ROS 2 Humble Hawksbill Released!

We’re happy to announce the eighth release of ROS 2, Humble Hawksbill!

Humble Hawksbill is a long-term support (LTS) release that will be supported until May 2027. It is the first ROS 2 release on Ubuntu 22.04 (Jammy Jellyfish). This release has two Tier 1 operating systems: Ubuntu 22.04 Jammy Jellyfish (both arm64 and amd64 architectures) and Windows 10. If you are new to ROS, we recommend that you use a Tier 1 operating system to try it out.

So what’s in a name? “Humble” refers to, “Reflecting, expressing, or offered in a spirit of deference,” and a Hawksbill is a sea turtle that is found all around the world. Hawksbill sea turtles are easy to recognize because of their iconic beak. We choose the name with help from our community. We’ve added the : humble : (:humble:) and : hawksbill : (:hawksbill:) icons to ROS Discourse and you can find the new Humble turtle icon here, and distro art here.

T-shirts and swag are available here. We plan to keep the shirts available indefinitely, but you can get a 10% discount before June 23rd with the code ROSLAUNCH. All proceeds go to fund development here at Open Robotics.

Humble has a number of new features (release notes). It was hard to pick, but here are some of them that we’re most excited about:

  • Type adaptation: In rclcpp, you can work with custom data structures and have them implicitly converted to be sent over the ROS network, or passed directly if you’re using intraprocess communication. This is convenient for working with complex data structures like images.
  • launch_pytest: A pytest plugin for writing tests in Python.
  • Frontend support for composable nodes: Composable nodes can now be specified in launch files.
  • Content filtered topics: Subscribers can filter which types of messages they want to see.

ROS 2 is truly a community effort, here’s a list of the 198 contributors that helped make this release possible:

Andou Tetsuo, Abrar Rahman Protyasha, Adam Dąbrowski, Aditya Pande, Afonso da Fonseca Braga, Ahmed Sobhy, Akash, Alberto Soragna, Alejandro Hernández Cordero, Amey Kulkarni, Amro Al-Baali, Andrea Sorbini, Andreas Korb, AndyZe, Anthony, Anthony Deschamps, Arne Nordmann, Artem Shumov, Audrow Nash, Auguste Lalande, Barry Xu, Bastian Jäger, Benjamin Hug, Bi0T1N, Bjar Ne, Brett Downing, Brian Gerkey, Brian Soe, Cameron Miller, Carlos Andrés Álvarez Restrepo, Charles Cross, Chen Lihui, Chris Lalancette, Christophe Bedard, Cory Crean, Daisuke Nishimatsu, David V. Lu, David V. Lu!!, Denis Štogl, Derek Chopp, Dietrich Krönke, Dima Dorezyuk, Dirk Thomas, Doug Smith, Elias De Coninck, Emerson Knapp, Eric Cousineau, Erik Boasson, Erki Suurjaak, Esteve Fernandez, Esther S. Weon, Felix Divo, Flobotics-robotics, Florian Vahl, Gaël Écorchard, Geoffrey Biggs, Gonzo, Greg Balke, Grey, HMellor, Hannu Henttinen, Haowei Wen, Hemal Shah, Hirokazu Ishida, Homalozoa X, Hunter L. Allen, Hye-Jong Kim, Immanuel Martini, Ingo Lütkebohle, Ivan Santiago Paunovic, Jacob Bandes-Storch, Jacob Perron, Jafar Abdi, Jaron, Jay Wang, Joakim Roubert, Jochen Sprickerhof, Joe Speed, Jonathan Binney, Jonathan Selling, Jorge Perez, Jose Antonio Moral, Jose Luis Rivero, Joseph Schornak, Joshua Whitley, João C. Monteiro, Karsten Knese, Katherine Scott, Kaven Yau, Keisuke Shima, Kenji Brameld, Kenji Miyake, Kenny Wang, Khasreto, Khush Jain, Kosuke Takeuchi, Laszlo Turanyi, Lei Liu, Louise Poubel, Lyle Johnson, M. Fatih Cırıt, M. Hofstätter, M. Mostafa Farzan, Marco Lampacrescia, Martin Günther, Martin Idel, Mateusz Sadowski, Matt Lanting, Mauro Passerino, Michael Ferguson, Michael Jeronimo, Michael Orlov, Michael Terzer, Michal Sojka, Michel Hidalgo, Miguel Company, Nathan Brooks, Nikolai Morin, Nils Schulte, Nisala Kalupahana, NoyZuberi, Octogonapus, PGotzmann, Pablo Garrido, Paul, Per Kerssens, Petter Nilsson, Piotr Jaroszek, Ralph Lange, Rebecca Butler, Rob Clarke, Roberto Zegers R, RoboTech Vision, Roger Strain, Russ, Russell Joyce, Scott K Logan, Serge Nikulin, Seulbae Kim, Shane Loretz, Shivam Pandey, Shyngyskhan Abilkassov, Sid Faber, Silvio Traversaro, Sonia Jin, Steve Macenski, Steve Nogar, Steve Peters, Steven! Ragnarök, Sumanth Nirmal, Taylor Alexander, Tim Clephas, Timo Röhling, Tomoya Fujita, Tony Peng, Tully Foote, Tyler Weaver, Veera Ragav, Vicidel, Víctor Mayoral Vilches, WideAwakeTN, Will, William Woodall, Wojciech Jaworski, Wolf Vollprecht, Yong-Hao Zou, Youngjin Yun, Zhenpeng Ge, Zongbao Feng, bailaC, carlossvg, cturcotte-qnx, davidorchansky, eboasson, gezp, guillaume-pais-siemens, hodnajit, iRobot ROS, ibnHatab, jmackay2, joshua-qnx, ketatam, ksuszka, leothehuman, livanov93, matthews-jca, mauropasse, methylDragon, ori155, rcp1, simulacrus, sonia, spiralray, tim-fan, tumtom, vineet131, xwnb, Øystein Sture

