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Open Navigation's Nav2 Docking Framework

This package contains an automatic robot docking framework & auxiliary tools. It uses plugin dock implementations for a particular platform to enable the framework to generalize to robots of many different kinematic models, charging methods, sensor modalities, and so on. It can also handle a database of many different docking locations and dock models to handle a heterogeneous environment. This task server is designed be called by an application BT or autonomy application to dock once completed with tasks or battery is low -- not within the navigate-to-pose action itself (though undock may be called from inside navigate actions!).

This work is sponsored by NVIDIA and created by Open Navigation LLC.

This is split into 4 packages

  • opennav_docking: Contains the main docking framework
  • opennav_docking_msgs: Contains the action interfaces for docking and undocking
  • opennav_docking_core: Contains the dock plugin header file to be implemented for each dock type
  • opennav_docking_bt: Contains behavior tree nodes and example XML files using the docking task server
  • nova_carter_docking: Contains an implementation using the Docking system with the Nvidia Nova Carter Robot platform and dock.

NOTE: This capability has been migrated within Nav2 itself as of June 2024.

NvidiaxOpenNavigation

IMAGE ALT TEXT

Click on the image above to see an extended video of docking in action.

Architecture

The Docking Framework has 5 main components:

  • DockingServer: The main action server and logic for performing the docking/undocking actions
  • Navigator: A NavigateToPose action client to navigate the robot to the dock's staging pose if not with the prestaging tolerances
  • DockDatabase: A database of dock instances in an environment and their associated interfaces for transacting with each type. An arbitrary number of types are supported.
  • Controller: A spiral-based graceful controller to use for the vision-control loop for docking
  • ChargingDock: Plugins that describe the dock and how to transact with it (check if charging, detection, etc). You can find this plugin header in the opennav_docking_core package.

The ChargingDock plugins are the heart of the customizability of the framework to support any type of charging dock for any kind of robot. The DockDatabase is how you describe where these docks exist in your environment to interact with and any of them may be used in your docking request.

The docking procedure is as follows:

  1. Take action request and obtain the dock's plugin and its pose
  2. If the robot is not within the prestaging tolerance of the dock's staging pose, navigate to the staging pose
  3. Use the dock's plugin to initially detect the dock and return the docking pose
  4. Enter a vision-control loop where the robot attempts to reach the docking pose while its actively being refined by the vision system
  5. Exit the vision-control loop once contact has been detected or charging has started
  6. Wait until charging starts and return success.

If anywhere this procedure is unsuccessful, N retries may be made by driving back to the dock's staging pose and trying again. If still unsuccessful, it will return a failure code to indicate what kind of failure occurred to the client.

Undocking works more simply:

  1. If previously docked, use the known dock information to get the dock type. If not, use the undock action request's indicated dock type
  2. Find the staging pose for this dock and back out to that pose
  3. Check if successfully backed out to the pose and charging has stopped

Interfaces

Docking Action

The docking action can either operate on a dock in the DockDatabase or from a dock specified in the docking request. This second option is useful for testing or when dock's locales are not necessarily known in advance. If use_dock_id = true, it uses the dock_id field to specify which dock in the database to use. Else, you must populate the dock_pose and dock_type fields.

If you wish for the docking server to stage your robot at the the dock's staging pose for you, navigate_to_staging_pose must be true. Else, you can send your robot to this pose and it will be skipped as long as the robot is within the prestaging tolerances. You may set the maximum time for navigation using max_staging_time.

In return, you obtain the num_retries, for the number of attempted retries of the action; success, if the action worked and the robot is successfully charging; and error_code to return a semantically meaningful error code about what kind of error occurred, if any. See DockRobot.action for more details.

While the action is performing, you can obtain feedback about the current state of docking, how much time docking_time has elapsed, and the current number of retries attempted.

Undocking Action

Undocking is similarly laid out. The action request contains the dock_type which is optional if the docking server previously docked the robot at its current dock. Else, it is required so that the undocking action can obtain the staging pose to back out to if there are multiple dock plugins specified (else, will use the default). There is also a maximum undocking time as a timeout for failures to uncouple itself from the dock, max_undocking_time.

The result similarly contains success and semantic error_code with no feedback.

Reload Database Service

This service exists to potentially reload the dock server's known dock database with a new file of docks after it is loaded. Simply provide the filepath to your new set of docks and it shall be done!

