ROS production: our prototype [2/5]
Kyle Fazzari
on 13 April 2017
Tags: developers , IoT , robotics , sc:series:ros-prototype-to-production , snapcraft , snapcraft.io , Snaps , Ubuntu Core
Please note that this blog post has out technical information that may no longer be correct. For latest updated documentation about robotics in Canonical please visit https://myasnchisdf.eu.org/robotics/docs.
This is the second blog post in this series about ROS production. In the previous post we discussed why Ubuntu Core was a good fit for production robotics. In this post we’ll be on classic Ubuntu, creating the example ROS prototype that we’ll use throughout the rest of the series as we work toward using Ubuntu Core.
I mentioned in the previous post that this series was going to use the Turtlebot 2. However, there are a number of possible configurations for the Turtlebot. Some use a Kinect, others use an Astra Pro, still others use a RealSense, etc. I want this prototype to be runnable by everyone who has a Turtlebot 2, so I’m going to cater to the lowest common denominator here: the Kobuki base. We’ll keep it very simple and make it randomly wander around, bumping into things and correcting itself, utilizing both the bumper sensors as well as the cliff sensors.
I also mentioned how the ROS community has standardized around the Turtlebot as the introductory platform. That makes this prototype incredibly easy to create, as every package we need has already been written: we just need to put them together. Let’s get started! Remember that this is also a video series, feel free to watch the video version of this post:
Prerequisites
This post will assume the following:
- You’re running on Ubuntu 16.04 (Xenial)
- You have ROS Kinetic installed (I installed ros-kinetic-ros-base)
- You have gone through at least the first 8 ROS tutorials (e.g. you should know what a launch file is)
The computer being used doesn’t matter so much as this prototype should work on any standard architecture, but for your reference I’m using an Intel NUC (the DE3815TYKE, specifically).
The prototype
Step 1: Install the Kobuki driver
The first Turtlebot-specific package we’ll need is the ROS wrapper for the Kobuki driver. It contains the node that’s responsible for communicating with the Kobuki itself, receiving sensor data and publishing it on ROS, etc.
$ sudo apt install ros-kinetic-kobuki-node
Step 2: Configure udev rule
By default, the driver will look for the Turtlebot at /dev/kobuki. Getting the Kobuki there takes a udev rule. Thankfully, what we just installed includes a utility for installing this udev rule:
$ rosrun kobuki_ftdi create_udev_rules
It may prompt for your sudo password. After this completes successfully, connect your Turtlebot, turn it on, and you should see the /dev/kobuki symlink show up.
Step 3: Test the Kobuki driver
We can prove that this is working by running the driver’s minimal launch file:
$ roslaunch kobuki_node minimal.launch
After the system comes up, you should hear the Turtlebot sing a little tune. If that doesn’t happen, check to make sure that the udev rule is working. If it does happen, leave it running and continue.
Step 4: Install the Kobuki Random Walker
The Kobuki driver is most of what we need. Its minimal launch file brings up enough nodes to obtain data from the wheel drop sensors, cliff sensors, etc., but most importantly exposes the ability to command the robot to move. We just need to make use of it. We want it to randomly walk around, so we’ll use the Kobuki Random Walker (note that this may already be installed):
$ sudo apt install ros-kinetic-kobuki-random-walker
Step 5: Test the Kobuki Random Walker
To run it (the minimal.launch file from kobuki_node still needs to be running):
$ roslaunch kobuki_random_walker safe_random_walker_app.launch
When that system finishes launching, the robot will begin randomly wandering around. If it collides with something using its bumper sensors, it’ll back up and rotate, trying to get around it. If it notices it’s about to drive off a cliff (e.g. your steps) it’ll stop and rotate again.
Go ahead and stop (ctrl+c) both launch files.
Step 6: Put the pieces together
At this point, if you have the appropriate 3d sensors, you could start doing the really fun stuff with the navigation stack, but as I mentioned before, we’re going to keep it simple here. These two launch files make up the entirety of the prototype we’ll use for this series. However, if we leave it as-is it has a small limitation: the only udev symlink location supported is /dev/kobuki. That works on our current system, but what if another user has it elsewhere? Or what if we couldn’t use that exact symlink in a snap (a hint for the next post in this series)? So let’s distill those two launch files into a single launch file that represents our prototype, and make it a little more configurable.
