I am modeling ticket system with various SLA. The model must contain several service blocks with different reaction time ( from 2 to 32 hours). In the service block only working hours should be taken into account. So in the service block timeout should stop when non-workong hours and on the weekend. Could you please kindly tell me how i can realize it?
Thank you very much in advance!
I can think of two answers, one simplified but works in many cases, the other more advanced and probably more accurate:
Simplified approach: I would set the model in hours and keep everything running as is without any stop. So, at the end of the simulation, if the total time is 100 hours and you know that you have 8 hours/day with 5 days/week, then you'd know the total duration is 2.5 weeks. Of course, this might have limitations or might become more complex later on if you want day-specific actions (e.g. you want to differentiate between Monday, Tuesday, etc.)
Advanced more accurate approach: Create resources whose capacities are defined by schedule and assigned them to your services. Create a schedule and specify the working hours in that schedule. Check the below link to learn more about schedules. I call this the more advanced approach because you need to make sure the schedule is defined correctly and make sure all elements in the model are properly controlled (e.g. non-service blocks such as source, delays, etc.).
https://help.anylogic.com/topic/com.anylogic.help/html/data/schedule.html?resultof=%22%73%63%68%65%64%75%6c%65%73%22%20%22%73%63%68%65%64%75%6c%22%20
I personally would use the first approach if the model is rather simple and modeling working hours is enough for analysis. Otherwise, I'd go for option 2.
Finally, another option I'd like to highlight is the "suspend/resume" functions. I am only adding this because you asked "how to stop timeout". So these functions specifically stop and resume timeout. But you'll need to define the times at which they are executed (through an event for example).
Related
I've got 3 different product types of agent, which each go it's individual path within the fabric. How can i measure the average time the product type spends in the system?
My logic looks like this , and i wanted to implement the measurement in the first service, like this:, it will be completed in the last service like this :
Now I get some really high numbers, which are absolutely wrong. The process itself works fine, if you run the measurement with the code "//agent.enteredSystemP1 = time()", you will get a mean of 24 minutes, per product. But how can i get the mean per product type?
Just use the same if-elseif-else distinction in the 2nd service block as well.
Currently, any agent leaving the system adds time to any systemTimeDistribution
I am using Anylogic for a simulation-modeling class, and I am not anylogic or coding smart. My last and only coding class was MatLab based about 16 yrs ago. I have a few questions about how to implement modeling concepts in a discrete model with anylogic.
How can I add/inject agents directly into a queue downstream from a source? I have tried adding an additional source to use the “Calls of inject() function,” but I am not sure how to implement it after selecting it ( example: what do I do after selecting the Calls of inject() function). I have the new source feeding directly into the queue where I want the inject.
How can I set the release of an agent to a defined schedule instead of a rate? Currently, I have my working model set to interarrival time. But I would like to set the agent release to a defined schedule. (example: agent-1 released at 120 seconds, agent-2 released at 150 seconds, agent-3 released at 270 seconds)
Any help would be greatly appreciated, especially if it can be written in a “explain to me like I am 5yrs old” format.
Question 1:
If you have a source connected directly to a queue, then when you call source.inject() an agent will be created at the source block and go to the queue. If you have 1 source with multiple possible destinations, then you will have to use select output blocks and some criteria to go from the source to the desired queue.
Since you mentioned not being a strong programmer, this probably wouldn't be for you, but I often find myself creating agents via add_population and then just adding them to an ArrayList until I am ready to pull them into the DES flow. Really, there are near infinite ways to control agent flow within AnyLogic.
Question 2:
Option a: Arrivals by "Arrival Table in Database" You can link an AnyLogic database table to Excel, and then the source block will just have an agent arrive based on that table.
Option b: Arrival Schedule - you could set this up manually within the development environment or load your schedule from a database. I prefer option a over option b given your brief description.
Option c: Read in data to variable and then write code to release based on next arrival time. 1,000s of ways to do this, but one example could be a list of doubles (your arrival times), set an event to delay until next arrival, call inject function, remove that arrival from the list. I think option a would be best for you, but given that AnyLogic allows you to add java code, there are no limits to how sophisticated you could make your arrival logic.
