Providers Interface (qiskit.providers
)#
This module contains the classes used to build external providers for Terra. A
provider is anything that provides an external service to Terra. The typical
example of this is a Backend provider which provides
Backend
objects which can be used for executing
QuantumCircuit
and/or Schedule
objects. This module contains the abstract classes which are used to define the
interface between a provider and terra.
Version Support#
Each providers interface abstract class is individually versioned. When we need to make a change to an interface a new abstract class will be created to define the new interface. These interface changes are not guaranteed to be backwards compatible between versions.
Version Changes#
Each minor version release of qiskit-terra may increment the version of any providers interface a single version number. It will be an aggregate of all the interface changes for that release on that interface.
Version Support Policy#
To enable providers to have time to adjust to changes in this interface
Terra will support multiple versions of each class at once. Given the
nature of one version per release the version deprecation policy is a bit
more conservative than the standard deprecation policy. Terra will support a
provider interface version for a minimum of 3 minor releases or the first
release after 6 months from the release that introduced a version, whichever is
longer, prior to a potential deprecation. After that the standard deprecation
policy will apply to that interface version. This will give providers and users
sufficient time to adapt to potential breaking changes in the interface. So for
example lets say in 0.19.0 BackendV2
is introduced and in the 3 months after
the release of 0.19.0 we release 0.20.0, 0.21.0, and 0.22.0, then 7 months after
0.19.0 we release 0.23.0. In 0.23.0 we can deprecate BackendV2, and it needs to
still be supported and can’t be removed until the deprecation policy completes.
It’s worth pointing out that Terra’s version support policy doesn’t mean
providers themselves will have the same support story, they can (and arguably
should) update to newer versions as soon as they can, the support window is
just for Terra’s supported versions. Part of this lengthy window prior to
deprecation is to give providers enough time to do their own deprecation of a
potential end user impacting change in a user facing part of the interface
prior to bumping their version. For example, let’s say we changed the signature
to Backend.run()
in BackendV34
in a backwards incompatible way, before
Aer could update its AerBackend
class
to use version 34 they’d need to deprecate the old signature prior to switching
over. The changeover for Aer is not guaranteed to be lockstep with Terra so we
need to ensure there is a sufficient amount of time for Aer to complete its
deprecation cycle prior to removing version 33 (ie making version 34
mandatory/the minimum version).
Abstract Classes#
Provider#
|
Base common type for all versioned Provider abstract classes. |
Base class for a Backend Provider. |
Backend#
|
Base common type for all versioned Backend abstract classes. |
|
Abstract class for Backends |
|
Abstract class for Backends |
|
A representation of the properties of a qubit on a backend. |
|
A converter class that takes a |
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Uses configuration, properties and pulse defaults to construct and return Target class. |
Options#
|
Base options object |
Job#
Job Status#
|
Class for job status enumerated type. |
Exceptions#
- exception qiskit.providers.QiskitBackendNotFoundError(*message)[Quellcode]#
Base class for errors raised while looking for a backend.
Set the error message.
- exception qiskit.providers.BackendPropertyError(*message)[Quellcode]#
Base class for errors raised while looking for a backend property.
Set the error message.
- exception qiskit.providers.JobError(*message)[Quellcode]#
Base class for errors raised by Jobs.
Set the error message.
- exception qiskit.providers.JobTimeoutError(*message)[Quellcode]#
Base class for timeout errors raised by jobs.
Set the error message.
- exception qiskit.providers.BackendConfigurationError(*message)[Quellcode]#
Base class for errors raised by the BackendConfiguration.
Set the error message.
Writing a New Provider#
If you have a quantum device or simulator that you would like to integrate with
Qiskit you will need to write a provider. A provider will provide Terra with a
method to get available BackendV2
objects. The
BackendV2
object provides both information describing
a backend and its operation for the transpiler
so that circuits
can be compiled to something that is optimized and can execute on the
backend. It also provides the run()
method which can
run the QuantumCircuit
objects and/or
Schedule
objects. This enables users and other Qiskit
APIs, such as execute()
and higher level algorithms in
qiskit.algorithms
, to get results from executing circuits on devices in a standard
fashion regardless of how the backend is implemented. At a high level the basic
steps for writing a provider are:
Implement a
ProviderV1
subclass that handles access to the backend(s).Implement a
BackendV2
subclass and itsrun()
method.
