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[DAGCircuit Oxidation] Port DAGCircuit to Rust (#12550)
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* Port DAGCircuit to Rust

This commit migrates the entirety of the `DAGCircuit` class to Rust. It
fully replaces the Python version of the class. The primary advantage
of this migration is moving from a Python space rustworkx directed graph
representation to a Rust space petgraph (the upstream library for
rustworkx) directed graph. Moving the graph data structure to rust
enables us to directly interact with the DAG directly from transpiler
passes in Rust in the future. This will enable a significant speed-up in
those transpiler passes. Additionally, this should also improve the
memory footprint as the DAGCircuit no longer stores `DAGNode`
instances, and instead stores a lighter enum NodeType, which simply
contains a `PackedInstruction` or the wire objects directly.

Internally, the new Rust-based `DAGCircuit` uses a `petgraph::StableGraph`
with node weights of type `NodeType` and edge weights of type `Wire`. The
NodeType enum contains variants for `QubitIn`, `QubitOut`, `ClbitIn`,
`ClbitOut`, and `Operation`, which should save us from all of the
`isinstance` checking previously needed when working with `DAGNode` Python
instances. The `Wire` enum contains variants `Qubit`, `Clbit`, and `Var`.

As the full Qiskit data model is not rust-native at this point while
all the class code in the `DAGCircuit` exists in Rust now, there are
still sections that rely on Python or actively run Python code via Rust
to function. These typically involve anything that uses `condition`,
control flow, classical vars, calibrations, bit/register manipulation,
etc. In the future as we either migrate this functionality to Rust or
deprecate and remove it this can be updated in place to avoid the use
of Python.

API access from Python-space remains in terms of `DAGNode` instances to
maintain API compatibility with the Python implementation. However,
internally, we convert to and deal in terms of NodeType. When the user
requests a particular node via lookup or iteration, we inflate an ephemeral
`DAGNode` based on the internal `NodeType` and give them that. This is very
similar to what was done in #10827 when porting CircuitData to Rust.

As part of this porting there are a few small differences to keep in
mind with the new Rust implementation of DAGCircuit. The first is that
the topological ordering is slightly different with the new DAGCircuit.
Previously, the Python version of `DAGCircuit` using a lexicographical
topological sort key which was basically `"0,1,0,2"` where the first
`0,1` are qargs on qubit indices `0,1` for nodes and `0,2` are cargs
on clbit indices `0,2`. However, the sort key has now changed to be
`(&[Qubit(0), Qubit(1)], &[Clbit(0), Clbit(2)])` in rust in this case
which for the most part should behave identically, but there are some
edge cases that will appear where the sort order is different. It will
always be a valid topological ordering as the lexicographical key is
used as a tie breaker when generating a topological sort. But if you're
relaying on the exact same sort order there will be differences after
this PR. The second is that a lot of undocumented functionality in the
DAGCircuit which previously worked because of Python's implicit support
for interacting with data structures is no longer functional. For
example, previously the `DAGCircuit.qubits` list could be set directly
(as the circuit visualizers previously did), but this was never
documented as supported (and would corrupt the DAGCircuit). Any
functionality like this we'd have to explicit include in the Rust
implementation and as they were not included in the documented public
API this PR opted to remove the vast majority of this type of
functionality.

The last related thing might require future work to mitigate is that
this PR breaks the linkage between `DAGNode` and the underlying
`DAGCirucit` object. In the Python implementation the `DAGNode` objects
were stored directly in the `DAGCircuit` and when an API method returned
a `DAGNode` from the DAG it was a shared reference to the underlying
object in the `DAGCircuit`. This meant if you mutated the `DAGNode` it
would be reflected in the `DAGCircuit`. This was not always a sound
usage of the API as the `DAGCircuit` was implicitly caching many
attributes of the DAG and you should always be using the `DAGCircuit`
API to mutate any nodes to prevent any corruption of the `DAGCircuit`.
However, now as the underlying data store for nodes in the DAG are
no longer the python space objects returned by `DAGCircuit` methods
mutating a `DAGNode` will not make any change in the underlying
`DAGCircuit`. This can come as quite the surprise at first, especially
if you were relying on this side effect, even if it was unsound.

