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The robot model of this repository is based on HighTorque’s 12-degree-of-freedom robot. The two degrees of freedom of the ankle joint are bound together in urdf, and the robot's degree of freedom becomes 10 degrees of freedom. Verified on bridgedp's code.

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BIT-XLJ/livelybot_dynamic_control

 
 

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livelybot_dynamic_control

An open source bipedal robot control framework, based on nonlinear MPC and WBC, adapted to high-end bipedal robots.Page

Installation

Install dependencies

OCS2

OCS2 is a huge monorepo; DO NOT try to compile the whole repo. You only need to compile ocs2_legged_robot_ros and its dependencies following the step below.

  1. You are supposed to clone the OCS2, pinocchio, and hpp-fcl as described in the documentation of OCS2.

    # Clone OCS2
    git clone https://github.com/leggedrobotics/ocs2.git
    # Clone pinocchio
    git clone --recurse-submodules https://github.com/leggedrobotics/pinocchio.git
    # Clone hpp-fcl
    git clone --recurse-submodules https://github.com/leggedrobotics/hpp-fcl.git
    # Clone ocs2_robotic_assets
    git clone https://github.com/leggedrobotics/ocs2_robotic_assets.git
    # Install dependencies
    sudo apt install liburdfdom-dev liboctomap-dev libassimp-dev
  2. Compile the ocs2_legged_robot_ros package with catkin tools instead of catkin_make. It will take you about ten minutes.

    catkin config -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=RelWithDebInfo 
    catkin build ocs2_legged_robot_ros ocs2_self_collision_visualization

    Ensure you can command the ANYmal as shown in the document and below.

Clone and Build

# Clone
mkdir -p <catkin_ws_name>/src
cd <catkin_ws_name>/src
git clone [email protected]:HighTorque-Robotics/livelybot_dynamic_control.git

# Build
cd <catkin_ws_name>
catkin init
catkin config -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=RelWithDebInfo

# for different use build 
#  gazebo simulation 
catkin build legged_controllers legged_hunter_description legged_gazebo

#  Robot hardware 
catkin build legged_controllers legged_hunter_description legged_bridge_hw

Quick Start

  • Gazebo Simulation

Simulation

Run the gazebo simulation and load the controller:

roslaunch legged_controllers one_start_gazebo.launch    

Robot hardware

load the controller

roslaunch legged_controllers one_start_real.launch

Notes: After the user starts the simulation, the robot falls down in Gazebo. Gazebo First the user needs to set kp_position=100, kd_position=1 in rqt (need refresh) and reset the simulation by pressing Ctrl+Shift+R to make the robot stand up.

Gamepad Control

  1. Start controller
Press the left joystick once,than push RT

Terminal appears "Successfully load the controller"

  1. Switch to walking mode
push RB
  1. Use the joystick to control robot movement

The following is a schematic diagram of the handle operation:

Simulation Without Gamepad

Compilation: Only compile the following packages (and their dependencies), there's no need to compile the entire OCS2.

  1. Gazebo Simulation
catkin build legged_controllers legged_hunter_description legged_gazebo

Execution: If you don't have a gamepad, you need to send the startup commands in order.

First, set kp_position=100 in rqt and reset the simulation by pressing Ctrl+Shift+R to make the robot stand up. Then, send the following commands:

rostopic pub --once /load_controller std_msgs/Float32 "data: 1.23"
rostopic pub --once /set_walk std_msgs/Float32 "data: 1.23"

Before /load_controller, there needs to be a node continuously sending /cmd_vel (10Hz is normal), and it should continue sending during the simulation. Once /cmd_vel stops, the robot may fall.

As a example, here's a Python script that continuously sends /cmd_vel and allows keyboard control. You should start the script before /load_controller.

#!/root/miniconda3/envs/py39cu12/bin/python

import rospy
from geometry_msgs.msg import Twist
from pynput import keyboard
import threading

class KeyboardController:
    def __init__(self):
        self.publisher = rospy.Publisher('/cmd_vel', Twist, queue_size=1)
        self.twist_msg = Twist()
        self.rate = rospy.Rate(10)

    def on_press(self, key):
        try:
            if key.char == 'q':
                rospy.signal_shutdown("Quit")
            else:
                if key.char == 'w':
                    self.twist_msg.linear.x = 0.2
                elif key.char == 's':
                    self.twist_msg.linear.x = -0.2
                else:
                    self.twist_msg.linear.x = 0.0

                if key.char == 'a':
                    self.twist_msg.angular.z = 0.2
                elif key.char == 'd':
                    self.twist_msg.angular.z = -0.2
                else:
                    self.twist_msg.angular.z = 0.0
        except AttributeError:
            pass

    def on_release(self, key):
        self.twist_msg.linear.x = 0.15
        self.twist_msg.angular.z = 0.0

def ros_publish():
    while not rospy.is_shutdown():
        controller.publisher.publish(controller.twist_msg)
        controller.rate.sleep()


if __name__ == '__main__':
    rospy.init_node("keyboard_control")
    controller = KeyboardController()

    thread = threading.Thread(target=ros_publish)
    thread.start()

    listener = keyboard.Listener(on_press=controller.on_press, on_release=controller.on_release)
    listener.start()
    while not rospy.is_shutdown():
        pass

    listener.stop()
    listener.join()
    
    thread.join()

Reference

Code Reference

https://bridgedp.github.io/hunter_bipedal_control

https://github.com/qiayuanl/legged_control

Paper Reference

State Estimation

[1] Flayols T, Del Prete A, Wensing P, et al. Experimental evaluation of simple estimators for humanoid robots[C]//2017 IEEE-RAS 17th International Conference on Humanoid Robotics (Humanoids). IEEE, 2017: 889-895.

[2] Bloesch M, Hutter M, Hoepflinger M A, et al. State estimation for legged robots-consistent fusion of leg kinematics and IMU[J]. Robotics, 2013, 17: 17-24.

MPC

[3] Di Carlo J, Wensing P M, Katz B, et al. Dynamic locomotion in the mit cheetah 3 through convex model-predictive control[C]//2018 IEEE/RSJ international conference on intelligent robots and systems (IROS). IEEE, 2018: 1-9.

[4] Grandia R, Jenelten F, Yang S, et al. Perceptive Locomotion Through Nonlinear Model-Predictive Control[J]. IEEE Transactions on Robotics, 2023.

[5] Sleiman J P, Farshidian F, Minniti M V, et al. A unified mpc framework for whole-body dynamic locomotion and manipulation[J]. IEEE Robotics and Automation Letters, 2021, 6(3): 4688-4695.

WBC

[6] Bellicoso C D, Gehring C, Hwangbo J, et al. Perception-less terrain adaptation through whole body control and hierarchical optimization[C]//2016 IEEE-RAS 16th International Conference on Humanoid Robots (Humanoids). IEEE, 2016: 558-564.

[7] Kim D, Di Carlo J, Katz B, et al. Highly dynamic quadruped locomotion via whole-body impulse control and model predictive control[J]. arXiv preprint arXiv:1909.06586, 2019.

About

The robot model of this repository is based on HighTorque’s 12-degree-of-freedom robot. The two degrees of freedom of the ankle joint are bound together in urdf, and the robot's degree of freedom becomes 10 degrees of freedom. Verified on bridgedp's code.

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