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Using parameters in a class (C++)
Goal: Create and run a class with ROS parameters using C++.
Tutorial level: Beginner
Time: 20 minutes
Background
When making your own nodes you will sometimes need to add parameters that can be set from the launch file.
This tutorial will show you how to create those parameters in a C++ class, and how to set them in a launch file.
Prerequisites
In previous tutorials, you learned how to create a workspace and create a package. You have also learned about parameters and their function in a ROS 2 system.
Tasks
1 Create a package
Open a new terminal and source your ROS 2 installation so that ros2
commands will work.
Follow these instructions to create a new workspace named ros2_ws
.
Recall that packages should be created in the src
directory, not the root of the workspace.
Navigate into ros2_ws/src
and create a new package:
ros2 pkg create --build-type ament_cmake --license Apache-2.0 cpp_parameters --dependencies rclcpp
Your terminal will return a message verifying the creation of your package cpp_parameters
and all its necessary files and folders.
The --dependencies
argument will automatically add the necessary dependency lines to package.xml
and CMakeLists.txt
.
1.1 Update package.xml
Because you used the --dependencies
option during package creation, you don’t have to manually add dependencies to package.xml
or CMakeLists.txt
.
As always, though, make sure to add the description, maintainer email and name, and license information to package.xml
.
<description>C++ parameter tutorial</description>
<maintainer email="you@email.com">Your Name</maintainer>
<license>Apache-2.0</license>
2 Write the C++ node
Inside the ros2_ws/src/cpp_parameters/src
directory, create a new file called cpp_parameters_node.cpp
and paste the following code within:
#include <chrono>
#include <functional>
#include <string>
#include <rclcpp/rclcpp.hpp>
using namespace std::chrono_literals;
class MinimalParam : public rclcpp::Node
{
public:
MinimalParam()
: Node("minimal_param_node")
{
this->declare_parameter("my_parameter", "world");
auto timer_callback = [this](){
std::string my_param = this->get_parameter("my_parameter").as_string();
RCLCPP_INFO(this->get_logger(), "Hello %s!", my_param.c_str());
std::vector<rclcpp::Parameter> all_new_parameters{rclcpp::Parameter("my_parameter", "world")};
this->set_parameters(all_new_parameters);
};
timer_ = this->create_wall_timer(1000ms, timer_callback);
}
private:
rclcpp::TimerBase::SharedPtr timer_;
};
int main(int argc, char ** argv)
{
rclcpp::init(argc, argv);
rclcpp::spin(std::make_shared<MinimalParam>());
rclcpp::shutdown();
return 0;
}
2.1 Examine the code
The #include
statements at the top are the package dependencies.
The next piece of code creates the class and the constructor.
The first line of this constructor creates a parameter with the name my_parameter
and a default value of world
.
The parameter type is inferred from the default value, so in this case it would be set to a string type.
Next, a lambda function called timer_callback
is declared.
It performs a by-reference capture of the current object this
, takes no input arguments and returns void.
The first line of our timer_callback
function gets the parameter my_parameter
from the node, and stores it in my_param
.
Then the RCLCPP_INFO
function ensures the event is logged.
The set_parameters
function sets the parameter my_parameter
back to the default string value world
.
In the case that the user changed the parameter externally, this ensures it is always reset back to the original.
In the end, timer_
is initialized with a period of 1000ms, which causes the timer_callback
function to be executed once a second.
class MinimalParam : public rclcpp::Node
{
public:
MinimalParam()
: Node("minimal_param_node")
{
this->declare_parameter("my_parameter", "world");
auto timer_callback = [this](){
std::string my_param = this->get_parameter("my_parameter").as_string();
RCLCPP_INFO(this->get_logger(), "Hello %s!", my_param.c_str());
std::vector<rclcpp::Parameter> all_new_parameters{rclcpp::Parameter("my_parameter", "world")};
this->set_parameters(all_new_parameters);
};
timer_ = this->create_wall_timer(1000ms, timer_callback);
}
Last is the declaration of timer_
.
private:
rclcpp::TimerBase::SharedPtr timer_;
Following our MinimalParam
is our main
.
