ScheduleBlock#
- class qiskit.pulse.ScheduleBlock(name=None, metadata=None, alignment_context=None)[Quellcode]#
Bases:
object
Time-ordered sequence of instructions with alignment context.
ScheduleBlock
supports lazy scheduling of context instructions, i.e. their timeslots is always generated at runtime. This indicates we can parametrize instruction durations as well as other parameters. In contrast toSchedule
being somewhat static,ScheduleBlock
is a dynamic representation of a pulse program.Pulse Builder
The Qiskit pulse builder is a domain specific language that is developed on top of the schedule block. Use of the builder syntax will improve the workflow of pulse programming. See Pulse Builder for a user guide.
Alignment contexts
A schedule block is always relatively scheduled. Instead of taking individual instructions with absolute execution time
t0
, the schedule block defines a context of scheduling and instructions under the same context are scheduled in the same manner (alignment). Several contexts are available in Alignments. A schedule block is instantiated with one of these alignment contexts. The default context isAlignLeft
, for which all instructions are left-justified, in other words, meaning they use as-soon-as-possible scheduling.If you need an absolute-time interval in between instructions, you can explicitly insert
Delay
instructions.Nested blocks
A schedule block can contain other nested blocks with different alignment contexts. This enables advanced scheduling, where a subset of instructions is locally scheduled in a different manner. Note that a
Schedule
instance cannot be directly added to a schedule block. To add aSchedule
instance, wrap it in aCall
instruction. This is implicitly performed when a schedule is added through the Pulse Builder.Unsupported operations
Because the schedule block representation lacks timeslots, it cannot perform particular
Schedule
operations such asinsert()
orshift()
that require instruction start timet0
. In addition,exclude()
andfilter()
methods are not supported because these operations may identify the target instruction witht0
. Except for these operations,ScheduleBlock
provides full compatibility withSchedule
.Subroutine
The timeslots-free representation offers much greater flexibility for writing pulse programs. Because
ScheduleBlock
only cares about the ordering of the child blocks we can add an undefined pulse sequence as a subroutine of the main program. If your program contains the same sequence multiple times, this representation may reduce the memory footprint required by the program construction. Such a subroutine is realized by the special compiler directiveReference
that is defined by a unique set of reference key strings to the subroutine. The (executable) subroutine is separately stored in the main program. Appended reference directives are resolved when the main program is executed. Subroutines must be assigned throughassign_references()
before execution.Program Scoping
When you call a subroutine from another subroutine, or append a schedule block to another schedule block, the management of references and parameters can be a hard task. Schedule block offers a convenient feature to help with this by automatically scoping the parameters and subroutines.
from qiskit import pulse from qiskit.circuit.parameter import Parameter amp1 = Parameter("amp") with pulse.build() as sched1: pulse.play(pulse.Constant(100, amp1), pulse.DriveChannel(0)) print(sched1.scoped_parameters())
(Parameter(root::amp),)
The
scoped_parameters()
method returns allParameter
objects defined in the schedule block. The parameter name is updated to reflect its scope information, i.e. where it is defined. The outer scope is called „root“. Since the „amp“ parameter is directly used in the current builder context, it is prefixed with „root“. Note that theParameter
object returned byscoped_parameters()
preserves the hidden UUID key, and thus the scoped name doesn’t break references to the originalParameter
.You may want to call this program from another program. In this example, the program is called with the reference key „grand_child“. You can call a subroutine without specifying a substantial program (like
sched1
above which we will assign later).amp2 = Parameter("amp") with pulse.build() as sched2: with pulse.align_right(): pulse.reference("grand_child") pulse.play(pulse.Constant(200, amp2), pulse.DriveChannel(0)) print(sched2.scoped_parameters())
(Parameter(root::amp),)
This only returns „root::amp“ because the „grand_child“ reference is unknown. Now you assign the actual pulse program to this reference.
sched2.assign_references({("grand_child", ): sched1}) print(sched2.scoped_parameters())
(Parameter(root::amp), Parameter(root::grand_child::amp))
Now you get two parameters „root::amp“ and „root::grand_child::amp“. The second parameter name indicates it is defined within the referred program „grand_child“. The program calling the „grand_child“ has a reference program description which is accessed through
ScheduleBlock.references
.print(sched2.references)
ReferenceManager: - ('grand_child',): ScheduleBlock(Play(Constant(duration=100, amp=amp,...
