NAG FL Interface
e04uff  (nlp1_rcomm_old)
e04ufa (nlp1_rcomm)

Note: this routine uses optional parameters to define choices in the problem specification and in the details of the algorithm. If you wish to use default settings for all of the optional parameters, you need only read Sections 1 to 10 of this document. If, however, you wish to reset some or all of the settings please refer to Section 11 for a detailed description of the algorithm, to Section 12 for a detailed description of the specification of the optional parameters and to Section 13 for a detailed description of the monitoring information produced by the routine.
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1 Purpose

e04uff/​e04ufa is designed to minimize an arbitrary smooth function subject to constraints (which may include simple bounds on the variables, linear constraints and smooth nonlinear constraints) using a Sequential Quadratic Programming (SQP) method. You should supply as many first derivatives as possible; any unspecified derivatives are approximated by finite differences. It is not intended for large sparse problems.
e04uff/​e04ufa may also be used for unconstrained, bound-constrained and linearly constrained optimization.
e04uff/​e04ufa uses reverse communication for evaluating the objective function, the nonlinear constraint functions and any of their derivatives.
e04ufa is a version of e04uff that has additional arguments in order to make it safe for use in multithreaded applications (see Section 5). The initialization routine e04wbf must have been called before calling e04ufa.

2 Specification

2.1 Specification for e04uff

Fortran Interface
Subroutine e04uff ( irevcm, n, nclin, ncnln, lda, ldcj, ldr, a, bl, bu, iter, istate, c, cjac, clamda, objf, objgrd, r, x, needc, iwork, liwork, work, lwork, ifail)
Integer, Intent (In) :: n, nclin, ncnln, lda, ldcj, ldr, liwork, lwork
Integer, Intent (Inout) :: irevcm, iter, istate(n+nclin+ncnln), iwork(liwork), ifail
Integer, Intent (Out) :: needc(max(1,ncnln))
Real (Kind=nag_wp), Intent (In) :: a(lda,*), bl(n+nclin+ncnln), bu(n+nclin+ncnln)
Real (Kind=nag_wp), Intent (Inout) :: c(*), cjac(ldcj,*), clamda(n+nclin+ncnln), objf, objgrd(n), r(ldr,n), x(n), work(lwork)
C Header Interface
#include <nag.h>
void  e04uff_ (Integer *irevcm, const Integer *n, const Integer *nclin, const Integer *ncnln, const Integer *lda, const Integer *ldcj, const Integer *ldr, const double a[], const double bl[], const double bu[], Integer *iter, Integer istate[], double c[], double cjac[], double clamda[], double *objf, double objgrd[], double r[], double x[], Integer needc[], Integer iwork[], const Integer *liwork, double work[], const Integer *lwork, Integer *ifail)

2.2 Specification for e04ufa

Fortran Interface
Subroutine e04ufa ( irevcm, n, nclin, ncnln, lda, ldcj, ldr, a, bl, bu, iter, istate, c, cjac, clamda, objf, objgrd, r, x, needc, iwork, liwork, work, lwork, cwsav, lwsav, iwsav, rwsav, ifail)
Integer, Intent (In) :: n, nclin, ncnln, lda, ldcj, ldr, liwork, lwork
Integer, Intent (Inout) :: irevcm, iter, istate(n+nclin+ncnln), iwork(liwork), iwsav(610), ifail
Integer, Intent (Out) :: needc(max(1,ncnln))
Real (Kind=nag_wp), Intent (In) :: a(lda,*), bl(n+nclin+ncnln), bu(n+nclin+ncnln)
Real (Kind=nag_wp), Intent (Inout) :: c(*), cjac(ldcj,*), clamda(n+nclin+ncnln), objf, objgrd(n), r(ldr,n), x(n), work(lwork), rwsav(475)
Logical, Intent (Inout) :: lwsav(120)
Character (80), Intent (InOut) :: cwsav(5)
C Header Interface
#include <nag.h>
void  e04ufa_ (Integer *irevcm, const Integer *n, const Integer *nclin, const Integer *ncnln, const Integer *lda, const Integer *ldcj, const Integer *ldr, const double a[], const double bl[], const double bu[], Integer *iter, Integer istate[], double c[], double cjac[], double clamda[], double *objf, double objgrd[], double r[], double x[], Integer needc[], Integer iwork[], const Integer *liwork, double work[], const Integer *lwork, char cwsav[], logical lwsav[], Integer iwsav[], double rwsav[], Integer *ifail, const Charlen length_cwsav)
Before calling e04ufa, or either of the option setting routines e04uda or e04uea, e04wbf must be called. The specification for e04wbf is:
Fortran Interface
Subroutine e04wbf ( rname, cwsav, lcwsav, lwsav, llwsav, iwsav, liwsav, rwsav, lrwsav, ifail)
Integer, Intent (In) :: lcwsav, llwsav, liwsav, lrwsav
Integer, Intent (Inout) :: ifail
Integer, Intent (Out) :: iwsav(liwsav)
Real (Kind=nag_wp), Intent (Out) :: rwsav(lrwsav)
Logical, Intent (Out) :: lwsav(llwsav)
Character (*), Intent (In) :: rname
Character (80), Intent (Out) :: cwsav(lcwsav)
C Header Interface
#include <nag.h>
void  e04wbf_ (const char *rname, char cwsav[], const Integer *lcwsav, logical lwsav[], const Integer *llwsav, Integer iwsav[], const Integer *liwsav, double rwsav[], const Integer *lrwsav, Integer *ifail, const Charlen length_rname, const Charlen length_cwsav)
e04wbf should be called with rname='e04ufa'. cwsav must have a length of lcwsav while the lengths of lwsav, iwsav and rwsav should be llwsav, liwsav and lrwsav, respectively. These arguments must satisfy the following constraints:
The contents of the arrays cwsav, lwsav, iwsav and rwsav must not be altered between calling routines e04uda, e04uea, e04ufa or e04wbf.

3 Description

e04uff/​e04ufa is designed to solve the nonlinear programming problem – the minimization of a smooth nonlinear function subject to a set of constraints on the variables. The problem is assumed to be stated in the following form:
minimize xRn ​ ​ F(x)   subject to   l ( x ALx c(x) ) u, (1)
where F(x) (the objective function) is a nonlinear function, AL is an nL×n constant matrix, and c(x) is an nN element vector of nonlinear constraint functions. (The matrix AL and the vector c(x) may be empty.) The objective function and the constraint functions are assumed to be smooth, i.e., at least twice-continuously differentiable. (The method of e04uff/​e04ufa will usually solve (1) if there are only isolated discontinuities away from the solution.)
Note that although the bounds on the variables could be included in the definition of the linear constraints, we prefer to distinguish between them for reasons of computational efficiency. For the same reason, the linear constraints should not be included in the definition of the nonlinear constraints. Upper and lower bounds are specified for all the variables and for all the constraints. An equality constraint can be specified by setting li=ui. If certain bounds are not present, the associated elements of l or u can be set to special values that will be treated as - or +. (See the description of the optional parameter Infinite Bound Size.)
If there are no nonlinear constraints in (1) and F is linear or quadratic then it will generally be more efficient to use one of e04mff/​e04mfa, e04ncf/​e04nca or e04nff/​e04nfa, or e04nqf if the problem is large and sparse. If the problem is large and sparse and does have nonlinear constraints, e04srf should be used, since e04uff/​e04ufa treats all matrices as dense.
e04uff/​e04ufa uses reverse communication for evaluating F(x), c(x) and as many of their first partial derivatives as possible; any remaining derivatives are approximated by finite differences. See the description of the optional parameter Derivative Level.
On initial entry, you must supply an initial estimate of the solution to (1).
On intermediate exits, the calling program must compute appropriate values for the objective function, the nonlinear constraints or their derivatives, as specified by the argument irevcm, and then re-enter the routine.
For maximum reliability, it is preferable to provide all partial derivatives (see Chapter 8 of Gill et al. (1981), for a detailed discussion). If they cannot all be provided, it is advisable to provide as many as possible. While developing code to evaluate the objective function and the constraints, the optional parameter Verify should be used to check the calculation of any known derivatives.
The method used by e04uff/​e04ufa is described in detail in Section 11.
e04wdf is an alternative routine which uses a similar method, but with direct communication: that is, the objective and constraint functions are evaluated by subroutines, supplied as arguments to the routine.

4 References

Dennis J E Jr and Moré J J (1977) Quasi-Newton methods, motivation and theory SIAM Rev. 19 46–89
Dennis J E Jr and Schnabel R B (1981) A new derivation of symmetric positive-definite secant updates nonlinear programming (eds O L Mangasarian, R R Meyer and S M Robinson) 4 167–199 Academic Press
Dennis J E Jr and Schnabel R B (1983) Numerical Methods for Unconstrained Optimization and Nonlinear Equations Prentice–Hall
Fletcher R (1987) Practical Methods of Optimization (2nd Edition) Wiley
Gill P E, Hammarling S, Murray W, Saunders M A and Wright M H (1986) Users' guide for LSSOL (Version 1.0) Report SOL 86-1 Department of Operations Research, Stanford University
Gill P E, Murray W, Saunders M A and Wright M H (1984a) Procedures for optimization problems with a mixture of bounds and general linear constraints ACM Trans. Math. Software 10 282–298
Gill P E, Murray W, Saunders M A and Wright M H (1984b) Users' guide for SOL/QPSOL version 3.2 Report SOL 84–5 Department of Operations Research, Stanford University
Gill P E, Murray W, Saunders M A and Wright M H (1986a) Some theoretical properties of an augmented Lagrangian merit function Report SOL 86–6R Department of Operations Research, Stanford University
Gill P E, Murray W, Saunders M A and Wright M H (1986b) Users' guide for NPSOL (Version 4.0): a Fortran package for nonlinear programming Report SOL 86-2 Department of Operations Research, Stanford University
Gill P E, Murray W and Wright M H (1981) Practical Optimization Academic Press
Hock W and Schittkowski K (1981) Test Examples for Nonlinear Programming Codes. Lecture Notes in Economics and Mathematical Systems 187 Springer–Verlag
Murtagh B A and Saunders M A (1983) MINOS 5.0 user's guide Report SOL 83-20 Department of Operations Research, Stanford University
Powell M J D (1974) Introduction to constrained optimization Numerical Methods for Constrained Optimization (eds P E Gill and W Murray) 1–28 Academic Press
Powell M J D (1983) Variable metric methods in constrained optimization Mathematical Programming: the State of the Art (eds A Bachem, M Grötschel and B Korte) 288–311 Springer–Verlag

