Difference between revisions of "ROS HOWTO"

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* '''rviz''' is a powerful (but not so straightforward to use) visualizer for data published as ROS messages.
 
* '''rviz''' is a powerful (but not so straightforward to use) visualizer for data published as ROS messages.
  
One powerful feature of ROS is that, provided that you have roscore running, you can run and/or stop any element of ROS (such as nodes or debugging tools like rxconsole) when you like, and the ROS system will automatically react to the changes and reconfigure itself.
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One powerful feature of ROS is that, provided that you have roscore running, you can run or stop any element of ROS (such as nodes or debugging tools like rxconsole or rviz) whenever you like, and the ROS system will automatically react to the changes and reconfigure itself.
 
Sometimes ROS or one of its elements can take a few seconds to react to the change; and sometimes something just gets stuck and has to be stopped and started again (rxgraph, notably)... but not often.
 
Sometimes ROS or one of its elements can take a few seconds to react to the change; and sometimes something just gets stuck and has to be stopped and started again (rxgraph, notably)... but not often.
  

Revision as of 10:38, 14 June 2012

About ROS in general

ROS (Robot Operating System) is an open-source framework for the creation of software for robots. It is a very interesting tool, since it promises to take care of many of the lower-level issues that make realizing the software for autonomous robots so difficult and time-consuming. By leaving such issues (e.g., communication among modules) to ROS, a researcher can focus on the more interesting high-level issues (e.g., perception). In the words of its creators:

"ROS provides libraries and tools to help software developers create robot applications. It provides hardware abstraction, device drivers, libraries, visualizers, message-passing, package management, and more."

ROS includes a large collection of packages that you can incorporate into your own system. A ROS package is a bundle of software dedicated to a single functionality (e.g., data acquisition from a laser scanner). Your own ROS-based applications will take the form of one or more ROS packages. If they can be useful to other people as well, once they are completed and tested such packages could become part of ROS: much of ROS was born in this way.

Though striving to be as easy-to-use as possible, ROS is a complex tool. This is unavoidable, as autonomous robots themselves are very complex systems. Before you can start writing your own ROS-based software, you have to devote a fair amount of time to studying how it works and how to use it. This part of AIRWiki is dedicated to helping you start using ROS as quickly as possible.

How to get ROS

This is probably the single aspect where the ROS team succeeded best in removing all the difficulties, even for beginners. Installing ROS is very simple: this webpage tells you how. At the moment ROS is only available for the Linux operating system, and support for other OSs is still experimental.

Resources

The ROS website itself includes a good deal of information, and you are invited to use it heavily. However, not always the information it provides is very clear for someone who is not an expert in ROS, nor all topics are equally covered. Here we'll try to complement what's provided by ROS with additional information, instead of saying the same things in another way.

Arguably, the most useful tools to learn how to use ROS are the basic tutorials. Be sure to go through them before writing a single line of code (except those that you will write for the tutorial, of course!). Once you have worked your way through the tutorials, the next thing to do is to write your own ROS package and apply what you have learned. The "Nodes" section below is the suggested starting point for that. Maybe you should start experimenting with a "test" package, before passing to a real application: in this way you can experiment without worrying if the end result is a mess :-) You are strongly invited to experiment: as usually happens in computer programming, that's the best way to understand and check if you have correctly understood, all at the same time.

Before you start with the tutorials, please read this introduction to the concepts behind ROS: you will not necessarily understand how things are done in practice until you will have completed the tutorials, but reading it before passing to these will provide you with useful background.

Programming languages

ROS, per se, does not force the developer to use a specific programming language. In practice, while there are expansion plans for the future, at present only two languages are supported: C++ and Python. That is to say, only for these two languages ROS provides client libraries that enable non-ROS software to interface with ROS. Such libraries are called roscpp (for C++) and rospy (for Python).

You can choose what language to use on a module-per-module basis, choosing C++ or Python (or whatever other language will be supported in the future) separately for each software module of your ROS system. As we will explain shortly, ROS software modules are called nodes.

Tutorials for roscpp and rospy are available: see here and here respectively.