Finally, you may want to call this program from another program. Here we try a different approach to define subroutine. Namely, we call a subroutine from the root program with the actual program
sched2
.amp3 = Parameter("amp") with pulse.build() as main: pulse.play(pulse.Constant(300, amp3), pulse.DriveChannel(0)) pulse.call(sched2, name="child") print(main.scoped_parameters())
(Parameter(root::amp), Parameter(root::child::amp), Parameter(root::child::grand_child::amp))
This implicitly creates a reference named „child“ within the root program and assigns
sched2
to it. You get three parameters „root::amp“, „root::child::amp“, and „root::child::grand_child::amp“. As you can see, each parameter name reflects the layer of calls from the root program. If you know the scope of a parameter, you can directly get the parameter object usingScheduleBlock.search_parameters()
as follows.main.search_parameters("root::child::grand_child::amp")
You can use a regular expression to specify the scope. The following returns the parameters defined within the scope of „ground_child“ regardless of its parent scope. This is sometimes convenient if you want to extract parameters from a deeply nested program.
main.search_parameters("\S::grand_child::amp")
Note that the root program is only aware of its direct references.
print(main.references)
ReferenceManager: - ('child',): ScheduleBlock(ScheduleBlock(ScheduleBlock(Play(Con...
As you can see the main program cannot directly assign a subroutine to the „grand_child“ because this subroutine is not called within the root program, i.e. it is indirectly called by „child“. However, the returned
ReferenceManager
is a dict-like object, and you can still reach to „grand_child“ via the „child“ program with the following chained dict access.main.references[("child", )].references[("grand_child", )]
Note that
ScheduleBlock.parameters
andScheduleBlock.scoped_parameters()
still collect all parameters also from the subroutine once it’s assigned.Create an empty schedule block.
- Parameter:
name (str | None) – Name of this schedule. Defaults to an autogenerated string if not provided.
metadata (dict | None) – Arbitrary key value metadata to associate with the schedule. This gets stored as free-form data in a dict in the
metadata
attribute. It will not be directly used in the schedule.alignment_context (AlignmentKind) –
AlignmentKind
instance that manages scheduling of instructions in this block.
- Verursacht:
TypeError – if metadata is not a dict.
Attributes
- alignment_context#
Return alignment instance that allocates block component to generate schedule.
- blocks#
Get the block elements added to self.
Bemerkung
The sequence of elements is returned in order of addition. Because the first element is schedule first, e.g. FIFO, the returned sequence is roughly time-ordered. However, in the parallel alignment context, especially in the as-late-as-possible scheduling, or
AlignRight
context, the actual timing of when the instructions are issued is unknown until theScheduleBlock
is scheduled and converted into aSchedule
.
- channels#
Returns channels that this schedule block uses.
- duration#
Duration of this schedule block.
- instances_counter = count(0)#
- instructions#
Get the time-ordered instructions from self.
- metadata#
The user provided metadata associated with the schedule.
User provided
dict
of metadata for the schedule. The metadata contents do not affect the semantics of the program but are used to influence the execution of the schedule. It is expected to be passed between all transforms of the schedule and that providers will associate any schedule metadata with the results it returns from the execution of that schedule.
- name#
Return name of this schedule
- parameters#
Return unassigned parameters with raw names.
- prefix = 'block'#
- references#
Return a reference manager of the current scope.
Methods
- append(block, name=None, inplace=True)[Quellcode]#
Return a new schedule block with
block
appended to the context block. The execution time is automatically assigned when the block is converted into schedule.- Parameter:
block (ScheduleBlock | Instruction) – ScheduleBlock to be appended.
name (str | None) – Name of the new
Schedule
. Defaults to name ofself
.inplace (bool) – Perform operation inplace on this schedule. Otherwise, return a new
Schedule
.
- Rückgabe:
Schedule block with appended schedule.
- Verursacht:
PulseError – When invalid schedule type is specified.
- Rückgabetyp:
- assign_parameters(value_dict, inplace=True)[Quellcode]#
Assign the parameters in this schedule according to the input.
- Parameter:
value_dict (Dict[ParameterExpression, ParameterExpression | float]) – A mapping from Parameters to either numeric values or another Parameter expression.
inplace (bool) – Set
True
to override this instance with new parameter.
- Rückgabe:
Schedule with updated parameters.
- Verursacht:
PulseError – When the block is nested into another block.