Dock Specification

There are two unique elements to consider in specifying docks: dock instances and dock plugins. Dock instances are instances of a particular dock in the map, as the database may contain many known docks (and you can specify which by name you'd like to dock at). Dock plugins are the model of dock that each is an instance of. The plugins contain the capabilities to generically detect and connect to a particular dock model. This separation allows us to efficiently enable many individual docking locations of potentially several different revisions with different attributes.

The dock plugins are specified in the parameter file as shown below. If you're familiar with plugins in other Nav2 servers, this should look like a familiar design pattern. Note that there is no specific information about the dock's pose or instances. These are generic attributes about the dock revision (such as staging pose, enable charging command, detection method, etc). You can add additional parameters in the dock's namespace as you choose (for example timeout).

dock_plugins: ["dockv1", "dockv3"]
dockv1:
  plugin: "my_custom_dock_ns::Dockv1"
dockv3:
  plugin: "my_custom_dock_ns::Dockv3"
  timeout: 10.0

There are two ways to populate the database of dock instances in your environment: through the parameter file or an external file. If you'd like to embed your dock information in your Docking Server config file (if you only have a couple of docks), you may use a similar method as defining the dock plugins, specifying the docks in the docks parameter. Note that we specify the plugin type and the dock's location [x, y, theta] in a particular frame.

docks: ['dock1', 'dock2']
dock1:
  type: "dockv3"
  frame: map
  pose: [0.3, 0.3, 0.0]
dock2:
  type: "dockv1"
  frame: map
  pose: [0.0, 0.0, 0.4]

If you'd prefer to specify the docks using an external file, you may use the dock_database parameter to specify the filepath to the yaml file. The file should be laid out like:

docks:
  dock1:
    type: "dockv3"
    frame: map
    pose: [0.3, 0.3, 0.0]
  dock2:
    type: "dockv1"
    frame: map
    pose: [0.0, 0.0, 0.4]

Note that you may leave the type to an empty string if there is only one type of dock being used. The frame will also default to map if not otherwise specified. The type and pose fields are required. Note also that these can be in any frame, not just map (i.e. odom, base_link, etc) in both the database and action requests.

Dock Plugin API

The dock plugin has several key functions to implement. First, there are two functions related to poses:

  • getStagingPose: This function should transform the dock pose into a pose for staging into the docking maneuver. Nav2 will be used to move the robot to the staging pose if not already within prestaging tolerances.
  • getRefinedPose: This function can be used refine the dock pose using sensors. Depending on how the robot can detect the dock, this might use laser scan data or camera data.

There are two functions used during dock approach:

  • isDocked: As the robot approaches the dock, this function should tell us when to stop driving forward. There are many ways this function could be implemented depending on the robot hardware:
    • If a charge dock communicates before charging starts, this should be done here. If the charge dock needs an "enable" message to be sent, this is a good place to send it.
    • If the charge dock doesn't use any sort of communications, you might still be able to detect contact with the dock by looking at the motor effort/current, or determining that velocity has dropped to zero.
    • In the absolute simplest case, isDocked might just call isCharging if there is no other feedback to know when we are docked.
  • isCharging: The approach stops when the robot reports isDocked, then we wait for charging to start by calling isCharging.
    • This may be implemented using the sensor_msgs/BatteryState message to check the power status or for charging current.

Similarly, there are two functions used during undocking:

  • disableCharging: This function is called before undocking commences to help prevent wear on the charge contacts. If the charge dock supports turning off the charge current, it should be done here.
  • hasStoppedCharging: This function is called while the controller is undocking. Undocking is successful when charging has stopped and the robot has returned to the staging pose.

Keep in mind that the docking and undocking functions should return quickly as they will be called inside the control loop. Also make sure that isDocked should return true if isCharging returns true.

Simple Charging Dock Plugin

The SimpleChargingDock plugin is an example with many common options which may be fully functional for some robots.

getStagingPose applys a parameterized translational and rotational offset to the dock pose to obtain the staging pose.

getRefinedPose can be used in two ways.

  1. A blind approach where the returned dock pose will simply be equal to whatever was passed in from the dock database. This may work with a reduced success rate on a real robot (due to global localization error), but is useful for initial testing and simulation.
  2. The more realistic use case is to use an AR marker, dock pose detection algorithm, etc. The plugin will subscribe to a geometry_msgs/PoseStamped topic detected_dock_pose. This can be used with the image_proc/TrackMarkerNode for Apriltags or other custom detectors for your dock. It is unlikely the detected pose is actually the pose you want to dock with, so several parameters are supplied to represent your docked pose relative to the detected feature's pose.

