, in seconds, defaults to 60 | 120 |
validation_time | optional, in seconds, defaults to 60 | 120 |
validation_memory | optional, in Mb, defaults to 2048 | 3072 |
validation_output | optional, in Mb, defaults to 8 | 4 |
Problem Statements
The problem statement of the problem is provided in the directory <short_name>/problem_statement/.
This directory must contain one LaTeX file per language, named problem.<language>.tex, that contains the problem text itself, including input and output specifications, but not sample input and output. Language must be given as an ISO 639-1 alpha-2 language code. Optionally, the language code can be left out, the default is then English.
A template will be provided that \imports this file as well as the sample input and output. The format of the problem statement is described in Problem Statement Template. Files needed by this file must all be in <short_name>/problem_statement/ , problem.tex should reference auxiliary files as if the working directory is <short_name>/problem_statement/.
Test data
The test data are provided in subdirectories of <short_name>/data/. The sample data in <short_name>/data/sample/ and the secret data in <short_name>/data/secret/.
All input and answer files have the filename extension .in and .ans respectively. Optionally a text file (with filename extension .txt) describing the purpose of an input file may be present. Input, answer and description files are matched by the base name.
Comment: .hint for hints about the testcase?
Included Code
Code that should be included with all submissions are provided one directory per supported language <short_name>/include/<language>/.
The files should be copied from a language directory based on the language of the submission, to the submission files before compiling, overwriting files from the submission in the case of name collision. Language must be given as one of the language codes in the table below.
If there are any language directories, then submissions on this problem will only be allowed for languages with a corresponding directory. If files are needed for some languages, but not others, empty language directories must be added.
Code | Language |
---|---|
c | C |
cpp | C++ |
csharp | C# |
go | Go |
java | Java |
php | PHP |
python2 | Python 2 |
python3 | Python 3 |
Example Submissions
Correct and incorrect solutions to the problem are provided in a directory <short_name>/submissions/. The submissions/ directory has subdirectories corresponding to the judgement that the programs are supposed to receive:
- submissions/accepted/: Solutions correctly solving the problem
- submissions/wrong_answer/: Submissions producing incorrect answers
- submissions/time_limit_exceeded/: Submissions that are supposed to be too slow
- submissions/run_time_error/: Submissions that are supposed to crash
Every file or directory in these directories represents a separate solution. Same requirements as for submissions with regards to filenames. It is mandatory to provide at least one accepted solution. Everything else is optional, and empty subdirectories can be omitted.
Input/Output Methods
Submissions must operate in such a way that they receive problem input data on their standard input stream, and write to their standard output stream.
Validators
Input Format Validators
Input Format Validators, for verifying the correctness of the input files, are provided in <short_name>/input_format_validators/. They must adhere to the Input format validator standard.
Output Validators
Output Validators are used if the problem requires more complicated output validation than what is provided by the default diff variant described below. They are provided in <short_name>/output_validators/, and must adhere to the Output Validator standard.
File Conventions For Validators
A validator is either a file or a directory. A validator in the form of a directory may include two scripts "build" and "run". Either both or none of these scripts must be included. If the scripts are present, then:
- validator must be compiled by executing the build script.
- the validator must be run by executing the run script.
Otherwise, the validator will be compiled and run as if it was a submission (except that it is given the command-line arguments specified in problem.yaml, if there are any).
Default Validator Capabilities
The default validator is essentially a beefed-up diff. In its default mode, it tokenizes the files to compare and compares them token by token. It supports the following command-line arguments to control how tokens are compared.
Arguments | Description |
---|---|
case_sensitive | indicates that comparisons should be case-sensitive. |
space_change_sensitive | indicates that changes in the amount of whitespace should be rejected (the default is that any sequence of 1 or more
whitespace characters are equivalent). |
float_relative_tolerance ε | indicates that floating-point tokens should be accepted if they are within relative error ≤ ε (see below for details). |
float_absolute_tolerance ε | indicates that floating-point tokens should be accepted if they are within absolute error ≤ ε (see below for details). |
float_tolerance ε | short-hand for applying ε as both relative and absolute tolerance. |
When supplying both a relative and an absolute tolerance, the semantics are that a token is accepted if it is within either of the two tolerances. When a floating-point tolerance has been set, any valid formatting of floating point numbers is accepted for floating point tokens. So for instance if a token in the answer file says 0.0314, a token of 3.14000000e-2 in the output file would be accepted. If no floating point tolerance has been set, floating point tokens are treated just like any other token and has to match exactly.
