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This fork of ardupilot_gazebo
incorporates
@gerkey's port to ignition
and has been updated to support Ignition Edifice.
Ignition Edifice is supported on Ubuntu Bionic and Ubuntu Focal. If you are running Ubuntu as a virtual machine you will need Ubuntu 20.04 (Focal) in order to have the OpenGL support required for the ogre2
render engine.
Follow the instructions for a binary install of ignition edifice and verify that ignition gazebo is running correctly.
Set up an ArduPilot development environment. In the following it is assumed that you are able to run ArduPilot SITL using the MAVProxy GCS.
This branch feature/ignition-edifice
of this fork is compatible with Ignition Edifice. Clone the repo and build with:
git clone https://github.com/srmainwaring/ardupilot_gazebo.git -b feature/ignition-edifice
cd ardupilot_gazebo
mkdir build && cd build
cmake .. -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=RelWithDebInfo
make -j4
We assume your platform is Ubuntu and the plugin code has been cloned into $HOME/Code/ardupilot/sim/ardupilot_gazebo
.
Set the ignition environment variables in your .bashrc
or the terminal used run gazebo:
export IGN_CONFIG_PATH=/usr/share/ignition
export IGN_RENDERING_RESOURCE_PATH=/usr/share/ignition/ignition-rendering5
export IGN_GAZEBO_RESOURCE_PATH=$HOME/Code/ardupilot/sim/ardupilot_gazebo/models:$HOME/Code/ardupilot/sim/ardupilot_gazebo/worlds
export IGN_GAZEBO_SYSTEM_PLUGIN_PATH=/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/ign-gazebo-5/plugins:$HOME/Code/ardupilot/sim/ardupilot_gazebo/build
$ ign gazebo -v 4 iris_arducopter_runway.world
$ sim_vehicle.py -v ArduCopter -f gazebo-iris --map --console
STABILIZE> mode guided
GUIDED> arm throttle
GUIDED> takeoff 5
This image shows the simulation running on an Ubuntu virtual machine hosted on macOS. The text overlay is presenting additional OpenGL information used to analyse the hardware acceleration on the VM.
To run ignition gazebo with accelerated 3D graphics on an Ubuntu virtual machine you need to set
additional environment variables to disable some of the OpenGL extensions in the VMware SVGA driver.
Ubuntu 20.04.2.0 or later is required, earlier versions do not have the Mesa drivers to support the
OpenGL features required by the ogre2
render engine used by gazebo.
The following environment variables apply to a macOS Big Sur 11.4 host (AMD Radeon Pro W5700X 16GB) with an Ubuntu 20.04.2.0 guest on VMware. You may need to experiment with the choice of extensions depending upon the OpenGL support of your GPU.
# set_mesa_env
# Configure the Mesa Environment
# https://docs.mesa3d.org/envvars.html
# Core Mesa environment variables
export MESA_DEBUG=1
export MESA_GL_VERSION_OVERRIDE=4.1
export MESA_GLSL_VERSION_OVERRIDE=410
export MESA_EXTENSION_OVERRIDE="\
-GL_ARB_buffer_storage \
-GL_ARB_multi_draw_indirect \
-GL_ARB_texture_buffer_range \
-GL_ARB_compute_shader \
-GL_ARB_ES3_compatibility \
"
When time synchronisation is enabled using VMware Tools, the guest VM may step back in time. This causes the ignition server and gui to get out of sync and also causes issues between the ArduPilot Gazebo plugin and SITL. When this happens the gui will not update visuals (the drone appears frozen) and MAVProxy will display warnings such as:
GUIDED> arm throttle
GUIDED> Warning, time moved backwards. Restarting timer.
Warning, time moved backwards. Restarting timer.
Warning, time moved backwards. Restarting timer.
Warning, time moved backwards. Restarting timer.
Warning, time moved backwards. Restarting timer.
Warning, time moved backwards. Restarting timer.
Warning, time moved backwards. Restarting timer.
Warning, time moved backwards. Restarting timer.
A workaround is to disable VMware tools timesync:
$ vmware-toolbox-cmd timesync disable
There is experimental support for ignition gazebo and the ArduPilot plugin running natively on macOS. This is ongoing development work and for those interested in assisting see the ogre-next, ignition-rendering and ignition-gazebo GitHub repo issue and PR lists for work in progress.
As far as I'm aware, there is no native support for Windows at present.