It's also worth noting that 2 large pieces of functionality from
rustworkx are included in this PR. These are the new files
`rustworkx_core_vnext` and `dot_utils` which are rustworkx's VF2
implementation and its dot file generation. As there was not a rust
interface exposed for this functionality from rustworkx-core there was
no way to use these functions in rustworkx. Until these interfaces
added to rustworkx-core in future releases we'll have to keep these
local copies. The vf2 implementation is in progress in
Qiskit/rustworkx#1235, but `dot_utils` might make sense to keep around
longer term as it is slightly modified from the upstream rustworkx
implementation to directly interface with `DAGCircuit` instead of a
generic graph.

Co-authored-by: Matthew Treinish <mtreinish@kortar.org>
Co-authored-by: Raynel Sanchez <87539502+raynelfss@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Elena Peña Tapia <57907331+ElePT@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Alexander Ivrii <alexi@il.ibm.com>
Co-authored-by: Eli Arbel <46826214+eliarbel@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: John Lapeyre <jlapeyre@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Jake Lishman <jake.lishman@ibm.com>

* Update visual mpl circuit drawer references

Right now there is a bug in the matplotlib circuit visualizer likely
caused by the new `__eq__` implementation for `DAGOpNode` that didn't
exist before were some gates are missing from the visualization. In the
interest of unblocking this PR this commit updates the references for
these cases temporarily until this issue is fixed.

* Ensure DAGNode.sort_key is always a string

Previously the sort_key attribute of the Python space DAGCircuit was
incorrectly being set to `None` for rust generated node objects. This
was done as for the default path the sort key is determined from the
rust domain's representation of qubits and there is no analogous data in
the Python object. However, this was indavertandly a breaking API change
as sort_key is expected to always be a string. This commit adds a
default string to use for all node types so that we always have a
reasonable value that matches the typing of the class. A future step is
likely to add back the `dag` kwarg to the node types and generate the
string on the fly from the rust space data.

* Make Python argument first in Param::eq and Param::is_close

The standard function signature convention for functions that take a
`py: Python` argument is to make the Python argument the first (or
second after `&self`). The `Param::eq` and `Param::is_close` methods
were not following this convention and had `py` as a later argument in
the signature. This commit corrects the oversight.

* Fix merge conflict with #12943

With the recent merge with main we pulled in #12943 which conflicted
with the rust space API changes made in this PR branch. This commit
updates the usage to conform with the new interface introduced in this
PR.

* Add release notes and test for invalid args on apply methods

This commit adds several release notes to document this change. This
includes a feature note to describe the high level change and the user
facing benefit (mainly reduced memory consumption for DAGCircuits),
two upgrade notes to document the differences with shared references
caused by the new data structure, and a fix note documenting the fix
for how qargs and cargs are handled on `.apply_operation_back()` and
`.apply_operation_front()`. Along with the fix note a new unit test is
added to serve as a regression test so that we don't accidentally allow
adding cargs as qargs and vice versa in the future.

* Restore `inplace` argument functionality for substitute_node()

This commit restores the functionality of the `inplace` argument for
`substitute_node()` and restores the tests validating the object
identity when using the flag. This flag was originally excluded from
the implementation because the Rust representation of the dag is not
a shared reference with Python space and the flag doesn't really mean
the same thing as there is always a second copy of the data for Python
space now. The implementation here is cheating slighty as we're passed
in the DAG node by reference it relies on that reference to update the
input node at the same time we update the dag. Unlike the previous
Python implementation where we were updating the node in place and the
`inplace` argument was slightly faster because everything was done by
reference. The rust space data is still a compressed copy of the data
we return to Python so the `inplace` flag will be slightly more
inefficient as we need to copy to update the Python space representation
in addition to the rust version.

* Revert needless dict() cast on metadata in dag_to_circuit()

This commit removes an unecessary `dict()` cast on the `dag.metadata`
when setting it on `QuantumCircuit.metadata` in
`qiskit.converters.dag_to_circuit()`. This slipped in at some point
during the development of this PR and it's not clear why, but it isn't
needed so this removes it.

