Sending motion commands is as easy as:
ros2 launch stretch_core stretch_driver.launch.py
import hello_helpers.hello_misc as hm
node = hm.HelloNode.quick_create('temp')
node.move_to_pose({'joint_lift': 0.4}, blocking=True)
node.move_to_pose({'joint_wrist_yaw': 0.0, 'joint_wrist_roll': 0.0}, blocking=True)
You can also write a ROS2 node to send motion commands:
import hello_helpers.hello_misc as hm
class MyNode(hm.HelloNode):
def __init__(self):
hm.HelloNode.__init__(self)
def main(self):
hm.HelloNode.main(self, 'my_node', 'my_node', wait_for_first_pointcloud=False)
# my_node's main logic goes here
self.move_to_pose({'joint_lift': 0.6}, blocking=True)
self.move_to_pose({'joint_wrist_yaw': -1.0, 'joint_wrist_pitch': -1.0}, blocking=True)
node = MyNode()
node.main()
Copy the above into a file called "example.py" and run it using:
python3 example.py
In a terminal, echo the /joint_limits
topic:
ros2 topic echo /joint_limits
In a second terminal, request the driver publish the joint limits:
ros2 service call /get_joint_states std_srvs/srv/Trigger {}
In the first terminal, you'll see a single message get published. It'll look like this:
header:
stamp:
sec: 1725388967
nanosec: 818893747
frame_id: ''
name:
- joint_head_tilt
- joint_wrist_pitch
- joint_wrist_roll
- joint_wrist_yaw
- joint_head_pan
- joint_lift
- joint_arm
- gripper_aperture
- joint_gripper_finger_left
- joint_gripper_finger_right
position:
- -2.0171847360696185
- -1.5707963267948966
- -2.9114955354069467
- -1.3933658823294575
- -4.035903452927122
- 0.0
- 0.0
- -0.1285204486235414
- -0.3757907854489514
- -0.3757907854489514
velocity:
- 0.4908738521234052
- 0.45099035163837853
- 2.9176314585584895
- 4.416586351787409
- 1.7303303287350031
- 1.0966833704348709
- 0.5197662863936018
- 0.34289112948906764
- 1.0026056417808995
- 1.0026056417808995
effort: []
We're misusing the sensor_msgs/JointState message to publish the joint limits. The name
array lists out each ranged joint. The position
array lists the lower bound for each joint. The velocity
array lists the upper bound. The length of these 3 arrays will be equal, because the index of the joint in the name
array determines which index the corresponding limits will be in the other two arrays.
The revolute joints will have their limits published in radians, and the prismatic joints will have them published in meters. See the Hardware Overview to see the ranges represented visually.