5 Arguments

Note: this routine uses reverse communication. Its use involves an initial entry, intermediate exits and re-entries, and a final exit, as indicated by the argument irevcm. Between intermediate exits and re-entries, all arguments other than those specified by the value of irevcm must remain unchanged.
1: irevcm Integer Input/Output
On initial entry: must be set to 0.
On intermediate exit: specifies what values the calling program must assign to arguments of e04uff/​e04ufa before re-entering the routine.
irevcm=1
Set objf to the value of the objective function F(x).
irevcm=2
Set objgrd(j) to the value F xj if available, for j=1,2,,n.
irevcm=3
Set objf and objgrd(j) as for irevcm=1 and irevcm=2.
irevcm=4
Set c(i) to the value of the constraint function ci(x), for each i such that needc(i)>0.
irevcm=5
Set cjac(i,j) to the value ci xj if available, for each i such that needc(i)>0 and j=1,2,,n.
irevcm=6
Set c(i) and cjac(i,j) as for irevcm=4 and irevcm=5.
On intermediate re-entry: must remain unchanged, unless you wish to terminate the solution to the current problem. In this case irevcm may be set to a negative value and then e04uff/​e04ufa will take a final exit with ifail set to this value of irevcm.
On final exit: irevcm=0.
Constraint: irevcm6.
Note: any values you return to e04uff/​e04ufa as part of the reverse communication procedure should not include floating-point NaN (Not a Number) or infinity values, since these are not handled by e04uff/​e04ufa. If your code does inadvertently return any NaNs or infinities, e04uff/​e04ufa is likely to produce unexpected results.
2: n Integer Input
On initial entry: n, the number of variables.
Constraint: n>0.
3: nclin Integer Input
On initial entry: nL, the number of general linear constraints.
Constraint: nclin0.
4: ncnln Integer Input
On initial entry: nN, the number of nonlinear constraints.
Constraint: ncnln0.
5: lda Integer Input
On initial entry: the first dimension of the array a as declared in the (sub)program from which e04uff/​e04ufa is called.
Constraint: ldamax(1,nclin).
6: ldcj Integer Input
On initial entry: the first dimension of the array cjac as declared in the (sub)program from which e04uff/​e04ufa is called.
Constraint: ldcjmax(1,ncnln).
7: ldr Integer Input
On initial entry: the first dimension of the array r as declared in the (sub)program from which e04uff/​e04ufa is called.
Constraint: ldrn.
8: a(lda,*) Real (Kind=nag_wp) array Input
Note: the second dimension of the array a must be at least n if nclin>0, and at least 1 otherwise.
On initial entry: the ith row of the matrix AL of general linear constraints in (1) must be stored in a(i,j), for i=1,2,,nclin and j=1,2,,n. That is, the ith row contains the coefficients of the ith general linear constraint, for i=1,2,,nclin.
If nclin=0, the array a is not referenced.
9: bl(n+nclin+ncnln) Real (Kind=nag_wp) array Input
10: bu(n+nclin+ncnln) Real (Kind=nag_wp) array Input
On initial entry: bl must contain the lower bounds and bu the upper bounds, for all the constraints in the following order. The first n elements of each array must contain the bounds on the variables, the next nL elements the bounds for the general linear constraints (if any) and the next nN elements the bounds for the general nonlinear constraints (if any). To specify a nonexistent lower bound (i.e., lj=-), set bl(j)-bigbnd, and to specify a nonexistent upper bound (i.e., uj=+), set bu(j)bigbnd; the default value of bigbnd is 1020, but this may be changed by the optional parameter Infinite Bound Size. To specify the jth constraint as an equality, set bl(j)=bu(j)=β, say, where |β|<bigbnd.
Constraints:
  • bl(j)bu(j), for j=1,2,,n+nclin+ncnln;
  • if bl(j)=bu(j)=β, |β|<bigbnd.
11: iter Integer Input/Output
On intermediate re-entry: must remain unchanged from a previous call to e04uff/​e04ufa.
On final exit: the number of major iterations performed.
12: istate(n+nclin+ncnln) Integer array Input/Output
On initial entry: need not be set if the (default) optional parameter Cold Start is used.
If the optional parameter Warm Start has been chosen, the elements of istate corresponding to the bounds and linear constraints define the initial working set for the procedure that finds a feasible point for the linear constraints and bounds. The active set at the conclusion of this procedure and the elements of istate corresponding to nonlinear constraints then define the initial working set for the first QP subproblem. More precisely, the first n elements of istate refer to the upper and lower bounds on the variables, the next nL elements refer to the upper and lower bounds on ALx, and the next nN elements refer to the upper and lower bounds on c(x). Possible values for istate(j) are as follows:
istate(j) Meaning
0 The corresponding constraint is not in the initial QP working set.
1 This inequality constraint should be in the working set at its lower bound.
2 This inequality constraint should be in the working set at its upper bound.
3 This equality constraint should be in the initial working set. This value must not be specified unless bl(j)=bu(j).
The values −2, −1 and 4 are also acceptable but will be modified by the routine. If e04uff/​e04ufa has been called previously with the same values of n, nclin and ncnln, istate already contains satisfactory information. (See also the description of the optional parameter Warm Start.) The routine also adjusts (if necessary) the values supplied in x to be consistent with istate.
Constraint: −2istate(j)4, for j=1,2,,n+nclin+ncnln.
On final exit: the status of the constraints in the QP working set at the point returned in x. The significance of each possible value of istate(j) is as follows:
istate(j) Meaning
−2 This constraint violates its lower bound by more than the appropriate feasibility tolerance (see the optional parameters Linear Feasibility Tolerance and Nonlinear Feasibility Tolerance). This value can occur only when no feasible point can be found for a QP subproblem.
−1 This constraint violates its upper bound by more than the appropriate feasibility tolerance (see the optional parameters Linear Feasibility Tolerance and Nonlinear Feasibility Tolerance). This value can occur only when no feasible point can be found for a QP subproblem.
-0 The constraint is satisfied to within the feasibility tolerance, but is not in the QP working set.
-1 This inequality constraint is included in the QP working set at its lower bound.
-2 This inequality constraint is included in the QP working set at its upper bound.
-3 This constraint is included in the QP working set as an equality. This value of istate can occur only when bl(j)=bu(j).
13: c(*) Real (Kind=nag_wp) array Input/Output
Note: the dimension of the array c must be at least max(1,ncnln).
On initial entry: need not be set.
On intermediate re-entry: if irevcm=4 or 6 and needc(i)>0, c(i) must contain the value of the ith constraint at x. The remaining elements of c, corresponding to the non-positive elements of needc, are ignored.
On final exit: if ncnln>0, c(i) contains the value of the ith nonlinear constraint function ci at the final iterate, for i=1,2,,ncnln.
If ncnln=0, the array c is not referenced.
14: cjac(ldcj,*) Real (Kind=nag_wp) array Input/Output
Note: the second dimension of the array cjac must be at least n if ncnln>0, and at least 1 otherwise.
On initial entry: in general, cjac need not be initialized before the call to e04uff/​e04ufa. However, if the optional parameter Derivative Level=2 or 3, you may optionally set the constant elements of cjac. Such constant elements need not be re-assigned on subsequent intermediate exits.
If all elements of the constraint Jacobian are known (i.e., Derivative Level=2 or 3), any constant elements may be assigned to cjac one time only at the start of the optimization. An element of cjac that is not subsequently assigned during an intermediate exit will retain its initial value throughout. Constant elements may be loaded into cjac either before the call to e04uff/​e04ufa or during the first intermediate exit. The ability to preload constants is useful when many Jacobian elements are identically zero, in which case cjac may be initialized to zero and nonzero elements may be reset during intermediate exits.
On intermediate re-entry: if irevcm=5 or 6 and needc(i)>0, the ith row of cjac must contain the available elements of the vector ci given by
ci= ( ci x1 , ci x2 ,, ci xn ) T,  
where ci xj is the partial derivative of the ith constraint with respect to the jth variable, evaluated at the point x. The remaining rows of cjac, corresponding to non-positive elements of needc, are ignored. The ith row of the Jacobian should be stored in elements cjac(i,j), for i=1,2,,ncnln and j=1,2,,n.
Note that constant nonzero elements do affect the values of the constraints. Thus, if cjac(i,j) is set to a constant value, it need not be reset during subsequent intermediate exits, but the value cjac(i,j)×x(j) must nonetheless be added to c(i). For example, if cjac(1,1)=2 and cjac(1,2)=−5, the term 2×x(1)-5×x(2) must be included in the definition of c(1).
It must be emphasized that, if Derivative Level=0 or 1, unassigned elements of cjac are not treated as constant; they are estimated by finite differences, at nontrivial expense. If you do not supply a value for the optional parameter Difference Interval, an interval for each element of x is computed automatically at the start of the optimization. The automatic procedure can usually identify constant elements of cjac, which are then computed once only by finite differences.
See also the description of the optional parameter Verify.
On final exit: if ncnln>0, cjac contains the Jacobian matrix of the nonlinear constraint functions at the final iterate, i.e., cjac(i,j) contains the partial derivative of the ith constraint function with respect to the jth variable, for i=1,2,,ncnln and j=1,2,,n.
If ncnln=0, the array cjac is not referenced.
15: clamda(n+nclin+ncnln) Real (Kind=nag_wp) array Input/Output
On initial entry: need not be set if the (default) optional parameter Cold Start is used.
If the optional parameter Warm Start has been chosen, clamda(j) must contain a multiplier estimate for each nonlinear constraint with a sign that matches the status of the constraint specified by the istate array, for j=n+nclin+1,,n+nclin+ncnln. The remaining elements need not be set. Note that if the jth constraint is defined as ‘inactive’ by the initial value of the istate array (i.e., istate(j)=0), clamda(j) should be zero; if the jth constraint is an inequality active at its lower bound (i.e., istate(j)=1), clamda(j) should be non-negative; if the jth constraint is an inequality active at its upper bound (i.e., istate(j)=2), clamda(j) should be non-positive. If necessary, the routine will modify clamda to match these rules.
On final exit: the values of the QP multipliers from the last QP subproblem. clamda(j) should be non-negative if istate(j)=1 and non-positive if istate(j)=2.
16: objf Real (Kind=nag_wp) Input/Output
On initial entry: need not be set.
On intermediate re-entry: if irevcm=1 or 3, objf must be set to the value of the objective function at x.
On final exit: the value of the objective function at the final iterate.
17: objgrd(n) Real (Kind=nag_wp) array Input/Output
On initial entry: need not be set.
On intermediate re-entry: if irevcm=2 or 3, objgrd must contain the available elements of the gradient evaluated at x.
See also the description of the optional parameter Verify.
On final exit: the gradient of the objective function at the final iterate (or its finite difference approximation).
18: r(ldr,n) Real (Kind=nag_wp) array Input/Output
On initial entry: need not be initialized if the (default) optional parameter Cold Start is used.
If the optional parameter Warm Start has been chosen, r must contain the upper triangular Cholesky factor R of the initial approximation of the Hessian of the Lagrangian function, with the variables in the natural order. Elements not in the upper triangular part of r are assumed to be zero and need not be assigned.
On final exit: if Hessian=NO, r contains the upper triangular Cholesky factor R of QTH~Q, an estimate of the transformed and reordered Hessian of the Lagrangian at x (see (6) in Section 11.1).
If Hessian=YES, r contains the upper triangular Cholesky factor R of H, the approximate (untransformed) Hessian of the Lagrangian, with the variables in the natural order.
19: x(n) Real (Kind=nag_wp) array Input/Output
On initial entry: an initial estimate of the solution.
On intermediate exit: the point x at which the objective function, constraint functions or their derivatives are to be evaluated.
On final exit: the final estimate of the solution.
20: needc(max(1,ncnln)) Integer array Output
On intermediate exit: if irevcm4, needc specifies the indices of the elements of c and/or cjac that must be assigned. If needc(i)>0, the ith element of c and/or the available elements of the ith row of cjac must be evaluated at x.
21: iwork(liwork) Integer array Communication Array
22: liwork Integer Input
On initial entry: the dimension of the array iwork as declared in the (sub)program from which e04uff/​e04ufa is called.
Constraint: liwork3×n+nclin+2×ncnln.
23: work(lwork) Real (Kind=nag_wp) array Communication Array
24: lwork Integer Input
On initial entry: the dimension of the array work as declared in the (sub)program from which e04uff/​e04ufa is called.
Constraints:
  • if ncnln=0 and nclin=0, lwork21×n+2;
  • if ncnln=0 and nclin>0, lwork2×n2+21×n+11×nclin+2;
  • if ncnln>0 and nclin0, lwork2×n2+n×nclin+2×n×ncnln+21×n+11×nclin+22×ncnln+1.
The amounts of workspace provided and required may be (by default for e04uff) output on the current advisory message unit (as defined by x04abf). As an alternative to computing liwork and lwork from the formulae given above, you may prefer to obtain appropriate values from the output of a preliminary run with liwork and lwork set to 1. (e04uff/​e04ufa will then terminate with ifail=9.)
25: ifail Integer Input/Output
Note: for e04ufa, ifail does not occur in this position in the argument list. See the additional arguments described below.
On initial entry: ifail must be set to 0, −1 or 1 to set behaviour on detection of an error; these values have no effect when no error is detected.
A value of 0 causes the printing of an error message and program execution will be halted; otherwise program execution continues. A value of −1 means that an error message is printed while a value of 1 means that it is not.
If halting is not appropriate, the value −1 or 1 is recommended. If message printing is undesirable, then the value 1 is recommended. Otherwise, the value −1 is recommended since useful values can be provided in some output arguments even when ifail0 on exit. When the value -1 or 1 is used it is essential to test the value of ifail on exit.
On final exit: ifail=0 unless the routine detects an error or a warning has been flagged (see Section 6).
e04uff/​e04ufa returns with ifail=0 if the iterates have converged to a point x that satisfies the first-order Kuhn–Tucker conditions (see Section 11.1) to the accuracy requested by the optional parameter Optimality Tolerance. This has default value=εr0.8, where εr is the value of the optional parameter Function Precision (default value=ε0.9, where ε is the machine precision). That is ifail=0 when the projected gradient and active constraint residuals are negligible at x.
You should check whether the following four conditions are satisfied:
  1. (i)the final value of Norm Gz (see Section 9.1) is significantly less than that at the starting point;
  2. (ii)during the final major iterations, the values of Step and Mnr (see Section 9.1) are both one;
  3. (iii)the last few values of both Norm Gz and Violtn (see Section 9.1) become small at a fast linear rate; and
  4. (iv)Cond Hz (see Section 9.1) is small.
If all these conditions hold, x is almost certainly a local minimum of (1).
Note: the following are additional arguments for specific use with e04ufa. Users of e04uff therefore need not read the remainder of this description.
25: cwsav(5) Character(80) array Communication Array
26: lwsav(120) Logical array Communication Array
27: iwsav(610) Integer array Communication Array
28: rwsav(475) Real (Kind=nag_wp) array Communication Array
The arrays lwsav, iwsav, rwsav and cwsav must not be altered between calls to any of the routines e04wbf, e04ufa, e04uda or e04uea.
29: ifail Integer Input/Output
Note: see the argument description for ifail above.