Check out our installation instructions and tutorials and give it a try! Make sure to follow the installation instructions carefully! There is a bug in Ubuntu 22.04 when installing Humble from Debian packages that has caused some major headaches for beta testers. We have a mitigation in place so you shouldn’t encounter this bug, but if you encounter issues please let us know. Documentation and tutorials for ROS 2 Humble Hawksbill are available on docs.ros.org. You can use ROS Answers if you happen to run into any issues or installation problems.

ROS wouldn’t exist if it weren’t for all of our wonderful package maintainers. We’ve asked all of the package maintainers who plan to have their code ready for release today, or in the near future, to prepare “humble brags.” In the comments below they’ll be posting brief updates about all of the new features they are bringing to Humble for their packages.

Finally, we’d like to announce the name of the next ROS 2 release for May 2023:

Iron Irwini

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The simulation team at Open Robotics is happy to announce that Gazebo Fortress :gazebo: :japanese_castle: simulation support is available with ROS Humble! Get started with:

sudo apt install ros-humble-desktop-full

fortress_demo_twitter3_opt2

See Fortress in action at this community meeting:

Run ROS 2 demos here

https://github.com/gazebosim/ros_gz/tree/ros2/ros_ign_gazebo_demos

Highlights

Libraries and tools

Gazebo is more than a simulator: it’s a collection of 16 C++ libraries that can be used independently of the simulator on your robot applications. You can use them on your ROS packages or plain C++ projects. If you need rendering or physics engine abstractions; a GUI framework to create modern robot interfaces; math, graphics or AV utilities, one of these libraries may come in handy!

You can use these rosdep keys in your package.xml
  • ignition-fortress
  • ignition-cmake2
  • ignition-common4
  • ignition-fuel-tools7
  • ignition-gazebo6
  • ignition-gui6
  • ignition-launch5
  • ignition-math6
  • ignition-math6-eigen3
  • ignition-msgs8
  • ignition-physics5
  • ignition-plugin
  • ignition-rendering6
  • ignition-sensors6
  • ignition-tools
  • ignition-transport11
  • ignition-utils1
  • sdformat12

:gazebo: Gazebo Development Team

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Congrats everyone on the launch!