Here ROS 2 is initialized, an instance of the MinimalParam
class is constructed, and rclcpp::spin
starts processing data from the node.
int main(int argc, char ** argv)
{
rclcpp::init(argc, argv);
rclcpp::spin(std::make_shared<MinimalParam>());
rclcpp::shutdown();
return 0;
}
2.1.1 (Optional) Add ParameterDescriptor
Optionally, you can set a descriptor for the parameter. Descriptors allow you to specify a text description of the parameter and its constraints, like making it read-only, specifying a range, etc. For that to work, the code in the constructor has to be changed to:
// ...
class MinimalParam : public rclcpp::Node
{
public:
MinimalParam()
: Node("minimal_param_node")
{
auto param_desc = rcl_interfaces::msg::ParameterDescriptor{};
param_desc.description = "This parameter is mine!";
this->declare_parameter("my_parameter", "world", param_desc);
auto timer_callback = [this](){
std::string my_param = this->get_parameter("my_parameter").as_string();
RCLCPP_INFO(this->get_logger(), "Hello %s!", my_param.c_str());
std::vector<rclcpp::Parameter> all_new_parameters{rclcpp::Parameter("my_parameter", "world")};
this->set_parameters(all_new_parameters);
};
timer_ = this->create_wall_timer(1000ms, timer_callback);
}
The rest of the code remains the same.
Once you run the node, you can then run ros2 param describe /minimal_param_node my_parameter
to see the type and description.
2.2 Add executable
Now open the CMakeLists.txt
file. Below the dependency find_package(rclcpp REQUIRED)
add the following lines of code.
add_executable(minimal_param_node src/cpp_parameters_node.cpp)
ament_target_dependencies(minimal_param_node rclcpp)
install(TARGETS
minimal_param_node
DESTINATION lib/${PROJECT_NAME}
)
3 Build and run
It’s good practice to run rosdep
in the root of your workspace (ros2_ws
) to check for missing dependencies before building:
rosdep install -i --from-path src --rosdistro rolling -y
rosdep only runs on Linux, so you can skip ahead to next step.
rosdep only runs on Linux, so you can skip ahead to next step.
Navigate back to the root of your workspace, ros2_ws
, and build your new package:
colcon build --packages-select cpp_parameters
colcon build --packages-select cpp_parameters
colcon build --merge-install --packages-select cpp_parameters
Open a new terminal, navigate to ros2_ws
, and source the setup files:
source install/setup.bash
. install/setup.bash
call install/setup.bat
Now run the node:
ros2 run cpp_parameters minimal_param_node
The terminal should return the following message every second:
[INFO] [minimal_param_node]: Hello world!
Now you can see the default value of your parameter, but you want to be able to set it yourself. There are two ways to accomplish this.
3.1 Change via the console
This part will use the knowledge you have gained from the tutorial about parameters and apply it to the node you have just created.
Make sure the node is running:
ros2 run cpp_parameters minimal_param_node
Open another terminal, source the setup files from inside ros2_ws
again, and enter the following line:
ros2 param list
There you will see the custom parameter my_parameter
.
To change it, simply run the following line in the console:
ros2 param set /minimal_param_node my_parameter earth
You know it went well if you got the output Set parameter successful
.
If you look at the other terminal, you should see the output change to [INFO] [minimal_param_node]: Hello earth!
3.2 Change via a launch file
You can also set the parameter in a launch file, but first you will need to add the launch directory.
Inside the ros2_ws/src/cpp_parameters/
directory, create a new directory called launch
.
In there, create a new file called cpp_parameters_launch.py
from launch import LaunchDescription
from launch_ros.actions import Node
def generate_launch_description():
return LaunchDescription([
Node(
package="cpp_parameters",
executable="minimal_param_node",
name="custom_minimal_param_node",
output="screen",
emulate_tty=True,
parameters=[
{"my_parameter": "earth"}
]
)
])
Here you can see that we set my_parameter
to earth
when we launch our node minimal_param_node
.
By adding the two lines below, we ensure our output is printed in our console.
output="screen",
emulate_tty=True,
Now open the CMakeLists.txt
file.
Below the lines you added earlier, add the following lines of code.
install(
DIRECTORY launch
DESTINATION share/${PROJECT_NAME}
)
Open a console and navigate to the root of your workspace, ros2_ws
, and build your new package:
colcon build --packages-select cpp_parameters
colcon build --packages-select cpp_parameters
colcon build --merge-install --packages-select cpp_parameters
Then source the setup files in a new terminal:
source install/setup.bash
. install/setup.bash
call install/setup.bat
Now run the node using the launch file we have just created:
ros2 launch cpp_parameters cpp_parameters_launch.py
The terminal should return the following message the first time:
[INFO] [custom_minimal_param_node]: Hello earth!
Further outputs should show [INFO] [minimal_param_node]: Hello world!
every second.
Summary
You created a node with a custom parameter that can be set either from a launch file or the command line. You added the dependencies, executables, and a launch file to the package configuration files so that you could build and run them, and see the parameter in action.
Next steps
Now that you have some packages and ROS 2 systems of your own, the next tutorial will show you how to examine issues in your environment and systems in case you have problems.