- Rückgabetyp:
- assign_references(subroutine_dict, inplace=True)[Quellcode]#
Assign schedules to references.
It is only capable of assigning a schedule block to immediate references which are directly referred within the current scope. Let’s see following example:
from qiskit import pulse with pulse.build() as subroutine: pulse.delay(10, pulse.DriveChannel(0)) with pulse.build() as sub_prog: pulse.reference("A") with pulse.build() as main_prog: pulse.reference("B")
In above example, the
main_prog
can refer to the subroutine „root::B“ and the reference of „B“ to program „A“, i.e., „B::A“, is not defined in the root namespace. This prevents breaking the reference „root::B::A“ by the assignment of „root::B“. For example, if a user could indirectly assign „root::B::A“ from the root program, one can later assign another program to „root::B“ that doesn’t contain „A“ within it. In this situation, a reference „root::B::A“ would still live in the reference manager of the root. However, the subroutine „root::B::A“ would no longer be used in the actual pulse program. To assign subroutine „A“ tonested_prog
as a nested subprogram ofmain_prog
, you must first assign „A“ of thesub_prog
, and then assign thesub_prog
to themain_prog
.sub_prog.assign_references({("A", ): nested_prog}, inplace=True) main_prog.assign_references({("B", ): sub_prog}, inplace=True)
Alternatively, you can also write
main_prog.assign_references({("B", ): sub_prog}, inplace=True) main_prog.references[("B", )].assign_references({"A": nested_prog}, inplace=True)
Here
references
returns a dict-like object, and you can mutably update the nested reference of the particular subroutine.Bemerkung
Assigned programs are deep-copied to prevent an unexpected update.
- Parameter:
- Rückgabe:
Schedule block with assigned subroutine.
- Verursacht:
PulseError – When reference key is not defined in the current scope.
- Rückgabetyp:
- ch_duration(*channels)[Quellcode]#
Return the time of the end of the last instruction over the supplied channels.
- draw(style=None, backend=None, time_range=None, time_unit='dt', disable_channels=None, show_snapshot=True, show_framechange=True, show_waveform_info=True, show_barrier=True, plotter='mpl2d', axis=None)#
Plot the schedule.
- Parameter:
style (Dict[str, Any] | None) – Stylesheet options. This can be dictionary or preset stylesheet classes. See
IQXStandard
,IQXSimple
, andIQXDebugging
for details of preset stylesheets.backend (Optional[BaseBackend]) – Backend object to play the input pulse program. If provided, the plotter may use to make the visualization hardware aware.
time_range (Tuple[int, int] | None) – Set horizontal axis limit. Tuple (tmin, tmax).
time_unit (str) – The unit of specified time range either dt or ns. The unit of ns is available only when backend object is provided.
disable_channels (List[Channel] | None) – A control property to show specific pulse channel. Pulse channel instances provided as a list are not shown in the output image.
show_snapshot (bool) – Show snapshot instructions.
show_framechange (bool) – Show frame change instructions. The frame change represents instructions that modulate phase or frequency of pulse channels.
show_waveform_info (bool) – Show additional information about waveforms such as their name.
show_barrier (bool) – Show barrier lines.
plotter (str) –
Name of plotter API to generate an output image. One of following APIs should be specified:
mpl2d: Matplotlib API for 2D image generation. Matplotlib API to generate 2D image. Charts are placed along y axis with vertical offset. This API takes matplotlib.axes.Axes as ``axis`` input.
axis
andstyle
kwargs may depend on the plotter.axis (Any | None) – Arbitrary object passed to the plotter. If this object is provided, the plotters use a given
axis
instead of internally initializing a figure object. This object format depends on the plotter. See plotter argument for details.
- Rückgabe:
Visualization output data. The returned data type depends on the
plotter
. If matplotlib family is specified, this will be amatplotlib.pyplot.Figure
data.
- exclude(*filter_funcs, channels=None, instruction_types=None, check_subroutine=True)[Quellcode]#
Return a new
ScheduleBlock
with only the instructions from thisScheduleBlock
failing at least one of the provided filters. This method is the complement of py:meth:~self.filter, so that:self.filter(args) + self.exclude(args) == self in terms of instructions included.