We’re excited to support ROS 2 Humble in Foxglove Studio and rosbridge.


(screenshot of our upcoming rewritten 3D visualization panel)

We also have a rosbag2 MCAP storage plugin available for those interested in an alternative to sqlite recording. For more information, check out mcap.dev.

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I would like to highlight the number of unanswered questions on https://answers.gazebosim.org/questions/

If Gazebo Fortress is going to be the new default simulator for ROS Humble, it is going to be important to answer new users’ questions… no matter how stupid they seem to experienced developers.

FWIW, I just installed ROS Humble via sudo apt install ros-humble-desktop on Ubuntu 22.04 and got a black screen in Gazebo workspace. It is going to be hard to nudge users to the new releases if the tutorials fail on the tier one install.

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Congrats on Humble, Gazebo Fortress, Foxglove Studio, and all ROS 2 packages! Awesome news!

We’re excited to announce that the ROS 2 Humble Hawksbill release includes FogROS 2, an open-source cloud-robotics pilot platform from UC Berkeley. Cloud computing using commercial clusters such as Amazon Web Services (AWS) is now fast enough to enable secure compute-intensive robot functions such as SLAM map building from video, grasp planning, and high-dimensional motion planning to be performed in the Cloud using high-performance hardware and GPUs in near real-time. FogROS 2 offers ROS 2 functions to streamline the deployment of robot code. Developers do not need to change their code–they need only to specify an AWS configuration of computers that they want their code to run. FogROS 2 coordinates the details of initiating hardware instances, installing software and dependencies, securing robot-cloud communication, and launching cloud processes.

In example applications, we used FogROS 2 to deploy compute-intensive ROS 2 nodes for SLAM, Grasp Planning, and Motion Planning to the cloud. For Visual SLAM, we ran an ORB-SLAM 2 node on a multi-core cloud computer and we got a 2x speedup. For Grasp Planning, we ran the Dex-Net node on a GPU instance in the cloud and got a 12x speedup. For Motion Planning, we ran Motion Planning Templates on a 96-core cloud computer and got a 28x speedup.

fogros2_orbslam2_example fogros2_dexnet_example fogros2_mpt_example

The FogROS 2 team includes: Jeffrey Ichnowski, Kaiyuan (Eric) Chen, Karthik Dharmarajan, Simeon Adebola, Michael Danielczuk, Víctor Mayoral-Vilches, Hugo Zhan, Derek Xu, Ramtin Ghassemi, John Kubiatowicz, Ion Stoica, Joseph Gonzalez, and Ken Goldberg.

Read more:

The FogROS 2 Team

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Cheers on the Humble release :tada: :partying_face:! The team at Acceleration Robotics and the Hardware Acceleration Working Group is proud to have contributed to bring the following capabilities to Humble:

Hardware Acceleration in ROS 2


    ROS 2 stack         Hardware Acceleration Architecture @ ROS 2 stack

    +-----------+          +---------------------------+
    |           |          |   acceleration_examples   |
    |user land  | +-----------------+------------------+--+-----------------+
    |           | |     Drivers     |     Libraries       | Firmware |Cloud |
    +-----------+ +-----------------+-+-------------------------+-----------+
    |           | | ament_1| ament_2  |                   |     |    |      |
    |           | +---------------------------------------+ fw_1|fw_2|cloud1|
    | tooling   | | ament_acceleration|colcon_acceleration|     |    |      |
    |           | +---------------------------------------------+-----------+
    |           | |    build system   |  meta build       | firmware | cloud|
    +-----------+ +--------+----------+-------+-----------+-+--------+--+---+
    |    rcl    |          |                  |             |           |
    +-----------+          |                  |             |           |
    |    rmw    |          |                  |             |           |
    +-----------+          +                  +             +           +
    |rmw_adapter|       Pillar I          Pillar II    Pillar III   Pillar IV
    +-----------+