Determination of Time Limit
The execution time limit for the problem is determined as follows. First, all the provided accepted/ solutions are run. Let tmax be the maximum running time of these solutions on any of the input files. The time limit is then set to be tlim = ⌈tmax · M⌉ where M is the value of the time multiplier parameter from the limits configuration of problem.yaml.
Furthermore, it is required that all of the provided time limit exceeded submissions run for at least tlim · S seconds, where S is the value of the time safety margin parameter from the limits configuration.
Verification
Solutions or validators in languages that are not supported by the CCS should be ignored and a warning to that effect shown.
Verification Checks (in order)
- Check files (all files present as required + check problem.yaml)
- Check compile (check that all programs compile)
- Check input (run input validators)
- Check solutions (run all solutions check that they get the expected verdicts)
Warn if: there are no *.in in data/sample/
Error if: there is no problem.yaml there is no problem statement (i.e., a problem*.tex file) any value in problem.yaml is invalid there are no *.in in data/secret/ there are .in files without corresponding .ans files in data/*/ there are .ans files without corresponding .in files in data/*/ there are no solutions in submissions/accepted/ there are no validators in input_format_validators/ validator begins with "custom" and there are no validators in output_validators/ there are validators in output_validators/ and validator does not begin with "custom" any validator (input format or output) does not compile
For each *.in in public_data and judge_data: For each validator in input_format_validators/: If the validator does not accept the input file: Error!
For each solution in test_submissions/accepted/: For each *.in in data/*/: Run the solution on the input For the built-in validator if corrector is "diff" or each validator in output_validators/: If the validator does not accept the output of the solution: Error! Let t be the longest time any of the solutions ran on any of the inputs.
For each solution in submissions/time_limit_exceeded/: For each *.in in data/*/: Run the solution on the input for at least t * time_limit_safety_margin seconds. Let t_slow be the shortest time any of the solutions ran on any of the inputs.
If t_slow is less than t * time_limit_safety_margin: Error!
For each solution in submissions/wrong_answer/: For each *.in in data/*/: Run the solution on the input For the built-in validator if corrector = "diff" or each validator in output_validators/: If the validator accepts the output of the solution: Error!
For each solution in submissions/run_time_error/: For each *.in in data/*/: Run the solution on the input If the solution is not judged Run-Time Error: Error!
Appendix
Sample problem.yaml
Typical problem.yaml:
# Problem configuration source: ICPC Mid-Atlantic Regional Contest author: John von Judge rights_owner: ICPC
Maximal problem.yaml:
# Problem configuration source: ICPC Mid-Atlantic Regional Contest author: - John von Judge - Jon Judgeson license: cc by-sa rights_owner: ICPC limits: time_multiplier: 5 time_safety_margin: 2 memory: 4096 output: 16 compilation_time: 240 validation_time: 240 validation_memory: 3072 validation_output: 4 validator: space_change_sensitive float_absolute_tolerance 1e-6
Directory structure
<short_name>/ problem.yaml - problem configuration file problem_statement/ problem.tex - problem statement - any files that problem.tex needs to include, e.g. images data/ sample/ *.in - sample input files *.ans - sample answer files secret/ *.in - input files *.ans - answer files *.txt - optional data file description include/ <language>/ - any files that should be included with all submissions in <language> submissions/ accepted/ - single file or directory per solution wrong_answer/ - single file or directory per solution time_limit_exceeded/ - single file or directory per solution run_time_error/ - single file or directory per solution input_format_validators/ - single file or directory per validator output_validators/ - single file or directory per validator
Sample Directory / Filenames
This is a sample list of directories/files for a problem named squares
squares/problem.yaml squares/problem_statement/problem.en.tex squares/problem_statement/problem.sv.tex squares/problem_statement/square1.png squares/problem_statement/square2.png squares/data/sample/squares_sample1.in squares/data/sample/squares_sample1.ans squares/data/sample/squares_sample2.in squares/data/sample/squares_sample2.ans squares/data/secret/squares1.in squares/data/secret/squares1.ans squares/data/secret/squares1.txt squares/data/secret/squares2_cornercases.in squares/data/secret/squares2_cornercases.ans squares/data/secret/squares3_bigcases.in squares/data/secret/squares3_bigcases.ans squares/submissions/accepted/squares.cpp squares/submissions/accepted/Squares.java squares/submissions/accepted/squares.c squares/submissions/wrong_answer/wrong.cpp squares/submissions/time_limit_exceeded/tle.c squares/submissions/run_time_error/rte.c squares/input_format_validators/squares_input_checker1.py squares/input_format_validators/squares_input_checker2/check.c squares/input_format_validators/squares_input_checker2/data.h squares/output_validators/squares_validator/validator.f squares/output_validators/squares_validator/build squares/output_validators/squares_validator/run