Template for ROS2 workspace using VS Code Dev Containers & Docker Compose.
- Use
Dev Containers: Clone Repository in Container Volume...
in VS Code's Command Palette to auto-magically setup everything!- To re-open repository, either use
File > Open Recent
or repeat the above with the exact SAME url.
- To re-open repository, either use
- For customization, do a global find & replace for
(OPTION)
.- Remember to
Dev Containers: Rebuild Container
afterwards!
- Remember to
- GUI apps are viewable via noVNC (VNC client web app) hosted on http://localhost:6080/.
- The password is
password
!
- The password is
(OPTION)
marks key options to consider before creating the Dev Container. Some of the (OPTION)
s work together to activate the features listed below:
Note: If using
Dev Containers: Clone Repository in Container Volume...
, the host folder path must be absolute. It is possible to use$USERPROFILE
(Windows) or$HOME
(Linux) for absolute paths. Otherwise, the host folder path would be relative to the Docker Compose file location.
Mount points are used to mount a folder from the host into the container. An example for mounting a folder to /data
is included in docker-compose.dev.yml
as an (OPTION)
. /data
can be used to share anything from the host with the container (e.g., config files, models, databases). Also remember to:
- Add mount points to
.gitignore
and.dockerignore
. - Symlink mount points into your workspace folder for convenience in
postCreate.sh
.
While one mount point is sufficient, more can be added by following /data
's example. See https://docs.docker.com/storage/bind-mounts/ for more info.
By default, noVNC & RQT are not installed in the production image to save space. It is recommended to use ROS CLI or create a proper API instead to manage ROS systems. However, they can be enabled by following (OPTION)
s in Dockerfile
. This can be convenient for early stages of deployment.
Some dependencies may be unavailable from the rosdep
package manager (check ROS Index). For Python dependencies, they should be added to a requirements.txt
created within the ROS package. The ROS package's requirements.txt
should then be composed into the workspace's requirements.txt
(example in requirements.txt
). For other dependencies, they should be added to both Dockerfiles. See https://github.com/ros/rosdistro/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md#rosdep-rules-contributions with regards to adding new packages to rosdep
.
For developer convenience, some common tasks are present in tasks.json
. Use them by opening the Command Palette and typing task
. The following tasks are available:
rosdep install dependencies
: Install all dependencies of the current workspace.colcon build all
: Build all (detected) ROS packages.colcon build specific
: Build a specific ROS package.update package index
: Update Ubuntu and ROS package indexes.
See https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/commandline/docker/ for more info.
Note: If using
Dev Containers: Clone Repository in Container Volume...
on Windows, follow https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/containers/choosing-dev-environment#_windows-subsystem-for-linux to ensure built images are stored on the host computer's image repository.
docker build . -t organization/repo:vx.x.x -t organization/repo:latest
Images can have multiple names tagged to them. Tagging images with the version number and as latest helps when distributing images.
Note: Run this command on the host computer rather than in the Dev Container.
docker save organization/repo:vx.x.x organization/repo:latest -o repo-vx.x.x.tar
Compressing the image afterwards using xzip
is recommended to save space. Docker is able to load compressed images (i.e., repo-vx.x.x.tar.xz
) without decompressing manually.
docker load -i repo-vx.x.x.tar.xz
Imports the image and its names. It will still be tagged as organization/repo:vx.x.x
and organization/repo:latest
, conveniently replacing the previous latest
.
Both devcontainer.json
and extensions.json
are configured such that VS Code will automatically install some extensions. These are highly recommended for developer experience.
black
is used to format Python code due to its uncompromising design. Imports are also automatically sorted using compatible rules. See settings.json
for the configuration.
devcontainer.json
allows adding lifecycle hooks which can be useful for special cases. See the hooks
folder for some examples.
Instead of using Dev Container with a Dockerfile, this template uses it with Docker Compose instead. This is done for a few reasons:
- Include example of how to configure Docker for ROS to communicate across containers.
- Docker Compose is closer to real world deployment scenarios.
- It is also more flexible and easier to configure than
devcontainer.json
.
- It is also more flexible and easier to configure than
example_module
's README.md provides instructions on how to create a git
submodule and add ROS packages to it. It also contains a simple pub-sub launch
file that can be used to test bandwidth & latency. To remove example_module
:
git rm example_module
Note: The template will clone missing submodules for you by default.
It is recommended to add custom ROS packages to the workspace via git
Submodules. However, when cloning a repository using git
, it will not clone submodules by default. In order to clone submodules, use:
git clone --recurse-submodules
If the repository is already cloned and has empty submodules, do:
git submodule update --init --recursive
If you want git
to clone submodules by default, try:
git config --global submodule.recurse true
Otherwise, use Github Desktop, which uses --recurse-submodules
by default.
Nonetheless, when submodules are cloned, they will be in a detached state, which prevents committing. Switching submodules to the main branch can either be done through VS Code's Source Control tab, or:
git submodule foreach --recursive git checkout main
This is done for you automatically if using a named volume to store the repository.
The rosdep
and Ubuntu package managers rely on a local cache of their package index. If the package index is outdated, it may not contain any active package distribution server, leading to package downloads failing. Hence, it is recommended to periodically re-download the package index:
apt-get update
rosdep update
When a step in the Dockerfile is changed, subsequent steps are invalidated and need to be rebuilt. Furthermore, ROS workspaces with the same Dockerfile share cache, resulting in less disk usage and shorter rebuilds.
The current Dockerfiles should work in most cases without needing edits. Nonetheless, if the Dockerfile becomes too complex, re-organizing it is fine. See https://docs.docker.com/develop/develop-images/dockerfile_best-practices/ for more info on Docker layer caching and other Docker tips.
To change ROS Distro, do a global search for the current distro (humble
) and replace as necessary with the new distro. Afterwards, rebuild the Dev Container.
- On first setup, the Dev Container fails to build and complains about
/r
.- The Dev Container lifecycle hooks were checked out with CRLF instead of LF line endings.
- Do
git config --global core.autocrlf input
and re-clone the repository. - See https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/remote/troubleshooting#_resolving-git-line-ending-issues-in-wsl-resulting-in-many-modified-files for more info.
- When modifying the Dockerfile, earlier cached steps might be stale, causing later steps to fail.
- Rebuild the Dev Container without cache.
- Try deleting the
build
andinstall
folders before rebuilding all packages.
rosdep
has no version lock, which means there is no protection against breaking changes when packages update.- See: ros-infrastructure/rosdep#325
- One solution would be to use your own install script instead of
rosdep
.
- ROS
launch
files aren't symlinked unlike Python code.- Rebuild the package when
launch
files are modified.
- Rebuild the package when