Quilc is an advanced optimizing compiler for the quantum instruction language Quil, licensed under the Apache 2.0 license.
Quilc comprises two projects. The first, cl-quil, does the heavy
lifting of parsing, compiling, and optimizing Quil code. The second,
quilc, presents an external interface for using cl-quil, either using
the binary quilc application directly, or alternatively by
communicating with an RPCQ server.
Quil is the quantum instruction language, originally developed at Rigetti Computing. In Quil quantum algorithms are expressed using Quil's
standard gates and instructions. One can also use Quil's DEFGATE to
define new non-standard gates, and DEFCIRCUIT to build a named circuit
that can be referenced elsewhere in Quil code (analogous to a function
in most other programming languages).
This directory contains the quilc application. quilc takes as input
arbitrary Quil code, either provided directly to the binary or to the
quilc server, and produces optimized Quil code. The compiled code is
optimized for the configured instruction set architecture (ISA),
targeting the native gates specified by the ISA.
To clone the quilc repository and its bundled submodules, run the following command:
git clone --recurse-submodules https://github.com/quil-lang/quilc.gitPrerequisites to building quilc are:
- Standard UNIX build tools
- SBCL (a recent version, but not SBCL 1.5.6): Common Lisp compiler
- Quicklisp: Common Lisp library manager
- ZeroMQ: Messaging library required by RPCQ. Development headers are required at build time.
Follow these instructions to get started from scratch.
One notorious dependency is MAGICL. It is available on Quicklisp,
but requires you to install some system libraries such as BLAS, LAPACK, and libffi. Follow MAGICL's
instructions carefully before proceeding with loading CL-QUIL or makeing quilc.
Once these dependencies are installed, building should be easy. Building the quilc
binary is automated using the Makefile:
$ make quilcThis will create a binary quilc in the current directory
$ ./quilc --versionTo install system-wide issue the command
$ make installquilc can be built with additional options provided to make as described below:
| Flag | Description |
|---|---|
POST_LOAD_ASDF_SYSTEMS |
Specify additional ASDF systems to load after quilc as part of the executable. This can be used to build quilc with additional out-of-tree functionality. |
The Quil Compiler provides two modes of interaction: (1) communicating
directly with the quilc binary, providing your Quil code over stdin;
or (2) communicating with the quilc server.
The quilc binary reads Quil code provided on stdin:
$ echo H 0 | quilc
$ cat large_file.quil | quilcFor various reasons (e.g. not having to repeatedly load the quilc
binary into memory, communicating over a network) quilc provides a
an RPCQ server
interface. RPCQ is an open-source
RPC framework developed at Rigetti for efficient network communication
through the QCS stack. The server is started in RPCQ-mode using the
-R flag
$ quilc -R
+-----------------+
| W E L C O M E |
| T O T H E |
| R I G E T T I |
| Q U I L |
| C O M P I L E R |
+-----------------+
Copyright (c) 2016-2019 Rigetti Computing.
<134>1 2019-01-29T22:03:08Z workstation.local ./quilc 4077 LOG0001 - Launching quilc.
<134>1 2019-01-29T22:03:08Z workstation.local ./quilc 4077 - - Spawning server at (tcp://*:5555) .
The server-mode provides to high-level languages such as Python a way
to communicate with the Quil compiler, thus enabling high-level
abstractions and tools that are not directly available in Quil. The
pyquil library provides such an interface to quilc.
CL-QUIL is the Lisp library that implements parsing and compiling
of Quil code. The code can be found under ./src/. Other lisp libraries, including
quilc, can depend on it.
To get up and running quickly using the quilc Docker image, head directly to the
section "Running the Quil Compiler with Docker" below. Otherwise, the following steps
will walk you through how to build the compiler from source.
