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Software for securely starting, monitoring, and stopping experiments with swarms of robots

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Introduction

Supervisor is a program for starting, monitoring, and shutting down multi-robot experiments. It is currently compatible with the firmware for the BuilderBot,1 Pi-Puck,2 and the IRIDIA drone.3

The program provides a web-based GUI in which the user can see which robots are online and upload ARGoS4 configuration and control software to them for an experiment. During an experiment, the program can record data from the Optitrack tracking system, log messages sent between robots, and capture ARGoS's standard output and standard error from each robot.

This software has been written in Rust5. The back-end is built on top of the Tokio asynchronous framework/runtime6 and the front-end (compiled to WebAssembly for the browser) is built on top of the Yew web framework.7 The front-end and back-end communicate with each other over a WebSocket.

Installation

The supervisor software has been mostly tested under Linux, however, it should also work under MacOS and Windows.

To compile and use the supervisor, it is necessary to first install the Rust toolchain. To install Rust, follow the instructions on the installation page of the Rust website: https://www.rust-lang.org/tools/install

It is also necessary to install wasm-pack, a tool that simplifies the process of compiling Rust to WebAssembly. To install wasm-pack, follow these instructions: https://rustwasm.github.io/wasm-pack/installer/

Once Rust and wasm-pack has been properly installed, clone this repository and run the command cargo build in that directory to compile everything. The compiled binary will be located under target/debug.

Configuration

When running the supervisor software, you need to pass a single argument -- the path to an XML configuration file. The supervisor software can be built and ran with a single command as follows:

cargo run -- --configuration path/to/configuration.xml

An example configuration file for the supervisor is shown below:

<?xml version="1.0" ?>
<configuration>
  <supervisor>
    <router socket="0.0.0.0:4950" />
    <webui socket="127.0.0.1:3030" />
    <optitrack version="2.9.0"
               bind_port="1511"
               multicast_addr="239.255.42.99" />
  </supervisor>
  <robots network="192.168.1.0/24">
    <drone id="drone1"
           xbee_macaddr="00:04:F3:19:FE:53"
           upcore_macaddr="B0:F1:EC:E9:2F:97"
           optitrack_id="1" />
    <pipuck id="pipuck1"
            rpi_macaddr="B8:27:EB:EF:E1:01"
            optitrack_id="2"
            apriltag_id="10" />
    <builderbot id="builderbot1"
                duovero_macaddr="00:19:88:52:98:0B"
                optitrack_id="3"
                apriltag_id="20" />
  </robots>
</configuration>

The supervisor node contains global configuration options for the session.

  • The router node specifies the IP address and port on which to run the message router service. The simple_radios actuators for the BuilderBot, Pi-Puck, and IRIDIA drone, send TCP messages to this service, which broadcasts those messages to all other connected robots, i.e., robot controllers configured with the simple_radios sensor. The IP address 0.0.0.0 means that robots can connect to this service from any interface (assuming there are no firewall rules preventing this).
  • The webui node specifies the IP address and port on which the web-based user interface can be accessed. The supervisor runs a HTTP-server on this port that will display the user interface when connected to from a browser (e.g., Firefox, Edge, or Chrome). The IP address 127.0.0.1 (local host), means that the user interface is only accessible from the same machine that the supervisor is running on.
  • The optitrack node specifies how to reach the optitrack service and the version of the protocol being used. It is recommended to use version 2.9.0, since other versions are known to either not work correctly or at all.

The robots node declares the robots that belong to the swarm and the network to which they are connected. Important: the supervisor software uses a very primitive approach to detecting robots, namely it tries to connect to the Fernbedienung service8 on each network address in the network specified by the network attribute. In the case of a class C private network such as 192.168.0.0/24, this includes 253 addresses. It is strongly recommended to not use a network with less than 24 network bits or conversely a network with more than 8 host bits. Using a network with more than 8 host bits will cause an excessive number of connections to be made concurrently and will likely exceed the open file limit of the system.

The nodes underneath the robot node list the robots that should be connected to. The id tag of each robot should be unique and will be passed to ARGoS automatically when running an experiment. Each robot contains one or more *_macaddr attributes which specify the MAC address of the wireless device(s) on the robot. These addresses are used to uniquely identify each robot in the swarm. The attribute optitrack_id specifies the rigid-body identifier from the Optitrack data stream. If the optitrack system is running during an experiment, position and orientation data for each robot with a valid identifier will be recorded.

Design

The design of the supervisor back-end is based on the actor pattern9. In this pattern, jobs execute concurrently and communicate with each other by passing messages through channels.

An executor (provided by the Tokio framework) is responsible for running these jobs which are either directly executed as tasks or are multiplexed with other jobs and then executed as a task. The executor efficiently detects when its tasks can perform work and schedules them to be executed. This process can be triggered by a message arriving on a channel, a packet arriving from the network, or the completion of writing or reading a file to disk.

network

The network component is responsible for detecting robots in the arena and for managing the connections to those robots. The component is capable of connecting to the Xbee device on a drone or to the Fernbedienung service running on the Linux OS of the BuilderBot, Pi-Puck, or IRIDIA drone. Once a connection has been established, an actor for managing the connection is created and passed to the arena component.

arena

The arena component is an actor which maintains the main data structure of the supervisor, that is, it handles routing messages between all other components.

journal

The journal component is an actor that records events during an experiment to a Python pickle that can be analyzed after an experiment has been finished. The Python script inside testing/parse_journal.py provides an example of how to read the data from that pickle and organize it for further processing.

webui

The webui component is an actor that implements a HTTP and WebSocket server. This component subscribes to the messages that it needs to keep the web-based user interface up to date and forwards the messages from that interface back to the other components.

router

The router component is an actor which is connected to by ARGoS when it is started on a robot with the simple_radios actuator and sensor. This component broadcasts the messages sent by one robot to all other robots in the swarm.

optitrack

The optitrack actor connects to the Optitrack data stream and forwards position and orientation data to the webui component and to the journal component for display and logging respectively.

Footnotes

  1. BuilderBot firmware: https://github.com/iridia-ulb/meta-builderbot

  2. Pi-Puck firmware: https://github.com/iridia-ulb/meta-pipuck

  3. Drone firmware: https://github.com/iridia-ulb/meta-drone

  4. The ARGoS simulator: https://argos-sim.info/

  5. The Rust programming language: https://www.rust-lang.org/

  6. Tokio: https://tokio.rs/

  7. Yew: https://yew.rs/

  8. Fernbedienung: https://github.com/iridia-ulb/fernbedienung-python

  9. The actor model: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Actor_model

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