Add any custom gates for the backend’s basis to the session
EquivalenceLibrary
instance.Implement a
JobV1
subclass that handles interacting with a running job.
For a simple example of a provider, see the qiskit-aqt-provider
Provider#
A provider class serves a single purpose: to get backend objects that enable executing circuits on a device or simulator. The expectation is that any required credentials and/or authentication will be handled in the initialization of a provider object. The provider object will then provide a list of backends, and methods to filter and acquire backends (using the provided credentials if required). An example provider class looks like:
from qiskit.providers import ProviderV1 as Provider
from qiskit.providers.providerutils import filter_backends
from .backend import MyBackend
class MyProvider(Provider):
def __init__(self, token=None):
super().__init__()
self.token = token
self.backends = [MyBackend(provider=self)]
def backends(self, name=None, **kwargs):
if name:
backends = [
backend for backend in backends if backend.name() == name]
return filter_backends(backends, filters=filters, **kwargs)
Ensure that any necessary information for authentication (if required) are present in the class and that the backends method matches the required interface. The rest is up to the specific provider on how to implement.
Backend#
The backend classes are the core to the provider. These classes are what
provide the interface between Qiskit and the hardware or simulator that will
execute circuits. This includes providing the necessary information to
describe a backend to the compiler so that it can embed and optimize any
circuit for the backend. There are 4 required things in every backend object: a
target
property to define the model of the
backend for the compiler, a max_circuits
property to define a limit on the number of circuits the backend can execute in
a single batch job (if there is no limit None
can be used), a
run()
method to accept job submissions, and
a _default_options
method to define the
user configurable options and their default values. For example, a minimum working
example would be something like:
from qiskit.providers import BackendV2 as Backend
from qiskit.transpiler import Target
from qiskit.providers import Options
from qiskit.circuit import Parameter, Measure
from qiskit.circuit.library import PhaseGate, SXGate, UGate, CXGate, IGate
class Mybackend(Backend):
def __init__(self):
super().__init__()
# Create Target
self._target = Target("Target for My Backend")
# Instead of None for this and below instructions you can define
# a qiskit.transpiler.InstructionProperties object to define properties
# for an instruction.
lam = Parameter("λ")
p_props = {(qubit,): None for qubit in range(5)}
self._target.add_instruction(PhaseGate(lam), p_props)
sx_props = {(qubit,): None for qubit in range(5)}
self._target.add_instruction(SXGate(), sx_props)
phi = Parameter("φ")
theta = Parameter("Ď´")
u_props = {(qubit,): None for qubit in range(5)}
self._target.add_instruction(UGate(theta, phi, lam), u_props)
cx_props = {edge: None for edge in [(0, 1), (1, 2), (2, 3), (3, 4)]}
self._target.add_instruction(CXGate(), cx_props)
meas_props = {(qubit,): None for qubit in range(5)}
self._target.add_instruction(Measure(), meas_props)
id_props = {(qubit,): None for qubit in range(5)}
self._target.add_instruction(IGate(), id_props)
# Set option validators
self.options.set_validator("shots", (1, 4096))
self.options.set_validator("memory", bool)
@property
def target(self):
return self._target
@property
def max_circuits(self):
return 1024
@classmethod
def _default_options(cls):
return Options(shots=1024, memory=False)
def run(circuits, **kwargs):
# serialize circuits submit to backend and create a job
for kwarg in kwargs:
if not hasattr(kwarg, self.options):
warnings.warn(
"Option %s is not used by this backend" % kwarg,
UserWarning, stacklevel=2)
options = {
'shots': kwargs.get('shots', self.options.shots),
'memory': kwargs.get('memory', self.options.shots),
}
job_json = convert_to_wire_format(circuit, options)
job_handle = submit_to_backend(job_jsonb)
return MyJob(self. job_handle, job_json, circuit)
Transpiler Interface#
The key piece of the Backend
object is how it describes itself to the
compiler. This is handled with the Target
class which defines
a model of a backend for the transpiler. A backend object will need to return
a Target
object from the target
attribute which the transpile()
function will use as
its model of a backend target for compilation.
