Installing on PandaBoard from source
(This Tutorial has been copied from http://wiki/groovy/Installation/Raspbian/Source and then modified.) Architecture: armel/armhf
Install from source requires that you download and compile the source code on your own.
The ros-comm and robot build instructions work at this time. The desktop and desktop-full still have errors in the code and they have not been resolved yet.
Contents
PandaBoard Install
If you have not already setup your machine please do the following:
Do the initial software install of Ubuntu 12.04 Precise Pangolin on your SD card.
Download your "Ubuntu 12.04 Precise Pangolin" image from the OMAPpedia download page: http://omappedia.org/wiki/Prebuilt_ubuntu_binaries
Instructions for how to create the SD card from the image: http://omappedia.org/wiki/Ubuntu_flashing
Do your preinitial configuration of the platform with the Ubuntu
Do your initial configuration of the platform.
sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get upgrade sudo apt-get install python-pip
Installation
Setup
Install bootstrap dependencies (PandaBoard):
Now to install some of the OS packages that we need for ROS.
$ sudo apt-get install build-essential python-yaml cmake subversion wget python-setuptools mercurial git-core
Install Core Library dependencies (aka, 'ROS BASE"):
$ sudo apt-get install libapr1-dev libaprutil1-dev libbz2-dev python-dev libgtest-dev python-paramiko libboost-all-dev liblog4cxx10-dev pkg-config python-empy swig python-nose lsb-release
Now check if all dependencies are installed, it is possible that some packages are skipped like libboost , so install them seperately
sudo apt-get install libboost-all-dev
an recheck if they are installed.
Next, you install graphical library dependencies, if you plan on using ROS graphical tools (aka 'ROS FULL'):
$ sudo apt-get install python-wxgtk2.8 python-gtk2 python-matplotlib libwxgtk2.8-dev python-imaging libqt4-dev graphviz qt4-qmake python-numpy libtiff-dev libpoco-dev assimp-utils libtinyxml-dev python-pydot python-qwt5-qt4 libxml2-dev libtiff4-dev libsdl-image1.2-dev
In case of problems with libtiff?-dev, do not install libtiff4-dev.
Collada
If you want to use any collada package (included in both the 'desktop' and 'robot' installations), you will need to install collada-dom from source http://sourceforge.net/projects/collada-dom/files/latest/download
$ sudo apt-get install libxml2-dev
$ mkdir /opt/ros/collada $ cd /opt/ros/collada {download the collada source from the above link and put it in this directory} $ tar -xf collada*; rm collada*tgz; cd collada*; mkdir build; cd build $ cmake .. ; make -j1; sudo make install
Collada requires assimp. There is something wrong with the ASSIMP binary, so you also need to compile it from source http://sourceforge.net/projects/assimp/files/assimp-3.0
$ mkdir /opt/ros/assimp $ cd /opt/ros/assimp {download the assmip source zip from the above link and put it in this directory} $ unzip assimp*; rm assimp*zip*; cd assimp*; mkdir build; cd build $ cmake ..; make -j1; sudo make install
Modify CMakeLists.txt in collada_urdf to default to ASSIMP version 3 by replacing "set(IS_ASSIMP3 0)" at line 36(?) with :
set(IS_ASSIMP3 1) add_definitions(-DIS_ASSIMP3)
Remaining Dependencies
I am not sure which package needs the tbb library, but you need to install it by hand
$ sudo wget http://threadingbuildingblocks.org/sites/default/files/software_releases/source/tbb41_20121112oss_src.tgz $ tar -xf tbb41_20121112oss_src.tgz $ cd tbb41_20121112oss $ make
I am not sure if that is the right approach, but since make install did not work I just copied the .so files and the numbered e.g. .so.2 files from the build folder to /lib. Its also possible that you have to copy them to /usr/lib.
Next, you must get the wstool, rospkg, rosdep and install it. Execute these lines also if you have installed the tools already.
$ sudo easy_install wstool $ sudo easy_install rospkg $ sudo easy_install rosdep
You can also use pip.
sudo pip install -U AMAZING_PACKAGE
#startinstallation
ROS Installation
Start by building the core ROS packages.
First create the area in the directories that we will be using:
$sudo mkdir /opt/ros $sudo mkdir /opt/ros/groovy cd /opt/ros/groovy
Next ensure rosdep has been initialized:
$ sudo rosdep init $ rosdep update
Building the catkin Packages
ROS is in the process of converting to a new build system, catkin, but not all of the packages have been converted and the two build systems cannot be used simultaneously. Therefore it is necessary to build the core ROS packages first (catkin packages) and then the rest.
Create a catkin Workspace
In order to build the core packages, you will need a catkin workspace. Create one now:
$ sudo mkdir /opt/ros/groovy/ros_catkin_ws $ cd /opt/ros/groovy/ros_catkin_ws
Next we will want to fetch the core packages so we can build them. We will use wstool for this. Select the wstool command for the particular variant you want to install:
ROS-Comm: (Bare Bones) (recommended) ROS package, build, and communication libraries. No GUI tools.