Nodes and communications

The basic element, or module, of a ROS-based software system is the node. A node executes one or more tasks and communicates with other nodes using the ROS infrastructure. Such communication takes the form of an exchange of messages, the internal structure of which is defined by the programmer. For instance, messages can be used to send sensor data to a processing node, or to issue commands to a motor-controlling node. By using messages, nodes communicate asynchronously: outgoing messages are delivered as soon as the ROS system manages to free the necessary resources, are stored in a queue by the receiving node(s), and the node(s) processes them as soon as it is able to (i.e., as soon as it "awakens" if it is executed periodically). An important consequence of this is that you must never count on correct message timing, or even ordering, for critical aspects of your system's functioning.

Messages that deal with the same aspect of the functioning of the robot can be grouped by publishing them on the same topic. A topic identifies a "communication channel", shared by nodes that deal with the same aspect of the robot. Each node can subscribe to the topics it is interested in (thus receiving all the messages that are published on them, without being bothered by messages published on other topics) and/or publish messages on them (thus ensuring that its messages reach all interested nodes).

A node can perform several types of activities, including:

  • publishing messages on a ROS topic;
  • requesting a service from ROS servers, i.e. acting as a ROS client;
  • acting as a ROS server, i.e. providing services to ROS clients;
  • executing a task whenever a message is published on a ROS topic;
  • managing a timeout and executing a task if it expires;
  • execute a task periodically.

In practice, a node is implemented as a single executable file. This is produced from a source code file written in one of the programming languages supported by ROS. For instance, if you use C++ you will have to write a .cpp file comprising a main block (and anything else your program needs to work, such as additional functions, data types, #include directives and so on).

AIRLab's basic ROS node template provides all the elements that you need to set up the structure of the .cpp file of a basic ROS node, including the elements that are required for the types of activities listed above. The template includes a single C++ class comprehending a suitable set of member variables and member functions, plus a very simple main block. By uncommenting the parts of the template that you require for your ROS node, you can quickly set up the structure of the node. Moreover, the template includes notes and comments that explain how a ROS node is built and works in practice: so take a look at it.

Tools

ROS provides a set of tools that you will need while building your own ROS-based application. They are provided in the form of command-line tools that (at least for Linux) become available in your system as soon as you install ROS. Some of these are especially useful during software development, and are listed below:

  • roscore must be run before anything else every time you run a ROS application, as it sets up the ROS infrastructure;
  • rosmake is necessary to compile your code as part of the ROS system;
  • rosrun lets you run a single node;
  • roslaunch lets you run a set of nodes at the same time (a .launch text file specifies the nodes to run, using a special syntax);
  • rxgraph graphically shows how the nodes of your system interact;
  • rxconsole is an interface to the (very comprehensive) logging system built-in in ROS, so it's very useful to understand what's happening within your running application;
  • rosbag records or plays back ROS messages: it can be used to simulate the presence of some parts of a robot system (e.g., those dealing with hardware) even if these parts are not available, by playing back their output captured during full-system tests;
  • rviz is a powerful (but not so straightforward to use) visualizer for data published as ROS messages.

One powerful feature of ROS is that, provided that you have roscore running, you can run or stop any element of ROS (such as nodes or debugging tools like rxconsole or rviz) whenever you like, and the ROS system will automatically react to the changes and reconfigure itself. Sometimes ROS or one of its elements can take a few seconds to react to the change; and sometimes something just gets stuck and has to be stopped and started again (rxgraph, notably)... but not often.

Node names

When a ROS node is run using rosrun, it takes the name specified by its associated .cpp file (precisely, by the call to ros::init). When roslaunch is used, for each of the nodes specified by the .launch file you can choose a name: such name overrides the one specified in the .cpp file (so you don't have to change it). This is especially useful when you need to run more than one instance of a node.

Actually, it would be more precise to say that the name specified by the call to ros::init in the .cpp file associated to a node is that of a type of node. If a single instance of such type of node is run with rosrun, it will take as its own name the name of its type; when, instead, one or more instances of such type of node are run with roslaunch, each of them can be given an arbitrary individual name.

About specific ROS packages

TF

TF "is a package that lets the user keep track of multiple coordinate frames over time. tf maintains the relationship between coordinate frames in a tree structure buffered in time, and lets the user transform points, vectors, etc between any two coordinate frames at any desired point in time" (from ROS documentation). It is a key element of ROS and, if you work on mobile robotics, there's not much that you can do with ROS without using TF.

One problem of the ROS documentation about TF is that there are countless references to a frame called /world but... /world is not defined by ROS! How's that? The answer is that (see this help page) "By convention, the /world frame is never defined. The frame /world is simply the default."