Only released in EOL distros:
Package Summary
The ros frontend to the pano subsystem.
- Author: Ethan Rublee, Ken Conley
- License: BSD
- Source: git https://github.com/turtlebot/turtlebot_apps.git (branch: groovy)
Package Summary
The ros frontend to the pano subsystem.
- Maintainer status: developed
- Maintainer: Jihoon Lee <jihoonlee.in AT gmail DOT com>
- Author: Ethan Rublee, Ken Conley
- License: BSD
- Bug / feature tracker: https://github.com/turtlebot/turtlebot_apps/issues
- Source: git https://github.com/turtlebot/turtlebot_apps.git (branch: hydro)
Package Summary
The ros frontend to the pano subsystem.
- Maintainer status: developed
- Maintainer: Jihoon Lee <jihoonlee.in AT gmail DOT com>
- Author: Ethan Rublee, Ken Conley
- License: BSD
- Bug / feature tracker: https://github.com/turtlebot/turtlebot_apps/issues
- Source: git https://github.com/turtlebot/turtlebot_apps.git (branch: indigo)
Contents
panorama capture with ros
pano_ros exposes a set of tools and small ros nodes that enables acquiring data that is convenient for the pano_core stitching library.
Through the use of actionlib, pano_ros may be used to capture bagfiles that may then be stitched asynchronously or completely offline.
Pano quicky (using kinect and openni_camera)
roslaunch openni_camera openni_kinect.launch
Spin up the capture server.
rosrun pano_ros capture_server.py camera:=/camera/rgb
Monitor the stitch output with image_view
rosrun image_view image_view image:=/pano_capture/stitch
Try the time interval based capture client. Slowly pan around and a photo will be taken every 1 seconds. Stops after 10 photos.
rosrun pano_ros capture_client.py `pwd`/pano01.bag 10 1
You should see the stitch appear in the image_view window. Click on it to save.
Email the stitch to ros@botview.appspotmail.com as an attachment. You will receive a link like the following: http://botview.appspot.com/viewer/pan0.swf?panoSrc=/media/3736001&FOV=52
capture_server
The capture server implements an action interface for writing camera images to a bag file. This bag file can then be passed to tools like stitch_client.py. The action server starts the capture process. You can then call the pano_capture/snap to capture another image to the bag, and you can call pano_capture/stop topics to stop the capture process. The action will complete when stop is called and will return the name of the bag file.
NOTE: the capture process may capture less images than requested via snap. This generally means that snap is being called faster than synchronized images can be acquired.
rosrun pano_ros capture_server.py camera:=/kinect/rgb
Testing in rosh
You'll need two rosh interpreters.
Interpreter 1:
In [1]: actions.pano_capture('camera/rgb')
Interpreter 2 (run snap as many times as you like):
In [1]: topics.pano_capture.snap() In [2]: topics.pano_capture.snap() In [3]: topics.pano_capture.stop()
In the Interpreter 1 window, you should see:
In [1]: actions.pano_capture('camera/rgb') Out[1]: pano_id: 1292382284 n_captures: 6 bag_filename: /tmp/pano_1292382284.bag
capture_client
The sample client takes the specified number of images, one per second.
rosrun pano_ros capture_client.py `pwd`/pano.bag 30
This will save all needed data for stitching in `pwd`/pano.bag. Notice the use of `pwd`/ as the bag name is absolute.
The following implements the simple time based capture client
1 import roslib; roslib.load_manifest('pano_ros')
2 import rospy
3 import sys
4 from pano_ros.msg import PanoCaptureResult
5 from pano_ros.capture_client_interface import CaptureClientInterface
6
7
8 class TimedCapture(object):
9 """
10 Uses the CaptureClientInterface to take photos
11 regularly at a time interval and will snap until
12 the desired number of frames are taken
13 """
14 def __init__(self):
15 #CaptureClientInterface does all of the setup
16 #for connecting to the pano_capture server
17 self._capture = CaptureClientInterface()
18
19 def capture(self,bag_filename, total_captures = 20, time_interval = 1):
20 """
21 This is a timed interval capture.
22 total_captures the number of images to take
23 time_interval attempt to take an image at
24 this time interval, specified in seconds
25 """
26 capture = self._capture
27 #start up the capture client, giving absolute path to a
28 #bag where the data will be stored
29 capture.start(bag_filename)
30 result = PanoCaptureResult()
31 try:
32 #we'll just capture total_captures images,
33 #1 every time_interval seconds
34 while ( capture.n_captures < total_captures
35 and not rospy.is_shutdown() ):
36 #request a snap
37 capture.snap()
38 #sleep for 1 seconds to allow the camera to be moved
39 rospy.sleep(time_interval)
40 finally:
41 tresult = capture.stop()
42 result = tresult if tresult else result
43 #this will return the PanoCapture result message
44 return result
Bag Stitcher
The bag_stitcher.py is an actionlib server that does bag stitching, just start her up...
rosrun pano_ros bag_stitcher.py
Bag Stitcher Client
Now to stitch, run a client that uses actionlib to stitch with the bag_stitcher A very simple one is implemented already.
rosrun pano_ros stitch_client.py test_pano.bag stitch.jpg eog stitch.jpg
This will take the bag generated by the capture client and turn it into a beautiful spherical panorama.
Try emailing the pano as an attachment to ros@botview.appspotmail.com if you would like to see it projected onto a 3d sphere in your web browser.
Not supported in fuerte.
To be documented.