Custom Basis Gates#
If your backend doesn’t use gates in the Qiskit circuit library (
qiskit.circuit.library
) you can integrate support for this into your provider. The basic method for doing this is first to define aGate
subclass for each custom gate in the basis set. For example:import numpy as np from qiskit.circuit import Gate from qiskit.circuit import QuantumCircuit class SYGate(Gate): def __init__(self, label=None): super().__init__("sy", 1, [], label=label) def _define(self): qc = QuantumCircuit(1) q.ry(np.pi / 2, 0) self.definition = qc
The key thing to ensure is that for any custom gates in your Backend’s basis set your custom gate’s name attribute (the first param on
super().__init__()
in the__init__
definition above) does not conflict with the name of any other gates. The name attribute is what is used to identify the gate in the basis set for the transpiler. If there is a conflict the transpiler will not know which gate to use.Add the custom gate to the target for your backend. This can be done with the
Target.add_instruction()
method. You’ll need to add an instance ofSYGate
and its parameters to the target so the transpiler knows it exists. For example, assuming this is part of yourBackendV2
implementation for your backend:from qiskit.transpiler import InstructionProperties sy_props = { (0,): InstructionProperties(duration=2.3e-6, error=0.0002) (1,): InstructionProperties(duration=2.1e-6, error=0.0001) (2,): InstructionProperties(duration=2.5e-6, error=0.0003) (3,): InstructionProperties(duration=2.2e-6, error=0.0004) } self.target.add_instruction(SYGate(), sy_props)
The keys in
sy_props
define the qubits where the backendSYGate
can be used on, and the values define the properties ofSYGate
on that qubit. For multiqubit gates the tuple keys contain all qubit combinations the gate works on (order is significant, i.e.(0, 1)
is different from(1, 0)
).After you’ve defined the custom gates to use for the backend’s basis set then you need to add equivalence rules to the standard equivalence library so that the
transpile()
function andtranspiler
module can convert an arbitrary circuit using the custom basis set. This can be done by defining equivalent circuits, in terms of the custom gate, for standard gates. Typically if you can convert from aCXGate
(if your basis doesn’t include a standard 2 qubit gate) and some commonly used single qubit rotation gates like theHGate
andUGate
that should be sufficient for the transpiler to translate any circuit into the custom basis gates. But, the more equivalence rules that are defined from standard gates to your basis the more efficient translation from an arbitrary circuit to the target basis will be (although not always, and there is a diminishing margin of return).For example, if you were to add some rules for the above custom
SYGate
we could define theU2Gate
andHGate
:from qiskit.circuit.equivalence_library import SessionEquivalenceLibrary from qiskit.circuit.library import HGate from qiskit.circuit.library import ZGate from qiskit.circuit.library import RZGate from qiskit.circuit.library import U2Gate # H => Z SY q = qiskit.QuantumRegister(1, "q") def_sy_h = qiskit.QuantumCircuit(q) def_sy_h.append(ZGate(), [q[0]], []) def_sy_h.append(SYGate(), [q[0]], []) SessionEquivalenceLibrary.add_equivalence( HGate(), def_sy_h) # u2 => Z SY Z phi = qiskit.circuit.Parameter('phi') lam = qiskit.circuit.Parameter('lambda') q = qiskit.QuantumRegister(1, "q") def_sy_u2 = qiskit.QuantumCircuit(q) def_sy_u2.append(RZGate(lam), [q[0]], []) def_sy_u2.append(SYGate(), [q[0]], []) def_sy_u2.append(RZGate(phi), [q[0]], []) SessionEquivalenceLibrary.add_equivalence( U2Gate(phi, lam), def_sy_u2)
You will want this to be run on import so that as soon as the provider’s package is imported it will be run. This will ensure that any time the
BasisTranslator
pass is run with the custom gates the equivalence rules are defined.It’s also worth noting that depending on the basis you’re using, some optimization passes in the transpiler, such as
Optimize1qGatesDecomposition
, may not be able to operate with your custom basis. For ourSYGate
example, theOptimize1qGatesDecomposition
will not be able to simplify runs of single qubit gates into the SY basis. This is because theOneQubitEulerDecomposer
class does not know how to work in the SY basis. To solve this theSYGate
class would need to be added to Qiskit andOneQubitEulerDecomposer
updated to support decomposing to theSYGate
. Longer term that is likely a better direction for custom basis gates and contributing the definitions and support in the transpiler will ensure that it continues to be well supported by Qiskit moving forward.