6 Error Indicators and Warnings

If on entry ifail=0 or −1, explanatory error messages are output on the current error message unit (as defined by x04aaf).
Errors or warnings detected by the routine:
Note: in some cases e04uff/​e04ufa may return useful information.
ifail=1
Optimal solution found, but requested accuracy not achieved.
The final iterate x satisfies the first-order Kuhn–Tucker conditions (see Section 11.1) to the accuracy requested, but the sequence of iterates has not yet converged. e04uff/​e04ufa was terminated because no further improvement could be made in the merit function (see Section 9.1).
The most common situation is that you ask for a solution with accuracy that is not attainable with the given precision of the problem (as specified by the optional parameter Function Precision). This condition will also occur if, by chance, an iterate is an ‘exact’ Kuhn–Tucker point, but the change in the variables was significant at the previous iteration. (This situation often happens when minimizing very simple functions, such as quadratics.)
ifail=2
No feasible point for the linear constraints.
e04uff/​e04ufa has terminated without finding a feasible point for the linear constraints and bounds, which means that either no feasible point exists for the given value of the optional parameter Linear Feasibility Tolerance, or no feasible point could be found in the number of iterations specified by the optional parameter Minor Iteration Limit. You should check that there are no constraint redundancies. If the data for the constraints are accurate only to an absolute precision σ, you should ensure that the value of the optional parameter Linear Feasibility Tolerance is greater than σ. For example, if all elements of AL are of order unity and are accurate to only three decimal places, Linear Feasibility Tolerance should be at least 10−3.
ifail=3
No feasible point for the nonlinear constraints.
No feasible point could be found for the nonlinear constraints. The problem may have no feasible solution. This means that there has been a sequence of QP subproblems for which no feasible point could be found (indicated by I at the end of each line of intermediate printout produced by the major iterations; see Section 9.1). This behaviour will occur if there is no feasible point for the nonlinear constraints. (However, there is no general test that can determine whether a feasible point exists for a set of nonlinear constraints.) If the infeasible subproblems occur from the very first major iteration, it is highly likely that no feasible point exists. If infeasibilities occur when earlier subproblems have been feasible, small constraint inconsistencies may be present. You should check the validity of constraints with negative values of istate. If you are convinced that a feasible point does exist, e04uff/​e04ufa should be restarted at a different starting point.
ifail=4
Too many major iterations.
The limiting number of iterations (as determined by the optional parameter Major Iteration Limit) has been reached.
If the algorithm appears to be making satisfactory progress, optional parameter Major Iteration Limit may be too small. If so, either increase its value and rerun e04uff/​e04ufa or, alternatively, rerun e04uff/​e04ufa using the optional parameter Warm Start. If the algorithm seems to be making little or no progress however, you should check for incorrect gradients or ill-conditioning as described under ifail=6.
Note that ill-conditioning in the working set is sometimes resolved automatically by the algorithm, in which case performing additional iterations may be helpful. However, ill-conditioning in the Hessian approximation tends to persist once it has begun, so that allowing additional iterations without altering r is usually inadvisable. If the quasi-Newton update of the Hessian approximation was reset during the latter major iterations (i.e., an R occurs at the end of each line of intermediate printout; see Section 9.1), it may be worthwhile to try a Warm Start at the final point as suggested above.
ifail=6
Current point cannot be improved upon.
x does not satisfy the first-order Kuhn–Tucker conditions (see Section 11.1), and no improved point for the merit function (see Section 9.1) could be found during the final linesearch.
This sometimes occurs because an overly stringent accuracy has been requested, i.e., the value of the optional parameter Optimality Tolerance (default value=εr0.8, where εr is the value of the optional parameter Function Precision) is too small. In this case you should apply the four tests described under ifail=0 to determine whether or not the final solution is acceptable (see Gill et al. (1981), for a discussion of the attainable accuracy).
If many iterations have occurred in which essentially no progress has been made and e04uff/​e04ufa has failed completely to move from the initial point, values set by the calling program for the objective or constraint functions or their derivatives during intermediate exits may be incorrect. You should refer to comments under ifail=7 and check the gradients using the optional parameter Verify. Unfortunately, there may be small errors in the objective and constraint gradients that cannot be detected by the verification process. Finite difference approximations to first derivatives are catastrophically affected by even small inaccuracies. An indication of this situation is a dramatic alteration in the iterates if the finite difference interval is altered. One might also suspect this type of error if a switch is made to central differences even when Norm Gz and Violtn (see Section 9.1) are large.
Another possibility is that the search direction has become inaccurate because of ill-conditioning in the Hessian approximation or the matrix of constraints in the working set; either form of ill-conditioning tends to be reflected in large values of Mnr (the number of iterations required to solve each QP subproblem; see Section 9.1).
If the condition estimate of the projected Hessian (Cond Hz; see Section 9.1) is extremely large, it may be worthwhile rerunning e04uff/​e04ufa from the final point with the optional parameter Warm Start. In this situation, istate and clamda should be left unaltered and r should be reset to the identity matrix.
If the matrix of constraints in the working set is ill-conditioned (i.e., Cond T is extremely large; see Section 13), it may be helpful to run e04uff/​e04ufa with a relaxed value of the optional parameter Feasibility Tolerance. (Constraint dependencies are often indicated by wide variations in size in the diagonal elements of the matrix T, whose diagonals will be printed if Major Print Level30.)
ifail=7
Large errors found in the derivatives.
The user-supplied derivatives of the objective function and/or nonlinear constraints appear to be incorrect.
Large errors were found in the derivatives of the objective function and/or nonlinear constraints. This value of ifail will occur if the verification process indicated that at least one gradient or Jacobian element had no correct figures. You should refer to the printed output to determine which elements are suspected to be in error.
As a first-step, you should check that the code for the objective and constraint values is correct – for example, by computing the function at a point where the correct value is known. However, care should be taken that the chosen point fully tests the evaluation of the function. It is remarkable how often the values x=0 or x=1 are used in such a test, and how often the special properties of these numbers make the test meaningless.
Gradient checking will be ineffective if the objective function uses information computed by the constraints, since they are not necessarily computed before each function evaluation.
Errors in programming the function may be quite subtle in that the function value is ‘almost’ correct. For example, the function may not be accurate to full precision because of the inaccurate calculation of a subsidiary quantity, or the limited accuracy of data upon which the function depends. A common error on machines where numerical calculations are usually performed in double precision is to include even one single precision constant in the calculation of the function; since some compilers do not convert such constants to double precision, half the correct figures may be lost by such a seemingly trivial error.
ifail=9
Not enough workspace to solve problem. Workspace provided is iwork(value) and work(value). To solve problem we need iwork(value) and work(value).
On entry, irevcm=value.
Constraint: 6irevcm0.
On entry, lda=value and nclin=value.
Constraint: ldamax(1,nclin).
On entry, ldcj=value and ncnln=value.
Constraint: ldcjmax(1,ncnln).
On entry, ldr=value and n=value.
Constraint: ldrn.
On entry, n=value.
Constraint: n1.
On entry, nclin=value.
Constraint: nclin0.
On entry, ncnln=value.
Constraint: ncnln0.
On entry, the bounds on value are inconsistent: bl(value)=value and bu(value)=value.
On entry, the bounds on linear constraint value are inconsistent: bl(value)=value and bu(value)=value.
On entry, the bounds on nonlinear constraint value are inconsistent: bl(value)=value and bu(value)=value.
On entry, the bounds on variable value are inconsistent: bl(value)=value and bu(value)=value.
On entry, the equal bounds on value are infinite, because bl(value)=beta and bu(value)=beta, but |beta|bigbnd: beta=value and bigbnd=value.
On entry, the equal bounds on linear constraint value are infinite, because bl(value)=beta and bu(value)=beta, but |beta|bigbnd: beta=value and bigbnd=value.
On entry, the equal bounds on nonlinear constraint value are infinite, because bl(value)=beta and bu(value)=beta, but |beta|bigbnd: beta=value and bigbnd=value.
On entry, the equal bounds on variable value are infinite, because bl(value)=beta and bu(value)=beta, but |beta|bigbnd: beta=value and bigbnd=value.
On entry with a Warm Start, istate(value)=value.
ifail<0
User requested termination by setting irevcm negative during an intermediate exit.
Overflow
If the printed output before the overflow error contains a warning about serious ill-conditioning in the working set when adding the jth constraint, it may be possible to avoid the difficulty by increasing the magnitude of the Linear Feasibility Tolerance and/or the optional parameter Nonlinear Feasibility Tolerance and rerunning the program. If the message recurs even after this change, the offending linearly dependent constraint (with index ‘j’) must be removed from the problem. If overflow occurs in one of the user-supplied subroutines (e.g., if the nonlinear functions involve exponentials or singularities), it may help to specify tighter bounds for some of the variables (i.e., reduce the gap between the appropriate lj and uj).
ifail=-99
An unexpected error has been triggered by this routine. Please contact NAG.
See Section 7 in the Introduction to the NAG Library FL Interface for further information.
ifail=-399
Your licence key may have expired or may not have been installed correctly.
See Section 8 in the Introduction to the NAG Library FL Interface for further information.
ifail=-999
Dynamic memory allocation failed.
See Section 9 in the Introduction to the NAG Library FL Interface for further information.

7 Accuracy

If ifail=0 on final exit then the vector returned in the array x is an estimate of the solution to an accuracy of approximately Optimality Tolerance (default value=ε0.8, where ε is the machine precision).

8 Parallelism and Performance

Background information to multithreading can be found in the Multithreading documentation.
e04uff/​e04ufa is threaded by NAG for parallel execution in multithreaded implementations of the NAG Library.
e04uff/​e04ufa makes calls to BLAS and/or LAPACK routines, which may be threaded within the vendor library used by this implementation. Consult the documentation for the vendor library for further information.
Please consult the X06 Chapter Introduction for information on how to control and interrogate the OpenMP environment used within this routine. Please also consult the Users' Note for your implementation for any additional implementation-specific information.

9 Further Comments

9.1 Description of the Printed Output

This section describes the intermediate printout and final printout produced by e04uff/​e04ufa. The intermediate printout is a subset of the monitoring information produced by e04uff/​e04ufa at every iteration (see Section 13). You can control the level of printed output (see the description of the optional parameter Major Print Level). Note that the intermediate printout and final printout are produced only if Major Print Level10 (the default for e04uff, by default no output is produced by e04ufa).
The following line of summary output (<80 characters) is produced at every major iteration. In all cases, the values of the quantities printed are those in effect on completion of the given iteration.
Maj is the major iteration count.
Mnr is the number of minor iterations required by the feasibility and optimality phases of the QP subproblem. Generally, Mnr will be 1 in the later iterations, since theoretical analysis predicts that the correct active set will be identified near the solution (see Section 11).
Note that Mnr may be greater than the optional parameter Minor Iteration Limit if some iterations are required for the feasibility phase.
Step is the step αk taken along the computed search direction. On reasonably well-behaved problems, the unit step (i.e., αk=1) will be taken as the solution is approached.
Merit Function is the value of the augmented Lagrangian merit function (12) at the current iterate. This function will decrease at each iteration unless it was necessary to increase the penalty parameters (see Section 11.3). As the solution is approached, Merit Function will converge to the value of the objective function at the solution.
If the QP subproblem does not have a feasible point (signified by I at the end of the current output line) then the merit function is a large multiple of the constraint violations, weighted by the penalty parameters. During a sequence of major iterations with infeasible subproblems, the sequence of Merit Function values will decrease monotonically until either a feasible subproblem is obtained or e04uff/​e04ufa terminates with ifail=3 (no feasible point could be found for the nonlinear constraints).
If there are no nonlinear constraints present (i.e., ncnln=0) then this entry contains Objective, the value of the objective function F(x). The objective function will decrease monotonically to its optimal value when there are no nonlinear constraints.
Norm Gz is ZTgFR, the Euclidean norm of the projected gradient (see Section 11.2). Norm Gz will be approximately zero in the neighbourhood of a solution.
Violtn is the Euclidean norm of the residuals of constraints that are violated or in the predicted active set (not printed if ncnln is zero). Violtn will be approximately zero in the neighbourhood of a solution.
Cond Hz is a lower bound on the condition number of the projected Hessian approximation HZ ( HZ = ZT HFR Z = RZT RZ ; see (6)). The larger this number, the more difficult the problem.
M is printed if the quasi-Newton update has been modified to ensure that the Hessian approximation is positive definite (see Section 11.4).
I is printed if the QP subproblem has no feasible point.
C is printed if central differences have been used to compute the unspecified objective and constraint gradients. If the value of Step is zero then the switch to central differences was made because no lower point could be found in the linesearch. (In this case, the QP subproblem is resolved with the central difference gradient and Jacobian.) If the value of Step is nonzero then central differences were computed because Norm Gz and Violtn imply that x is close to a Kuhn–Tucker point (see Section 11.1).
L is printed if the linesearch has produced a relative change in x greater than the value defined by the optional parameter Step Limit. If this output occurs frequently during later iterations of the run, optional parameter Step Limit should be set to a larger value.
R is printed if the approximate Hessian has been refactorized. If the diagonal condition estimator of R indicates that the approximate Hessian is badly conditioned then the approximate Hessian is refactorized using column interchanges. If necessary, R is modified so that its diagonal condition estimator is bounded.
The final printout includes a listing of the status of every variable and constraint.
The following describes the printout for each variable. A full stop (.) is printed for any numerical value that is zero.
Varbl gives the name (V) and index j, for j=1,2,,n, of the variable.
State gives the state of the variable (FR if neither bound is in the working set, EQ if a fixed variable, LL if on its lower bound, UL if on its upper bound, TF if temporarily fixed at its current value). If Value lies outside the upper or lower bounds by more than the Feasibility Tolerance, State will be ++ or -- respectively.
A key is sometimes printed before State.
A Alternative optimum possible. The variable is active at one of its bounds, but its Lagrange multiplier is essentially zero. This means that if the variable were allowed to start moving away from its bound then there would be no change to the objective function. The values of the other free variables might change, giving a genuine alternative solution. However, if there are any degenerate variables (labelled D), the actual change might prove to be zero, since one of them could encounter a bound immediately. In either case the values of the Lagrange multipliers might also change.
D Degenerate. The variable is free, but it is equal to (or very close to) one of its bounds.
I Infeasible. The variable is currently violating one of its bounds by more than the Feasibility Tolerance.
Value is the value of the variable at the final iteration.
Lower Bound is the lower bound specified for the variable. None indicates that bl(j)-bigbnd.
Upper Bound is the upper bound specified for the variable. None indicates that bu(j)bigbnd.
Lagr Mult is the Lagrange multiplier for the associated bound. This will be zero if State is FR unless bl(j)-bigbnd and bu(j)bigbnd, in which case the entry will be blank. If x is optimal, the multiplier should be non-negative if State is LL and non-positive if State is UL.
Slack is the difference between the variable Value and the nearer of its (finite) bounds bl(j) and bu(j). A blank entry indicates that the associated variable is not bounded (i.e., bl(j)-bigbnd and bu(j)bigbnd).
The meaning of the printout for linear and nonlinear constraints is the same as that given above for variables, with ‘variable’ replaced by ‘constraint’, bl(j) and bu(j) replaced by bl(n+j) and bu(n+j) respectively and with the following changes in the heading:
L Con gives the name (L) and index j, for j=1,2,,nL, of the linear constraint.
N Con gives the name (N) and index (j-nL), for j=nL+1,,nL+nN, of the nonlinear constraint.
Note that movement off a constraint (as opposed to a variable moving away from its bound) can be interpreted as allowing the entry in the Slack column to become positive.
Numerical values are output with a fixed number of digits; they are not guaranteed to be accurate to this precision.

