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Package Summary

Tags No category tags.
Version 0.0.0
License Apache License, Version 2.0
Build type CATKIN
Use RECOMMENDED

Repository Summary

Checkout URI https://github.com/nasa/astrobee.git
VCS Type git
VCS Version master
Last Updated 2024-07-03
Dev Status UNMAINTAINED
CI status No Continuous Integration
Released UNRELEASED
Tags No category tags.
Contributing Help Wanted (0)
Good First Issues (0)
Pull Requests to Review (0)

Package Description

Interface for the choreographer subsystem

Additional Links

No additional links.

Maintainers

  • Astrobee Flight Software

Authors

  • Astrobee Flight Software

\page choreographer Choreographer

The choreographer is the core of the mobility system and provides six critical functions in support of mobility:

  1. It provides a single action topic called /mob/motion, which supports several types of command – prep, move, execute, stop and idle.
  2. It interacts with the low-level control action to send control goals and monitor the current progress for tolerance errors.
  3. It provides an interface for planners to register themselves at runtime, offering a range of different ways to plan a segment.
  4. It broadcasts the current flight mode, which is used by peer nodes (fam, ctl, ekf) to reconfigure themselves.
  5. It broadcasts the current inertia properties, which are used by peer nodes (fam) to reconfigure themselves.
  6. It broadcasts the current set of keep in and keep out zones, which are used by the mapper to check for collisions and build a clutter map.

Basic operation

The choreographer supports a number of different motion requests – executing an existing plan, moving through a sequence of timestamped poses, prepping to a given flight mode, stopping as quickly as possible, and idling the propulsion system. Each request has different data in the payload, and so it makes sense to support multiple action types:

The choreographer provides the callee with a single action-based entry point for control, called ff_msgs::MotionAction . This “motion action” accepts a command – PREP, MOVE, EXEC, STOP or IDLE – and carries it out in the background, sending periodic feedback to the callee. When the task completes a result is returned, along with a response code that captures any errors.

The action supports only one goal, which is fully-preemptible. This means that a new goal always preempts the current goal (the previous goal’s callee will be notified of preemption). Consequently, you must be careful not to interact with docking action, or any of its dependencies while active.

Configurable parameters

The choreographer exposes its configuration through ff_common::ConfigServer class. Thus, the rqt_reconfigure client can be used to change settings manually, or the ff_common::ConfigClient can be used to change the settings programatically.

The following configurable parameters are supported:

| Parameter | Description | |:———————————|:———– | | planner | Which planner to call when a segment needs to be created for a given sequence of poses. | | enable_immediate | Whether a segment should be executed immediately, regardless of the first timestamp value. (move, exec) | | enable_validation | Whether a segment should be validated by the mapper prior to execution (move, exec). | | enable_bootstrapping | Whether the rsbot should plan a path automatically to move from its current position to the first position of a segment. (exec) | | enable_faceforward | Whether the planner should generate a segment where the robot always faces the translation direction. (move) | | enable_collision_checking | Whether the choreographer should intervene if the mapper detects an obstacle. (move, exec) | | enable_replanning | Whether the choreographer should try and automatically replan around obstacles. (move, exec) | | desired_vel | Desired upper bound on linear velocity when planning (move) | | desired_accel | Desired upper bound on linear acceleration when planning (move) | | desired_omega | Desired upper bound on angular velocity when planning (move) | | desired_alpha | Desired upper bound on angular acceleration when planning (move) | | desired_rate | Desired sampling rate of segment when planning (move) |

Additional parameters are supported, but are not reconfigurable.

A replanning approach is implemented to support obstacle avoidance using the qp-planner. To utilize this functionality set the following parameters: planner to “qp”, enable_faceforward and enable_collision_checking to true.

Under the hood

Internally, the choreographer is encoded as a finite state machine depicted below and implemented using the ff_util/FSM class. This class essentially captures a map of (state, event) -> lambda function relationships. The state of the system is moved forward by setting the initial state and then pushing a sequence of events to the FSM.

\dotfile choreographer_fsm “Choreographer finite state machine”

Trajectory checks

To ensure that the robot is following the desired trajectory, the choreographer overviews the controller feedback and cancels the movement if the motion value is above the defined values for a certain amout of time. The parameters are tuned according to the flight mode chosen. A zero value for any of these parameters disables the check.

| Parameter | Description | |:———————————|:———– | | tolerance_pos_endpoint | End of motion position tolerance. Checked when the trajectory finishes and the robot is stopped | | tolerance_pos | Position tolerance checked thoughout the entire trajectory | | tolerance_vel | Velocity tolerance checked thoughout the entire trajectory | | tolerance_att | Attitude tolerance checked thoughout the entire trajectory | | tolerance_omega | Omega tolerance checked thoughout the entire trajectory. | | tolerance_time | Time for sync check |

The planned trajectories are also checked against the keep-in and keep-out zones.