$ sudo wstool init src -j8 http://packages.ros.org/web/rosinstall/generate/raw/groovy/ros_comm
Robot: Is defined to be core, stable, ROS libraries for any robot hardware. It is the "general robotics" libraries of ROS. It may not contain any GUI dependencies extens ROS-Comm, stacks: bond_core, common_msgs, common, diagnostics,
- driver_common, eigen, filters, bullet, geometry, nodelet_core, orocos_kinematics_dynamics, pluginlib, assimp, robot_model, executive_smach, xacro
$ sudo wstool init src -j8 http://packages.ros.org/web/rosinstall/generate/raw/groovy/robot
The Desktop installations may wont work probably on the PandaBoard, if you want to try a Desktop installation look at the corresponding part in the Raspbian Pi Tutorial!
The -j8 option downloads 8 packages in parallel. For the PandaBoard it is possible to use the -j8 option. If you get failures during the update process use the -j1 option like for the Raspbian Pi.
In addition to the 3 variants above, more are defined in REP 131 such as robot, perception, etc. Just change the package path to the one you want.
Resolving Dependencies
Before you can build your catkin workspace you need to make sure that you have all the required dependencies. We use the rosdep tool for this:
$ sudo rosdep install --from-paths src --ignore-src --rosdistro groovy -y
This will look at all of the packages in the src directory and find all of the dependencies they have. Then it will recursively install the dependencies.
The --from-paths option indicates we want to install the dependencies for an entire directory of packages, in this case src. The --ignore-src option indicates to rosdep that it shouldn't try to install any ROS packages in the src folder from the package manager, we don't need it to since we are building them ourselves. The --rosdistro option is required because we don't have a ROS environment setup yet, so we have to indicate to rosdep what version of ROS we are building for. Finally, the -y option indicates to rosdep that we don't want to be bothered by too many prompts from the package manager.
After a while (and maybe some prompts for your password) rosdep will finish installing system dependencies and you can continue.
If you get an error you can manually check if all dependencies are satified:
sudo rosdep check --from-paths src --ignore-src --rosdistro groovy
You will have to manually install remaining dependencies:
sudo apt-get install -y <package_1> <package_2>
For the Desktop package that did not work, because it could not find packages like collada-dom and a few others. So I installed all these packages by hand (will take a long time to compile) and then removed the dependencies from the package.xml files. rosdep will tell you which package is missing which dependency, so you know which package.xml files have to be edited. After that you should be able to retry the rosdep command and have it install all the other dependencies.
It is possible that you will get an error because python-rosdep cannot be resolved. It's no problem because you already have installed the rosdep using sudo pip install -U rosdep or sudo easy_install rosdep
Building the catkin Workspace
If you are building Desktop installations, at this point there are additional steps to do. Please have a look in the Raspbian Pi tutorial.
Now you are ready to build the catkin packages. We will use the catkin_make_isolated command because there are both catkin and plain cmake packages in the base install, when developing on your catkin only workspaces you should use catkin/commands/catkin_make.
Invoke catkin_make_isolated:
$ ./src/catkin/bin/catkin_make_isolated --install
Note: The default catkin installation location would be ~/ros_catkin_ws/install_isolated, if you would like to install some where else then you can do this by adding the --install-space /opt/ros/groovy argument to your catkin_make_isolated call.
For usage on a robot without Raspbain, it is recommended to install compiled code into /opt/ros/groovy just as the Raspbain packages would do. It is also possible to install elsewhere (e.g. /usr), but it is not recommended unless you really know what you are doing.
Please see REP 122: Filesystem Hierarchy Layout for more detailed documentation on how the installed files are placed.
Note: In the above command we are running the catkin_make_isolated command from the catkin source folder because it has not been installed yet, once installed it can be called directly.
Now the packages should have been installed to ~/ros_catkin_ws/install_isolated or to wherever you specified with the --install-space argument. If you look in that directory you will see that a setup.bash file have been generated. To utilize the things installed there simply source that file. Lets do that now before building the rest of ROS:
$ source /opt/ros/groovy/ros_catkin_ws/install_isolated/setup.bash
Build the rosbuild Packages
Now that you have the catkin ROS packages built and sourced, you can build any of the packages and stacks using the rosbuild build system.
Create a rosbuild workspace
Note: You do not need to do this part of the installation for the ROS-Comm: (Bare Bones) variant as it does not contain any rosbuild packages in it but you can do it if you plan to use own stacks or packages in an different place.
Like with building catkin packages, it is convenient to build rosbuild packages in a workspace. Lets create a ROS workspace using rosws:
$ mkdir ~/ros_ws $ cd ~/ros_ws $ rosws init . /opt/ros/groovy/ros_catkin_ws/install_isolated
Note that we are pointing the ROS workspace to the catkin install location that we built in the previous step. This allows the ROS workspace to always source the catkin install location environment before you use the ROS workspace.
Configure Environment
Now you can setup this workspace:
$ source ~/ros_ws/setup.bash
It is recommended that you put this line in your ~/.bashrc file.
You also have to add the workspace directory ~/ros_ws to the ROS_PACKAGE_PATH environment variable:
$ export ROS_PACKAGE_PATH=~/ros_ws:$ROS_PACKAGE_PATH
You can create a file like this my_ros_init.sh in ~/ros_ws.
$ touch my_ros_init.sh
Add the ROS_PACKAGE_PATH environment variable command to this file and also source it in your ~/.bashrc file like this:
$ source ~/ros_ws/my_ros_init.sh
Now you can create own packages or stacks in this workspace.
If there are some questions have a look at the Raspbian Pi Tutorial.