TY - GEN
T1 - Super-Blocked Clauses
AU - Kiesl, Benjamin
AU - Seidl, Martina
AU - Tompits, H.
AU - Biere, Armin
PY - 2016
Y1 - 2016
N2 - In theory and practice of modern SAT solving, clause-elimination procedures are essential for simplifying formulas in conjunctive normal form (CNF). Such procedures identify redundant clauses and faithfully remove them, either before solving in a preprocessing phase or during solving, resulting in a considerable speed up of the SAT solver. A wide number of effective clause-elimination procedures is based on the clause-redundancy property called blocked clauses. For checking if a clause C is blocked in a formula F, only those clauses of F that are resolvable with C have to be considered. Hence, the blocked-clauses redundancy property can be said to be local. In this paper, we argue that the established definitions of blocked clauses are not in their most general form. We introduce more powerful generalizations, called set-blocked clauses and super-blocked clauses, respectively. Both can still be checked locally, and for the latter it can even be shown that it is the most general local redundancy property. Furthermore, we relate these new notions to existing clause-redundancy properties and give a detailed complexity analysis.
AB - In theory and practice of modern SAT solving, clause-elimination procedures are essential for simplifying formulas in conjunctive normal form (CNF). Such procedures identify redundant clauses and faithfully remove them, either before solving in a preprocessing phase or during solving, resulting in a considerable speed up of the SAT solver. A wide number of effective clause-elimination procedures is based on the clause-redundancy property called blocked clauses. For checking if a clause C is blocked in a formula F, only those clauses of F that are resolvable with C have to be considered. Hence, the blocked-clauses redundancy property can be said to be local. In this paper, we argue that the established definitions of blocked clauses are not in their most general form. We introduce more powerful generalizations, called set-blocked clauses and super-blocked clauses, respectively. Both can still be checked locally, and for the latter it can even be shown that it is the most general local redundancy property. Furthermore, we relate these new notions to existing clause-redundancy properties and give a detailed complexity analysis.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84976610352
U2 - 10.1007/978-3-319-40229-1_5
DO - 10.1007/978-3-319-40229-1_5
M3 - Conference proceedings
VL - 9706
T3 - Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS)
SP - 45
EP - 61
BT - Automated Reasoning - 8th International Joint Conference, IJCAR 2016, Coimbra, Portugal, June 27 - July 2, 2016
A2 - Nicola Olivetti, Ashish Tiwari, null
PB - Springer
ER -