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Author SHA1 Message Date
Jade Choghari cbb380df34 draft changes 2025-12-26 14:06:30 +00:00
388 changed files with 10330 additions and 26230 deletions
+4 -5
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@@ -22,21 +22,20 @@ Short, imperative summary (e.g., "fix(robots): handle None in sensor parser"). S
- Short, concrete bullets of the modifications (files/behaviour).
- Short note if this introduces breaking changes and migration steps.
## How was this tested (or how to run locally)
## How was this tested
- Tests added: list new tests or test files.
- Manual checks / dataset runs performed.
- Instructions for the reviewer
Example:
## How to run locally (reviewer)
- Ran the relevant tests:
- Run the relevant tests:
```bash
pytest -q tests/ -k <keyword>
```
- Reproduce with a quick example or CLI (if applicable):
- Run a quick example or CLI (if applicable):
```bash
lerobot-train --some.option=true
+1 -12
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@@ -18,11 +18,6 @@ name: Documentation
on:
# Allows running this workflow manually from the Actions tab
workflow_dispatch:
inputs:
version:
description: 'Version tag (e.g. v0.1.2) - Leave empty for standard main build'
required: false
type: string
# Triggers the workflow on push events to main for the docs folder
push:
@@ -59,13 +54,7 @@ jobs:
with:
commit_sha: ${{ github.sha }}
package: lerobot
additional_args: >-
--not_python_module
${{
(github.event_name == 'release' && format('--version {0}', github.event.release.tag_name)) ||
(inputs.version != '' && format('--version {0}', inputs.version)) ||
''
}}
additional_args: --not_python_module ${{ github.event_name == 'release' && format('--version {0}', github.event.release.tag_name) || '' }}
secrets:
token: ${{ secrets.HUGGINGFACE_PUSH }}
hf_token: ${{ secrets.HF_DOC_BUILD_PUSH }}
+1 -8
View File
@@ -44,7 +44,7 @@ permissions:
# Sets up the environment variables
env:
UV_VERSION: "0.8.0"
PYTHON_VERSION: "3.12"
PYTHON_VERSION: "3.10"
# Ensures that only the latest commit for a PR or branch is built, canceling older runs.
concurrency:
@@ -61,7 +61,6 @@ jobs:
MUJOCO_GL: egl
HF_HOME: /mnt/cache/.cache/huggingface
HF_LEROBOT_HOME: /mnt/cache/.cache/huggingface/lerobot
HF_USER_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.LEROBOT_HF_USER }}
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v6
with:
@@ -90,11 +89,5 @@ jobs:
- name: Install lerobot with test extras
run: uv sync --extra "test"
- name: Login to Hugging Face
if: env.HF_USER_TOKEN != ''
run: |
uv run hf auth login --token "$HF_USER_TOKEN" --add-to-git-credential
uv run hf auth whoami
- name: Run pytest
run: uv run pytest tests -vv --maxfail=10
+9 -29
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@@ -37,7 +37,7 @@ permissions:
# Sets up the environment variables
env:
UV_VERSION: "0.8.0"
PYTHON_VERSION: "3.12"
PYTHON_VERSION: "3.10"