* Add code comment for DAGOpNode.__eq__ parameter checking

This commit adds a small inline code comment to make it clear why we
skip parameter comparisons in DAGOpNode.__eq__ for python ops. It might
not be clear why the value is hard coded to `true` in this case, as this
check is done via Python so we don't need to duplicate it in rust space.

* Raise a ValueError on DAGNode creation with invalid index

This commit adds error checking to the DAGNode constructor to raise a
PyValueError if the input index is not valid (any index < -1).
Previously this would have panicked instead of raising a user catchable
error.

* Use macro argument to set python getter/setter name

This commit updates the function names for `get__node_id` and
`set__node_id` method to use a name that clippy is happy with and
leverage the pyo3 macros to set the python space name correctly instead
of using the implicit naming rules.

* Remove Ord and PartialOrd derives from interner::Index

The Ord and PartialOrd traits were originally added to the Index struct
so they could be used for the sort key in lexicographical topological
sorting. However, that approach was abandonded during the development of
this PR and instead the expanded Qubit and Clbit indices were used
instead. This left the ordering traits as unnecessary on Index and
potentially misleading. This commit just opts to remove them as they're
not needed anymore.

* Fix missing nodes in matplotlib drawer.

Previously, the change in equality for DAGNodes was causing nodes
to clobber eachother in the matplotlib drawer's tracking data
structures when used as keys to maps.

To fix this, we ensure that all nodes have a unique ID across
layers before constructing the matplotlib drawer. They actually
of course _do_ in the original DAG, but we don't really care
what the original IDs are, so we just make them up.

Writing to _node_id on a DAGNode may seem odd, but it exists
in the old Python API (prior to being ported to Rust) and
doesn't actually mutate the DAG at all since DAGNodes are
ephemeral.

* Revert "Update visual mpl circuit drawer references"

With the previous commit the bug in the matplotlib drawer causing the
images to diverge should be fixed. This commit reverts the change to the
reference images as there should be no difference now.

This reverts commit 1e4e6f3.

* Update visual mpl circuit drawer references for control flow circuits

The earlier commit that "fixed" the drawers corrected the visualization
to match expectations in most cases. However after restoring the
references to what's on main several comparison tests with control flow
in the circuit were still failing. The failure mode looks similar to the
other cases, but across control flow blocks instead of at the circuit
level. This commit temporarily updates the references of these to the
state of what is generated currently to unblock CI. If/when we have a
fix this commit can be reverted.

* Fix edge cases in DAGOpNode.__eq__

This commit fixes a couple of edge cases in DAGOpNode.__eq__ method
around the python interaction for the method. The first is that in
the case where we had python object parameter types for the gates we
weren't comparing them at all. This is fixed so we use python object
equality for the params in this case. Then we were dropping the error
handling in the case of using python for equality, this fixes it to
return the error to users if the equality check fails. Finally a comment
is added to explain the expected use case for `DAGOpNode.__eq__` and why
parameter checking is more strict than elsewhere.

* Remove Param::add() for global phase addition

This commit removes the Param::add() method and instead adds a local
private function to the `dag_circuit` module for doing global phase
addition. Previously the `Param::add()` method was used solely for
adding global phase in `DAGCircuit` and it took some shortcuts knowing
that context. This made the method implementation ill suited as a
general implementation.

* More complete fix for matplotlib drawer.

* Revert "Update visual mpl circuit drawer references for control flow circuits"

This reverts commit 9a6f953.

* Unify rayon versions in workspace

* Remove unused _GLOBAL_NID.

* Use global monotonic ID counter for ids in drawer

The fundamental issue with matplotlib visualizations of control flow is
that locally in the control flow block the nodes look the same but are
stored in an outer circuit dictionary. If the gates are the same and on
the same qubits and happen to have the same node id inside the different
control flow blocks the drawer would think it's already drawn the node
and skip it incorrectly. The previous fix for this didn't go far enough
because it wasn't accounting for the recursive execution of the drawer
for inner blocks (it also didn't account for LayerSpoolers of the same
length).

* Re-add missing documentation

* Remove unused BitData iterator stuff.

* Make types, dag, and bit count methods public

This commit makes some attributes of the dag circuit public as they will
need to be accessible from the accelerate crate to realistically start
using the DAGCircuit for rust transpiler passes.