(more at REP-2008 PR - ROS 2 Hardware Acceleration Architecture and Conventions)

  • ament_acceleration: CMake macros and utilities to include hardware acceleration in the ROS 2 build system (ament) and its development flows.
  • ament_vitis: CMake macros and utilities to include Vitis platform into the ROS 2 build system (ament) and its development flows.
  • colcon-hardware-acceleration: An extension for colcon-core to include Hardware Acceleration capabilities.
  • ros2acceleration: acceleration command for ROS 2 command line tools.
  • tracetools_acceleration: LTTng tracing provider wrapper for ROS 2 packages in the Hardware Acceleration Working Group.
  • acceleration_firmware: Base ROS 2 package for hardware acceleration firmware. Used to organize firmware dependencies across vendors.
  • adaptive_component: A composable container for Adaptive ROS 2 Node computations. Select between FPGA, CPU or GPU at run-time.

And not shipped in Humble but worth checking:

Humble support in Yocto (Honister) - build custom Linux-based production-grade operating systems for robots

Happy to share an extension (PR) of the meta-ros Yocto/OE recipes that allow building production-grade custom Linux operating system with support for ROS 2 Humble while using Yocto (Honister).

Why Yocto/PetaLinux is a great fit for hardware acceleration in robotics?

Hardware acceleration involves creating custom compute architectures to improve the computing performance. In a nutshell, by designing specialized acceleration kernels, one can build custom brains for robots to hasten their response time. This becomes specially feasible when using adaptive computing and FPGAs which according to previous benchmarks, deliver best results in robotics with ROS.

Creating such custom compute architectures involves both hardware and software customization, thereby: Yocto . Though complicated , Yocto in combination with hardware acceleration helps deliver high performance production-grade robotic systems.

The recipes have been validated with various popular SBCs. Instructions on how to reproduce in the links below:

Image Board Description
AMD KR260 AMD KR260 The Kria™ KR260 Robotics Starter Kit is a Kria SOM-based development platform for robotics and factory automation applications. With native ROS 2 Humble support, it enables roboticists with a ROS 2-centric dev. flow.
AMD KV260 AMD KV260 The Kria™ KV260 starter kit is a development platform for the K26, the first adaptive Single Board Computer. KV260 offers a compact board for edge vision and robotics applications.
AMD ZCU102 AMD ZCU102 The ZCU102 Evaluation Kit enables designers to jumpstart designs for automotive, industrial, video, and communications applications. This kit features a Zynq® UltraScale+™ MPSoC with a quad-core Arm® Cortex®-A53, dual-core Cortex-R5F real-time processors, and a Mali™-400 MP2 graphics processing unit.
AMD ZCU104 AMD ZCU104 The ZCU104 Evaluation Kit enables designers to jumpstart designs for embedded vision applications such as surveillance, Advanced Driver Assisted Systems (ADAS), machine vision, Augmented Reality (AR), drones and medical imaging. This kit features a Zynq® UltraScale+™ MPSoC EV device with video codec and supports many common peripherals and interfaces for embedded vision use case.
NVIDIA Jetson Nano NVIDIA Jetson Nano The Jetson Nano™ Developer Kit is a small, powerful computer that lets you run multiple neural networks in parallel for applications like image classification, object detection, segmentation, and speech processing. All in an easy-to-use platform that runs in as little as 5 watts.
NVIDIA Jetson AGX Xavier Jetson AGX Xavier The NVIDIA Jetson AGX Xavier Developer Kit is an AI computer for autonomous machines, delivering the performance of a GPU workstation in an embedded module under 30W. Jetson AGX Xavier is designed for robots, drones and other autonomous machines.
Microchip PolarFire Icicle Kit Microchip PolarFire Icicle Kit The PolarFire SoC Icicle kit is a low-cost development platform that enables evaluation of the five-core Linux capable RISC-V microprocessor subsystem, innovative Linux, and real-time execution, low-power capabilities and the rich set of peripherals of the PolarFire SoC FPGA.