DOCKER_IMAGE_NAME: huggingface/lerobot-gpu
# Ensures that only the latest action is built, canceling older runs.
@@ -60,7 +60,6 @@ jobs:
MUJOCO_GL: egl
HF_HOME: /mnt/cache/.cache/huggingface
HF_LEROBOT_HOME: /mnt/cache/.cache/huggingface/lerobot
HF_USER_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.LEROBOT_HF_USER }}
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v6
with:
@@ -88,12 +87,6 @@ jobs:
- name: Install lerobot with all extras
run: uv sync --extra all # TODO(Steven): Make flash-attn optional
- name: Login to Hugging Face
if: env.HF_USER_TOKEN != ''
run: |
uv run hf auth login --token "$HF_USER_TOKEN" --add-to-git-credential
uv run hf auth whoami
- name: Run pytest (all extras)
run: uv run pytest tests -vv --maxfail=10
@@ -108,11 +101,9 @@ jobs:
runs-on:
group: aws-general-8-plus
if: |
github.repository == 'huggingface/lerobot' && (
(github.event_name == 'pull_request_review' && github.event.review.state == 'approved' && github.event.pull_request.head.repo.fork == false) ||
github.event_name == 'push' ||
github.event_name == 'workflow_dispatch'
)
(github.event_name == 'pull_request_review' && github.event.review.state == 'approved' && github.event.pull_request.head.repo.fork == false) ||
github.event_name == 'push' ||
github.event_name == 'workflow_dispatch'
outputs:
image_tag: ${{ steps.set_tag.outputs.image_tag }}
env:
@@ -169,7 +160,6 @@ jobs:
HF_LEROBOT_HOME: /home/user_lerobot/.cache/huggingface/lerobot
TORCH_HOME: /home/user_lerobot/.cache/torch
TRITON_CACHE_DIR: /home/user_lerobot/.cache/triton
HF_USER_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.LEROBOT_HF_USER }}
container:
image: ${{ needs.build-and-push-docker.outputs.image_tag }} # zizmor: ignore[unpinned-images]
options: --gpus all --shm-size "16gb"
@@ -181,13 +171,6 @@ jobs:
shell: bash
working-directory: /lerobot
steps:
- name: Login to Hugging Face
if: env.HF_USER_TOKEN != ''
run: |
hf auth login --token "$HF_USER_TOKEN" --add-to-git-credential
hf auth whoami
- name: Fix ptxas permissions
run: chmod +x /lerobot/.venv/lib/python3.12/site-packages/triton/backends/nvidia/bin/ptxas
- name: Run pytest on GPU
run: pytest tests -vv --maxfail=10
- name: Run end-to-end tests
@@ -203,18 +186,15 @@ jobs:
steps:
- name: Get Docker Hub Token and Delete Image
# zizmor: ignore[template-injection]
env:
DOCKERHUB_LEROBOT_USERNAME: ${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_LEROBOT_USERNAME }}
DOCKERHUB_LEROBOT_PASSWORD: ${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_LEROBOT_PASSWORD }}
IMAGE_FULL: ${{ needs.build-and-push-docker.outputs.image_tag }}
run: |
IMAGE_NAME=$(echo "$IMAGE_FULL" | cut -d':' -f1)
IMAGE_TAG=$(echo "$IMAGE_FULL" | cut -d':' -f2-)
IMAGE_NAME=$(echo "${{ needs.build-and-push-docker.outputs.image_tag }}" | cut -d':' -f1)
IMAGE_TAG=$(echo "${{ needs.build-and-push-docker.outputs.image_tag }}" | cut -d':' -f2)
echo "Attempting to delete image: $IMAGE_NAME:$IMAGE_TAG"
TOKEN=$(curl -s -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-X POST \
-d "{\"username\": \"$DOCKERHUB_LEROBOT_USERNAME\", \"password\": \"$DOCKERHUB_LEROBOT_PASSWORD\"}" \
-d '{"username": "${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_LEROBOT_USERNAME }}", "password": "${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_LEROBOT_PASSWORD }}"}' \
https://hub.docker.com/v2/users/login/ | jq -r .token)
if [ "$TOKEN" == "null" ] || [ -z "$TOKEN" ]; then
@@ -225,7 +205,7 @@ jobs:
HTTP_RESPONSE=$(curl -s -o /dev/null -w "%{http_code}" \
-H "Authorization: JWT ${TOKEN}" \
-X DELETE \
https://hub.docker.com/v2/repositories/${IMAGE_NAME}/tags/$IMAGE_TAG)
https://hub.docker.com/v2/repositories/${IMAGE_NAME}/tags/${IMAGE_TAG}/)
if [ "$HTTP_RESPONSE" -eq 204 ]; then
echo "Successfully deleted Docker image tag: $IMAGE_NAME:$IMAGE_TAG"
+4 -20
View File
@@ -28,7 +28,7 @@ on:
# Sets up the environment variables
env:
UV_VERSION: "0.8.0"
PYTHON_VERSION: "3.12"
PYTHON_VERSION: "3.10"
DOCKER_IMAGE_NAME_CPU: huggingface/lerobot-cpu:latest
DOCKER_IMAGE_NAME_GPU: huggingface/lerobot-gpu:latest
