WBC is C++ library for optimization-based control of redundant robots. It allows intuitive specification and execution of reactive robot control problems that involve multiple simultaneously running tasks.
WBC was initiated and is currently developed at the Robotics Innovation Center of the German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence (DFKI) in Bremen. It is part of the ARC-OPT (Adaptive Robot Control using Optimization) framework, which facilitates learning and optimizing whole-body controllers from data obtained, e.g., in user demonstrations. Also see the ARC-OPT website of the Robotics Innovation Center.
WBC is a standalone library for optimization-based control of redundant robots. It contains various implementations of whole-body feedback control approaches on velocity-, acceleration- and force/torque-level. WBC is meant for controlling robots with redundant degrees of freedom, like humanoids or other legged robots with floating base, but also fixed-base systems like mobile manipulators, dual-arm systems or even simple manipulators. It is also meant for controlling multiple tasks simultaneously while taking into account the physical constraints of the robot. E.g., on a humanoid robot do ... (1) keep balance (2) Grasp an object with one arm (3) maintaining an upright body posture (4) Consider the joint torque limits, etc... WBC is a purely reactive approach, i.e., it does not involve any motion planning or trajectory optimization. However, it can be used to stabilize trajectories coming from a motion planner or trajectory optimizer and integrate them with other objectives and physical constraints of the robot.
The library is written in C++, with Python bindings for most functionalities. The general idea of optimization-based robot control is to formulate simultaneously running robot tasks as constraints or within the cost function of an instantaneous optimization problem. Now, in each control cycle ...
- The constraints/cost functions are updated with the current robot state/control reference
- The optimization problem is solved
- The solution is applied to the actuators of the robot
The online solution of this problem is the robot joint control signal that complies with all tasks, while integrating physical constraints like actuator limits. An advantage of this approach is that complex tasks can be composed from low-dimensional descriptors, which are typically easier to specify and control than the complete task are once. Also, the redundancy of the robot is nicely exploited utilizing all the dof of the system (whole body).
Please check out the tutorials section in the documentation for examples of usage.
Currently supported OS: Ubuntu20.04, Ubuntu22.04
Since WBC can be considered as an integrative framework that facilitates the composition of different robot control approaches, there is a number of dependencies:
- WBC has initially been developed for the Robot Construction Kit (Rock), thus it requires a couple of Rock core libraries, namely base-cmake, base-types and base-logging
- For robot modeling we use Orocos KDL
- For model persistence, URDF is used, for parsing from URDF into KDL, we use the kdl_parser
- The only currently supported solver is qpOASES
Optional:
- For python bindings: python-dev, libboost-python-dev, libboost-numpy-dev, python-numpy
- To support robot architectures with closed loops (series-parallel hybrid systems): rbdl, hyrodyn
Please check the unit tests here, as well the tutorials
Please use the issue tracker to submit bug reports and feature requests. Please use merge requests as described here to add/adapt functionality.
WBC is distributed under the 3-clause BSD license.
If you use WBC within your scientific work, please cite this paper.
WBC has been developed in the research projects TransFit (Grant number 50RA1701) and BesMan (Grant number 50RA1216) funded by the German Aerospace Center (DLR) with funds from the German Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Climate Action (BMWK). It is further developed in the M-Rock (Grant number 01IW21002) and VeryHuman (Grant number 01IW20004) projects funded by the German Aerospace Center (DLR) with federal funds from the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF).
Dennis Mronga, [email protected]
Copyright 2017, DFKI GmbH / Robotics Innovation Center