The keep-in and keep-out zones describe safe and unsafe areas for flight respectively. Each zone is a cuboid in 3-space, and is fully-defined by the coordinates of two diagonally opposite vertices. The union of all keep-in zones minus the union of all keep-out zones describes the free space in which safe flight can occur. The default zones are provided as JSON formatted files with suffix .json in the astrobee/gds_config directory.

An example of a keep-in and keep-out zone JSON file might look like this:

{
"timestamp" : "1475516840",
"zones":
[
{
  "name" : "keepout",
  "safe" : false,
  "sequence" : [ [ -1.0, -0.3, -3, -0.6, 1.0, 3.0 ], [ 0.5, -0.3, -3, 1.0, 1.0, 3.0 ] ]
},
{
  "name" : "keepin",
  "safe" : true,
  "sequence" : [ [ -1.5, -1.5, 0, 1.5, 1.5, 3.0 ] ]
}
]
}

Note that the “sequence” field takes an array of 6-vectors, and not just a single 6-vector. Each element of this array represents a zone, with each vector denoting the two coordinates that fully-define the cuboid.

At any point while running the robot, the operator can load and parse a JSON file:

`rosrun executive zones_pub -compression none <file_name>.json`

Or manually through the SetZones service call on the ROS namespace ~/mob/set_zones. Please refer to the definition of \ref ff_msgs_SetZones for more information on how to update zones using a ROS service call.

The resulting data structure is serialized into a binary file. If the option zone_overwrite in mobility/choreographer.config is activated (default), it will overwrite the current <world>.bin file containing the default set of zones at start-up.

The \ref mapper node publishes visualization_msgs::MarkerArrays on the namespace ~/mob/mapper/zones. When listened to in rviz, these marker arrays render keep-in and keep-out zones as semi-transparent green and red cuboids. The two example zones should be rendered as shown below:

alt text

CHANGELOG
No CHANGELOG found.

Wiki Tutorials

This package does not provide any links to tutorials in it's rosindex metadata. You can check on the ROS Wiki Tutorials page for the package.

Package Dependencies

System Dependencies

No direct system dependencies.

Dependant Packages

Launch files

  • launch/choreographer.launch
    • Copyright (c) 2017, United States Government, as represented by the
      • name [default: choreographer]
      • manager [default: ]

Messages

No message files found.

Services

No service files found

Plugins

Recent questions tagged choreographer at Robotics Stack Exchange

No version for distro galactic. Known supported distros are highlighted in the buttons above.

Package Summary

Tags No category tags.
Version 0.0.0
License Apache License, Version 2.0
Build type CATKIN
Use RECOMMENDED

Repository Summary

Checkout URI https://github.com/nasa/astrobee.git
VCS Type git
VCS Version master
Last Updated 2024-07-03
Dev Status UNMAINTAINED
CI status No Continuous Integration
Released UNRELEASED
Tags No category tags.
Contributing Help Wanted (0)
Good First Issues (0)
Pull Requests to Review (0)

Package Description

Interface for the choreographer subsystem

Additional Links

No additional links.

Maintainers

  • Astrobee Flight Software

Authors

  • Astrobee Flight Software

\page choreographer Choreographer

The choreographer is the core of the mobility system and provides six critical functions in support of mobility:

  1. It provides a single action topic called /mob/motion, which supports several types of command – prep, move, execute, stop and idle.
  2. It interacts with the low-level control action to send control goals and monitor the current progress for tolerance errors.
  3. It provides an interface for planners to register themselves at runtime, offering a range of different ways to plan a segment.
  4. It broadcasts the current flight mode, which is used by peer nodes (fam, ctl, ekf) to reconfigure themselves.
  5. It broadcasts the current inertia properties, which are used by peer nodes (fam) to reconfigure themselves.
  6. It broadcasts the current set of keep in and keep out zones, which are used by the mapper to check for collisions and build a clutter map.

Basic operation

The choreographer supports a number of different motion requests – executing an existing plan, moving through a sequence of timestamped poses, prepping to a given flight mode, stopping as quickly as possible, and idling the propulsion system. Each request has different data in the payload, and so it makes sense to support multiple action types:

The choreographer provides the callee with a single action-based entry point for control, called ff_msgs::MotionAction . This “motion action” accepts a command – PREP, MOVE, EXEC, STOP or IDLE – and carries it out in the background, sending periodic feedback to the callee. When the task completes a result is returned, along with a response code that captures any errors.

The action supports only one goal, which is fully-preemptible. This means that a new goal always preempts the current goal (the previous goal’s callee will be notified of preemption). Consequently, you must be careful not to interact with docking action, or any of its dependencies while active.

Configurable parameters

The choreographer exposes its configuration through ff_common::ConfigServer class. Thus, the rqt_reconfigure client can be used to change settings manually, or the ff_common::ConfigClient can be used to change the settings programatically.