For 2) You could also use an event or a dynamic event. The action could be source.inject(1); and you can schedule them to your preferences with variables. Just be vigilant that you re-start the events if necessary.
There is a demo-model from AnyLogic for dynamic events.
Good day
I'm a new user trying to find my with Anylogic.
Any help with the following question will be appreciated.
Is it possible to start a model with initial values/quantities given to certain blocks/sections in a model? In other words not have the model start from 0 but from the values given.
You can run a "warmup" period manually and save that as a model snapshot. In future runs, you can start off from that snapshot by loading it. See the help on model snapshots
This is the general problem of model initialisation (e.g., if you're modelling a manufacturing facility, you may want the run to start with the facility at the state it would be at on 9am next Monday morning). There is no generic answer: what initialisation you need is 100% model-dependent (as is how easy/hard this is).
In particular, process models make this difficult because entities (agents) are expected to have flowed through the process up to the point they 'start' in. You can use things like extra initialisation-only Source/Enter blocks to 'inject' agents into the appropriate process points, but in most models it's not this easy: you will have all kinds of model state that needs to be made consistent with this (e.g., the agents flowing through the process might have attributes which have changed based on what's happened to them so far, so this would have to be made consistent).
That's why warm-up periods (letting the model run 'from empty' for a period until its state is qualitatively what you want as your starting point) is a common approach. Model snapshots can help you here (see Ben's answer) but they're not the only way of doing it. (You can also just 'reset' all your metrics/output gathering at the point when you determine the warm-up period has ended --- i.e., you are effectively establishing a new 'time zero' --- but, again, exactly what you need to do is 100% model dependent.)
Basically I've got a Service which can work with two alternatives of ResourceSets. Let's say, the Service would optimally work with one Doctor and one Nurse, but it is also possible to work with only one Doctor if a Nurse isn't available.
Now, assuming the Doctor works slower without a Nurse, the Service's delay time must depend upon the resourceSet being employed at the moment (Doctor+Nurse or Doctor). Any idea how can I program this?
You should also have in mind that my model has various Services in parallel working in the same way, it's not just only one Service line.
Thanks!
You're using Services but, to me, using the combination of Seize, Delay and Release gives you more flexibility.
What I've done is set the resource choice according to the image bellow:
It is important to have the nurses prior to the doctors in the first set (for some reason anylogic would opt for using only the doctor if otherwise - even with a nurse available).
Than, I would write this code:
Which means that if the agent was only able to seize one resource it will take longer (15 is just a random value).
In the delay block, I would set the processing time to agent.processTime
The topology I'm using is this:
Obviously this is a workaround and will not work for every case. You can always change the conditions you verify. I couldn't find a way to check which resource set was picked by the seize operation. If you're in a hurry this will do the trick.
Hope that helps,
Luís
I'll try and keep it simple : I've started using Arena Simulation for studies purposes, and up until now, I've been unable to find any conclusive documentation or tutorial as to how to create a Job Shop, if you could direct me to specific and practical documentation, or otherwise a helpful example which could get me started , that would be most helpful.
My problem : A given number of jobs must be processed through a given number of ressources (machines), each job has a different route to take, and each one has a different work-time depending on the resource it is using.
Ex : For job_1 to be finished, it must first use ressource_1 with 5 seconds execution-time, then ressource_3 with 3 seconds execution-time and finally ressource_9 with 1 second execution-time. Of course, a different job has a totally different route and different execution-times.
Here's an MS thesis I found...
http://www.scribd.com/doc/54342479/Simulation-of-Job-Shop-using-Arena-Mini-Project-Report
ADDENDUM:
The basic idea is to use ASSIGN to label the jobs with attribute variables reflecting their routing requirements. Those attributes can be read and used by decision blocks to route the job to the appropriate next workstation or to the exit. Perhaps these notes will be more useful to you than the MS thesis cited above. That's about all I can give you since I haven't used Arena for several years now -- I no longer have access to it and can't put together any specific examples.