10 Example

This is based on Problem 71 in Hock and Schittkowski (1981) and involves the minimization of the nonlinear function
F(x)=x1x4(x1+x2+x3)+x3  
subject to the bounds
1x1 5 1x2 5 1x3 5 1x4 5  
to the general linear constraint
x1+x2+x3+x420,  
and to the nonlinear constraints
x12+x22+x32+x42 40, x1x2x3x4 25.  
The initial point, which is infeasible, is
x0=(1,5,5,1)T,  
and F(x0)=16.
The optimal solution (to five figures) is
x*=(1.0,4.7430,3.8211,1.3794)T,  
and F(x*)=17.014. One bound constraint and both nonlinear constraints are active at the solution.

10.1 Program Text

Note: the following programs illustrate the use of e04uff and e04ufa.
Program Text (e04uffe.f90)
Program Text (e04ufae.f90)

10.2 Program Data

Program Data (e04uffe.d)
Program Data (e04ufae.d)

10.3 Program Results

Program Results (e04uffe.r)
Program Results (e04ufae.r)
Note: the remainder of this document is intended for more advanced users. Section 11 contains a detailed description of the algorithm which may be needed in order to understand Sections 12 and 13. Section 12 describes the optional parameters which may be set by calls to e04udf/​e04uda and/or e04uef/​e04uea. Section 13 describes the quantities which can be requested to monitor the course of the computation.

11 Algorithmic Details

This section contains a detailed description of the method used by e04uff/​e04ufa.

11.1 Overview

e04uff/​e04ufa is essentially identical to the subroutine NPSOL described in Gill et al. (1986b).
At a solution of (1), some of the constraints will be active, i.e., satisfied exactly. An active simple bound constraint implies that the corresponding variable is fixed at its bound, and hence the variables are partitioned into fixed and free variables. Let C denote the m×n matrix of gradients of the active general linear and nonlinear constraints. The number of fixed variables will be denoted by nFX , with nFR ( nFR = n-nFX ) the number of free variables. The subscripts ‘FX’ and ‘FR’ on a vector or matrix will denote the vector or matrix composed of the elements corresponding to fixed or free variables.
A point x is a first-order Kuhn–Tucker point for (1) (see Powell (1974)) if the following conditions hold:
  1. (i)x is feasible;
  2. (ii)there exist vectors ξ and λ (the Lagrange multiplier vectors for the bound and general constraints) such that
    g=CTλ+ξ (2)
    where g is the gradient of F evaluated at x and ξj=0 if the jth variable is free.
  3. (iii)the Lagrange multiplier corresponding to an inequality constraint active at its lower bound must be non-negative. It is non-positive for an inequality constraint active at its upper bound.
Let Z denote a matrix whose columns form a basis for the set of vectors orthogonal to the rows of CFR; i.e., CFRZ=0. An equivalent statement of the condition (2) in terms of Z is
ZTgFR=0.  
The vector ZTgFR is termed the projected gradient of F at x. Certain additional conditions must be satisfied in order for a first-order Kuhn–Tucker point to be a solution of (1) (see Powell (1974)).
e04uff/​e04ufa implements a Sequential Quadratic Programming (SQP) method. For an overview of SQP methods, see Fletcher (1987), Gill et al. (1981) and Powell (1983).
The basic structure of e04uff/​e04ufa involves major and minor iterations. The major iterations generate a sequence of iterates {xk} that converge to x*, a first-order Kuhn–Tucker point of (1). At a typical major iteration, the new iterate x¯ is defined by
x¯=x+αp (3)
where x is the current iterate, the non-negative scalar α is the step length, and p is the search direction. (For simplicity, we shall always consider a typical iteration and avoid reference to the index of the iteration.) Also associated with each major iteration are estimates of the Lagrange multipliers and a prediction of the active set.
The search direction p in (3) is the solution of a quadratic programming subproblem of the form
minimizep gT p+ 12 pT H p   subject to   l¯ { p ALp ANp } u¯ , (4)
where g is the gradient of F at x, the matrix H is a positive definite quasi-Newton approximation to the Hessian of the Lagrangian function (see Section 11.4), and AN is the Jacobian matrix of c evaluated at x. (Finite difference estimates may be used for g and AN; see the optional parameter Derivative Level.) Let l in (1) be partitioned into three sections: lB, lL and lN, corresponding to the bound, linear and nonlinear constraints. The vector l¯ in (4) is similarly partitioned and is defined as
l¯B=lB-x,  l¯L=lL-ALx,   and  l¯N=lN-c,  
where c is the vector of nonlinear constraints evaluated at x. The vector u¯ is defined in an analogous fashion.
The estimated Lagrange multipliers at each major iteration are the Lagrange multipliers from the subproblem (4) (and similarly for the predicted active set). (The numbers of bounds, general linear and nonlinear constraints in the QP active set are the quantities Bnd, Lin and Nln in the monitoring file output of e04uff/​e04ufa; see Section 13.) In e04uff/​e04ufa, (4) is solved using e04ncf/​e04nca. Since solving a quadratic program is itself an iterative procedure, the minor iterations of e04uff/​e04ufa are the iterations of e04ncf/​e04nca. (More details about solving the subproblem are given in Section 11.2.)
Certain matrices associated with the QP subproblem are relevant in the major iterations. Let the subscripts ‘FX’ and ‘FR’ refer to the predicted fixed and free variables, and let C denote the m×n matrix of gradients of the general linear and nonlinear constraints in the predicted active set. Firstly, we have available the TQ factorization of CFR:
CFRQFR=(0T), (5)
where T is a nonsingular m×m reverse-triangular matrix (i.e., tij=0 if i+j<m), and the nonsingular nFR×nFR matrix QFR is the product of orthogonal transformations (see Gill et al. (1984b)). Secondly, we have the upper triangular Cholesky factor R of the transformed and reordered Hessian matrix
RTR=HQQTH~Q, (6)
where H~ is the Hessian H with rows and columns permuted so that the free variables are first and Q is the n×n matrix
Q= ( QFR IFX ) (7)
with IFX the identity matrix of order nFX. If the columns of QFR are partitioned so that
QFR= ( Z Y ) ,  
then the nZ (nZnFR-m) columns of Z form a basis for the null space of CFR. The matrix Z is used to compute the projected gradient ZTgFR at the current iterate. (The values Nz and Norm Gz printed by e04uff/​e04ufa give nZ and ZTgFR, see Section 13.)
A theoretical characteristic of SQP methods is that the predicted active set from the QP subproblem (4) is identical to the correct active set in a neighbourhood of x*. In e04uff/​e04ufa, this feature is exploited by using the QP active set from the previous iteration as a prediction of the active set for the next QP subproblem, which leads in practice to optimality of the subproblems in only one iteration as the solution is approached. Separate treatment of bound and linear constraints in e04uff/​e04ufa also saves computation in factorizing CFR and HQ.
Once p has been computed, the major iteration proceeds by determining a step length α that produces a ‘sufficient decrease’ in an augmented Lagrangian merit function (see Section 11.3). Finally, the approximation to the transformed Hessian matrix HQ is updated using a modified BFGS quasi-Newton update (see Section 11.4) to incorporate new curvature information obtained in the move from x to x¯.
On entry to e04uff/​e04ufa, an iterative procedure from e04ncf/​e04nca is executed, starting with the user-supplied initial point, to find a point that is feasible with respect to the bounds and linear constraints (using the tolerance specified by the optional parameter Linear Feasibility Tolerance). If no feasible point exists for the bound and linear constraints, (1) has no solution and e04uff/​e04ufa terminates. Otherwise, the problem functions will thereafter be evaluated only at points that are feasible with respect to the bounds and linear constraints. The only exception involves variables whose bounds differ by an amount comparable to the finite difference interval (see the discussion of the optional parameter Difference Interval). In contrast to the bounds and linear constraints, it must be emphasized that the nonlinear constraints will not generally be satisfied until an optimal point is reached.
Facilities are provided to check whether the user-supplied gradients appear to be correct (see the description of the optional parameter Verify). In general, the check is provided at the first point that is feasible with respect to the linear constraints and bounds. However, you may request that the check be performed at the initial point.
In summary, the method of e04uff/​e04ufa first determines a point that satisfies the bound and linear constraints. Thereafter, each iteration includes:
  1. (a)the solution of a quadratic programming subproblem;
  2. (b)a linesearch with an augmented Lagrangian merit function; and
  3. (c)a quasi-Newton update of the approximate Hessian of the Lagrangian function.
These three procedures are described in more detail in Sections 11.2 to 11.4.