During the docking approach, there are two options for detecting isDocked:

  1. We can check the joint states of the wheels if the current has spiked above a set threshold to indicate that the robot has made contact with the dock or other physical object.
  2. The dock pose is compared with the robot pose and isDocked returns true when the distance drops below the specified docking_threshold.

The isCharging and hasStoppedCharging functions have two options:

  1. Subscribing to a sensor_msgs/BatteryState message on topic battery_state. The robot is considered charging when the current field of the message exceeds the charging_threshold.
  2. We can return that we are charging is isDocked() = true, which is useful for initial testing or low-reliability docking until battery state or similar information is available.

For debugging purposes, there are several publishers which can be used with RVIZ:

Topic Description Type
dock_pose The current transformed dock pose geometry_msgs/PoseStamped
filtered_dock_pose The current un-transformed dock pose geometry_msgs/PoseStamped
staging_pose The staging pose for the dock geometry_msgs/PoseStamped

Configuration

Parameter Description Type Default
controller_frequency Control frequency (Hz) for vision-control loop double 50.0
initial_perception_timeout Timeout (s) to wait to obtain intial perception of the dock double 5.0
wait_charge_timeout Timeout (s) to wait to see if charging starts after docking double 5.0
dock_approach_timeout timeout (s) to attempt vision-control approach loop double 30.0
undock_linear_tolerance Tolerance (m) to exit the undocking control loop at staging pose double 0.05
undock_angular_tolerance Angular Tolerance (rad) to exist undocking loop at staging pose double 0.05
max_retries Maximum number of retries to attempt int 3
base_frame Robot's base frame for control law string "base_link"
fixed_frame Fixed frame to use, recommended to be a smooth odometry frame not map string "odom"
dock_backwards Whether the robot is docking with the dock forward or backward in motion bool false
dock_prestaging_tolerance L2 distance in X,Y,Theta from the staging pose to bypass navigation double 0.5
dock_plugins A set of dock plugins to load vector N/A
dock_database The filepath to the dock database to use for this environment string N/A
docks Instead of dock_database, the set of docks specified in the params file itself vector N/A
navigator_bt_xml BT XML to use for Navigator, if non-default string ""
controller.k_phi TODO double 3.0
controller.k_delta TODO double 2.0
controller.beta TODO double 0.4
controller.lambda TODO double 2.0
controller.v_linear_min TODO double 0.1
controller.v_linear_max TODO double 0.25
controller.v_angular_max TODO double 0.75
controller.slowdown_radius TODO double 0.25

Note: dock_plugins and either docks or dock_database are required.

SimpleChargingDock Parameter Description Type Default
use_battery_status Whether to use the battery state message or isDocked() for isCharging() bool true
use_external_detection_pose Whether to use external detection topic for dock or use the databases' pose bool false
external_detection_timeout Timeout at which if the newest detection update does not meet to fail double 1.0
external_detection_translation_x X offset from detected pose for docking pose (m) double -0.20
external_detection_translation_y Y offset from detected pose for docking pose (m) double 0.0
external_detection_rotation_yaw Yaw offset from detected pose for docking pose (rad) double 0.0
external_detection_rotation_pitch Pitch offset from detected pose for docking pose (rad) double 1.57
external_detection_rotation_roll Roll offset from detected pose for docking pose (rad) double -1.57
filter_coef Dock external detection method filtering algorithm coefficient double 0.1
charging_threshold Threshold of current in battery state above which isCharging() = true double 0.5
use_stall_detection Whether or not to use stall detection for isDocked() or positional threshold bool false
stall_joint_names Names in joint_states topic of joints to track vector N/A
stall_velocity_threshold The joint velocity below which to trigger isDocked() = true double 1.0
stall_effort_threshold Current or motor effort in joint state to trigger isDocked() = true double 1.0
docking_threshold If not using stall detection, the pose threshold to the docking pose where isDocked() = true double 0.05
staging_x_offset Staging pose offset forward (negative) of dock pose (m) double -0.7
staging_yaw_offset Staging pose angle relative to dock pose (rad) double 0.0

Note: The external detection rotation angles are setup to work out of the box with Apriltags detectors in image_proc and isaac_ros.

Etc

On Staging Poses

Staging poses are where the robot should navigate to in order to start the docking procedure. This pose should be close enough to the dock to accurately detect the dock's presence, but far enough that if its moved slightly or the robot's localization isn't perfect it can still be detected and have enough room to adjust. The robot's charging contacts or charging location should be pointed towards the dock in this staging pose. That way, a feasible global planner can be used to model your robot's real constraints while getting to the docking pose (non-circular, non-holonomic), rather than complicating the docking process itself.