After the Humble sync, the recipes might go out of date which will require (again) community contributions. If you’re relying on meta-ros, please contribute back, try out the recipes and send PRs with adjustments as needed while reporting your feedback in the Pull Request.

If you have questions about Yocto or need additional rationale on why this is important, check out the original article ROS 2 Humble Hawksbill with Yocto and PetaLinux.

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ROS Humble docker images are now available on Dockerhub! :whale2:

The ROS latest tag now points to the Humble ros_base image.

Simply run this command to download and start a session in a Humble container:

docker run -it ros:humble

ROS Humble images are available for the following platforms/architectures:

Ubuntu Jammy:
  amd64
  arm64v8 (aarch64)

The desktop image (amd64 only) is available on the ‘osrf/ros’ docker hub profile

:warning: Not that the ros1-bridge image does not exist for Humble as this is the first ROS 2 distribution not coming with ROS 1 support.

In the coming weeks new tags will be made available to provide the new variants (aka perception, simulation and desktop-full).

As always:

Happy containing!

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Friendly reminder to package maintainers to get your Humble Brags in =).

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We are celebrating the release of humble, and the new features it brings to enable hardware acceleration for graphs of nodes.

This is a culmination of a 9 month collaboration with Open Robotics to improve ROS performance on hardware accelerated platforms. Our thanks and appreciation goes to Chris Lalancette, Audrow Nash, Gonzalo de Pedro, and William Woodall for all of their hard and relentless efforts; special thanks to Brian Gerkey for partnering on this work.

As robotics applications embrace AI, CV, and other compute intensive workloads, it has become imperative to enable hardware acceleration in ROS. With hardware acceleration, these applications can perform more functions with higher throughput, and better perf/watt. Realizing these benefits are often specific to the hardware implementation and therefore need to be abstracted from ROS.

ros2_humble_typeadaptation
(example graph of nodes using hardware acceleration in Foxy (top graph) compared to use of type adaption in Humble (bottom graph). Type adaptation reduces copies from CPU to GPU in a pipeline of nodes, while increasing concurrency between the CPU and GPU)

TYPE ADAPTATION

ROS topics can be adapted to a format better suited for acceleration in hardware using type adaptation (REP-2007). A node using an adapted type, can publish, and/or receive the adapted type. Nodes using an adapted type, need to provide functions to convert from the standard type, to the adapted type, and visa-versa. This enables a graph of nodes to use an adapted type which can improve CPU and hardware acceleration concurrency, offload the CPU from compute tasks, and eliminate memory copies between the CPU and hardware accelerator.

TYPE NEGOTIATION

With a graph of ROS nodes using an adapted type, we can further benefit from optimizing the type used between nodes in the graph. Nodes supporting type negotiation (REP-2009) can share a list of types they support as a publisher, and as a subscriber with a weight indicating their preferences. ROS will review the publishers and subscribers participating in type negotiation, and optimize for preferences while maintaining compatibility with nodes that do not support type negotiation. Preferences are a way to reflect performance, or cost of the type, and should be tuned by the developer of the node, but can be overridden by the application developer.


(profile of Jetson AGX Xavier, with 89ms on Foxy vs 32ms on Humble with type adaptation for the same graph of nodes)

As performance was improved with type adaptation, and type negotiation, intra-process topic passing in ROS became a bottleneck. Nsight Systems was used to profile message passing to identify areas for improvement. Changes were made in rcl.cpp to reduce shared memory pointer copies and checking to print debug messages.