11.2 Solution of the Quadratic Programming Subproblem

The search direction p is obtained by solving (4) using e04ncf/​e04nca (see Gill et al. (1986)), which was specifically designed to be used within an SQP algorithm for nonlinear programming.
e04ncf/​e04nca is based on a two-phase (primal) quadratic programming method. The two phases of the method are: finding an initial feasible point by minimizing the sum of infeasibilities (the feasibility phase) and minimizing the quadratic objective function within the feasible region (the optimality phase). The computations in both phases are performed by the same subroutines. The two-phase nature of the algorithm is reflected by changing the function being minimized from the sum of infeasibilities to the quadratic objective function.
In general, a quadratic program must be solved by iteration. Let p denote the current estimate of the solution of (4); the new iterate p¯ is defined by
p¯=p+σd (8)
where, as in (3), σ is a non-negative step length and d is a search direction.
At the beginning of each iteration of e04ncf/​e04nca, a working set is defined of constraints (general and bound) that are satisfied exactly. The vector d is then constructed so that the values of constraints in the working set remain unaltered for any move along d. For a bound constraint in the working set, this property is achieved by setting the corresponding element of d to zero, i.e., by fixing the variable at its bound. As before, the subscripts ‘FX’ and ‘FR’ denote selection of the elements associated with the fixed and free variables.
Let C denote the sub-matrix of rows of
( AL AN )  
corresponding to general constraints in the working set. The general constraints in the working set will remain unaltered if
CFRdFR=0, (9)
which is equivalent to defining dFR as
dFR=ZdZ (10)
for some vector dZ, where Z is the matrix associated with the TQ factorization (5) of CFR.
The definition of dZ in (10) depends on whether the current p is feasible. If not, dZ is zero except for an element γ in the jth position, where j and γ are chosen so that the sum of infeasibilities is decreasing along d. (For further details, see Gill et al. (1986).) In the feasible case, dZ satisfies the equations
RZT RZ dZ = - ZT qFR , (11)
where RZ is the Cholesky factor of ZTHFRZ and q is the gradient of the quadratic objective function (q=g+Hp). (The vector ZTqFR is the projected gradient of the QP.) With (11), p+d is the minimizer of the quadratic objective function subject to treating the constraints in the working set as equalities.
If the QP projected gradient is zero, the current point is a constrained stationary point in the subspace defined by the working set. During the feasibility phase, the projected gradient will usually be zero only at a vertex (although it may vanish at non-vertices in the presence of constraint dependencies). During the optimality phase, a zero projected gradient implies that p minimizes the quadratic objective function when the constraints in the working set are treated as equalities. In either case, Lagrange multipliers are computed. Given a positive constant δ of the order of the machine precision, the Lagrange multiplier μj corresponding to an inequality constraint in the working set is said to be optimal if μjδ when the jth constraint is at its upper bound, or if μj-δ when the associated constraint is at its lower bound. If any multiplier is nonoptimal, the current objective function (either the true objective or the sum of infeasibilities) can be reduced by deleting the corresponding constraint from the working set.
If optimal multipliers occur during the feasibility phase and the sum of infeasibilities is nonzero, no feasible point exists. The QP algorithm will then continue iterating to determine the minimum sum of infeasibilities. At this point, the Lagrange multiplier μj will satisfy -(1+δ)μjδ for an inequality constraint at its upper bound, and -δμj(1+δ) for an inequality at its lower bound. The Lagrange multiplier for an equality constraint will satisfy |μj|1+δ.
The choice of step length σ in the QP iteration (8) is based on remaining feasible with respect to the satisfied constraints. During the optimality phase, if p+d is feasible, σ will be taken as unity. (In this case, the projected gradient at p¯ will be zero.) Otherwise, σ is set to σM, the step to the ‘nearest’ constraint, which is added to the working set at the next iteration.
Each change in the working set leads to a simple change to CFR: if the status of a general constraint changes, a row of CFR is altered; if a bound constraint enters or leaves the working set, a column of CFR changes. Explicit representations are recurred of the matrices T, QFR and R, and of the vectors QTq and QTg.

11.3 The Merit Function

After computing the search direction as described in Section 11.2, each major iteration proceeds by determining a step length α in (3) that produces a ‘sufficient decrease’ in the augmented Lagrangian merit function
L (x,λ,s) = F(x) - i λi (ci(x)-si) + 12 i ρi (ci(x)-si) 2 , (12)
where x, λ and s vary during the linesearch. The summation terms in (12) involve only the nonlinear constraints. The vector λ is an estimate of the Lagrange multipliers for the nonlinear constraints of (1). The non-negative slack variables {si} allow nonlinear inequality constraints to be treated without introducing discontinuities. The solution of the QP subproblem (4) provides a vector triple that serves as a direction of search for the three sets of variables. The non-negative vector ρ of penalty parameters is initialized to zero at the beginning of the first major iteration. Thereafter, selected elements are increased whenever necessary to ensure descent for the merit function. Thus, the sequence of norms of ρ (the printed quantity Penalty; see Section 13) is generally nondecreasing, although each ρi may be reduced a limited number of times.
The merit function (12) and its global convergence properties are described in Gill et al. (1986a).

11.4 The Quasi-Newton Update

The matrix H in (4) is a positive definite quasi-Newton approximation to the Hessian of the Lagrangian function. (For a review of quasi-Newton methods, see Dennis and Schnabel (1983).) At the end of each major iteration, a new Hessian approximation H¯ is defined as a rank-two modification of H. In e04uff/​e04ufa, the BFGS (Broyden–Fletcher–Goldfarb–Shanno) quasi-Newton update is used:
H¯=H-1sTHs HssTH+1yTs yyT, (13)
where s=x¯-x (the change in x).
In e04uff/​e04ufa, H is required to be positive definite. If H is positive definite, H¯ defined by (13) will be positive definite if and only if yTs is positive (see Dennis and Moré (1977)). Ideally, y in (13) would be taken as yL, the change in gradient of the Lagrangian function
yL = g¯ - A¯NT μN - g + ANT μN , (14)
where μN denotes the QP multipliers associated with the nonlinear constraints of the original problem. If yLT s is not sufficiently positive, an attempt is made to perform the update with a vector y of the form
y=yL+i=1mNωi(ai(x^)ci(x^)-ai(x)ci(x)),  
where ωi0. If no such vector can be found, the update is performed with a scaled yL. In this case, M is printed to indicate that the update was modified.
Rather than modifying H itself, the Cholesky factor of the transformed Hessian HQ (6) is updated, where Q is the matrix from (5) associated with the active set of the QP subproblem. The update (13) is equivalent to the following update to HQ:
H¯Q = HQ - 1 sQT HQ sQ HQ sQ sQT HQ + 1 yQT sQ yQ yQT , (15)
where yQ=QTy, and sQ=QTs. This update may be expressed as a rank-one update to R (see Dennis and Schnabel (1981)).

12 Optional Parameters

Several optional parameters in e04uff/​e04ufa define choices in the problem specification or the algorithm logic. In order to reduce the complexity of using e04uff/​e04ufa these optional parameters have associated default values that are appropriate for most problems. Therefore, you need only specify those optional parameters whose values are to be different from their default values.
The remainder of this section can be skipped if you wish to use the default values for all optional parameters.
The following is a list of the optional parameters available. A full description of each optional parameter is provided in Section 12.1.
Optional parameters may be specified by calling one, or both, of e04udf/​e04uda and e04uef/​e04uea before a call to e04uff/​e04ufa.
e04udf/​e04uda reads options from an external options file, with Begin and End as the first and last lines respectively and each intermediate line defining a single optional parameter. For example,
Begin * Example options file 
   Print level = 5 
End
The call
Call e04udf/​e04uda (ioptns, inform)
can then be used to read the file on unit ioptns. inform=0 on successful exit. e04udf/​e04uda should be consulted for a full description of this method of supplying optional parameters.
e04uef/​e04uea can be called to supply options directly, one call being necessary for each optional parameter. For example,
Call e04uef ('Print Level = 1')
e04uef/​e04uea should be consulted for a full description of this method of supplying optional parameters.
All optional parameters not specified are set to their default values. Optional parameters specified are unaltered by e04uff/​e04ufa (unless they define invalid values) and so remain in effect for subsequent calls to e04uff/​e04ufa.

