Author(s): [email protected]
Copyright (C) 2015-2016 SBRE
robot-jumpstarter helps you make NAOqi Applications, for the robots NAO and Pepper.
It's inspired by Yeoman, and aims to be as useful for making NAOqi apps.
It is aimed for making apps in Python and Javascript, as opposed to:
- Choregraphe - for those, see the official documentation
- Android - see Pepper SDK for Android
Also note that unlike the above, this is not part of the "official" Softbank Robotics SDK, but rather a collection of useful shortcuts, examples and best practices.
Making and testing NAOqi apps can be a bit of a pain. In an ideal world:
- your essential logic should not be mixed up with cruft and boilerplate
- you should be able to test your code in a matter of seconds, without any unnecessary steps
robot-jumpstarter
makes it easy to start a new app or service from a template that takes care of these aspects. It contains:
- Application templates (folders)
- A script for generating a new project from a template
For example, calling
python jumpstart.py pythonapp my-super-app
... will create a new project "my-super-app" containing a copy of the pythonapp template, with all necessary parts renamed.
git clone https://github.com/pepperhacking/robot-jumpstarter.git
You will also need a working NAOqi Python SDK - see the installation guide.
Projects are created by calling
python jumpstart.py template-name app-name [service-name] (optional)
A project with the given name will be created in the "output" folder.
There are currently three basic templates:
- pythonapp, a standalone Python script
- python-service, a NAOqi service in Python
- simple-tabletpage, a simple webpage, for Pepper's tablet
- service-tabletpage, a Python service linked to a webpage
- dialog-service, collaborative dialogue with a helper service
- simple-webpage-nao, a simple webpage for Nao
- service-webpage-nao, a Python service with a webpage for Nao
You can also create your own template just by putting it in the "templates" folder.
For more details:
An interactive application made as a simple standalone Python script.
Ideal for:: A game, a utility (diagnosis/cleanup) script, etc.
Usage: python jumpstart.py pythonapp my-app-name
All the logic is in app/scripts/main.py
.
When the application is installed on the robot, running the behavior is equivalent to running main.py
(the behavior will exit when main.py stops, and stopping the behavior will kill main.py).
But for development, you can also run it in standalone on your computer; pass the robot's address as parameter (python main.py --qi-url [your robot's IP]
), or don't pass an address and you will interactively be asked for one. This allows quicker iterations.
If you build an application from this template, you should only have to change:
main.py
(which can include other Python files)- the project Properties, in Choregraphe (icon, description, trigger condition, supported languages, etc.)
Note that this application doesn't register a service in NAOqi.
A NAOqi service that will be running at all times on your robot.
Ideal for:: A bundle of helper function used by your other apps, A background service monitoring your robot's state and notifying your web server, etc.
Usage: python jumpstart.py python-service my-package-name MyServiceName
All the logic is in app/scripts/myservice.py
. (it will be renamed by the generator script)
As long as the application is installed on the robot, the service is present and can be called from anywhere with MyServiceName.get()
(or whatever others you want to define).
For development, as with the previous template, you can run it in standalone on your computer (python main.py --qi-url [your robot's IP]
), and you will still be able to call it as if it was running on the robot.
This project also contains unit tests: run python testrun.py
in the project root (this is experimental).
A webpage that uses NAOqi services by calling them with QiMessaging.js.
Ideal for:: A diagnosis webpage, an utility for controling your robot, a javascript game on the tablet, a configuration page, a helper for testing (e.g. text to speech), etc.
Usage: python jumpstart.py simple-tabletpage my-package-name
It also contains a behavior, who, when run on Pepper, will require that webpage to be displayed on her tablet.
To test the page without installing it on a robot, run python serve.py
(in the app's root), and a new tab will be opened on your browser, in which you will be prompted to enter your robot's IP address, then given your app page as if it was installed on the robot (so you can use all your browser's debug facilities, and just reload the page when you edited your html/js/css).
Note that the html headers include a scale adjustment that ensures that one CSS pixel corresponds to one physical pixel on the tablet (so that e.g. if you want a full screen image, it should be 1280x800 pixels), to compensate for a scale added by Pepper's tablet browser (in NAOqi 2.5 and before). This also disabled user scaling on the page (most of the time, you don't want the user to be able to scale your page with his fingers).
A webpage backed by a custom service.
Ideal for:: An app/game that displays rich content on the tablet, an advance diagnosis webpage, etc.
Usage: python jumpstart.py service-tabletpage my-package-name MyServiceName
Combines python-service and simple-tabletpage to have an application consisting of a (Python) NAOqi service, and a webpage that calls it (a common pattern in application development).
A collaborative dialogue linked to a service.
Ideal for:: An "intelligent" dialogue with complex logic, a dialogue linked to a web service, etc.
Usage: python jumpstart.py dialog-service my-package-name MyServiceName
Works like python-service, but with an extra collaborative dialogue file (a qichat file, that can be edited through choregraphe), to show how you can call the service from dialogue.
This is again a common pattern: Anything needing computations or complex actions can be done by the service (in Python), the dialogue provides the interface (as opposed to putting the logic in qichat too, which is less readable, harder to debug, and makes it harder to handle several languages).
A webpage for nao.
Ideal for:: Diagnosis info, a remote control.
Usage: python jumpstart.py simple-webpage-nao my-package-name
Basically the same as simple-tabletpage except:
- The javascript uses the
robotutils.qim1.js
library, that provides the same API but is needed for NAOqi versions before 2.3 - There is no behavior - it only provides as webpage you can access on http://(your NAO)/apps/my-package-name/
- The page scale is not adjusted for Pepper's tablet
A webpage linked to a service for nao.
Ideal for:: A utility service and it's debug page, a rich remote control, etc.
Usage: python jumpstart.py service-webpage-nao my-package-name MyServiceName
Basically service-tabletpage adapted for nao (see simple-webpage-nao above).
- The Official Python SDK documentation.
- The Studio Toolkit libraries, used in these templates (stk, and robotutils.js)
- Notes on "Services", an attempt to clarify some terminological confusion