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walking-controllers

The walking-controllers project is a suite of modules for achieving bipedal locomotion on humanoid robots such as iCub or ergoCub.

The suite includes:

  • Walking_module: this is the main module and it implements all the controller architecture that allows the robot to walk.
  • Joypad_module: this module allows using the Joypad as reference input for the trajectory generated by the Walking Module
  • WalkingLogger_module: an module that can be useful to dump data coming from the Walking Module

Overview

πŸ“™ Some theory behind the code

This module allows humanoid robots walking using the position control interface. It implements the following architecture controller_architecture where two controller loops can be distinguished:

Two different inverse kinematics solver are implemented:

  • a standard non-linear IK solver;
  • a standard QP Jacobian based IK solver.

Reference paper

A paper describing some of the algorithms implemented in this repository can be downloaded here. If you're going to use the code developed for your work, please quote it within any resulting publication:

G. Romualdi, S. Dafarra, Y. Hu, D. Pucci "A Benchmarking of DCM Based
Architectures for Position and Velocity Controlled Walking of Humanoid Robots",
2018

The bibtex code for including this citation is provided:

@misc{1809.02167,
Author = {Giulio Romualdi and Stefano Dafarra and Yue Hu and Daniele Pucci},
Title = {A Benchmarking of DCM Based Architectures for Position and Velocity Controlled Walking of Humanoid Robots},
Year = {2018},
Eprint = {arXiv:1809.02167},
}

πŸ“„ Dependencies

πŸ”¨ Build the suite

Linux/macOs

git clone https://github.com/robotology/walking-controllers.git
cd walking-controllers
mkdir build && cd build
cmake ../
make
[sudo] make install

Notice: sudo is not necessary if you specify the CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX. In this case it is necessary to add in the .bashrc or .bash_profile the following lines:

export WalkingControllers_INSTALL_DIR=/path/where/you/installed/
export PATH=$PATH:$WalkingControllers_INSTALL_DIR/bin
export YARP_DATA_DIRS=$YARP_DATA_DIRS:$WalkingControllers_INSTALL_DIR/share/ICUBcontrib

πŸ’» How to run the simulation

Additional Dependencies

In order to run the simulation, the following additional dependency are required:

How to run

  1. Set the YARP_ROBOT_NAME environment variable according to the chosen Gazebo model for instance for the model ergoCubGazeboV1:

    export YARP_ROBOT_NAME="ergoCubGazeboV1"
  2. Run yarpserver

    yarpserver --write
  3. Run gazebo and drag and drop robot model (e.g. ergoCubGazeboV1):

    export YARP_CLOCK=/clock
    gazebo -slibgazebo_yarp_clock.so
  4. Run whole-body-dynamics, for instance for the model ergoCubGazeboV1:

    yarprobotinterface --config conf/launch_wholebodydynamics_ecub.xml
  5. Run the walking module

    YARP_CLOCK=/clock WalkingModule
  6. communicate with the WalkingModule:

    yarp rpc /walking-coordinator/rpc
    

    the following commands are allowed:

    • prepareRobot: put ergoCub in the home position;
    • startWalking: run the controller;
    • pauseWalking: the controller is paused, you can start again the controller sending startWalking command;
    • stopWalking: the controller is stopped, in order to start again the controller you have to prepare again the robot.
    • setGoal (x, y, k): send the desired input to the planner. Send this command after startWalking.

    Example sequence:

    prepareRobot
    startWalking
    setGoal (1.0, 0.0, 0.0)
    setGoal (1.0, 0.0, 0.0)
    stopWalking
    

How to run the Joypad Module

The Joypad application, called WalkingJoypadModule, allows you to send all the rpc commands using the buttons. The application processes the button press events associating them to the pre-defined rpc commands which are then sent through Yarp to the Walking Coordinator module. The joypad keys mapping is as follows:

  • A for preparing the robot
  • B for start walking
  • Y for pause walking
  • X for stop walking

Suppose that you want to run the Joypad application, called WalkingJoypadModule in the same machine where the physical device is connected. The only thing that you have to do is running the following command from the terminal:

YARP_CLOCK=/clock WalkingJoypadModule

The application will take care to open an SDLJoypad device.