First of all, create a new ROS workspace for this prototype (you can of course put this anywhere):
$ mkdir -p ~/workspace/src
$ cd ~/workspace/src
$ catkin_init_workspace
Now create a new package within that workspace to contain our prototype’s launch file. It should depend upon the two packages we know we need (kobuki_node and kobuki_random_walker):
$ cd ~/workspace/src
$ catkin_create_pkg prototype kobuki_node kobuki_random_walker
Now we’re going to create our launch file:
$ cd ~/workspace/src/prototype
$ mkdir launch
$ touch launch/prototype.launch
Open that launch/prototype.launch file in your favorite editor. In your terminal, open up the minimal.launch file from the Kobuki driver:
$ rosed kobuki_node minimal.launch
We’ll copy the contents of that launch file into ours, clean it up into only the bits we need, and add an argument that makes the serial port configurable. Finally, we’re also going to include the random walker launch file so that launching this single launch file brings up our entire prototype:
<launch> <!-- Make the device port configurable. --> <arg name="device_port" default="/dev/kobuki"/> <!-- Nodelet manager for the Kobuki driver as well as the safe walker. --> <node pkg="nodelet" type="nodelet" name="mobile_base_nodelet_manager" args="manager"/> <!-- The ROS wrapper for the Kobuki driver. --> <node pkg="nodelet" type="nodelet" name="mobile_base" args="load kobuki_node/KobukiNodelet mobile_base_nodelet_manager"> <rosparam file="$(find kobuki_node)/param/base.yaml" command="load"/> <param name="device_port" value="$(arg device_port)"/> <remap from="mobile_base/odom" to="odom"/> <remap from="mobile_base/joint_states" to="joint_states"/> </node> <!-- The safe random walker launch file that causes the robot to wander while trying not to destroy itself by utilizing the bumper sensors as well as the cliff sensors. --> <include file="$(find kobuki_random_walker)/launch/safe_random_walker_app.launch" /> </launch>
Save and exit. We also need to modify ~/workspace/src/prototype/CMakeLists.txt to actually install that launch file:
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 2.8.3)
project(prototype)
find_package(catkin REQUIRED)
catkin_package()
install(DIRECTORY launch
DESTINATION ${CATKIN_PACKAGE_SHARE_DESTINATION}
)
Save and exit. Note that the entire ROS project used here is available for reference. Finally, build the workspace:
$ cd ~/workspace
$ catkin_make
Now test out our final prototype:
$ source ~/workspace/devel/setup.sh
$ roslaunch prototype prototype.launch
And the robot should sing its little tune and immediately begin moving randomly again. So now we have our prototype contained in a single launch file, and we can use a different serial port like so:
$ roslaunch prototype prototype.launch device_port:=/dev/my-serial-port
In the next post in this series, we’ll discuss the process of packaging this prototype as a snap.
This article originally appeared on Kyle Fazzari’s blog.
IoT as a service
Bring an IoT device to market fast. Focus on your apps, we handle the rest. Canonical offers hardware bring up, app integration, knowledge transfer and engineering support to get your first device to market. App store and security updates guaranteed.
IoT app store
Build a platform ecosystem for connected devices to unlock new avenues for revenue generation. Get a secure, hosted and managed multi-tenant app store for your IoT devices.
Newsletter signup
Are you building a robot on top of Ubuntu and looking for a partner? Talk to us!
Related posts
TurtleBot3 OpenCR firmware update from a snap
The TurtleBot3 robot is a standard platform robot in the ROS community, and it’s a reference that Canonical knows well, since we’ve used it in our tutorials....
Space pioneers: Lonestar gears up to create a data centre on the Moon
Why establish a data centre on the Moon? Find out in our blog.
A look into Ubuntu Core 24: Robotics telemetry for your fleet
Welcome to this blog series which explores innovative uses of Ubuntu Core. Throughout this series, Canonical’s Engineers will show what you can build with...