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ROS Robotics Projects,

You're reading from   ROS Robotics Projects, Build and control robots powered by the Robot Operating System, machine learning, and virtual reality

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838649326
Length 456 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Author (1):
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Ramkumar Gandhinathan Ramkumar Gandhinathan
Author Profile Icon Ramkumar Gandhinathan
Ramkumar Gandhinathan
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Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with ROS FREE CHAPTER 2. Introduction to ROS-2 and Its Capabilities 3. Building an Industrial Mobile Manipulator 4. Handling Complex Robot Tasks Using State Machines 5. Building an Industrial Application 6. Multi-Robot Collaboration 7. ROS on Embedded Platforms and Their Control 8. Reinforcement Learning and Robotics 9. Deep Learning Using ROS and TensorFlow 10. Creating a Self-Driving Car Using ROS 11. Teleoperating Robots Using a VR Headset and Leap Motion 12. Face Detection and Tracking Using ROS, OpenCV, and Dynamixel Servos 13. Other Books You May Enjoy

Setting up the ROS workspace

After setting up ROS on a real PC, VirtualBox, or Docker, the next step is to create a workspace in ROS. The ROS workspace is a place where we keep ROS packages. In the latest ROS distribution, we use a catkin-based workspace to build and install ROS packages. The catkin system (http://wiki.ros.org/catkin) is the official build system of ROS, which helps us build the source code into a target executable or libraries inside the ROS workspace.

Building an ROS workspace is an easy task; just open a Terminal and follow these instructions:

  1. The first step is to create an empty workspace folder and another folder called src to store the ROS package in. The following command will do this for us. The workspace folder name here is catkin_ws:
$ mkdir -p catkin_ws/src
  1. Switch to the src folder and execute the catkin_init_workspace command. This command will initialize a catkin workspace in the current src folder. We can now start creating packages inside the src folder:
$ cd ~/catkin_ws/src 
$ catkin_init_workspace
  1. After initializing the catkin workspace, we can build the packages inside the workspace using the catkin_make command. We can also build the workspace without any packages:
$ cd ~/catkin_ws/ 
$ catkin_make
  1. This will create additional folders called build and devel inside the ROS workspace:
The catkin workspace folders
  1. Once you've built the workspace, to access packages inside the workspace, we should add the workspace environment to our .bashrc file using the following command:
$ echo "source ~/catkin_ws/devel/setup.bash" >> ~/.bashrc 
$ source ~/.bashrc
  1. When everything is done, you can verify that everything is correct by executing the following command:
$ echo $ROS_PACKAGE_PATH

This command will print the entire ROS package path. If your workspace path is in the output, you are done:

The ROS package path

You will see that two locations are sourced as ROS_PACKAGE_PATH. The former is the recent edition we made in step 5 and the latter is the actual ROS installed packages folder. With this, we have set up the ROS workspace. We will now look at the different opportunities for ROS in industries and research.

You have been reading a chapter from
ROS Robotics Projects, - Second Edition
Published in: Dec 2019
Publisher: Packt
ISBN-13: 9781838649326
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