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There are two types of homework assignments:
Written homeworks will not be collected or graded. They will be problems
from the required textbook (Kleinberg & Tardos). You are expected to work
on them since exam questions may resemble these problems!
Programming assignments, on the other hand, will be collected and graded.
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Written Homework Assignments
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On all the written homework assignments, when you are asked to give an algorithm,
in addition to the algorithm, you must also give (a) a proof of its correctness and
(b) an analysis of its complexity.
All homework assignments are from Kleinberg and Tardos, 1st edition, unless otherwise stated.
- Chapter 1: Read Chapter 1. Problems 1, 2, and 7.
[solutions]
- Chapter 2: Read Chapter 2. Problems 2, 3, 5, and 6(a,b).
[solutions]
- Chapter 3: Read Chapter 3. Problems 2, 3, and 12.
[solutions]
- Chapter 4: Read Chapter 4. Problems 3, 7, 17, and 28.
[solutions]
- Chapter 5: Read Chapter 5. Problems 2 and 3.
[solutions]
- Chapter 6: Read Chapter 6. Problems 1, 5, 10, and 20.
[solutions]
- Chapter 7: Read Chapter 7. Problems 7, 12, 16, and 29.
[solutions]
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Programming Homework Assignments
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(Please note that access to homework assignments is restricted.)
(Most of the programming assignments links are unavailable at this time.)
If you would like to get started early with Homework 4, please read [Knuth00a]
D. E. Knuth. Dancing Links.. Millenial Perspectives in Computer Science, pages 187-214, 2000.
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General Information about Programming Assignments
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(Please note that access to programming assignment related
information is restricted.
You should have received a password in your e-mail after you have
registered with the class mailing list.)
The programming assignments will be C/C++ code to
be developed on a UNIX environment. No other programming
language will be accepted and your program must compile and
run with a Makefile
as is on a nunki.usc.edu.
You must be familiar with the UNIX
development environment (vi/pico/emacs, cc/gcc or g++/cxx, make, etc.)
Please read the programming FAQ if you
need a refresher on C/C++ file I/O and bit/byte manipulications.
You should use your USC accounts and preferably work on the
Solaris machines in the ISD computer rooms for testing. The
final (submitted) program must run on
nunki because we are going to test it in that environment.
But you should not do the whole program development there, as nunki
is a general purpose server - under heavy use from many students.
We will only grade from a grading account on
nunki, so you must make sure your program runs
correctly from any account on nunki.
We cannot run your program from your account for the purpose of grading.
Late
submissions will receive severe penalties. Due to clock skews,
electronic submissions of projects and homeworks assignments will
be accepted within 15 minutes after the specified deadlines without
penalties. If you submit with the next 24 hours,
you will receive 75% of your grade.
Although in the first 50 minutes of this period,
you will only lose 1% of your grade every 2 minutes.
You will receive a score of zero after the first 24 hours
(and your assignment will not be graded).
All submissions
will be timestamped by the submission server and receipts will be
issued. Whether your submission arrived to the server by
the deadline is determined by the timestamp. Please keep
your receipts.
If a student signs up late for this class, he/she is still
required to turn in all the assignments on time
or he/she will receive a score of zero for these assignments.
No exceptions! This requirement also applys to students on
the wait list.
You must follow the
Electronic Submission Guidelines
when you submit programming assignments.
Please note that this is a brand new procedure and very different
from previous procedures.
Please make sure you read the output of the
bsubmit program carefully.
It should look similar to the sample output
given on the bsubmit page. The timestamped upload ticket
issued by the Bistro server is a proof that the server has received
your submission (and you do not need additional proof).
You should also verify what you have submitted is what
you intended to submit by following the
Verify Your Submission procedure.
Please note that it is your responsibility to ensure that
you have submitted valid submissions and that you have received
timestampted upload tickets for them.
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Modifications after Deadline
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You are allowed to submit modifications via
e-mail to the instructor, within 24 hours
of the submission deadline.
One line (128 characters max) of change is defined as
one of the following:
- Add 1 line before (or after) line x of file y
- Delete line x of file y
- Replace line x of file y by 1 line
where x is a line number and y is a specified file.
The first 3 lines of modifications are free
of charge. Additional modifications cost 3 points per
line.
Afterwards, additional modifications cost 12 points
per line until 7 days past the submission deadline.
After 7 days past the submission deadline, an additional
modification costs 30 points per line.
Please note that this applies to source code, Makefile, and README files.
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Segmentation Faults and Bus Errors
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I often get questions regarding segmentation faults and bus errors.
Sometimes, these occue when one calls library functions such as
gethostbyname(). Some students think this is some kind of
a networking bug. Well, it's often not. I will try to answer
this type of questions here once and for all.
Chances are that you have corrupted memory. This usually means that
you have corrupted memory a while back. It just happened
that when you call gethostbyname(), the corrupted memory
caused a bus error or the execution of an illegal instruction.
Bus errors and illegal instructions are basically the same thing
as segmentation faults.
How does one corrupt memory? You can write beyond an allocated
memory block. You can free the same object twice. You can
free an object that was not allocated. You can write to an
object that's already freed. These bugs are hard to find
because most of the them you only see that there is problem
long time after you have corrupted memory. If you have access
to a professional/expensive debugging tool, it may be helpful.
Otherwise, you just need to do binary search and see where the
bug(s) might be. There's no magical cures in debugging
memory corruption bugs.
One thing you might try is to temporarily turn off memory
deallocation (if you suspect that you have freed the same
object twice or freed an object that was not allocated).
You can do the following to define free() as a
no-op in a common header file when you are debugging:
#define DEBUGGING_MEMORY_CORRUPTION
/* comment out the above line when you are done debugging */
#ifdef DEBUGGING_MEMORY_CORRUPTION
#ifdef free
#undef free
#endif /* free */
#define free
#endif /* DEBUGGING_MEMORY_CORRUPTION */
As your code gets more and more complicated, and you are not
very careful in managing your resources, you may get more of
these. This is one reason why you want to keep your code
nice and clean.
On nunki, you can try efence. There is a copy
installed in:
~csci551b/public/efence/2.2/ElectricFence-2.2.2-15
Please read:
~csci551b/public/efence/2.2/README-solaris
I have not tried this library and I do not know if it's
suitable for our programming assignments. But I've heard good things
and bad things about it. Please try it at your own risk.
If you develop your code on a Linux, you can try
valgrind.
I have not tried this tool and I do not know if it's
suitable for our programming assignments. But I've heard good things
(e.g., easy to use) and bad things about it (e.g., it only runs on Linux).
Please try it at your own risk.
Also, if you want to try these, incorporate them in your programs
as early as possible. Don't start learning it when bugs
are happening and deadlines are approaching.
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