package opam-solver

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type package
include OpamParallel.GRAPH with type V.t = package OpamTypes.action
include Graph.Sig.I with type V.t = package OpamTypes.action

An imperative graph is a graph.

include Graph.Sig.G with type V.t = package OpamTypes.action

Graph structure

type t

Abstract type of graphs

Vertices have type V.t and are labeled with type V.label (note that an implementation may identify the vertex with its label)

type vertex = V.t
module E : Graph.Sig.EDGE with type vertex = vertex

Edges have type E.t and are labeled with type E.label. src (resp. dst) returns the origin (resp. the destination) of a given edge.

type edge = E.t
val is_directed : bool

Is this an implementation of directed graphs?

Size functions

val is_empty : t -> bool
val nb_vertex : t -> int
val nb_edges : t -> int

Degree of a vertex

val out_degree : t -> vertex -> int

out_degree g v returns the out-degree of v in g.

  • raises Invalid_argument

    if v is not in g.

val in_degree : t -> vertex -> int

in_degree g v returns the in-degree of v in g.

  • raises Invalid_argument

    if v is not in g.

Membership functions

val mem_vertex : t -> vertex -> bool
val mem_edge : t -> vertex -> vertex -> bool
val mem_edge_e : t -> edge -> bool
val find_edge : t -> vertex -> vertex -> edge

find_edge g v1 v2 returns the edge from v1 to v2 if it exists. Unspecified behaviour if g has several edges from v1 to v2.

  • raises Not_found

    if no such edge exists.

val find_all_edges : t -> vertex -> vertex -> edge list

find_all_edges g v1 v2 returns all the edges from v1 to v2.

  • since ocamlgraph 1.8

Successors and predecessors

You should better use iterators on successors/predecessors (see Section "Vertex iterators").

val succ : t -> vertex -> vertex list

succ g v returns the successors of v in g.

  • raises Invalid_argument

    if v is not in g.

val pred : t -> vertex -> vertex list

pred g v returns the predecessors of v in g.

  • raises Invalid_argument

    if v is not in g.

Labeled edges going from/to a vertex

val succ_e : t -> vertex -> edge list

succ_e g v returns the edges going from v in g.

  • raises Invalid_argument

    if v is not in g.

val pred_e : t -> vertex -> edge list

pred_e g v returns the edges going to v in g.

  • raises Invalid_argument

    if v is not in g.

Graph iterators

val iter_vertex : (vertex -> unit) -> t -> unit

Iter on all vertices of a graph.

val fold_vertex : (vertex -> 'a -> 'a) -> t -> 'a -> 'a

Fold on all vertices of a graph.

val iter_edges : (vertex -> vertex -> unit) -> t -> unit

Iter on all edges of a graph. Edge label is ignored.

val fold_edges : (vertex -> vertex -> 'a -> 'a) -> t -> 'a -> 'a

Fold on all edges of a graph. Edge label is ignored.

val iter_edges_e : (edge -> unit) -> t -> unit

Iter on all edges of a graph.

val fold_edges_e : (edge -> 'a -> 'a) -> t -> 'a -> 'a

Fold on all edges of a graph.

val map_vertex : (vertex -> vertex) -> t -> t

Map on all vertices of a graph.

Vertex iterators

Each iterator iterator f v g iters f to the successors/predecessors of v in the graph g and raises Invalid_argument if v is not in g. It is the same for functions fold_* which use an additional accumulator.

<b>Time complexity for ocamlgraph implementations:</b> operations on successors are in O(1) amortized for imperative graphs and in O(ln(|V|)) for persistent graphs while operations on predecessors are in O(max(|V|,|E|)) for imperative graphs and in O(max(|V|,|E|)*ln|V|) for persistent graphs.

iter/fold on all successors/predecessors of a vertex.

val iter_succ : (vertex -> unit) -> t -> vertex -> unit
val iter_pred : (vertex -> unit) -> t -> vertex -> unit
val fold_succ : (vertex -> 'a -> 'a) -> t -> vertex -> 'a -> 'a
val fold_pred : (vertex -> 'a -> 'a) -> t -> vertex -> 'a -> 'a

iter/fold on all edges going from/to a vertex.

val iter_succ_e : (edge -> unit) -> t -> vertex -> unit
val fold_succ_e : (edge -> 'a -> 'a) -> t -> vertex -> 'a -> 'a
val iter_pred_e : (edge -> unit) -> t -> vertex -> unit
val fold_pred_e : (edge -> 'a -> 'a) -> t -> vertex -> 'a -> 'a
val create : ?size:int -> unit -> t

create () returns an empty graph. Optionally, a size can be given, which should be on the order of the expected number of vertices that will be in the graph (for hash tables-based implementations). The graph grows as needed, so size is just an initial guess.

val clear : t -> unit

Remove all vertices and edges from the given graph.