12.1 Description of the Optional Parameters

For each option, we give a summary line, a description of the optional parameter and details of constraints.
The summary line contains:
Keywords and character values are case and white space insensitive.
Central Difference IntervalrDefault values are computed
If the algorithm switches to central differences because the forward-difference approximation is not sufficiently accurate, the value of r is used as the difference interval for every element of x. The switch to central differences is indicated by C at the end of each line of intermediate printout produced by the major iterations (see Section 9.1). The use of finite differences is discussed further under the optional parameter Difference Interval.
If you supply a value for this optional parameter, a small value between 0.0 and 1.0 is appropriate.
Cold Start Default
Warm Start
This option controls the specification of the initial working set in both the procedure for finding a feasible point for the linear constraints and bounds and in the first QP subproblem thereafter. With a Cold Start, the first working set is chosen by e04uff/​e04ufa based on the values of the variables and constraints at the initial point. Broadly speaking, the initial working set will include equality constraints and bounds or inequality constraints that violate or ‘nearly’ satisfy their bounds (to within Crash Tolerance).
With a Warm Start, you must set the istate array and define clamda and r as discussed in Section 5. istate values associated with bounds and linear constraints determine the initial working set of the procedure to find a feasible point with respect to the bounds and linear constraints. istate values associated with nonlinear constraints determine the initial working set of the first QP subproblem after such a feasible point has been found. e04uff/​e04ufa will override your specification of istate if necessary, so that a poor choice of the working set will not cause a fatal error. For instance, any elements of istate which are set to −2, −1 or 4 will be reset to zero, as will any elements which are set to 3 when the corresponding elements of bl and bu are not equal. A warm start will be advantageous if a good estimate of the initial working set is available – for example, when e04uff/​e04ufa is called repeatedly to solve related problems.
Crash TolerancerDefault =0.01
This value is used in conjunction with the optional parameter Cold Start (the default value) when e04uff/​e04ufa selects an initial working set. If 0r1, the initial working set will include (if possible) bounds or general inequality constraints that lie within r of their bounds. In particular, a constraint of the form ajT xl will be included in the initial working set if |ajTx-l| r (1+|l|) . If r<0 or r>1, the default value is used.
Defaults
This special keyword may be used to reset all optional parameters to their default values.
Derivative LeveliDefault =3
This parameter indicates which derivatives are provided during intermediate exits. The possible choices for i are the following.
i Meaning
3 All elements of the objective gradient and the constraint Jacobian are provided.
2 All elements of the constraint Jacobian are provided, but some elements of the objective gradient are not specified.
1 All elements of the objective gradient are provided, but some elements of the constraint Jacobian are not specified.
0 Some elements of both the objective gradient and the constraint Jacobian are not specified.
The value i=3 should be used whenever possible, since e04uff/​e04ufa is more reliable (and will usually be more efficient) when all derivatives are exact.
If i=0 or 2, e04uff/​e04ufa will estimate the unspecified elements of the objective gradient, using finite differences. The computation of finite difference approximations usually increases the total run-time, since an intermediate exit to the calling program is required for each unspecified element. Furthermore, less accuracy can be attained in the solution (see Chapter 8 of Gill et al. (1981), for a discussion of limiting accuracy).
If i=0 or 1, e04uff/​e04ufa will approximate unspecified elements of the constraint Jacobian. One intermediate exit is needed for each variable for which partial derivatives are not available. For example, if the Jacobian has the form
( * * * * * ? ? * * * ? * * * * * )  
where ‘*’ indicates an element provided and ‘?’ indicates an unspecified element, e04uff/​e04ufa will make an intermediate exit to the calling program twice: once to estimate the missing element in column 2, and again to estimate the two missing elements in column 3. (Since columns 1 and 4 are known, they require no intermediate exits for information.)
At times, central differences are used rather than forward differences, in which case twice as many intermediate exits are needed. (The switch to central differences is not under your control.)
If i<0 or i>3, the default value is used.
Difference IntervalrDefault values are computed
This option defines an interval used to estimate derivatives by finite differences in the following circumstances:
  1. (a)For verifying the objective and/or constraint gradients (see the description of the optional parameter Verify).
  2. (b)For estimating unspecified elements of the objective gradient or the constraint Jacobian.
In general, a derivative with respect to the jth variable is approximated using the interval δj, where δj=r(1+|x^j|), with x^ the first point feasible with respect to the bounds and linear constraints. If the functions are well scaled, then the resulting derivative approximation should be accurate to O(r). See Gill et al. (1981) for a discussion of the accuracy in finite difference approximations.
If a difference interval is not specified, then a finite difference interval will be computed automatically for each variable by a procedure that requires up to six intermediate exits for each element. This option is recommended if the function is badly scaled or you wish to have e04uff/​e04ufa determine constant elements in the objective and constraint gradients.
If you supply a value for this optional parameter, a small value between 0.0 and 1.0 is appropriate.
Feasibility TolerancerDefault =ε
The scalar r defines the maximum acceptable absolute violations in linear and nonlinear constraints at a ‘feasible’ point; i.e., a constraint is considered satisfied if its violation does not exceed r. If r<ε or r1, the default value is used. Using this keyword sets both optional parameters Linear Feasibility Tolerance and Nonlinear Feasibility Tolerance to r, if εr<1. (Additional details are given under the descriptions of these optional parameters.)
Function PrecisionrDefault =ε0.9
This parameter defines εr, which is intended to be a measure of the accuracy with which the problem functions F(x) and c(x) can be computed. If r<ε or r1, the default value is used.
The value of εr should reflect the relative precision of 1+|F(x)|; i.e., εr acts as a relative precision when |F| is large and as an absolute precision when |F| is small. For example, if F(x) is typically of order 1000 and the first six significant digits are known to be correct, an appropriate value for εr would be 10−6. In contrast, if F(x) is typically of order 10−4 and the first six significant digits are known to be correct, an appropriate value for εr would be 10−10. The choice of εr can be quite complicated for badly scaled problems; see Chapter 8 of Gill et al. (1981) for a discussion of scaling techniques. The default value is appropriate for most simple functions that are computed with full accuracy. However, when the accuracy of the computed function values is known to be significantly worse than full precision, the value of εr should be large enough so that e04uff/​e04ufa will not attempt to distinguish between function values that differ by less than the error inherent in the calculation.
Hessian Default =NO
This option controls the contents of the upper triangular matrix R (see Section 5). e04uff/​e04ufa works exclusively with the transformed and reordered Hessian HQ (6), and hence extra computation is required to form the Hessian itself. If Hessian=NO, r contains the Cholesky factor of the transformed and reordered Hessian. If Hessian=YES, the Cholesky factor of the approximate Hessian itself is formed and stored in r. You should select Hessian=YES if a Warm Start will be used for the next call to e04uff/​e04ufa.
Infinite Bound SizerDefault =1020
If r>0, r defines the ‘infinite’ bound bigbnd in the definition of the problem constraints. Any upper bound greater than or equal to bigbnd will be regarded as + (and similarly any lower bound less than or equal to -bigbnd will be regarded as -). If r<0, the default value is used.
Infinite Step SizerDefault =max(bigbnd,1020)
If r>0, r specifies the magnitude of the change in variables that is treated as a step to an unbounded solution. If the change in x during an iteration would exceed the value of r, the objective function is considered to be unbounded below in the feasible region. If r0, the default value is used.
Line Search TolerancerDefault =0.9
The value r (0r<1) controls the accuracy with which the step α taken during each iteration approximates a minimum of the merit function along the search direction (the smaller the value of r, the more accurate the linesearch). The default value r=0.9 requests an inaccurate search and is appropriate for most problems, particularly those with any nonlinear constraints.
If there are no nonlinear constraints, a more accurate search may be appropriate when it is desirable to reduce the number of major iterations – for example, if the objective function is cheap to evaluate, or if a substantial number of derivatives are unspecified. If r<0 or r1, the default value is used.
Linear Feasibility Tolerancer1Default =ε
Nonlinear Feasibility Tolerancer2Default =ε0.33 or ε
The default value of r2 is ε0.33 if Derivative Level=0 or 1, and ε otherwise.
The scalars r1 and r2 define the maximum acceptable absolute violations in linear and nonlinear constraints at a ‘feasible’ point; i.e., a linear constraint is considered satisfied if its violation does not exceed r1. Similarly a nonlinear constraint is considered satisfied if its violation does not exceed r2. If rm<ε or rm1, the default value is used, for m=1,2.
On entry to e04uff/​e04ufa, an iterative procedure is executed in order to find a point that satisfies the linear constraints and bounds on the variables to within the tolerance r1. All subsequent iterates will satisfy the linear constraints to within the same tolerance (unless r1 is comparable to the finite difference interval).