While, if you want to run the WalkingJoypadModule in a machine that is different form the one where the physical devce is connected. The JoypadControlServer - JoypadControlClient architecture is required. In details:

  1. Run the JoypadControlServer device in the computer where the joypad is physically connected:

    YARP_CLOCK=/clock yarpdev --device JoypadControlServer --use_separate_ports 1 --period 10 --name /joypadDevice/xbox --subdevice SDLJoypad --sticks 0
    
  2. Run the WalkingJoypadModule in the other computer

    YARP_CLOCK=/clock WalkingJoypadModule --device JoypadControlClient --local /joypadInput --remote /joypadDevice/xbox
    

How to walk sideways

In order to enable the sideways walking it is necessary to set the parameter controlType to direct in the plannerParams configuration file. In this configuration, the goal set with setGoal is interpreted as a desired velocity reference for the unicycle. In this case, setGoal expects three doubles that represent the forward velocity, angular velocity, and lateral velocity. For example

setGoal (0.0 0.0 1.0)

will command the robot to step sideways to the left.

In case the planner fails in finding a solution, it is possible to reduce the values in saturationFactors in the plannerParams file. These numbers represent conservative factors that multiply the unicycle velocity saturations computed from the other parameters, like the minStepDuration. The first number multiplies the saturation for the linear and lateral velocity. The second number multiplies the angular velocity saturation. Suggested values for saturationFactors:

  • personFollowing case: (0.9, 0.7)
  • direct case: (0.7, 0.7)

​

How to control the robot from YARP port

The WalkingModule opens a port named by default /walking-coordinator/goal:i (it can be edited from the main configuration file). This port expects a vector of double of size 2 if the controlType in plannerParams is set to personFollowing, or 3 if the value is direct. In the first case, they represent the x and y position in a robot centered frame of the desired point to reach. In the second case, they represent the desired unicycle velocities.

The range of the numbers is expected to be [-1, +1]. Some scaling can be applied in the main configuration file through the parameter goal_port_scaling. Suggested scaling:

  • personFollowing case: (10.0, 10.0, 1.0) (the third input is not considered)
  • direct case: (0.5, 1.0, 0.5)

How to dump data

Before running WalkingModule check if dump_data is set to 1. This parameter is set in a configuration ini file depending on the control mode, for instance controlling from the joypad: src/WalkingModule/app/robots/${YARP_ROBOT_NAME}/dcm_walking_with_joypad.ini. Example for the model ergoCubGazeboV1 Then you can log your data with YarpRobotLoggerDevice.

Some interesting parameters

You can change the DCM controller and the inverse kinematics solver by editing these parameters.

Inverse Kinematics configuration

The Inverse Kinematics block configuration can be set through the file src/WalkingModule/app/robots/ergoCubGazeboV1/dcm_walking/joint_retargeting/inverseKinematics.ini.

The Inverse Kinematics block uses an open source package for large-scale optimisation, IPOPT (Interior Point Optimizer), which requires other packages like BLAS (Basic Linear Algebra Sub-routines), LAPACK (Linear Algebra PACKage) and a sparse symmetric indefinite linear solver (MAxx, HSLMAxx, MUMPS, PARDISO etc). Further documentation can be found at https://coin-or.github.io/Ipopt and https://coin-or.github.io/Ipopt/INSTALL.html#EXTERNALCODE. The package IPOPT installed with the superbuild (via homebrew or conda) is built with the solver MUMPS by default, which is reflected in the default configuration of the Inverse Kinematics block src/WalkingModule/app/robots/ergoCubGazeboV1/dcm_walking/joypad_control/inverseKinematics.ini#L14-L17:

# solver paramenters
solver-verbosity        0
solver_name             mumps
max-cpu-time            20

For instance, for using MA27 solver instead of MUMPS, replace mumps by ma27.

⚠️ HSL solvers are not compiled with IPOPT by default. Refer to https://coin-or.github.io/Ipopt/INSTALL.html#EXTERNALCODE for further documentation.

In case you encounter issues when starting the Walking Module with the selected options, you can increase the verbosity to 1 for additional debug information.

πŸƒ How to test on the robot

You can follows the same instructions of the simulation section without using YARP_CLOCK=/clock. Make sure your YARP_ROBOT_NAME is coherent with the name of the robot (e.g. ergoCubSN000)

⚠️ Warning

Currently the supported robots are only:

  • iCubGazeboV3
  • ergoCubGazeboV1
  • ergoCubSN000

Yet, it is possible to use these controllers provided that the robot has powerful enough legs. In this case, the user should define the robot specific configuration files (those of ergoCubSN000 are a good starting point). If you want to try these, feel free to open an issue to track your progress.

⚠️ The IIT STRAIN F/T sensors mounted on older versions of iCub may suffer from saturations due to the strong impacts the robot has with the ground, which may lead to a failure of the controller. It is suggested to use these controllers with IIT STRAIN2 sensors only to avoid such saturations.

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