* Make Wire pickle serialization explicit

This commit pivots away from using the PyO3 crate's conversion traits
for specialized pickle serialization output of Wire objects. The output
of the previous traits wasn't really intended for representing a Wire in
Python but only for pickle serialization. This commit migrates these to
custom methods, without a trait, to make it clear they're only for
pickle.

* Make py token usage explicit in _VarIndexMap

The _VarIndexMap type was designed to look like an IndexMap but is
actually an inner python dictionary. This is because `Var` types are still
defined in python and we need to use a dictionary if we have `Var`
objects as keys in the mapping. In the interest of looking like an
IndexMap all the methods (except for 1) used `with_gil` internally to
work with the dictionary. This could add unecessary overhead and to make
it explicit that there is python involvement with this struct's methods
this commit adds a py: Python argument to all the methods and removes
the `with_gil` usage.

* Make all pub(crate) visibility pub

* Remove unused method

* Reorganize code structure around PyVariableMapper and BitLocations

* Add missing var wires to .get_wires() method

In the porting of the get_wires() method to Rust the handling of Var
wires was missed in the output of the method. This commit corrects the
oversight and adds them to the output.

* Raise TypeError not ValueError for invalid input to set_global_phase

* De-duplicate check logic for op node adding methods

The methods for checking the input was valid on apply_operation_back,
apply_operation_front, and _apply_op_node_back were all identical. This
combines them into a single method to deduplicate the code.

* Improve collect_1q_runs() filter function

The filter function for collect_1q_runs() was needlessly building a
matrix for all the standard gates when all we need to know in that case
is whether the standard gate is parameterized or not. If it's not then
we're guaranteed to have a matrix available. This commit updates the
filter logic to account for this and improve it's throughput on standard
gates.

* Use swap_remove instead of shift_remove

* Combine input and output maps into single mapping

This commit combines the `DAGCircuit` `qubit_input_map` and
`qubit_output_map` fields into a single `IndexMap` `qubit_io_map` (and
the same for `clbit_input_map` and `clbit_output_map` going to
`clbit_io_map`). That stores the input and output as 2 element array
where the first element is the input node index and the second element
is the output node index. This reduces the number of lookups we need to
do in practice and also reduces the memory overhead of `DAGCircuit`.

* Ensure we account for clbits in depth() short circuit check

* Also account for Vars in DAGCircuit.width()

The number of vars should be included in the return from the width()
method. This was previously missing in the new implementation of this
method.

* Remove duplicated _get_node() method

The `_get_node()` method was duplicated with the already public
`node()` method. This commit removes the duplicate and updates it's only
usage in the code base.

* Handle Var wires in classical_predecessors

This method was missing the handling for var wires, this commit corrects
the oversight.

* Remove stray comment

* Use Operation::control_flow() instead of isinstance checking

* Use &str for increment_op and decrement_op

This commit reworks the interface for the increment_op and decrement_op
methods to work by reference instead of passing owned String objects to
the methods. Using owned String objects was resulting in unecessary
allocations and extra overhead that could be avoided. There are still a
few places we needed to copy strings to ensure we're not mutating things
while we have references to nodes in the dag, typically only in the
decrement/removal case. But this commit reduces the number of String
copies we need to make in the DAGCircuit.

* Also include vars in depth short circuit

* Fix typing for controlflow name lookup in count_ops

* Fix .properties() method to include operations field

The .properties() method should have included the output of .count_ops()
in its dictionary return but this was commented out temporarily while
other pieces of this PR were fixed. This commit circles back to it and
adds the missing field from the output.

As an aside we should probably deprecate the .properties() method for
removal in 2.0 it doesn't seem to be the most useful method in practice.

* Add missing Var wire handling to py_nodes_on_wire

* Add back optimization to avoid isinstance in op_nodes

This commit adds back an optimization to the op_nodes dag method to
avoid doing a python space op comparison when we're filtering on
non-standard gates and evaluating a standard gate. In these cases we
know that the filter will not match purely from rust without needing a
python space op object creation or an isinstance call so we can avoid
the overhead of doing that.

* Simplify/deduplicate __eq__ method

This commit reworks the logic in the DAGCircuit.__eq__ method
implementation to simplify the code a bit and make it less verbose and
duplicated.