For nonlinear constraints, the feasibility tolerance r2 defines the largest constraint violation that is acceptable at an optimal point. Since nonlinear constraints are generally not satisfied until the final iterate, the value of optional parameter Nonlinear Feasibility Tolerance acts as a partial termination criterion for the iterative sequence generated by e04uff/​e04ufa (see the discussion of optional parameter Optimality Tolerance).
These tolerances should reflect the precision of the corresponding constraints. For example, if the variables and the coefficients in the linear constraints are of order unity, and the latter are correct to about 6 decimal digits, it would be appropriate to specify r1 as 10−6.
List Default for e04uff
Nolist Default for e04ufa
Optional parameter List enables printing of each optional parameter specification as it is supplied. Nolist suppresses this printing.
Major Iteration LimitiDefault =max(50,3(n+nL)+10nN)
Iteration Limiti
Itersi
Itnsi
The value of i specifies the maximum number of major iterations allowed before termination. Setting i=0 and Major Print Level>0 means that the workspace needed will be computed and printed, but no iterations will be performed. If i<0, the default value is used.
Major Print LeveliDefault for e04uff =10
Print LeveliDefault for e04ufa =0
The value of i controls the amount of printout produced by the major iterations of e04uff/​e04ufa, as indicated below. A detailed description of the printed output is given in Section 9.1 (summary output at each major iteration and the final solution) and Section 13 (monitoring information at each major iteration). (See also the description of the optional parameter Minor Print Level.)
The following printout is sent to the current advisory message unit (as defined by x04abf):
i Output
00 No output.
01 The final solution only.
05 One line of summary output (<80 characters; see Section 9.1) for each major iteration (no printout of the final solution).
10 The final solution and one line of summary output for each major iteration.
The following printout is sent to the unit number given by the optional parameter Monitoring File:
i Output
<5 No output.
5 One long line of output (>80 characters; see Section 13) for each major iteration (no printout of the final solution).
20 At each major iteration, the objective function, the Euclidean norm of the nonlinear constraint violations, the values of the nonlinear constraints (the vector c), the values of the linear constraints (the vector ALx), and the current values of the variables (the vector x).
30 At each major iteration, the diagonal elements of the matrix T associated with the TQ factorization (5) (see Section 11.1) of the QP working set, and the diagonal elements of R, the triangular factor of the transformed and reordered Hessian (6) (see Section 11.1).
If Major Print Level5 and the unit number defined by the optional parameter Monitoring File is the same as that defined by x04abf, the summary output for each major iteration is suppressed.
Minor Iteration LimitiDefault =max(50,3(n+nL+nN))
The value of i specifies the maximum number of iterations for finding a feasible point with respect to the bounds and linear constraints (if any). The value of i also specifies the maximum number of minor iterations for the optimality phase of each QP subproblem. If i0, the default value is used.
Minor Print LeveliDefault =0
The value of i controls the amount of printout produced by the minor iterations of e04uff/​e04ufa (i.e., the iterations of the quadratic programming algorithm), as indicated below. A detailed description of the printed output is given in Section 9.2 in e04ncf/​e04nca (summary output at each minor iteration and the final QP solution) and Section 13 in e04ncf/​e04nca) (monitoring information at each minor iteration). (See also the description of the optional parameter Major Print Level.)
The following printout is sent to the current advisory message unit (as defined by x04abf):
i Output
00 No output.
01 The final QP solution only.
05 One line of summary output (<80 characters; see Section 9.2 in e04ncf/​e04nca) for each minor iteration (no printout of the final QP solution).
10 The final QP solution and one line of summary output for each minor iteration.
The following printout is sent to the unit number given by the optional parameter Monitoring File:
i Output
<5 No output.
5 One long line of output (>80 characters; see Section 9.2 in e04ncf/​e04nca) for each minor iteration (no printout of the final QP solution).
20 At each minor iteration, the current estimates of the QP multipliers, the current estimate of the QP search direction, the QP constraint values and the status of each QP constraint.
30 At each minor iteration, the diagonal elements of the matrix T associated with the TQ factorization (5) (see Section 11.1) of the QP working set and the diagonal elements of the Cholesky factor R of the transformed Hessian (6) (see Section 11.1).
If Major Print Level5 and the unit number defined by the optional parameter Monitoring File is the same as that defined by x04abf, the summary output for each major iteration is suppressed.
Monitoring FileiDefault =−1
If i0 and Major Print Level5 or i0 and Minor Print Level5, monitoring information produced by e04uff/​e04ufa at every iteration is sent to a file with logical unit number i. If i<0 and/or Major Print Level<5 and Minor Print Level<5, no monitoring information is produced.
Optimality TolerancerDefault =εr0.8
The parameter r (εrr<1) specifies the accuracy to which you wish the final iterate to approximate a solution of the problem. Broadly speaking, r indicates the number of correct figures desired in the objective function at the solution. For example, if r is 10−6 and e04uff/​e04ufa terminates successfully, the final value of F should have approximately six correct figures. If r<εr or r1, the default value is used.
e04uff/​e04ufa will terminate successfully if the iterative sequence of x values is judged to have converged and the final point satisfies the first-order Kuhn–Tucker conditions (see Section 11.1). The sequence of iterates is considered to have converged at x if
αpr(1+x), (16)
where p is the search direction and α the step length from (3). An iterate is considered to satisfy the first-order conditions for a minimum if
Z T g FR r (1+max( 1 + |F(x)| , g FR )) (17)
and
|resj|ftol  for all  j, (18)
where ZTgFR is the projected gradient (see Section 11.1), gFR is the gradient of F(x) with respect to the free variables, resj is the violation of the jth active nonlinear constraint, and ftol is the Nonlinear Feasibility Tolerance.
Start Objective Check At Variablei1Default =1
Stop Objective Check At Variablei2Default =n
Start Constraint Check At Variablei3Default =1
Stop Constraint Check At Variablei4Default =n
These keywords take effect only if Verify Level>0. They may be used to control the verification of gradient elements and/or Jacobian elements computed by the calling program during intermediate exits. For example, if the first 30 elements of the objective gradient appeared to be correct in an earlier run, so that only element 31 remains questionable, it is reasonable to specify Start Objective Check At Variable=31. If the first 30 variables appear linearly in the objective, so that the corresponding gradient elements are constant, the above choice would also be appropriate.
If i2m-10 or i2m-1>min(n,i2m), the default value is used, for m=1,2. If i2m0 or i2m>n, the default value is used, for m=1,2.
Step LimitrDefault =2.0
If r>0,r specifies the maximum change in variables at the first step of the linesearch. In some cases, such as F(x)=aebx or F(x)=axb, even a moderate change in the elements of x can lead to floating-point overflow. The parameter r is, therefore, used to encourage evaluation of the problem functions at meaningful points. Given any major iterate x, the first point x~ at which F and c are evaluated during the linesearch is restricted so that
x~-x2r(1+x2).  
The linesearch may go on and evaluate F and c at points further from x if this will result in a lower value of the merit function (indicated by L at the end of each line of output produced by the major iterations; see Section 9.1). If L is printed for most of the iterations, r should be set to a larger value.
Wherever possible, upper and lower bounds on x should be used to prevent evaluation of nonlinear functions at wild values. The default value Step Limit=2.0 should not affect progress on well-behaved functions, but values such as 0.1 or 0.01 may be helpful when rapidly varying functions are present. If a small value of Step Limit is selected, then a good starting point may be required. An important application is to the class of nonlinear least squares problems. If r0, the default value is used.
Verify LeveliDefault =0
Verify
Verify Constraint Gradients
Verify Gradients
Verify Objective Gradients
These keywords refer to finite difference checks on the gradient elements computed by the calling program during intermediate exits. (Unspecified gradient elements are not checked.) The possible choices for i are as follows:
i Meaning
−1 No checks are performed.
-0 Only a ‘cheap’ test will be performed.
1 In addition to the ‘cheap’ test, individual gradient elements will also be checked using a reliable (but more expensive) test.
It is possible to specify Verify Level=0 to 3 in several ways. For example, the objective gradient will be verified if Verify, Verify=YES, Verify Gradients, Verify Objective Gradients or Verify Level=1 is specified. The constraint gradients will be verified if Verify=YES or Verify Level=2 or Verify is specified. Similarly, the objective and the constraint gradients will be verified if Verify=YES or Verify Level=3 or Verify is specified.
If 0i3, gradients will be verified at the first point that satisfies the linear constraints and bounds.
If i=0, only a ‘cheap’ test will be performed, requiring one intermediate exit for the objective function gradients and (if appropriate) one intermediate exit for the partial derivatives of the constraints.
If 1i3, a more reliable (but more expensive) check will be made on individual gradient elements, within the ranges specified by the Start Objective Check At Variable and Stop Objective Check At Variable keywords. A result of the form OK or BAD? is printed by e04uff/​e04ufa to indicate whether or not each element appears to be correct. If a gradient element is determined to be extremely poor (i.e., if it appears to have no significant digits of accuracy at all), then e04uff/​e04ufa will also exit with an error indicator in argument ifail.
If 10i13, the action is the same as for i<10, except that it will take place at the user-specified initial value of x.
If i<−1 or 4i9 or i>13, the default value is used.
We suggest that Verify Level=3 be used whenever a new calling program is being developed.