Follow the instructions in QVM's
doc/lisp-setup.md to satisfy the
dependencies required to load the CL-QUIL library. Afterwhich, the
library can be loaded
$ sbcl
* (ql:quickload :cl-quil)
;;; <snip>compilation output</snip>
(:CL-QUIL)
* (cl-quil:parse-quil "H 0")
#<CL-QUIL:PARSED-PROGRAM {100312C643}>A few good entry points to exploring the library are:
- The functions
cl-quil::parse-quilinsrc/parser.lisp, andcl-quil:parse-quilinsrc/cl-quil.lispand the various transforms therein. - The function
cl-quil:compiler-hookwhich constructs a control-flow graph (CFG) and then performs various optimizations on the CFG.
The CI pipeline for quilc produces a Docker image, available at
rigetti/quilc.
To get the latest stable version of quilc, run docker pull rigetti/quilc.
To instead pull a specific version of quilc, run docker pull rigetti/quilc:VERSION,
where VERSION is something like 1.10.4.
The Dockerfile for quilc builds from three parent Docker images:
rigetti/lisp: Contains SBCL, Quicklisp, and third-party libraries.rigetti/rpcq: Contains the message spec and RPC framework used by quilc.rigetti/qvm: Contains the Quantum Virtual Machine, used in the quilc tests.
The Dockerfile for quilc intentionally pins the versions of these three images, which means that the version numbers must be actively incremented as necessary. If the build for quilc is failing, this is probably the place to look, because the unit tests are run inside of a freshly-built quilc Docker image as part of the GitLab CI pipeline.
As outlined above, the Quil Compiler supports two modes of operation: stdin and server.
To run quilc in stdin mode, do one either of the following:
- The containerized compiler will then read whatever newline-separated Quil instructions you enter, waiting for an EOF signal (Control+d) to compile it.
docker run --rm -it rigetti/quilc- You can alternatively pipe Quil instructions into the
quilccontainer if you drop the-t.
echo H 0 | docker run --rm -i rigetti/quilcTo run quilc in server mode, do the following:
docker run --rm -it -p 5555:5555 rigetti/quilc -RThis will spawn an RPCQ-mode quilc server, that you can communicate with over TCP. If
you would like to change the port of the server to PORT, you can alter the command as follows:
docker run --rm -it -p PORT:PORT rigetti/quilc -R -p PORTPort 5555 is exposed using the EXPOSE directive in the rigetti/quilc image, so
you can additionally use the -P option to automatically bind this container port to a randomly
assigned host port. You can then inspect the mapping using docker port CONTAINER [PORT].
- Update
VERSION.txtand push the commit tomaster. - Push a git tag
vX.Y.Zthat contains the same version number as inVERSION.txt. - Verify that the resulting build (triggered by pushing the tag) completes successfully.
- Publish a release using the tag as the name.
- Close the milestone associated with this release, and migrate incomplete issues to the next one.
- Update the quilc version of downstream dependencies (if applicable, see next section).
Currently, there are a couple different components of the Forest SDK that depend on quilc:
It is the responsibility of the releaser to verify that the latest quilc release does not break the test suites of these downstream dependencies. All of these repositories pull the latest released version of quilc as part of their CI pipelines.
quilc offers a benchmarking suite to compare its performance against other compilers and
between its own versions. To run the benchmark suite, move to the quilc root directory,
make sure the git submodules are checked out, and run
make benchmark-qasm
We welcome and encourage community contributions! Peruse our guidelines for contributing to get you up to speed on expectations. Once that's clear, a good place to start is the good first issue section. If you find any bugs, please create an issue.
We look forward to meeting and working with you!
There is an issue with
SBCL 1.5.6 that results in unhandled memory faults in
SB-VM::FUNCALLABLE-INSTANCE-TRAMP when attempting to run quilc
compiled with that version of SBCL. The issue was resolved with SBCL
commit
550c4d2. For
this reason, it's not possible to use quilc or cl-quil with SBCL
1.5.6, but any other recent SBCL version should work fine.