Refactor in WriteAwareBruteSolver, add javadoc

Refactor WriteAwareBruteSolver constructor to guard against a situation
in which the class could have an inconsistent internal state
This commit is contained in:
maddiebaka 2024-03-28 19:13:31 -04:00
parent 152d9dc3ce
commit 26ff1404a1
1 changed files with 56 additions and 21 deletions

View File

@ -7,21 +7,72 @@ import org.apache.commons.text.similarity.LevenshteinDistance;
/**
* This is a write-aware brute solver implementation that uses the levenshtein distance to sort passcode permutations
* into a tree. Walking the tree in-order (Likely a depth-first traversal internally) results in a naive nearest-neighbor
* optimization that generally performs well, but may perform poorly in some cases.
* optimization that generally performs well, but may perform poorly in some cases. Heuristic solutions exist that have
* acceptable performance, and this is a more naive heuristic implementation.
*
* This permutation optimization problem is NP-hard and a perfect brute-force solution has a worst-case running time that
* is super-polynomial. Heuristic solutions exist that have acceptable performance, and this is a more naive heuristic
* implementation.
* This permutation optimization problem is NP-hard and can be represented as the traveling salesperson problem.
* Representing passcode permutations as vertices and the levenshtein distance as edges in an undirected, weighted graph,
* an optimal solution is the shortest path satisfying a tour of the entire graph.
*
* A more advanced solution (based on Christofides, or another TSP heuristic) may result in more performance gains, but
* the performance of this nearest-neighbor solution is adequate for the keypad sizes under test. A keypad size of 9
* results in a graph of vertex-count 9!. It's unlikely performance gains from a more intelligent TSP solver would
* offset the performance cost of building a graph and optimizing traversal.
*/
public class WriteAwareBruteSolver extends DumbBruteSolver {
private final TreeSet<IntegerLevenshtein> orderedTree;
private final Integer numpadSize;
private Integer numpadSize;
/**
* Creates an ordered tree on instantiation to be used as a cache for subsequent brute-force solves.
* @param numpadSize The size of the padlock's numpad, used in generation of the internal ordered tree
*/
public WriteAwareBruteSolver(int numpadSize) {
orderedTree = new TreeSet<IntegerLevenshtein>();
this.numpadSize = numpadSize;
this.createOrderedTree(numpadSize);
}
/**
* Solves the padlock passed in to the method. The padlock's internal state should be correct after this method
* runs.
* @param padlockAdapter A padlock conforming to the PadlockAdapter contract
*/
@Override
public void solve(PadlockAdapter padlockAdapter) {
int padlockNumpadSize = padlockAdapter.getNumpadSize();
if (this.numpadSize != padlockNumpadSize) {
this.createOrderedTree(padlockNumpadSize);
}
for (IntegerLevenshtein integerLevenshtein : orderedTree) {
if (this.checkPermutation(integerLevenshtein.getIntegerData(), padlockAdapter)) {
return;
}
}
}
/**
* Returns the size of the tree (the number of possible permutations)
* @return the size of the ordered tree
*/
public Integer getTreeSize() {
return this.orderedTree.size();
}
/**
* Creates an ordered tree of possible passcode permutations
* @param size The number of keys on the numpad
*/
protected void createOrderedTree(int size) {
if(this.numpadSize != size) {
this.numpadSize = size;
orderedTree.clear();
}
Integer[] currentPermutation = new Integer[numpadSize];
for(int i = 0; i < numpadSize; i++) {
currentPermutation[i] = i;
@ -36,20 +87,4 @@ public class WriteAwareBruteSolver extends DumbBruteSolver {
morePermutationsExist = this.calculateNextPermutation(currentPermutation, numpadSize);
} while(morePermutationsExist);
}
public void solve(PadlockAdapter padlockAdapter) {
int numpadSize = padlockAdapter.getNumpadSize();
Iterator<IntegerLevenshtein> iterator = orderedTree.iterator();
while(iterator.hasNext()) {
if(this.checkPermutation(iterator.next().getIntegerData(), padlockAdapter)) {
return;
}
}
}
public Integer getTreeSize() {
return this.orderedTree.size();
}
}