13 Description of Monitoring Information

This section describes the long line of output (>80 characters) which forms part of the monitoring information produced by e04uff/​e04ufa. (See also the description of the optional parameters Major Print Level, Minor Print Level and Monitoring File.) You can control the level of printed output (see the description of the optional parameter Major Print Level).
When Major Print Level5 and Monitoring File0, the following line of output is produced at every major iteration of e04uff/​e04ufa on the unit number specified by Monitoring File. In all cases, the values of the quantities printed are those in effect on completion of the given iteration.
Maj is the major iteration count.
Mnr is the number of minor iterations required by the feasibility and optimality phases of the QP subproblem. Generally, Mnr will be 1 in the later iterations, since theoretical analysis predicts that the correct active set will be identified near the solution (see Section 11).
Note that Mnr may be greater than the optional parameter Minor Iteration Limit if some iterations are required for the feasibility phase.
Step is the step αk taken along the computed search direction. On reasonably well-behaved problems, the unit step (i.e., αk=1) will be taken as the solution is approached.
Nfun is the cumulative number of evaluations of the objective function needed for the linesearch. Evaluations needed for the estimation of the gradients by finite differences are not included. Nfun is printed as a guide to the amount of work required for the linesearch.
Merit Function is the value of the augmented Lagrangian merit function (12) at the current iterate. This function will decrease at each iteration unless it was necessary to increase the penalty parameters (see Section 11.3). As the solution is approached, Merit Function will converge to the value of the objective function at the solution.
If the QP subproblem does not have a feasible point (signified by I at the end of the current output line) then the merit function is a large multiple of the constraint violations, weighted by the penalty parameters. During a sequence of major iterations with infeasible subproblems, the sequence of Merit Function values will decrease monotonically until either a feasible subproblem is obtained or e04uff/​e04ufa terminates with ifail=3 (no feasible point could be found for the nonlinear constraints).
If there are no nonlinear constraints present (i.e., ncnln=0) then this entry contains Objective, the value of the objective function F(x). The objective function will decrease monotonically to its optimal value when there are no nonlinear constraints.
Norm Gz is ZTgFR, the Euclidean norm of the projected gradient (see Section 11.2). Norm Gz will be approximately zero in the neighbourhood of a solution.
Violtn is the Euclidean norm of the residuals of constraints that are violated or in the predicted active set (not printed if ncnln is zero). Violtn will be approximately zero in the neighbourhood of a solution.
Nz is the number of columns of Z (see Section 11.2). The value of Nz is the number of variables minus the number of constraints in the predicted active set; i.e., Nz=n-(Bnd+Lin+Nln).
Bnd is the number of simple bound constraints in the predicted active set.
Lin is the number of general linear constraints in the predicted working set.
Nln is the number of nonlinear constraints in the predicted active set (not printed if ncnln is zero).
Penalty is the Euclidean norm of the vector of penalty parameters used in the augmented Lagrangian merit function (not printed if ncnln is zero).
Cond H is a lower bound on the condition number of the Hessian approximation H.
Cond Hz is a lower bound on the condition number of the projected Hessian approximation HZ ( HZ = ZT HFR Z = RZT RZ ; see (6)). The larger this number, the more difficult the problem.
Cond T is a lower bound on the condition number of the matrix of predicted active constraints.
Conv is a three-letter indication of the status of the three convergence tests (16)(18) defined in the description of the optional parameter Optimality Tolerance. Each letter is T if the test is satisfied and F otherwise. The three tests indicate whether:
  1. (i)the sequence of iterates has converged;
  2. (ii)the projected gradient (Norm Gz) is sufficiently small; and
  3. (iii)the norm of the residuals of constraints in the predicted active set (Violtn) is small enough.
If any of these indicators is F when e04uff/​e04ufa terminates with ifail=0, you should check the solution carefully.
M is printed if the quasi-Newton update has been modified to ensure that the Hessian approximation is positive definite (see Section 11.4).
I is printed if the QP subproblem has no feasible point.
C is printed if central differences have been used to compute the unspecified objective and constraint gradients. If the value of Step is zero then the switch to central differences was made because no lower point could be found in the linesearch. (In this case, the QP subproblem is resolved with the central difference gradient and Jacobian.) If the value of Step is nonzero then central differences were computed because Norm Gz and Violtn imply that x is close to a Kuhn–Tucker point (see Section 11.1).
L is printed if the linesearch has produced a relative change in x greater than the value defined by the optional parameter Step Limit. If this output occurs frequently during later iterations of the run, optional parameter Step Limit should be set to a larger value.
R is printed if the approximate Hessian has been refactorized. If the diagonal condition estimator of R indicates that the approximate Hessian is badly conditioned then the approximate Hessian is refactorized using column interchanges. If necessary, R is modified so that its diagonal condition estimator is bounded.