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Orocos Barret Interface

This repository contains Orocos/RTT components for interfacing with Barret WAM and BHand hardware supported by libbarrett.

This package aims to support developing real-time state estimation and control algorithms in the Orocos Toolchain for the Barrett WAM robot.

libbarrett-Orocos Interface

The Orocos/RTT interfaces are meant to provide interfaces similar to libbarrett's "low-level" interface. These interfaces include barrett::LowLevelWam and barrett:Hand, which each provide direct access to joint-level torque, position, and velocity information.

The package oro_barrett_interface includes an Orocos component which is represents the set of devices that can be represented by a single libbarrett barrett::ProductManager and is used in oro_barrett_hw and oro_barrett_sim for talking to the real hardware and simulated hardware, respectively. See each package for more information about its contents.

These packages require Orocos and rtt_ros_integration version 2.7 or greater.

ROS Interface

These components also expose a ROS interface via the rtt_ros_integration packages.

Theory of Operation

Since this set of Orocos components uses libbarrett, it's designed with the same concepts in mind. For example, the oro_barrett_hw::BarrettHWManager corresponds to a libbarrett::ProductManager and its associated CANBus. As such, this manager is used to configure and instantiate different products on that bus, like a WAM or BHand. These products then appear as RTT services of the manager.

Soft Running and Idling

Both the hand and the arm must be initialized if they are being brought up for the first time (see below for more detail). Before they are initialized, they will still query the hardware for device state. Once they have been initialized, they can be run. Once the system is activated via the control pendant, they will send commands to their respective devices.

At any point, the WAM can be soft-idled which will cause it to stop sending effort commands. This is not the ideal way to start and stop the robot, however, because it will also stop compensating for gravity. It is better to hard-idle the robot via the control pendant.

Once the robot has been hard-idled, it will automatically soft-idle and before it will begin sending commands again, it must be soft-run.

Safety Features

The Orocos Barrett WAM abstraction includes both velocity and effort limits per joint. If at any point any one joint velocity exceeds its velocity limit or the commanded effort exceeds its effort limit, the Barrett manager component will zero the effort command, stop running, and enter the RTT Error state. This will terminate the sending of joint commands and trigger an E-STOP on the Barrett Safety System. Once this happens, the robot must be re-set.

In addition to these limits, there is a scalar warning ratio such that any velocities or efforts which exceed that ratio of the limit will prompt a warning as often as once per second.

Building

Building the rtt_barrett packages from source is most easily done with a pair of Catkin workspaces. One workspace is an "isolated" workspace, and the other is a "normal" workspace.

First, clear your catkin environment:

unset CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH
source /opt/ros/$ROS_DISTRO/setup.sh

Then, checkout the Eigen-3-based version of catkin to an "isolated" workspace and build it:

mkdir -p ~/ws/underlay_isolated/src
cd ~/ws/underlay_isolated
git clone [email protected]:jhu-lcsr-forks/barrett.git src/barrett
catkin_make_isolated --install
source install_isolated/setup.bash

Then in the same shell, create a "normal" workspace for these packages and yours:

mkdir -p ~/ws/underlay
git clone [email protected]:jhu-lcsr/orocos_barrett.git src/orocos_barrett
catkin_make
source devel/setup.sh

Now you can move on to trying the examples.

Examples with Gazebo

roslaunch oro_barrett_sim wam.launch
roslaunch oro_barrett_sim hand.launch
roslaunch oro_barrett_sim wam_hand.launch

Examples with Real Hardware

See each package for usage examples for both simulated and real robots.

Bringing up a Real WAM

First, load the following parameters onto the ROS parameter server. These include the CANBus ID, the home position, and the resolver (MECH encoder) offsets in radians at the home position. In addition, make sure the /robot_description ROS parameter is set with the URDF from the barrett_model package.

deployer:
  barrett_hw_manager:
    bus_id: 0
    wam:
      home_position: [0.0, -1.5708, 0.0, 3.1415, 0.0, -1.5708, 1.5708]
      home_resolver_offset: [0.544563, -2.09235, 0.944932, -1.35757, 2.11383, 1.18423, 2.23808]

Second, import the Orocos Barrett components and create and configure a Barrett Hardware Manager and a WAM like the following orocos script:

import("rtt_ros");
ros.import("oro_barrett_hw");

/* Create the barrett manager */
loadComponent("barrett_hw_manager","oro_barrett_hw::BarrettHWManager");
loadService("barrett_hw_manager","rosparam");

/* Load parameters from ROS */
barrett_hw_manager.rosparam.getAll();
barrett_hw_manager.rosparam.getAbsolute("robot_description");

/* Configure a 7-DOF WAM */
barrett_hw_manager.configure();
barrett_hw_manager.configureWam7("wam");
barrett_hw_manager.rosparam.getComponentPrivate("wam");

Second, the WAM might need to be homed. To do this, move the WAM near the known calibration pose, and run the following Orocos script:

barrett_hw_manager.wam.initialize();
barrett_hw_manager.wam.run()

After homing the WAM, you can enable your controllers and activate the WAM.

If the calibration offsets are unknown, you can inspect the current resolver offsets (as resolver_offset_out) by listing the WAM's properties in the deployer:

ls barrett_hw_manager.wam

If the wam has already been homed since it was shut down, you don't need to home it, but you can turn off the reading of the resolver angles to save CANBus bandwidth:

barrett_hw_manager.wam.run()

Bringing up a Real BHand

You can also add a Barrett BHand 280 to the Hardware Manager. Similarly to above, construct the BHand like the following Orocos script:

barrett_hw_manager.configureHand("wam/bhand");

Before it can be used, the hand also needs to be homed:

barrett_hw_manager.hand.initialize();

This will open and close the hand, and afterwards the hand will output state and accept commands.

If the BHand has already been homed since it was turned on, you only need to run the following to start it reporting position and accepting commands:

barrett_hw_manager.hand.run();

BHand Joint Command Conventions

Hand actuators: [f1, f2, f3, spread]

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