DIIM provides the Demand-Reduction and Recovery Dynamic Inoperability Input-Output Model (DIIM) for interdependent functions as described in the papers:
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Haimes, Y. Y., Horowitz, B. M., Lambert, J. H., Santos, J. R., Lian, C. & Crowther, K. G. (2005). Inoperability input-output model for interdependent infrastructure sectors. I: Theory and methodology. Journal of Infrastructure Systems, 11, 67-79.
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Lian, C. & Haimes, Y. Y. (2006). Managing the Risk of Terrorism to Interdependent Infrastructure Systems Through the Dynamic Inoperability Input-Output Model. Systems Engineering, 9, 241-258.
DIIM also provides the Static Demand-Driven and Supply-Driven Inoperability Input-Output Models (IIM) for interdependent functions as described in the papers:
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Haimes, Y. Y & Jiang, P. (2001). Leontief-based model of risk in complex interconnected infrastructures. Journal of Infrastructure Systems, 7, 1-12.
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Haimes, Y. Y., Horowitz, B. M., Lambert, J. H., Santos, J. R., Lian, C. & Crowther, K. G. (2005). Inoperability input-output model for interdependent infrastructure sectors. I: Theory and methodology. Journal of Infrastructure Systems, 11, 67-79.
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Leung, M., Haimes, Y. Y. & Santos, J. R. (2007). Supply- and output-side extensions to the inoperability input-output model for interdependent infrastructures. Journal of Infrastructure Systems, 13, 299-310.
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Santos, J. R. & Haimes, Y. Y. (2004). Modeling the demand reduction input-output (I-O) inoperability due to terrorism of interconnected infrastructures. Risk Analysis, 24, 1437-1451.
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Setola, R., De Porcellinis, S. & Sforna, M. (2009). Critical infrastructure dependency assessment using the input-output inoperability model. International Journal of Critical Infrastructure Protection, 2, 170-178.
DIIM is released under the MIT license.
This project makes use of the following third-party libraries:
Please see their websites for details regarding licensing terms.
Compiler | Versions Tested |
---|---|
GCC | 10, 11 |
Clang | 12, 13, 14 |
Visual Studio | VS2019, VS2022 |
XCode | 14.2 |
The source code can be obtained from
git clone https://github.com/stigrs/diim.git
These steps assumes that the source code of this repository has been cloned
into a directory called diim
.
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Create a directory to contain the build outputs:
cd diim mkdir build cd build
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Configure CMake to use the compiler of your choice (you can see a list by running
cmake --help
):cmake -G "Visual Studio 17 2022" ..
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Build the software (in this case in the Release configuration):
cmake --build . --config Release
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Run the test suite:
ctest -C Release
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Install the software:
cmake --build . --config Release --target install
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If you want to install the Python wrapper,
cd
to the directorydiim
and runpip
:pip install .
All tests should pass, indicating that your platform is fully supported.