GridPath is a versatile power-system planning platform capable of a range of planning approaches including production-cost, capacity-expansion, asset-valuation, and reliability modeling.
GridPath's documentation is hosted on Read the Docs.
GridPath is tested on Python 3.8, 3.9, and 3.10. We recommend using Python 3.9. Get Python here.
You should create a Python environment for your GridPath installation, e.g. via
venv
, a lightweight environment manager
that is part of the standard Python distribution. Make sure to create activate the environment before installing GridPath.
Once you have created and activated the GridPath Python environment, you can install GridPath and the Python packages it uses.
For most users, installing GridPath's base set of Python packages and those needed
to use the graphical user interface would be sufficient. You can do so by navigating to the GridPath root
directory (which is where this README.md
file is located) and running:
pip install .[ui]
You can install all needed Python packages, including the developer extras by running:
pip install .[all]
NOTE: If you plan to edit the GridPath code, you should install with the -e
flag.
You will need a solver to use this platform. GridPath assumes you will be using Cbc (Coin-or branch and cut) by default, but you can specify a different solver.
To test the GridPath codebase, make sure the GridPath environment you installed to is activated and use the unittest module as follows from the root directory:
python -m unittest discover tests
If you install GridPath via the setup script following the instructions above,
you can use the command gridpath_run
to run a scenario from any directory
-- as long as your GridPath Python environment is enabled -- as follows:
gridpath_run --scenario SCENARIO_NAME --scenario_location
/PATH/TO/SCENARIO
If you are using the database, you can use the command gridpath_run_e2e
to
run GridPath end-to-end, i.e. get inputs for the scenario from the database,
solve the scenario problem, import the results into the database, and
process them. Refer to the documentation for how to build the database.
gridpath_run_e2e --scenario SCENARIO_NAME --scenario_location
/PATH/TO/SCENARIO
To see usage and other optional arguments, e.g. how to specify a solver, check the help menu, e.g.:
gridpath_run --help
In general, you can check usage of GridPath's scripts by calling the --help
option, e.g.:
python get_scenario_inputs.py --help