Rust bindings to the CoinOR CBC MILP Solver using the C API.
Tested on Debian 10, AMD64, coinor-libcbc3 2.9.9 repack1-1.
For more details on installing the libCbc
dependencies, see below.
This crate exposes raw bindings to the C functions.
This crate exposes safe rust bindings using coin_cbc_sys
.
coin_cbc::raw::Model
exposes direct translation of the C function with assert to guaranty safe use.
coin_cbc::Model
exposes a more user friendly, rustic and efficient API: it was used successfully to solve MILP with 250,000 binary variables with unnoticeable overhead.
See the examples directory.
The library files of the COIN-OR
Solver Cbc
need to present on your system when compiling a project that depends on coin_cbc
.
On a Debian system with a user with admin rights, this is easily achieved with:
sudo apt install coinor-libcbc-dev
If you have pkg-config
available, it'll be used to locate the library.
For other systems, without admin rights or if you need a newer version of Cbc
(e.g. with bug fixes), you can install Cbc
through coinbrew
:
https://coin-or.github.io/user_introduction#building-from-source
You will then have to either:
- register the resulting library files with your system, or
- provide
cargo
with the location of that library. For the first option,coinbrew
provides a command suggestion after successful compilation. The second option can e.g. be done via:
RUSTFLAGS='-L /path/to/your/cbc/install/lib' cargo test
By default, this crate enforces a global lock which will force multiple
problems to be solved sequentially even if solve
is called from multiple
threads in parallel. This is because by default, libcbc is not thread safe.
If you have compiled your own libcbc with the CBC_THREAD_SAFE
option,
you can disable this behavior by disabling the singlethread-cbc
feature on this crate. Do not disable this feature if you are not certain
that you have a thread safe libcbc, or you will be exposed to memory corruption
vulnerabilities.
This project is distributed under the MIT License by Kardinal.