Software for the AutoRally research platform.
BibTex:
@article{goldfain2019autorally,
title={AutoRally: An Open Platform for Aggressive Autonomous Driving},
author={Goldfain, Brian and Drews, Paul and You, Changxi and Barulic, Matthew and Velev, Orlin and Tsiotras, Panagiotis and Rehg, James M},
journal={IEEE Control Systems Magazine},
volume={39},
number={1},
pages={26--55},
year={2019},
publisher={IEEE}
}
We welcome bug fixes, ehancements, new features, and feedback!
Please submit pull requests to the melodic-devel branch that conform to the ROS C++ Style Guide. We use Gitflow, so master branch is reserved for releases.
Install Ubuntu 18.04 64-bit
Install required packages
sudo apt install git doxygen openssh-server libusb-dev texinfo
ROS Melodic only supports Python 2.7. Before installing Python packages, you need to ensure that python
points to Python 2.7, e.g., by setting up a Python 2.7 conda environment:
conda create -n my_ros_env python=2.7
source activate my_ros_env
conda install defusedxml
conda install -c jdh88 rospkg
The following tools are recommended, but not required for this project.
sudo apt install cutecom cmake-curses-gui synaptic python-termcolor
Install ros-melodic-desktop-full
Install MPPI Dependencies (if you have a GPU and will run MPPI)
The core idea behind MPPI is to sample thousands of trajectories really fast. This is accomplished by implementing the sampling step on a GPU, for which you will need CUDA. We also use an external library to load python's numpy zip archives (.npz files) into C++.
Install gtsam
Follow the gtsam Quick Start guide to clone and install the develop branch of gtsam.
Instead of cmake ..
, use:
cmake -DGTSAM_INSTALL_GEOGRAPHICLIB=ON -DGTSAM_WITH_EIGEN_MKL=OFF ..
Once install is complete, make sure linux can see the shared library:
sudo ldconfig
Update to latest version of gazebo 9.XX
You will want to be on the latest version of gazebo 9.
Get the autorally repository in a catkin workspace. The suggested location is ~/catkin_ws/src/
, but any valid catkin worskspace source folder will work. We suggest forking over cloning if you will be working with the code.
Also clone the IMU code and Pointgrey camera drivers into the same catkin workspace:
git clone https://github.com/AutoRally/imu_3dm_gx4.git
git clone https://github.com/ros-drivers/pointgrey_camera_driver.git
Since there are no pre-built drivers for Melodic, follow these instructions to build the driver yourself.
flycapture2-2.13.3.31-amd64-pkg_Ubuntu18.04.tgz
.sudo apt --fix-broken install
after installing the suggested packages and before running sudo sh install_flycapture.sh
.Within the catkin workspace folder, run this command to install the packages this project depends on.
rosdep install --from-path src --ignore-src -y
First, check your Eigen version with pkg-config --modversion eigen3
. If you don't have at least version 3.3.5, upgrade Eigen by following "Method 2" within the included INSTALL
file.
Then, to compile and install, run catkin_make
from the catkin workspace folder. If your version of CUDA does not support gcc-7
, you may need to use
catkin_make -DCMAKE_C_COMPILER=gcc-6 -DCMAKE_CXX_COMPILER=g++-6
Due to the additional requirement of ROS's distributed launch system, you must run
source src/autorally/autorally_util/setupEnvLocal.sh
before using any AutoRally components. See the wiki for more information about how to set this system up for distributed launches on your vehicle platform.
Note: If you are unfamiliar with catkin, please know that you must run source catkin_ws/devel/setup.sh
before ROS will be able to locate the autorally packages (and thus you must run this before sourcing setupEnvLocal.sh
). This line can be added to your ~/.bashrc file so that it is automatically run on opening a terminal.
You can generate or update code documentation by running doxygen
in autorally/
.
To view code documentation open autorally/doc/html/index.html
in a web browser.
roslaunch autorally_gazebo autoRallyTrackGazeboSim.launch
You can use a USB gamepad to drive the simulated platform around. On startup, the runstop
message published by the joystick
node is false. Press any of the buttons by the right stick (normally labelled X, Y, A, B or square, triangle, X, circle) to toggle the published value.
Verify runstop motion is enabled by looking at the runstopMotionEnabled
field in the /chassisState
topic (rostopic echo /chassisState
).
If you aren't using a gamepad, you will have to configure another source of runstop information for the platform to move:
Comment out the line <include file="$(find autorally_control)/launch/joystickController.launch" />
near the end of autorally_gazebo/launch/autoRallyTrackGazeboSim.launch
rosrun rqt_publisher rqt_publisher
and configure rqt_publisher to publish a message to topic /runstop
of type autorally_msgs/runstop
at 1 Hz with sender
set to rqt_publisher
and motionEnabled
set to true.
runstopMotionEnabled
is true in /chassisState
topic.At the end of this section the robot will be driving autonomously in simulation using controllers available in autorally_control
.
Position the robot in the same spot as when the simulation starts and make sure runstop motion should is enabled (set to true).
roslaunch autorally_control waypointFollower.launch
roslaunch autorally_control constantSpeedController.launch
rosrun rqt_publisher rqt_publisher
Configure a publisher on topic constantSpeedController/speedCommand
of type std_msgs/Float64
at rate 10 with value of 3 (you can adjust he value once everything is running). The value is the target velocity in m/s, and as soon as you do this the platform should move if motion is enabled.
If the robot turns and hits the barrier it's probably because the state estimator has not converged, so its orientation estimate is incorrect. Just select the track barriers and move them up to allow the robot to continue driving, and the estimator should converge and the vehicle will return to within the barriers.
More detailed explanations of the controllers and state estimator can be found on the wiki:
Controlling the AutoRally platform is a tutorial for how your own controller can control the AutoRally platform (in simulation or on hardware).
Running Vehicles in Simulation is a tutorial on how run gazebo in the two different worlds and with multiple vehicles.
If you are configuring a physical AutoRally platform, the next step is to configure the compute box, all of the peripherals, and the launch system. Those instructions are found in the Platform Configuration Instructions.