Code for the RA-L and IROS publication "Design and Motion Planning for a Reconfigurable Robotic Base".
The full text of the paper is on IEEE Xplore.
You can find the accepted version on arxiv.
Bibtex snippet to cite our work:
@article{pankertDesignMotionPlanning2022,
title = {Design and {Motion} {Planning} for a {Reconfigurable} {Robotic} {Base}},
volume = {7},
issn = {2377-3766},
doi = {10.1109/LRA.2022.3189166},
number = {4},
journal = {IEEE Robotics and Automation Letters},
author = {Pankert, Johannes and Valsecchi, Giorgio and Baret, Davide and Zehnder, Jon and Pietrasik, Lukasz L. and Bjelonic, Marko and Hutter, Marco},
month = oct,
year = {2022},
note = {Conference Name: IEEE Robotics and Automation Letters},
keywords = {Legged locomotion, Manipulators, Mechanism design, mobile manipulation, Navigation, Planning, robotics and automation in construction, Robots, Task analysis, Wheels, whole-body motion planning and control},
pages = {9012--9019}
}
Videos of the hardware experiments are on youtube.
The easiest way to run a demo on your local machine is to use docker. Fetch the image from dockerhub with:
docker pull rslethz/swerve_mpc
Alternatively, build a docker image by cloning this repository and running the following command:
docker image build -t rslethz/swerve_mpc .
Run the simulation with this command:
xhost local:root &&\
docker container run -it --rm --name swerve_simulation_demo \
-e DISPLAY=$DISPLAY \
-v /tmp/.X11-unix:/tmp/.X11-unix \
--device /dev/dri \
rslethz/swerve_mpc /bin/bash -c "source devel/setup.bash && roslaunch swerve_control simulation.launch"
If a joystick is connected to the port /dev/input/js0
, you can give the container access to it:
xhost local:root &&\
docker container run -it --rm --name swerve_simulation_demo \
-e DISPLAY=$DISPLAY \
-v /tmp/.X11-unix:/tmp/.X11-unix \
--device /dev/dri --device /dev/input/js0 \
rslethz/swerve_mpc /bin/bash -c "source devel/setup.bash && roslaunch swerve_control simulation.launch"
The reconfiguration scripts can be called as follows:
docker exec swerve_simulation_demo /bin/bash -c "source devel/setup.bash && rosrun swerve_mpc x_open.py"
The code has been tested with Ubuntu 20.04 and ros-noetic. Install the following tools to fetch the dependencies:
sudo apt install python3-catkin-tools python3-rosdep git python3-vcstool
Create a new catkin workspace and clone this repo into the src dir.
Clone all source dependencies into the src dir with vcstool:
vcs import . < ../dependencies_exact.rosinstall --recursive --shallow
Use rosdep to install all binary dependencies:
rosdep update && rosdep install --from-paths . --ignore-src -r -y
Compile all packages with:
catkin build swerve_control
To launch in simulation, run:
roslaunch swerve_control simulation.launch
By default, the gazebo simulator starts with an empty world. In swerve_description/launch/gazebo.launch
, the world file can be specified. We provide the file slope.world
to test the SE3 motion model of the MPC. For deployments on slopes, the state estimator can be activated by setting the argument use_state_estimator
in swerve_control/launch/highlevel_controller.launch
to true.
The MPC ros controller can be activated with the rqt_controller_manager
GUI. Navigation commands can be send to the robot with the rviz
goal pose marker or a joystick.
Reconfiguration can be triggered with the rosservice /swerve_base/brakes_service
or the following scripts:
rosrun swerve_mpc x_open.py
rosrun swerve_mpc x_close.py
rosrun swerve_mpc h_open.py
rosrun swerve_mpc h_close.py
rosrun swerve_mpc a_open.py
rosrun swerve_mpc a_close.py
The open
scripts open the brakes and allow for reconfiguration. The close
scripts fix the base at the current configuration. Please note that a navigation goal needs to be sent while reconfiguring.
Swerve MPC module and a ros_control
tracking controller implementation.
Launch files to start the simulation.
Fork of turtle_teleop_joy including a new axis for strafing.
Robot description files specific to swerve.
Message definitions for steering controllers and brakes
Contains code for controlling magnetic brakes and reading brake encoders with a micro controller
BSD-3-Clause Copyright (c) 2022 Johannes Pankert [email protected], Davide Baret, Lukasz Pietrasik All rights reserved.
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
- Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
- Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
- Neither the name of this work nor the names of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software without specific prior written permission.
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