* Invalidate cached py op when needed in substitute_node_with_dag

This commit fixes a potential issue in substitute_node_with_dag() when
the propagate_condition flag was set we were not invalidating cached py
ops when adding a new condition based on a propagated condition. This
could potentially cause the incorrect object to be returned to Python
after calling this method. This fixes the issues by clearing the cached
node so that when returning the op to python we are regenerating the
python object.

* Copy-editing suggestions for release notes

Co-authored-by: John Lapeyre <jlapeyre@users.noreply.github.com>

* Fix and simplify separable_circuits()

This commit fixes and simplifies the separable_circuits() method. At
it's core the method is building a subgraph of the original dag for each
weakly connected component in the dag with a little bit of extra
tracking to make sure the graph is a valid DAGCircuit. Instead of trying
to do this manually this commit updates the method implementation to
leverage the tools petgraph gives us for filtering graphs. This both
fixes a bug identified in review but also simplifies the code.

* Add clbit removal test

* Move to using a Vec<[NodeIndex; 2]> for io maps

This commit migrates the qubit_io_map and clbit_io_map to go from a type
of `IndexMap<Qubit, [NodeIndex; 2], RandomState>` to
`Vec<[NodeIndex; 2]>`. Our qubit indices (represented by the `Qubit`
type) must be a contiguous set for the circuit to be valid, and using an
`IndexMap` for these mappings of bit to input and output nodes only
really improved performance in the removal case, but at the cost of
additional runtime overhead for accessing the data. Since removals are
rare and also inefficient because it needs to reindex the entire dag
already we should instead optimize for the accessing the data. Since we
have contiguous indices using a Vec is a natural structure to represent
this mapping.

* Make add_clbits() signature the same as add_qubits()

At some point during the development of this PR the function signatures
between `add_qubits()` and `add_clbits()` diverged between taking a
`Vec<Bound<PyAny>>` and `&Bound<PySequence>`. In general they're are
comprable but since we are going to be working with a `Vec<>` in the
function body this is a better choice to let PyO3 worry about the
conversion for us. Additionally, this is a more natural signature for
rust consumption. This commit just updates `add_clbits()` to use a Vec
too.

* Add attribution comment to num_tensor_factors() method

* Add py argument to add_declared_var()

* Remove unnecessarily Python-space check

* Correct typo in `to_pickle` method

---------

Co-authored-by: Matthew Treinish <mtreinish@kortar.org>
Co-authored-by: Raynel Sanchez <87539502+raynelfss@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Elena Peña Tapia <57907331+ElePT@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Alexander Ivrii <alexi@il.ibm.com>
Co-authored-by: Eli Arbel <46826214+eliarbel@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: John Lapeyre <jlapeyre@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Jake Lishman <jake.lishman@ibm.com>
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6 changes: 6 additions & 0 deletions Cargo.lock

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6 changes: 5 additions & 1 deletion Cargo.toml
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -16,14 +16,18 @@ license = "Apache-2.0"
[workspace.dependencies]
bytemuck = "1.17"
indexmap.version = "2.4.0"
hashbrown.version = "0.14.0"
hashbrown.version = "0.14.5"
num-bigint = "0.4"
num-complex = "0.4"
ndarray = "^0.15.6"
numpy = "0.21.0"
smallvec = "1.13"
thiserror = "1.0"
rustworkx-core = "0.15"
approx = "0.5"
itertools = "0.13.0"
ahash = "0.8.11"
rayon = "1.10"

# Most of the crates don't need the feature `extension-module`, since only `qiskit-pyext` builds an
# actual C extension (the feature disables linking in `libpython`, which is forbidden in Python
Expand Down
8 changes: 4 additions & 4 deletions crates/accelerate/Cargo.toml
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -10,18 +10,18 @@ name = "qiskit_accelerate"
doctest = false

[dependencies]
rayon = "1.10"
rayon.workspace = true
numpy.workspace = true
rand = "0.8"
rand_pcg = "0.3"
rand_distr = "0.4.3"
ahash.workspace = true
num-traits = "0.2"
num-complex.workspace = true
rustworkx-core.workspace = true
num-bigint.workspace = true
rustworkx-core = "0.15"
faer = "0.19.1"
itertools = "0.13.0"
itertools.workspace = true
qiskit-circuit.workspace = true
thiserror.workspace = true

