Skip to content

python wrapper for py-powsybl #376

New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

Open
wants to merge 15 commits into
base: master
Choose a base branch
from
6 changes: 4 additions & 2 deletions py-powsybl/Demo1.py
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -42,6 +42,8 @@ def dumpLinesFlow(network):
computationManager = gateway.jvm.LocalComputationManager()
loadflowfactory=defaultConfig.newFactoryImpl(ReflectionUtil.classForName("com.powsybl.loadflow.LoadFlowFactory"))

lf_para = gateway.jvm.com.powsybl.loadflow.LoadFlowParameters.load()

#create a demo network
network = gateway.jvm.com.powsybl.iidm.network.test.FictitiousSwitchFactory.create()

Expand All @@ -52,7 +54,7 @@ def dumpLinesFlow(network):
dumpLinesFlow(network)

#run a LF on the network and dump its results metrics
loadflowResult = loadFlow.run()
loadflowResult = loadFlow.run(network.getStateManager().getWorkingStateId(), lf_para).get()
print("\nLF result: " + str(loadflowResult.isOk()) + "; metrics: " + str(loadflowResult.getMetrics()))

#dump network's lines flow
Expand All @@ -63,7 +65,7 @@ def dumpLinesFlow(network):
network.getSwitch("BD").setOpen(True)

#re-run a LF on the network and dump its results metrics
loadflowResult = loadFlow.run()
loadflowResult = loadFlow.run(network.getStateManager().getWorkingStateId(), lf_para).get()
print("\nLF result: " + str(loadflowResult.isOk()) + "; metrics: " + str(loadflowResult.getMetrics()))

#dump network's lines flow
Expand Down
35 changes: 35 additions & 0 deletions py-powsybl/README.md
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -27,6 +27,41 @@ Start the py-powsybl 'server' in a console.
Demo1.py demostrates what can be done (it executes a loadflow on a network, opens a switch, exports a network to a file in xiidm format)

python Demo1.py

Another example using pypowsybl module

```
from pypowsybl import *

# simple dump network flows function
def dump_lines_flow(network):
print(len(network.get_lines()))
for l in network.get_lines():
print(l.get_id() + ";" + str(l.get_terminal_1().get_i()) + ";" + str(l.get_terminal_2().get_i()))
print(l.get_current_limits_1().get_permanent_limit())
print(str(l.check_permanent_limit_1()) + ";" + str(l.check_permanent_limit_2()))
print(str(l.check_permanent_limit_1(0.1)) + ";" + str(l.check_permanent_limit_2(0.1)))
print(str(l.is_overloaded()) + ";" + str(l.is_overloaded(0.1)))

if __name__ == '__main__':
port = 3338
with launch(config_name=None, nb_port=port):
n1 = load_network("/path/to/case-file/example.xiidm")
dump_lines_flow(n1)

lf = run_load_flow(n1)
print("\nLF result: " + str(lf.is_ok()) + "; metrics: " + str(lf.get_metrics()))
dump_lines_flow(n1)

# re-run load flow alternatively
lf = n1.run_load_flow()
print("\nLF result: " + str(lf.is_ok()) + "; metrics: " + str(lf.get_metrics()))

n1.save("/path/to/output/example.xiidm")
# or save(n1, "/path/to/output/example.xiidm")


```

### Stop py-powsybl
To stop the py-powsybl 'server', CTRL+C in the itools console.
Expand Down
Loading