== Call for Benchmark Problems == The 4th Open Answer Set Programming Competition is open to ASP systems and *any other system* based on a declarative specification paradigm. Participants will compete on a selected collection of declarative specifications of benchmark problems, taken from a variety of domains as well as real world applications, and instances thereof. These include but are not limited to: * Deductive database tasks on large data-sets * Sequential and Temporal Planning * Classic and Applicative graph problems * Puzzles and combinatorics * Scheduling, timetabling and other resource allocation problems * Combinatorial Optimization problems * Ontology reasoning * Automated Theorem Proving and model checking * Reasoning tasks over large propositional instances * Constraint Programming problems * Other AI problems We encourage to provide help by proposing and/or devising new challenging benchmark problems. The submission of problems arising from applications having practical impact are strongly encouraged; problems used in the former ASP Competitions, or variants thereof, can be re-submitted. Benchmark authors are expected to produce a problem specification and an instance set (or a generator thereof). Problems will be classified and selected in order to obtain a fair balance between several factors (including complexity category, modeling difficulty, expressiveness, application domain, etc). === Schedule === * ''Problem Proposal and Discussion'' * '''Aug 30th, 2012''' - Problem submission deadline * ''Problem Validation and Final Submission'' * TBA === Problem submission procedure === The problems submission procedure will consist of two stages: 1. Proposal and discussion; 2. Validation and final submission. At the first stage, problem descriptions are submitted and made publicly available in the competition website. The community is invited to discuss and improve the proposals. At the second stage, the organizing committee will validate a selection of benchmarks; each selected problem will be completed by original contributor(s). Submission, discussion and selection of benchmark problems is handled via email, the details are reported below. === Problem submission === To submit a new problem just prepare a package according to the format described in the following and send it by email to [[mailto:benchmark_submission_REPLACE_WITH_AT_mat.unical.it|Benchmark Submission]]. Problem specifications can be initially submitted in a preliminary form by providing problem name and problem specification only (we encourage to provide an ASP encoding already in this stage). Note that: a complete package containing the problem specification '''must be provided''' before the validation stage start. == Package Format == A complete problem submission has to be enclosed in a single compressed package ({{{zip}}} and {{{{tar.gz}}} are allowed formats), containing: 1. a textual problem description (same as the abstract) where both names and arguments of input and output predicates are clearly specified; 2. a problem encoding; 3. some sample instances, that is some instances for the problem, which comply with the Input specification (see [[#input-output|Problem I/O and Instance Specification]]), added in order to help evaluating the specification (sample instances should not be used for the competition). 4. a correctness checker, that is, a program (better if written in ASP whenever possible) or a script able to decide whether the output predicates occurring in some answer set form a solution to a given instance of the problem at hand (and in case of an optimization problem, the program should be able to compute the "quality" of the answer). The problem statement must be anyway unambiguous and include the description of input and output predicates according to the problem description format described above. ''In the proposal and discussion stage, the submission of correctness checkers, as well as problem encodings and sample instances, are optional and left up to participants; nonetheless, we are grateful if you can already provide us with some. Especially, the submission of problems encodings often helps in disambiguating blurred specifications, so its provision is greatly appreciated.'' === Problem discussion === Benchmarks will be published in a [[BenchmarkDiscussion| specific section of the competition website]]. any comment/suggestion can be sent to [[mailto:benchmark_submission_REPLACE_WITH_AT_mat.unical.it|Benchmark Submission]] and will be discussed via e-mail. Researchers interested in discussing/improving problem proposals can send an e-mail to [[mailto:benchmark_submission_REPLACE_WITH_AT_mat.unical.it|Benchmark Discussion]] with subject: DISCUSSION: First Name - Second Name - Email ''The community is strongly encouraged to participate to this important moment in which problems are submitted and evaluated.'' === Validation and final submission stage === Benchmark problems submitted and discussed in the first stage are evaluated by the competition organizing committee. As for paper submissions in a conference, authors will be notified regarding the final acceptance decision. Benchmark problems that are accepted by the organizing committee (see [[#acceptance|Final acceptance of problems]]) will be then finalized by the authors. Finalized submission shall be sent by email to [[mailto:benchmark_submission_REPLACE_WITH_AT_mat.unical.it|Benchmark Discussion]] enclosed in a single compressed package (zip, rar, and tar.gz are allowed formats), containing: 1. the textual problem description (same as the abstract) where both names and arguments of input and output predicates are clearly specified; 1. the problem encoding; 1. a correctness checker; 1. either an instance generator or at least 50 ''hard'' instances of the problem (using only input predicates); 1. a "demonstration" that the benchmark problem can be effectively solved on the class of instances provided, e.g. a report about tests carried out on a system of choice. The above information shall be provided according to the [[ProblemPackageFormats|Problem Package Format]] information. At least one among item 4 and 5 must be provided. In this phase the contribution of benchmarks authors is fundamental, submission which are incomplete at the end of this stage are unsuitable for usage in the final competition and will be rejected (see Section [[#acceptance|Final acceptance of problems]]). The organizing committee takes the right to exclude benchmark problems whose provided instance family turns out to be blatantly too ''easy'' or ''difficult'' in terms of expected evaluation time. <> === Programs with Function symbols and integers === Programs with function symbols and integers are in principle subject to no restriction. For the sake of Competition, and to facilitate system implementors * each selected problem encoding ''P'' must provably have finitely many finite answer sets for any of its benchmark instance ''I'', that is ''AS(P U I)'' must be a finite set of finite elements. "Proofs" of finiteness can be given in terms of membership to a known decidable class of programs with functions and/or integers, or any other formal mean. * a bound ''k,,P,,'' on the maximum nesting level of terms, and a bound ''m,,P,,'' on the maximum integer value appearing in answer sets originated from ''P'' must be known. That is, for any instance ''I'' and for any term ''t'' appearing in ''AS(P U I)'', the nesting level of ''t'' must not be greater than ''k,,P,,'' and, if ''t'' is an integer it must not exceed ''m,,P,,''. The values ''m,,P,,'' and ''k,,P,,'' will be provided in input to participant systems, when invoked on ''P'': problem designers are thus invited to provide such values accordingly. <> === Final acceptance of problems === The final inclusion of problems in the competition is subject to to the conclusive approval of the competition organizing committee. Among the collected problems, the committee takes the right to discard problems which are not compliant with one or more of the following criteria: 1. The instance set (or the instances generator output) does not comply with the competition input/output format (see Section [[#input-output|Problem I/O and Instance Specification]]); 2. The set of provided instances counts less than 25 instances, or the provided generator is missing or failing; 3. The provided (or generated) instances are trivial or not provably solvable when run on the competition hardware;