Expand All @@ -38,7 +38,7 @@ workspace = true
features = ["rayon", "approx-0_5"]

[dependencies.approx]
version = "0.5"
workspace = true
features = ["num-complex"]

[dependencies.hashbrown]
Expand Down
26 changes: 2 additions & 24 deletions crates/accelerate/src/convert_2q_block_matrix.rs
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -27,15 +27,15 @@ use qiskit_circuit::circuit_instruction::CircuitInstruction;
use qiskit_circuit::dag_node::DAGOpNode;
use qiskit_circuit::gate_matrix::ONE_QUBIT_IDENTITY;
use qiskit_circuit::imports::QI_OPERATOR;
use qiskit_circuit::operations::{Operation, OperationRef};
use qiskit_circuit::operations::Operation;

use crate::QiskitError;

fn get_matrix_from_inst<'py>(
py: Python<'py>,
inst: &'py CircuitInstruction,
) -> PyResult<Array2<Complex64>> {
if let Some(mat) = inst.op().matrix(&inst.params) {
if let Some(mat) = inst.operation.matrix(&inst.params) {
Ok(mat)
} else if inst.operation.try_standard_gate().is_some() {
Err(QiskitError::new_err(
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -124,29 +124,7 @@ pub fn change_basis(matrix: ArrayView2<Complex64>) -> Array2<Complex64> {
trans_matrix
}

#[pyfunction]
pub fn collect_2q_blocks_filter(node: &Bound<PyAny>) -> Option<bool> {
let Ok(node) = node.downcast::<DAGOpNode>() else {
return None;
};
let node = node.borrow();
match node.instruction.op() {
gate @ (OperationRef::Standard(_) | OperationRef::Gate(_)) => Some(
gate.num_qubits() <= 2
&& node
.instruction
.extra_attrs
.as_ref()
.and_then(|attrs| attrs.condition.as_ref())
.is_none()
&& !node.is_parameterized(),
),
_ => Some(false),
}
}

pub fn convert_2q_block_matrix(m: &Bound<PyModule>) -> PyResult<()> {
m.add_wrapped(wrap_pyfunction!(blocks_to_matrix))?;
m.add_wrapped(wrap_pyfunction!(collect_2q_blocks_filter))?;
Ok(())
}
24 changes: 4 additions & 20 deletions crates/accelerate/src/euler_one_qubit_decomposer.rs
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -743,7 +743,7 @@ pub fn compute_error_list(
.iter()
.map(|node| {
(
node.instruction.op().name().to_string(),
node.instruction.operation.name().to_string(),
smallvec![], // Params not needed in this path
)
})
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -988,10 +988,11 @@ pub fn optimize_1q_gates_decomposition(
.iter()
.map(|node| {
if let Some(err_map) = error_map {
error *= compute_error_term(node.instruction.op().name(), err_map, qubit)
error *=
compute_error_term(node.instruction.operation.name(), err_map, qubit)
}
node.instruction
.op()
.operation
.matrix(&node.instruction.params)
.expect("No matrix defined for operation")
})
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -1043,22 +1044,6 @@ fn matmul_1q(operator: &mut [[Complex64; 2]; 2], other: Array2<Complex64>) {
];
}

#[pyfunction]
pub fn collect_1q_runs_filter(node: &Bound<PyAny>) -> bool {
let Ok(node) = node.downcast::<DAGOpNode>() else {
return false;
};
let node = node.borrow();
let op = node.instruction.op();
op.num_qubits() == 1
&& op.num_clbits() == 0
&& op.matrix(&node.instruction.params).is_some()
&& match &node.instruction.extra_attrs {
None => true,
Some(attrs) => attrs.condition.is_none(),
}
}