Custom Transpiler Passes#
The transpiler supports the ability for backends to provide custom transpiler
stage implementations to facilitate hardware specific optimizations and
circuit transformations. Currently there are two stages supported,
get_translation_stage_plugin()
and get_scheduling_stage_plugin()
which allow a backend to specify string plugin names to be used as the default
translation and scheduling stages, respectively. These
hook points in a BackendV2
class can be used if your
backend has requirements for compilation that are not met by the
current backend/Target
interface. Please also consider
submitting a Github issue describing your use case as there is interest
in improving these interfaces to be able to describe more hardware
architectures in greater depth.
To leverage these hook points you just need to add the methods to your
BackendV2
implementation and have them return a string plugin name.
For example:
class Mybackend(BackendV2):
def get_scheduling_stage_plugin(self):
return "SpecialDD"
def get_translation_stage_plugin(self):
return "BasisTranslatorWithCustom1qOptimization"
This snippet of a backend implementation will now have the transpile()
function use the SpecialDD
plugin for the scheduling stage and
the BasisTranslatorWithCustom1qOptimization
plugin for the translation
stage by default when the target is set to Mybackend
. Note that users may override these choices
by explicitly selecting a different plugin name. For this interface to work though transpiler
stage plugins must be implemented for the returned plugin name. You can refer
to qiskit.transpiler.preset_passmanagers.plugin
module documentation for
details on how to implement plugins. The typical expectation is that if your backend
requires custom passes as part of a compilation stage the provider package will
include the transpiler stage plugins that use those passes. However, this is not
required and any valid method (from a built-in method or external plugin) can
be used.
This way if these two compilation steps are required for running or providing
efficient output on Mybackend
the transpiler will be able to perform these
custom steps without any manual user input.
Run Method#
Of key importance is the run()
method, which
is used to actually submit circuits to a device or simulator. The run method
handles submitting the circuits to the backend to be executed and returning a
Job
object. Depending on the type of backend this
typically involves serializing the circuit object into the API format used by a
backend. For example, on IBMQ backends from the qiskit-ibmq-provider
package this involves converting from a quantum circuit and options into a
qobj JSON payload and submitting
that to the IBM Quantum API. Since every backend interface is different (and
in the case of the local simulators serialization may not be needed) it is
expected that the backend’s run
method will
handle this conversion.
An example run method would be something like:
def run(self, circuits. **kwargs):
for kwarg in kwargs:
if not hasattr(kwarg, self.options):
warnings.warn(
"Option %s is not used by this backend" % kwarg,
UserWarning, stacklevel=2)
options = {
'shots': kwargs.get('shots', self.options.shots)
'memory': kwargs.get('memory', self.options.shots),
}
job_json = convert_to_wire_format(circuit, options)
job_handle = submit_to_backend(job_jsonb)
return MyJob(self. job_handle, job_json, circuit)
Options#
There are often several options for a backend that control how a circuit is run.
The typical example of this is something like the number of shots
which is
how many times the circuit is to be executed. The options available for a
backend are defined using an Options
object. This
object is initially created by the
_default_options
method of a Backend class.
The default options returns an initialized Options
object with all the default values for all the options a backend supports. For
example, if the backend supports only supports shots
the
_default_options
method would look like:
@classmethod
def _default_options(cls):
return Options(shots=1024)
You can also set validators on an Options
object to
provide limits and validation on user provided values based on what’s acceptable
for your backend. For example, if the "shots"
option defined above can be set
to any value between 1 and 4096 you can set the validator on the options object
for you backend with:
self.options.set_validator("shots", (1, 4096))
you can refer to the set_validator()
documentation
for a full list of validation options.
Job#
The output from the run
method is a JobV1
object. Each provider is expected to implement a custom job subclass that
defines the behavior for the provider. There are 2 types of jobs depending on
the backend’s execution method, either a sync or async. By default jobs are
considered async and the expectation is that it represents a handle to the
async execution of the circuits submitted with Backend.run()
. An async
job object provides users the ability to query the status of the execution,
cancel a running job, and block until the execution is finished. The
result
is the primary user facing method
which will block until the execution is complete and then will return a
Result
object with results of the job.
For some backends (mainly local simulators) the execution of circuits is a
synchronous operation and there is no need to return a handle to a running job
elsewhere. For sync jobs its expected that the
run
method on the backend will block until a
Result
object is generated and the sync job will return
with that inner Result
object.
