Description: In this tutorial you will set up a ROS package to use the CRAM plan language within the Lisp REPL. You can find the code resulting from the beginner tutorials on GitHub..
Next Tutorial: Controlling turtlesim from CRAM
First we need to create a ROS package that depends on cram_language
. On the ROS website there are two tutorials on creating a package: Package creation and Package creation by hand (it is recommended that you work with catkin
and not legacy rosbuild
).
In the src
subdirectory of your ROS workspace execute the following command:
$ catkin_create_pkg cram_my_beginner_tutorial cram_language
Setting up the Common Lisp part is a little bit more work. First, we need to create a Lisp 'project file', i.e. an ASDF system.
After that we will need to create a Common Lisp package (i.e. the equivalent of C++ namespaces). You can learn roslisp
in more detail through roslisp tutorials
Switch into the root directory of the cram_my_beginner_tutorial
package
and create a file cram-my-beginner-tutorial.asd
. You shouldn't use underscores but dashes in .asd
file names. The reason is that the system that is defined in the .asd
file should be named like the file itself and in Lisp it is very uncommon to use underscores in general.
Put the following content into cram-my-beginner-tutorial.asd
:
(defsystem cram-my-beginner-tutorial :depends-on (cram-language) :components ((:module "src" :components ((:file "package") (:file "control-turtlesim" :depends-on ("package"))))))
The first line defines the name of the system. Then we specify the dependencies of the system, i.e. other systems that need to be loaded before we load our system.
Finally, we define the components of the system. A component is a sort of sub-system and might be either a module (i.e. a sub-directory) or a file. ASDF knows some more component types but they are not relevant for us most of the time. We define that the system knows a sub-directory src
. Further, we define that this module contains two components, one file for the package definition package.lisp
and one with the actual tutorial code control-turtlesim.lisp
that has exactly one dependency - the component package
. We will create these two source files next. Dependencies inside the system can be any component that is known in the current scope. That means that a component can only depend on those components that are defined in the same parent component. Please note that the file extension must be left out when defining files.
Lisp packages are the equivalent to C++ namespaces or Python modules. Lisp packages cannot be hierarchical. Through Lisp packages we can define which other packages should be used, i.e. which symbols should be accessible without a package prefix. Further, we can define which symbols should be exported from the package.
Create a sub-directory src
in your package. Then create the file package.lisp
and put the following code into it:
(defpackage :cram-my-beginner-tutorial (:nicknames :tut) (:use :cpl))
We define a package with the name cram-my-beginner-tutorial
. Packages in Common Lisp can have an arbitrary number of nicknames. In our case we nickname cram-my-beginner-tutorial
as tut
. Finally, we define that the package uses another package cpl
which is a nickname of the package cram-language
from the metapackage cram_core
.
To actually load the ASDF system, all files referenced in the system definition must be present and we are missing the file control-turtlesim.lisp
in src
, so create it with the following content:
(in-package :tut)
This just selects the namespace of the file by the nickname :tut
we defined in package.lisp
. We will fill it with more content in the next tutorial.
Now we are ready to compile and load our new system. First of all, let us compile the ROS workspace, such that ROS knows about our new cram_my_beginner_tutorial
package:
$ roscd && cd .. && catkin_make
Then launch the Lisp REPL ($ roslisp_repl
, if you already have a REPL running, keep in mind that you need to restart it whenever a new ROS package is added to the workspace).
Then load your newly created system by typing:
CL-USER> (ros-load:load-system "cram_my_beginner_tutorial" :cram-my-beginner-tutorial)
This loads the cram-my-beginner-tutorial
of the package cram_my_beginner_tutorial
.
Test it by evaluating
CL-USER> (in-package :tut)
Now that we have created our first CRAM package, let's try controlling the ROS turtlesim from it…