  • since ocamlgraph 1.4
val copy : t -> t

copy g returns a copy of g. Vertices and edges (and eventually marks, see module Mark) are duplicated.

val add_vertex : t -> vertex -> unit

add_vertex g v adds the vertex v to the graph g. Do nothing if v is already in g.

val remove_vertex : t -> vertex -> unit

remove g v removes the vertex v from the graph g (and all the edges going from v in g). Do nothing if v is not in g.

<b>Time complexity for ocamlgraph implementations:</b> O(|V|*ln(D)) for unlabeled graphs and O(|V|*D) for labeled graphs. D is the maximal degree of the graph.

val add_edge : t -> vertex -> vertex -> unit

add_edge g v1 v2 adds an edge from the vertex v1 to the vertex v2 in the graph g. Add also v1 (resp. v2) in g if v1 (resp. v2) is not in g. Do nothing if this edge is already in g.

val add_edge_e : t -> edge -> unit

add_edge_e g e adds the edge e in the graph g. Add also E.src e (resp. E.dst e) in g if E.src e (resp. E.dst e) is not in g. Do nothing if e is already in g.

val remove_edge : t -> vertex -> vertex -> unit

remove_edge g v1 v2 removes the edge going from v1 to v2 from the graph g. If the graph is labelled, all the edges going from v1 to v2 are removed from g. Do nothing if this edge is not in g.

  • raises Invalid_argument

    if v1 or v2 are not in g.

val remove_edge_e : t -> edge -> unit

remove_edge_e g e removes the edge e from the graph g. Do nothing if e is not in g.

  • raises Invalid_argument

    if E.src e or E.dst e are not in g.

include Graph.Oper.S with type g = t
type g = t
val add_transitive_closure : ?reflexive:bool -> g -> g

add_transitive_closure ?reflexive g replaces g by its transitive closure. Meaningless for persistent implementations (then acts as transitive_closure).

val transitive_reduction : ?reflexive:bool -> g -> g

transitive_reduction ?reflexive g returns the transitive reduction of g (as a new graph). Loops (i.e. edges from a vertex to itself) are removed only if reflexive is true (default is false).

val replace_by_transitive_reduction : ?reflexive:bool -> g -> g

replace_by_transitive_reduction ?reflexive g replaces g by its transitive reduction. Meaningless for persistent implementations (then acts as transitive_reduction).

val mirror : g -> g

mirror g returns a new graph which is the mirror image of g: each edge from u to v has been replaced by an edge from v to u. For undirected graphs, it simply returns g. Note: Vertices are shared between g and mirror g; you may need to make a copy of g before using mirror

val complement : g -> g

complement g returns a new graph which is the complement of g: each edge present in g is not present in the resulting graph and vice-versa. Edges of the returned graph are unlabeled.

val intersect : g -> g -> g

intersect g1 g2 returns a new graph which is the intersection of g1 and g2: each vertex and edge present in g1 *and* g2 is present in the resulting graph.

val union : g -> g -> g

union g1 g2 returns a new graph which is the union of g1 and g2: each vertex and edge present in g1 *or* g2 is present in the resulting graph.

module Topological : sig ... end
module Parallel : OpamParallel.SIG with type G.t = t and type G.V.t = vertex
module Dot : sig ... end
val transitive_closure : ?reflexive:bool -> t -> unit
val reduce : t -> t

Reduces a graph of atomic or concrete actions (only removals, installs and builds) by turning removal+install to reinstalls or up/down-grades, best for display. Dependency ordering won't be as accurate though, as there is no proper ordering of (reinstall a, reinstall b) if b depends on a. The resulting graph contains at most one action per package name.

There is no guarantee however that the resulting graph is acyclic.

val explicit : ?noop_remove:(package -> bool) -> t -> t

Expand install actions, adding a build action preceding them. The argument noop_remove is a function that should return `true` for package where the `remove` action is known not to modify the filesystem (such as `conf-*` package).

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