(ROS2 node graph operating in sequence on 1080p CUDA buffers in Foxy vs the same node graph in Humble with Type Adaptation; results measured in Hz on Jetpack 5.0 developer preview, Ubuntu 20.04 with Jetson AGX Orin and Xavier. Graph of nodes is designed to test framework performance by minimizing compute workload, bringing focus to overhead in the ROS Client Library)

In pixel processing Jetson AGX Orin went from 0.55 gigapixels/sec in Foxy to 4 gigapixels/sec in Humble on this test.

Hardware accelerated graphs of nodes using type adaption and type negotiation improve performance, concurrency, and perf/watt. There are other alternative approaches to implementing hardware acceleration which fork ROS, bypass ROS topics or introduce incompatibilities with existing nodes. Type adaptation and type negotiation are native to ROS with Humble, compatible with existing nodes, and open to all types of hardware accelerators including GPUs, DSPs, NN accelerators, and other HW blocks.

We are implementing type adaptation and type negotiation in NITROS (NVIDIA Isaac Transport for ROS) to optimize hardware acceleration for ROS2 Humble; this will be released in Isaac ROS late June.

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Great work all. Specially Open Robotics, as well as TSC members and leaders. These has a been a significant multi-year effort and collaboration by some of the brightest minds I have been lucky to meet. It has been great to see how many joined the journey and molded a collective vision along the way.

Looking forward to see what the world builds with ROS 2 in the years to come!

Cheers,
Cam

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Congratulations for the ROS 2 Humble Hawksbill release! :partying_face::tada::turtle:

The eProsima team is very excited as the new ROS 2 Humble comes with Fast DDS!

In fact, Fast DDS was selected as the default DDS middleware for the ROS 2 Humble, allowing ROS 2 users to develop their robotics applications using a reliable and performance optimized implementation.

Known for many features like

  • Real-time behavior
  • DDS Security
  • Discovery Server
  • Shared Memory transport
  • Synchronous and asynchronous publishing modes
  • and many more

eProsima was able to include even more characteristics in Fast DDS for the Humble release…

Stay tuned because more features are coming!!

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The MoveIt team at PickNik Robotics is excited to announce that MoveIt 2 is available with ROS Humble! MoveIt continues to be the #1 ROS application for manipulation and motion planning in complex environments.

Open Door3
Example of supervised autonomy door opening with MoveIt 2, MoveIt Studio, and the UR driver for ROS 2.


PickNik and Fraunhofer IPA have applied MoveIt 2 to advanced robotic welding techniques. Full video here

We’ve put a lot of effort into revamping the tutorials with an improved learning-oriented content structure! Get started by building from source or using our Rolling binary release. Humble binary release coming soon!

Highlights

  • Hybrid Planning: use a (slower) global motion planner with a (faster) local motion planner to enable a robot to solve different tasks online and in dynamic environments
  • TOTG: now default parameterization method
  • Ruckig: improved time parameterization and jerk smoothing that allows for nonzero initial/final conditions
  • MoveIt Setup Assistant: the entry point for using MoveIt, now for ROS 2
  • MoveIt Config Utilities: simplify loading parameters
  • Lots of new ROS 2 drivers for arms (Universal Robotics and more announced soon)

Thanks to our Maintainers and Contributors

Andy Zelenak, Jafar Abdi, Vatan Aksoy Tezer, Tyler Weaver, Henning Kayser, Abi Sivaraman, David V. Lu!!, Sebastian Jahr, Stephanie Eng

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rclc - The ROS 2 C-API for micro-controllers

The rclc package complements the ROS Client Support Library (rcl) to provide a complete ROS 2 client library for the C programming language. That is, rclc does not add a new layer of types on top of rcl (like rclcpp and rclpy do) but only provides convenience functions that ease the programming with the rcl types.

With Humble, it supports not only all communication types like subscriptions, timers, services, clients etc. but also parameters, actions and lifecycle. It comes with its own Executor enabling more deterministic and real-time execution management. It serves as a fully-compliant ROS 2 programming interface for micro-ROS applications on micro-controllers. An overview, concepts, tutorials, supported micro-controllers and RTOSes can be found at micro.ros.org.