The following configurable parameters are supported:

| Parameter | Description | |:———————————|:———– | | planner | Which planner to call when a segment needs to be created for a given sequence of poses. | | enable_immediate | Whether a segment should be executed immediately, regardless of the first timestamp value. (move, exec) | | enable_validation | Whether a segment should be validated by the mapper prior to execution (move, exec). | | enable_bootstrapping | Whether the rsbot should plan a path automatically to move from its current position to the first position of a segment. (exec) | | enable_faceforward | Whether the planner should generate a segment where the robot always faces the translation direction. (move) | | enable_collision_checking | Whether the choreographer should intervene if the mapper detects an obstacle. (move, exec) | | enable_replanning | Whether the choreographer should try and automatically replan around obstacles. (move, exec) | | desired_vel | Desired upper bound on linear velocity when planning (move) | | desired_accel | Desired upper bound on linear acceleration when planning (move) | | desired_omega | Desired upper bound on angular velocity when planning (move) | | desired_alpha | Desired upper bound on angular acceleration when planning (move) | | desired_rate | Desired sampling rate of segment when planning (move) |

Additional parameters are supported, but are not reconfigurable.

A replanning approach is implemented to support obstacle avoidance using the qp-planner. To utilize this functionality set the following parameters: planner to “qp”, enable_faceforward and enable_collision_checking to true.

Under the hood

Internally, the choreographer is encoded as a finite state machine depicted below and implemented using the ff_util/FSM class. This class essentially captures a map of (state, event) -> lambda function relationships. The state of the system is moved forward by setting the initial state and then pushing a sequence of events to the FSM.

\dotfile choreographer_fsm “Choreographer finite state machine”

Trajectory checks

To ensure that the robot is following the desired trajectory, the choreographer overviews the controller feedback and cancels the movement if the motion value is above the defined values for a certain amout of time. The parameters are tuned according to the flight mode chosen. A zero value for any of these parameters disables the check.

| Parameter | Description | |:———————————|:———– | | tolerance_pos_endpoint | End of motion position tolerance. Checked when the trajectory finishes and the robot is stopped | | tolerance_pos | Position tolerance checked thoughout the entire trajectory | | tolerance_vel | Velocity tolerance checked thoughout the entire trajectory | | tolerance_att | Attitude tolerance checked thoughout the entire trajectory | | tolerance_omega | Omega tolerance checked thoughout the entire trajectory. | | tolerance_time | Time for sync check |

The planned trajectories are also checked against the keep-in and keep-out zones.

The keep-in and keep-out zones describe safe and unsafe areas for flight respectively. Each zone is a cuboid in 3-space, and is fully-defined by the coordinates of two diagonally opposite vertices. The union of all keep-in zones minus the union of all keep-out zones describes the free space in which safe flight can occur. The default zones are provided as JSON formatted files with suffix .json in the astrobee/gds_config directory.

An example of a keep-in and keep-out zone JSON file might look like this:

{
"timestamp" : "1475516840",
"zones":
[
{
  "name" : "keepout",
  "safe" : false,
  "sequence" : [ [ -1.0, -0.3, -3, -0.6, 1.0, 3.0 ], [ 0.5, -0.3, -3, 1.0, 1.0, 3.0 ] ]
},
{
  "name" : "keepin",
  "safe" : true,
  "sequence" : [ [ -1.5, -1.5, 0, 1.5, 1.5, 3.0 ] ]
}
]
}

Note that the “sequence” field takes an array of 6-vectors, and not just a single 6-vector. Each element of this array represents a zone, with each vector denoting the two coordinates that fully-define the cuboid.

At any point while running the robot, the operator can load and parse a JSON file:

`rosrun executive zones_pub -compression none <file_name>.json`

Or manually through the SetZones service call on the ROS namespace ~/mob/set_zones. Please refer to the definition of \ref ff_msgs_SetZones for more information on how to update zones using a ROS service call.

The resulting data structure is serialized into a binary file. If the option zone_overwrite in mobility/choreographer.config is activated (default), it will overwrite the current <world>.bin file containing the default set of zones at start-up.

The \ref mapper node publishes visualization_msgs::MarkerArrays on the namespace ~/mob/mapper/zones. When listened to in rviz, these marker arrays render keep-in and keep-out zones as semi-transparent green and red cuboids. The two example zones should be rendered as shown below:

alt text

CHANGELOG
No CHANGELOG found.

Wiki Tutorials

This package does not provide any links to tutorials in it's rosindex metadata. You can check on the ROS Wiki Tutorials page for the package.

Package Dependencies

System Dependencies

No direct system dependencies.

Dependant Packages

Launch files

  • launch/choreographer.launch
    • Copyright (c) 2017, United States Government, as represented by the
      • name [default: choreographer]
      • manager [default: ]

Messages

No message files found.

Services

No service files found

Plugins

Recent questions tagged choreographer at Robotics Stack Exchange