Critical Path Partners forensic scheduling MCP
13 tools for Primavera P6 forensic delay analysis — AACE windows (29R-03 MIP 3.3), DCMA-14 health checks, Monte Carlo SRA with AACE 122R-22 QRAMM maturity, TIA fragnet (MIP 3.7), collapsed as-built (MIP 3.8), and claim workbench evidence ledger. Open-source CPM engine (MIT) at github.com/danafitkowski/cpp-cpm-engine. Daubert-disclosed methodology. 66-jurisdiction holiday calendars. SHA-256 topology hash on every output.
cpm-engine
The forensically-defensible CPM engine. AACE-canonical. Daubert-disclosed. Bit-identical between JavaScript and Python.
Maintained by Critical Path Partners — a forensic-scheduling consultancy.
Quick start
npm install @critical-path-partners/cpm-engine
const E = require('@critical-path-partners/cpm-engine');
const result = E.computeCPM(
[
{ code: 'A', duration_days: 5, early_start: '2026-01-05', clndr_id: 'MF' },
{ code: 'B', duration_days: 3, clndr_id: 'MF' },
{ code: 'C', duration_days: 4, clndr_id: 'MF' },
],
[
{ from_code: 'A', to_code: 'B', type: 'FS', lag_days: 0 },
{ from_code: 'B', to_code: 'C', type: 'FS', lag_days: 0 },
],
{
dataDate: '2026-01-05',
calMap: { MF: { work_days: [1, 2, 3, 4, 5], holidays: [] } },
}
);
console.log('Project finish:', result.projectFinish); // 2026-01-21
console.log('Critical path:', result.criticalCodesArray); // ['A', 'B', 'C']
console.log('Engine version:', result.manifest.engine_version); // 2.9.8
That's it. Forward pass, backward pass, total float, free float, calendar arithmetic, P6-conventional date math, multi-jurisdiction holidays — all done.
Why this engine?
| Capability | cpm-engine | SmartPM | Acumen Fuse | Phoenix |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Open source | yes | no | no | no |
| AACE-canonical method labels (29R-03 / 49R-06 / 52R-06) | yes | partial | partial | partial |
| FRE 707 / Daubert disclosure (built-in) | yes | no | no | no |
| JS-Python bit-identical parity | yes | n/a | n/a | n/a |
| Topology fingerprint hash (SHA-256, copy-detection) | yes | no | no | no |
| Kinematic delay dynamics (velocity / accel / jerk) | yes | no | no | no |
| Bayesian update with hierarchical pooling | yes | no | no | no |
| Multi-jurisdiction holiday calendars (66 jurisdictions) | yes | partial | partial | partial |
| MIT licensed | yes | no | no | no |
The engine math is a commodity. The competitive moat in forensic scheduling is the workflow, the discipline, and the Daubert posture — not the forward pass. Critical Path Partners open-sources the engine so any academic, any solo forensic, any contractor's internal scheduler can build on a defensible foundation.
What you can build
- Forensic delay analysis — windows analysis (AACE MIP 3.3), collapsed as-built (MIP 3.8), prospective TIA (MIP 3.6 Single Base or MIP 3.7 Multiple Base, depending on mode)
- Claim packages — owner-submission EOT bundles with cover letter, exhibits, mitigation logs
- Daubert disclosures — FRCP 26(a)(2)(B) reports, FRE 702/707 four-prong methodology statements
- Schedule risk analysis — Monte Carlo P10/P50/P80/P90, sensitivity tornadoes, Bayesian updates
- Schedule health — DCMA-14 assessment, A-F auto-grade, baseline-vs-current diff
- Multi-jurisdiction calendars — 66 jurisdictions (CA-FED + 13 provinces, US-FED + 50 states + DC)
AACE alignment
The engine implements the math behind these AACE Recommended Practices:
| RP | Title | Method labels emitted |
|---|---|---|
| 29R-03 | Forensic Schedule Analysis | MIP 3.3 / 3.6 / 3.7 / 3.8 |
| 49R-06 | Identifying the Critical Path | LPM, TFM, MFP |
| 52R-06 | Prospective Time Impact Analysis | MIP 3.6 (Single Base) / MIP 3.7 (Multiple Base) |
| 122R-22 | Quantitative Risk Analysis Maturity Model (QRAMM) | (badge surface) |
| PPG #20 (2nd Ed 2024) | Forensic Schedule Analysis Practice Guide | (general acceptance) |
Method labels are emitted in result.manifest.methodology — exactly the strings AACE peer-reviewers and opposing experts expect.
Verifiable provenance
Every computation emits a manifest:
result.manifest = {
engine_version: '2.9.8',
method_id: 'computeCPM',
activity_count: 3,
relationship_count: 2,
data_date: '2026-01-05',
calendar_count: 1,
computed_at: '2026-05-10T14:32:01.847Z',
}
Plus, for forensic provenance, every input carries a SHA-256 topology hash:
const hash = E.computeTopologyHash(activities, relationships);
console.log(hash.topology_hash); // 64-char hex over canonical (code, duration, sorted preds)
// Two XERs with identical hashes ARE the same schedule, regardless of UID rotation.