pub fn euler_one_qubit_decomposer(m: &Bound<PyModule>) -> PyResult<()> {
m.add_wrapped(wrap_pyfunction!(params_zyz))?;
m.add_wrapped(wrap_pyfunction!(params_xyx))?;
Expand All @@ -1072,7 +1057,6 @@ pub fn euler_one_qubit_decomposer(m: &Bound<PyModule>) -> PyResult<()> {
m.add_wrapped(wrap_pyfunction!(compute_error_one_qubit_sequence))?;
m.add_wrapped(wrap_pyfunction!(compute_error_list))?;
m.add_wrapped(wrap_pyfunction!(optimize_1q_gates_decomposition))?;
m.add_wrapped(wrap_pyfunction!(collect_1q_runs_filter))?;
m.add_class::<OneQubitGateSequence>()?;
m.add_class::<OneQubitGateErrorMap>()?;
m.add_class::<EulerBasis>()?;
Expand Down
14 changes: 13 additions & 1 deletion crates/circuit/Cargo.toml
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -10,17 +10,29 @@ name = "qiskit_circuit"
doctest = false

[dependencies]
rayon.workspace = true
ahash.workspace = true
rustworkx-core.workspace = true
bytemuck.workspace = true
hashbrown.workspace = true
num-complex.workspace = true
ndarray.workspace = true
numpy.workspace = true
thiserror.workspace = true
approx.workspace = true
itertools.workspace = true

[dependencies.pyo3]
workspace = true
features = ["hashbrown", "indexmap", "num-complex", "num-bigint", "smallvec"]

[dependencies.hashbrown]
workspace = true
features = ["rayon"]

[dependencies.indexmap]
workspace = true
features = ["rayon"]

[dependencies.smallvec]
workspace = true
features = ["union"]
Expand Down
45 changes: 31 additions & 14 deletions crates/circuit/src/bit_data.rs
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -81,17 +81,6 @@ pub struct BitData<T> {
cached: Py<PyList>,
}

pub struct BitNotFoundError<'py>(pub(crate) Bound<'py, PyAny>);

impl<'py> From<BitNotFoundError<'py>> for PyErr {
fn from(error: BitNotFoundError) -> Self {
PyKeyError::new_err(format!(
"Bit {:?} has not been added to this circuit.",
error.0
))
}
}

impl<T> BitData<T>
where
T: From<BitType> + Copy,
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -139,14 +128,19 @@ where
pub fn map_bits<'py>(
&self,
bits: impl IntoIterator<Item = Bound<'py, PyAny>>,
) -> Result<impl Iterator<Item = T>, BitNotFoundError<'py>> {
) -> PyResult<impl Iterator<Item = T>> {
let v: Result<Vec<_>, _> = bits
.into_iter()
.map(|b| {
self.indices
.get(&BitAsKey::new(&b))
.copied()
.ok_or_else(|| BitNotFoundError(b))
.ok_or_else(|| {
PyKeyError::new_err(format!(
"Bit {:?} has not been added to this circuit.",
b
))
})
})
.collect();
v.map(|x| x.into_iter())
Expand All @@ -168,7 +162,7 @@ where
}

/// Adds a new Python bit.
pub fn add(&mut self, py: Python, bit: &Bound<PyAny>, strict: bool) -> PyResult<()> {
pub fn add(&mut self, py: Python, bit: &Bound<PyAny>, strict: bool) -> PyResult<T> {
if self.bits.len() != self.cached.bind(bit.py()).len() {
return Err(PyRuntimeError::new_err(
format!("This circuit's {} list has become out of sync with the circuit data. Did something modify it?", self.description)
Expand All @@ -193,6 +187,29 @@ where
bit
)));
}
Ok(idx.into())
}

pub fn remove_indices<I>(&mut self, py: Python, indices: I) -> PyResult<()>
where
I: IntoIterator<Item = T>,
{
let mut indices_sorted: Vec<usize> = indices
.into_iter()
.map(|i| <BitType as From<T>>::from(i) as usize)
.collect();
indices_sorted.sort();

for index in indices_sorted.into_iter().rev() {
self.cached.bind(py).del_item(index)?;
let bit = self.bits.remove(index);
self.indices.remove(&BitAsKey::new(bit.bind(py)));
}
// Update indices.
for (i, bit) in self.bits.iter().enumerate() {
self.indices
.insert(BitAsKey::new(bit.bind(py)), (i as BitType).into());
}
Ok(())
}

Expand Down
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