Check out the Tutorials today and get started with first applications on your micro-controller on https://github.com/micro-ROS/.

Micro-ROS stack

Highlights of new features in Humble

Many thanks to our Maintainers and Contributors

Antonio Cuadros, Brett Downing, Pablo Garrido, Ilya Guterman, Ralph Lange, Ted Miller, Arne Nordmann, Ivan Santiago Paunovic, Steven! Ragnarök, Błażej Sowa, Jan Staschulat.

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micro-ROS Humble release!
Congratulations for the release of ROS 2 Humble Hawksbill from micro-ROS!

We worked as fast as possible to get the small turtle ready, and are proud to announce the corresponding micro-ROS Humble release. Careful, it just hatched.

micro-ROS Humble

Since last year a lot has happened in ROS 2 but not less in micro-ROS!
First and foremost, micro-ROS was able to drastically improve its overall performance, making the framework less memory-hungry, more reliable, more multi-thread capable and real-time ready.

Further important features included until this Humble release are:

All the details can be found in the micro-ROS Humble release notes.
Get creative!

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I have some questions regarding the performance enhancement with Isaac ROS :

  1. Is the repo of graph nodes used for benchmarking publicly available?

  2. Is there no copy at all (e.g. cudamemcpy) between CPU and GPU for this ROS2 node graph ?

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An open source CUDA example on how to use this will be released in the next few weeks.

The NITROS package implementing this will be part of the Isaac ROS release.

There is an initial copy from CPU to GPU at the start of the node graph, and a copy from GPU to CPU at the end of the node graph. This is visible as the red & orange rectangles in the profile of the CUDA API.

In practice, a USB or Ethernet camera (for example Realsense) has both the copy from CPU->GPU at the start of a node graph, and results from GPU->CPU at the end of the node graph.

More optimally a CSI or GMSL camera’s are used to improve performance as the camera stream would come directly into GPU memory off the hardware interface, and remain in GPU memory until results from a perception function are pulled back to the CPU.

Thanks.

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Nav2

Hi all, we have a lot of changes from Galactic to Humble to announce. You can find a full accounting on our Migration Guide however: Galactic to Humble — Navigation 2 1.0.0 documentation.

Highlights

  • Massive improvements to the Smac Planner in run-time, organization, heuristics, and adding in new State Lattice planner, and more.
  • Adding in a Python3 API for Nav2 application developers that can access all of Nav2’s systems from a pythonic API.
  • Improvements in run-time performance across the stack reducing the number of nodes, explicitly controlling executors, and enabling composition by default so all of Nav2 is in a single process reducing CPU overhead by 15% and reducing memory by 70%. Tested to run easily on a raspberry pi with plenty of room left for custom robot code.
  • Inclusion of new algorithms: State Lattice, Rotation Shim, Simple Smoother, Constrained Smoother, (soon to add) Velocity Smoother
  • Dynamic reconfiguration of all appropriate parameters
  • Addition of a new Smoother Server in the Nav2 core architecture for global path smoothing
  • Added respawn support to Lifecycle Manager and Nav2 bringup
  • Several new documentation pages, tutorials, etc.

And much more!

Enjoy the new architecture diagram ™!

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Hello!
Thank you for the great work on ROS.

I would like to ask to default DDS implementation in Humble. I read the post here:

But if I open the official Humble documentation I read the Connext DDS is the default in Humble.
https://docs.ros.org/en/humble/Releases/Release-Humble-Hawksbill.html#rmw-connextdds

I have one more related question. Does Humble release change default DDS implementation in rolling?

Thank you, Mat.

ROS Humble is using Connext 6 as default for rmw_connextdds:

By default, Humble Hawksbill uses Connext 6.0.1 as the DDS implementation for rmw_connextdds . It is still possible to use Connext 5.3.1 with rmw_connextdds , but it must be rebuilt from source.

But rmw_connextdds is not the default DDS implementation for ROS Humble.