Warnung
Because
ScheduleBlock
is not aware of the execution time of the context instructions, excluding some instructions may change the execution time of the remaining instructions.- Parameter:
filter_funcs (List[Callable]) – A list of Callables which take a
Instruction
and return a bool.channels (Iterable[Channel] | None) – For example,
[DriveChannel(0), AcquireChannel(0)]
.instruction_types (Iterable[ABCMeta] | ABCMeta | None) – For example,
[PulseInstruction, AcquireInstruction]
.check_subroutine (bool) – Set True to individually filter instructions inside of a subroutine defined by the
Call
instruction.
- Rückgabe:
ScheduleBlock
consisting of instructions that do not match with at least one of filtering conditions.
- filter(*filter_funcs, channels=None, instruction_types=None, check_subroutine=True)[Quellcode]#
Return a new
ScheduleBlock
with only the instructions from thisScheduleBlock
which pass though the provided filters; i.e. an instruction will be retained if every function infilter_funcs
returnsTrue
, the instruction occurs on a channel type contained inchannels
, and the instruction type is contained ininstruction_types
.Warnung
Because
ScheduleBlock
is not aware of the execution time of the context instructions, filtering out some instructions may change the execution time of the remaining instructions.If no arguments are provided,
self
is returned.- Parameter:
filter_funcs (List[Callable]) – A list of Callables which take a
Instruction
and return a bool.channels (Iterable[Channel] | None) – For example,
[DriveChannel(0), AcquireChannel(0)]
.instruction_types (Iterable[ABCMeta] | ABCMeta | None) – For example,
[PulseInstruction, AcquireInstruction]
.check_subroutine (bool) – Set True to individually filter instructions inside a subroutine defined by the
Call
instruction.
- Rückgabe:
ScheduleBlock
consisting of instructions that matches with filtering condition.
- get_parameters(parameter_name)[Quellcode]#
Get parameter object bound to this schedule by string name.
Note that we can define different parameter objects with the same name, because these different objects are identified by their unique uuid. For example,
from qiskit import pulse, circuit amp1 = circuit.Parameter("amp") amp2 = circuit.Parameter("amp") with pulse.build() as sub_prog: pulse.play(pulse.Constant(100, amp1), pulse.DriveChannel(0)) with pulse.build() as main_prog: pulse.call(sub_prog, name="sub") pulse.play(pulse.Constant(100, amp2), pulse.DriveChannel(0)) main_prog.get_parameters("amp")
This returns a list of two parameters
amp1
andamp2
.
- classmethod initialize_from(other_program, name=None)[Quellcode]#
Create new schedule object with metadata of another schedule object.
- Parameter:
- Rückgabe:
New block object with name and metadata.
- Verursacht:
PulseError – When
other_program
does not provide necessary information.- Rückgabetyp:
- is_parameterized()[Quellcode]#
Return True iff the instruction is parameterized.
- Rückgabetyp:
- is_referenced()[Quellcode]#
Return True iff the current schedule block contains reference to subroutine.
- Rückgabetyp:
- is_schedulable()[Quellcode]#
Return
True
if all durations are assigned.- Rückgabetyp:
- replace(old, new, inplace=True)[Quellcode]#
Return a
ScheduleBlock
with theold
component replaced with anew
component.- Parameter:
old (ScheduleBlock | Instruction) – Schedule block component to replace.
new (ScheduleBlock | Instruction) – Schedule block component to replace with.
inplace (bool) – Replace instruction by mutably modifying this
ScheduleBlock
.
- Rückgabe:
The modified schedule block with
old
replaced bynew
.- Rückgabetyp:
- scoped_parameters()[Quellcode]#
Return unassigned parameters with scoped names.
Bemerkung
If a parameter is defined within a nested scope, it is prefixed with all parent-scope names with the delimiter string, which is „::“. If a reference key of the scope consists of multiple key strings, it will be represented by a single string joined with „,“. For example, „root::xgate,q0::amp“ for the parameter „amp“ defined in the reference specified by the key strings („xgate“, „q0“).
- search_parameters(parameter_regex)[Quellcode]#
Search parameter with regular expression.
This method looks for the scope-aware parameters. For example,
from qiskit import pulse, circuit amp1 = circuit.Parameter("amp") amp2 = circuit.Parameter("amp") with pulse.build() as sub_prog: pulse.play(pulse.Constant(100, amp1), pulse.DriveChannel(0)) with pulse.build() as main_prog: pulse.call(sub_prog, name="sub") pulse.play(pulse.Constant(100, amp2), pulse.DriveChannel(0)) main_prog.search_parameters("root::sub::amp")
This finds
amp1
with scoped name „root::sub::amp“.