ur_description
URDF description for Universal Robots
Links
README
Universal_Robots_ROS2_Description
This repository contains description files and meshes for Universal Robots manipulators.
Build status
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A more detailed build status shows the state of all CI workflows inside this repo. Please note that the detailed view is intended for developers, while the one here should give end users an overview of the current released state.
License
The UR20 meshes and UR30 meshes constitutes “Graphical Documentation” the use of which is subject to and governed by our “Terms and Conditions for use of Graphical Documentation”.
Universal Robots’ Terms and Conditions for use of Graphical Documentation do not fully comply with OSI’s definition of Open Source, but they do allow you to use, modify and share “Graphical Documentation”, including UR20 and UR30 meshes, subject to certain restrictions.
If you have any questions regarding this license or if this license doesn’t fit your use-case, please contact legal@universal-robots.com.
All other content is licensed under the BSD-3-Clause license
Structure of the repository
The most relevant files are:
urdf/ur_macro.xacro
- macro file with UR-manipulator description. This file is usually included into external projects to visualize and configure UR manipulators properly. An example how to use this macro is inurdf/ur.urdf.xacro
file.urdf/ur.ros2_control.xacro
- definition of manipulator’s joints and interfaces forros2_control
framework.
Testing description of a manipulator
To visualize the robot install this repository to you workspace and execute the following:
ros2 launch ur_description view_ur.launch.py ur_type:=ur5e
To test other descriptions change the ur_type
argument.
Package / Description structure
This package uses one description for all robots. The different robot variants are configured using four configuration files. These files can also be changed for further customizing a description.
Basically, the description can be modified using configuration values stored in four files:
config/urXX/default_kinematics.yaml
- This contains the calibration values as they can be extracted from the robot. Changing these values with the one extracted from a real robot will result in a description matching the real robot exactly (w.r.t thetool0
frame). It is highly recommended to use matching kinematic values in real-world applications.config/urXX/joint_limits.yaml
- If you’d like to further restrict the robot’s joint limits, these limits can be modified there.config/urXX/physical_parameters.yaml
- Everything regarding physics simulation parameters (e.g. inertia poses and values) can be tuned hereconfig/urXX/visual_parameters.yaml
- Some users change certain visual aspects, e.g. replacing the cap on the wrist_3_link. This config file specifies which meshes (both, visual and collision) should be used.
The four configuration files have to be passed to ur_macro.urdf
(more specific to the macro
defined in that file) which is done inside the ur.urdf.macro
. Contents of the files are parsed
inside ur_common.xacro
.
Arguments that have to be passed to the main ur.urdf.xacro
file are:
kinematics_params - Filename to the
default_kinematics.yaml
(or equivalent specific kinematics) filejoint_limit_params - Filename to the
joint_limits.yaml
filephysical_params - Filename to the
physical_parameters.yaml
filevisual_params - Filename to the
visual_params.yaml
file
The launchfile launch/view_ur.launch.py
abstracts these four parameters to one ur_type
argument
which will basically replace the urXX
part of the paths as shown in the picture above.
Creating your own description including this description
In real-world applications you will most probably have a more complex description consisting of more objects than just the robot. It is recommended to create a separate ROS package containing this particular description. Inside this description you could also store your robot-specific kinematics parameters file.
As mentioned above, see the urdf/ur.urdf.xacro
file as an example to integrate a UR robot into
your scene description. Basically, you could create a copy of that file and extend it with the
modifications from your specific scene.