An example job class for an async API based backend would look something like:
from qiskit.providers import JobV1 as Job
from qiskit.providers import JobError
from qiskit.providers import JobTimeoutError
from qiskit.providers.jobstatus import JobStatus
from qiskit.result import Result
class MyJob(Job):
def __init__(self, backend, job_id, job_json, circuits):
super().__init__(backend, job_id)
self._backend = backend
self.job_json = job_json
self.circuits = circuits
def _wait_for_result(self, timeout=None, wait=5):
start_time = time.time()
result = None
while True:
elapsed = time.time() - start_time
if timeout and elapsed >= timeout:
raise JobTimeoutError('Timed out waiting for result')
result = get_job_status(self._job_id)
if result['status'] == 'complete':
break
if result['status'] == 'error':
raise JobError('Job error')
time.sleep(wait)
return result
def result(self, timeout=None, wait=5):
result = self._wait_for_result(timeout, wait)
results = [{'success': True, 'shots': len(result['counts']),
'data': result['counts']}]
return Result.from_dict({
'results': results,
'backend_name': self._backend.configuration().backend_name,
'backend_version': self._backend.configuration().backend_version,
'job_id': self._job_id,
'qobj_id': ', '.join(x.name for x in self.circuits),
'success': True,
})
def status(self):
result = get_job_status(self._job_id)
if result['status'] == 'running':
status = JobStatus.RUNNING
elif result['status'] == 'complete':
status = JobStatus.DONE
else:
status = JobStatus.ERROR
return status
def submit(self):
raise NotImplementedError
and for a sync job:
class MySyncJob(Job):
_async = False
def __init__(self, backend, job_id, result):
super().__init__(backend, job_id)
self._result = result
def submit(self):
return
def result(self):
return self._result
def status(self):
return JobStatus.DONE
Primitives#
While not directly part of the provider interface, the qiskit.primitives
module is tightly coupled with providers. Specifically the primitive
interfaces, such as BaseSampler
and BaseEstimator
,
are designed to enable provider implementations to provide custom
implementations which are optimized for the provider’s backends. This can
include customizations like circuit transformations, additional pre- and
post-processing, batching, caching, error mitigation, etc. The concept of
the qiskit.primitives
module is to explicitly enable this as the
primitive objects are higher level abstractions to produce processed higher
level outputs (such as probability distributions and expectation values)
that abstract away the mechanics of getting the best result efficiently, to
concentrate on higher level applications using these outputs.
For example, if your backends were well suited to leverage
mthree measurement
mitigation to improve the quality of the results, you could implement a
provider-specific Sampler
implementation that leverages the
M3Mitigation
class internally to run the circuits and return
quasi-probabilities directly from mthree in the result. Doing this would
enable algorithms from qiskit.algorithms
to get the best results with
mitigation applied directly from your backends. You can refer to the
documentation in qiskit.primitives
on how to write custom
implementations. Also the built-in implementations: Sampler
,
Estimator
, BackendSampler
, and BackendEstimator
can serve as references/models on how to implement these as well.
Migrating between Backend API Versions#
BackendV1 -> BackendV2#
The BackendV2
class re-defined user access for most properties of a
backend to make them work with native Qiskit data structures and have flatter
access patterns. However this means when using a provider that upgrades
from BackendV1
to BackendV2
existing access patterns will need
to be adjusted. It is expected for existing providers to deprecate the old
access where possible to provide a graceful migration, but eventually users
will need to adjust code. The biggest change to adapt to in BackendV2
is
that most of the information accessible about a backend is contained in its
Target
object and the backend’s attributes often query
its target
attribute to return information, however in many cases the attributes only provide
a subset of information the target can contain. For example, backend.coupling_map
returns a CouplingMap
constructed from the
Target
accessible in the
target
attribute, however the target may contain
instructions that operate on more than two qubits (which can’t be represented in a
CouplingMap
) or has instructions that only operate on
a subset of qubits (or two qubit links for a two qubit instruction) which won’t be
detailed in the full coupling map returned by
coupling_map
. So depending on your use case
it might be necessary to look deeper than just the equivalent access with
BackendV2
.
Below is a table of example access patterns in BackendV1
and the new form
with BackendV2
:
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There is also a BackendV2Converter
class available that enables you
to wrap a BackendV1
object with a BackendV2
interface.