Skip to content

superjax/multirotor_sim

Repository files navigation

Multirotor Sim

Build Status

This package is a pure C++ library which simulates a multirotor flying through some environment.

Simulated Sensors:

  • 6-DOF Accelerometer with constant bias
  • Altimeter
  • GPS solution
  • Raw GPS Measurements (pseudorange, pseudorange rate, carrier phase)
  • Visual Odometry
  • Pixel Measurements to tracked features

Installing and Building

This package depends on CMake, Eigen and Yaml-CPP. If you want to run the unit tests, you'll also need GoogleTest

Installing Eigen and Yaml-CPP

sudo apt install -y cmake libeigen3-dev libyaml-cpp-dev

Installing googletest

sudo apt install -y libgtest-dev
cd /usr/src/gtest
sudo cmake CMakeLists.txt
sudo make
sudo cp *.a /usr/lib

Building and Running Unit Tests

mkdir build
cd build
cmake .. -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release
make -j -l
./multirotor_sim_test

Default Behavior

Here is a simple example of how to use the simulator.

#include "multirotor_sim/simulator.h"
using namespace multirotor_sim;

int main
{
    Simulator sim;
    sim.load("../params/sim_params.yaml");

    while (sim.run())
    {
        ...
    }
}

This by default runs a reference nonlinear controller and follows the waypoints specified in the sim_params.yaml file.

The constructor to the Simulator object takes two optional variables. The first is whether or not to render a progress bar during simulation (default=false) and the second is a random seed. If the seed is 0, then a seed is generated using the current clock (default=0).

sim.run() will return true until the time variable reaches tmax specified in the yaml file, and each call will integrate the dynamics by the dt parameter.

The state of the simulator at each step is accessed through the sim.state() function, and various other data access mechanisms are given in the Simulator definition.

Configuration

Configuration of the simulator is done in the provided .yaml file. Configuration options include the rate of the dynamic integration, which sensors are enabled, etc...

Using a Custom Controller, Estimator, and Trajectory

The simulator also supports the use of a custom trajectory, controller and estimator. All you have to do is inherit from the base class and implement the approprate functions.

Custom Controller

The interface to the controller object is given by the virtual ControllerBase class.

class ControllerBase
{
public:
  // t - current time (seconds)
  // x - current state
  // x_c - desired state
  // u - output [F, tau_x, tau_y, tau_z].T
  virtual void computeControl(const double& t, const State& x, const State& x_c, Vector4d& u) = 0;
};

To use this controller, just provide a pointer to it in the use_custom_controller() function.

#include "multirotor_sim/simulator.h"
using namespace multirotor_sim;

int main
{
    Simulator sim;
    sim.load("../params/sim_params.yaml");

    CustomController controller;
    sim.use_custom_controller(&controller);

    while (sim.run())
    {
        ...
    }
}

A custom trajectory is used in the same way, but must inherit from the TrajectoryBase class instead.

class TrajectoryBase
{
public:
  // t - current time (seconds)
  // (return) commanded state
  virtual const State& getCommandedState(const double& t) = 0;
};

Custom State Estimator

The interface to the estimator object is given by the virtual EstimatorBase class.

class EstimatorBase
{
public:
    // t - current time (seconds)
    // z - imu measurement [acc, gyro]
    // R - imu covariance
    virtual void imuCallback(const double& t, const Vector6d& z, const Matrix6d& R) {}

    virtual void altCallback(const double& t, const Vector1d& z, const Matrix1d& R) {}
    virtual void mocapCallback(const double& t, const Xformd& z, const Matrix6d& R) {}
    virtual void voCallback(const double& t, const Xformd& z, const Matrix6d& R) {}
    virtual void imageCallback(const double& t, const Image& z, const Matrix2d& R) {}

    // t - current time (seconds)
    // z - gnss measurement [p_{b/ECEF}^ECEF, v_{b/ECEF}^ECEF]
    // R - gnss covariance
    virtual void gnssCallback(const double& t, const Vector6d& z, const Matrix6d& R) {}

    // t - Time of measurement (GPS Time)
    // z - gnss measurement [rho(m), rhodot(m/s), l(cycles)]
    // R - gnss covariance
    // sat - Satellite object related to this measurement
    virtual void rawGnssCallback(const GTime& t, const Vector3d& z, const Matrix3d& R, Satellite& sat) {}
};

To implement a custom estimator, inherit from EstimatorBase and override whatever callbacks you want to use. You do not need to implement all the callbacks if you don't want to. Once you have a custom estimator, just provide the simulator object a pointer to the estimator.

#include "multirotor_sim/simulator.h"
using namespace multirotor_sim;

int main
{
    Simulator sim;
    sim.load("../params/sim_params.yaml");

    CustomEstimator estimator;
    sim.register_estimator(&estimator);

    while (sim.run())
    {
        ...
    }
}

You can register as many estimators as you want, and they will all be given exactly the same data. Sensor measurements are generated at the closest simulation step to the specified update rate in the simulation configuration yaml file.

State and ErrorState Objects

One potentially confusing thing is the way that the State object and ErrorState object are defined.

Both of these objects have an underlying Eigen Array. The State has a 17x1 array, while the ErrorState is a 16x1. This array is then Mapped. with several small accessors which provide convenient access to the parts of the state. For example, if I wanted to access the position state of some State x;, I would just type

State x;
Vector3d position = x.p;

The attitude is represented as a quaternion, accessed through State.q, and the homogeneous transform (the combination of position and attitude) is given by State.X.

The State and ErrorState objects have operator overloads to allow things like addition and subtraction (similar to the $\boxminus$ operators defined in Hertzberg et. al).

State x1;
ErrorState dx;

State x2 = x1 + dx;

ErrorState dx2 = x2 - x1;

If you want to access the underlying array directly, you can always access it with the arr() function;

About

No description, website, or topics provided.

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Contributors 3

  •  
  •  
  •