This is the single most important forensic feature in the engine. Bid-collusion detection, retroactive-manipulation detection, and copy-detection across XERs all rely on it. It is also the foundation that lets opposing counsel verify a CPP analysis post-hoc.
JavaScript - Python parity
The engine has a Python sibling (_cpp_common/scripts/cpm.py) used by every CPP forensic skill. The two implementations are kept bit-identical via cross-validation:
npm run crossval
# 25 fixtures × 281 checks. 0 deviations as of v2.9.8.
Plus a 282-activity real-XER stress test reports 0 mismatches.
This means a forensic analysis run in JavaScript (browser, Node) produces the same numbers as one run in Python (claims-preparation skill, MCP server, batch pipeline). Every CPP deliverable carries the same manifest regardless of which surface produced it.
Production use
The engine runs live at mcp.criticalpathpartners.ca — try it in your browser. The same cpm-engine.js file is served over the wire and embedded inline in every report CPP produces.
The CPP forensic suite (forensic-delay-analysis, claims-preparation, claim-workbench, time-impact-analysis, schedule-risk-analysis, collapsed-as-built, counter-claim-analysis) all consume this engine — the JS port for browser/MCP, the Python sibling for batch pipelines.
Citation
If you use this engine in academic work or expert-witness reports, please cite:
Fitkowski, D. (2026). cpm-engine: A forensically-defensible critical-path-method engine with AACE-canonical method labels and Daubert disclosure. Critical Path Partners. Version 2.9.8. https://github.com/danafitkowski/cpp-cpm-engine
Algorithm citations are in docs/citations.md. All citations have been verified against primary sources.
License
MIT — see LICENSE.
You can use this engine in commercial forensic consulting, in academic research, in your own scheduling product, in court-filed expert reports. Just keep the copyright notice. No support is implied; no warranty is provided. You are responsible for the conclusions you draw with the engine. A Daubert disclosure is built in (DAUBERT.md) — you may use it as a starting point for your own FRCP 26(a)(2)(B) report.
Release notes
See CHANGELOG.md for the full release history through v2.9.8.
Contributing
See CONTRIBUTING.md. Forensic correctness is enforced — every commit must pass 685 unit tests and 281 cross-validation checks. New citations require WebSearch-verified URLs. No fabricated case names. No LLM-generated narratives in core engine paths.
Companion repositories
Two companion repositories are public and consume this engine:
- cpp-xer-parser — Canonical Primavera P6 XER parser and generator
- cpp-critical-path-validator — Critical path validation and logic health assessment
Additional CPP skills (forensic-delay-analysis, claims-preparation, claim-workbench, time-impact-analysis, collapsed-as-built, counter-claim-analysis, schedule-risk-analysis) are private; contact Critical Path Partners for access.
Strategic note
CPP is a forensic-scheduling consultancy. The engine is open-source not as a loss-leader but as a deliberate inversion of the competitive landscape: the math is a commodity, the workflow and discipline are not. Every academic, every solo forensic, every contractor's internal scheduler now has a reason to install CPP and a citation pathway. The closed-engine competitors — SmartPM, ALICE, Nodes&Links, Acumen — cannot match this move because their valuations require the engine stay proprietary.
If you ship something built on this engine, we'd love to hear about it: [email protected].
संबंधित सर्वर
Kone.vc
प्रायोजकMonetize your AI agent with contextual product recommendations
LAPRAS MCP Server
An MCP server for lapras.com, providing access to career-related tools.
OmniTaskAgent
A multi-model agent for managing tasks across various platforms, requiring API keys for different AI models.
Hyperpost
An AI-native publishing engine for persona-driven content creation and multi-platform publishing.
Chhart MCP
Chhart MCP is a tool that enables AI assistants to generate instant, shareable flowcharts and Sankey diagrams directly in chat,
AtlaCP
An MCP interface for Atlassian products, including Jira and Bitbucket.
Anytype
Interact with your Anytype data through its API, enabling AI assistants to access your information.
MCP Currency Converter Server
Provides real-time currency conversion and exchange rate data using the Frankfurter API.
iTop MCP Server
An MCP server for interacting with iTop ITSM systems via its REST API.
netdev-ssh-mcp
MCP server for interacting with network devices (switches, routers) over SSH. Supports Arista EOS, Cisco NX-OS, and Cisco IOS/IOS-XE. Exposes network device operations as tools for use with Claude Code and Claude Desktop (and other MCP clients)
Adaptive Recall
Adaptive MCP memory system for AI applications. Learns which retrieval strategies work for your data, scores results using cognitive science models, builds a knowledge graph automatically, and validates every parameter change against real query history before adopting it. Patent pending.