@@ -119,7 +119,6 @@ jobs:
HF_LEROBOT_HOME: /home/user_lerobot/.cache/huggingface/lerobot
TORCH_HOME: /home/user_lerobot/.cache/torch
TRITON_CACHE_DIR: /home/user_lerobot/.cache/triton
HF_USER_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.LEROBOT_HF_USER }}
container:
image: ${{ needs.build-docker-cpu-nightly.outputs.image_tag }} # zizmor: ignore[unpinned-images]
options: --shm-size "16gb"
@@ -131,11 +130,6 @@ jobs:
shell: bash
working-directory: /lerobot
steps:
- name: Login to Hugging Face
if: env.HF_USER_TOKEN != ''
run: |
hf auth login --token "$HF_USER_TOKEN" --add-to-git-credential
hf auth whoami
- name: Run pytest on CPU
run: pytest tests -vv --maxfail=10
- name: Run end-to-end tests
@@ -152,7 +146,6 @@ jobs:
HF_LEROBOT_HOME: /home/user_lerobot/.cache/huggingface/lerobot
TORCH_HOME: /home/user_lerobot/.cache/torch
TRITON_CACHE_DIR: /home/user_lerobot/.cache/triton
HF_USER_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.LEROBOT_HF_USER }}
container:
image: ${{ needs.build-docker-gpu-nightly.outputs.image_tag }} # zizmor: ignore[unpinned-images]
options: --gpus all --shm-size "16gb"
@@ -164,11 +157,6 @@ jobs:
shell: bash
working-directory: /lerobot
steps:
- name: Login to Hugging Face
if: env.HF_USER_TOKEN != ''
run: |
hf auth login --token "$HF_USER_TOKEN" --add-to-git-credential
hf auth whoami
- name: Run pytest on GPU
run: pytest tests -vv --maxfail=10
- name: Run end-to-end tests
@@ -186,7 +174,6 @@ jobs:
TORCH_HOME: /home/user_lerobot/.cache/torch
TRITON_CACHE_DIR: /home/user_lerobot/.cache/triton
CUDA_VISIBLE_DEVICES: "0,1,2,3"
HF_USER_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.LEROBOT_HF_USER }}
container:
image: ${{ needs.build-docker-gpu-nightly.outputs.image_tag }} # zizmor: ignore[unpinned-images]
options: --gpus all --shm-size "16gb"
@@ -198,15 +185,12 @@ jobs:
shell: bash
working-directory: /lerobot
steps:
- name: Login to Hugging Face
if: env.HF_USER_TOKEN != ''
run: |
hf auth login --token "$HF_USER_TOKEN" --add-to-git-credential
hf auth whoami
- name: Verify GPU availability
run: |
nvidia-smi
python -c "import torch; print(f'PyTorch CUDA available: {torch.cuda.is_available()}'); print(f'Number of GPUs: {torch.cuda.device_count()}')"
- name: Run multi-GPU training tests
run: pytest -vv tests/training/
# TODO(Steven): Investigate why motors tests are failing in multi-GPU setup
run: pytest tests -vv --maxfail=10 --ignore=tests/motors/
timeout-minutes: 10
+1 -1
View File
@@ -50,7 +50,7 @@ jobs:
- name: Set up Python
uses: actions/setup-python@v6
with:
python-version: '3.12'
python-version: '3.10'
- name: Run pre-commit hooks
uses: pre-commit/action@v3.0.1 # zizmor: ignore[unpinned-uses]
+10 -2
View File
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@ on:
# Sets up the environment variables
env:
UV_VERSION: "0.8.0"
PYTHON_VERSION: "3.12"
PYTHON_VERSION: "3.10"
jobs:
# This job builds the Python package and publishes it to PyPI
@@ -45,7 +45,7 @@ jobs:
- name: Set up Python
uses: actions/setup-python@v6
with:
python-version: '3.12'
python-version: '3.10'
- name: Extract Version
id: extract_info
@@ -83,6 +83,14 @@ jobs:
exit 1
fi
- name: Remove Tags with Git dependencies
# TODO(Steven): Temporary patch to remove pi from PyPi 0.4.0 release due to its reliance on git dependencies.
run: |
echo "::info:: Checking for Git dependencies to remove from pyproject.toml..."
grep -E '@ git\+https|lerobot\[pi\]' pyproject.toml | sed 's/^/::warning:: Removing line: /' || true
sed -E -i '/@ git\+https|lerobot\[pi\]/d' pyproject.toml
echo "::info:: Git dependencies removed. Proceeding with build."
- name: Install build dependencies
run: python -m pip install build
+8 -24
View File
@@ -20,8 +20,8 @@ on:
workflow_dispatch:
# Run on the 1st and 15th of every month at 09:00 UTC
# schedule:
# - cron: '0 2 1,15 * *'
schedule:
- cron: '0 2 1,15 * *'
permissions:
contents: read
@@ -29,7 +29,7 @@ permissions:
# Sets up the environment variables
env:
UV_VERSION: "0.8.0"
PYTHON_VERSION: "3.12"
PYTHON_VERSION: "3.10"
DOCKER_IMAGE_NAME: huggingface/lerobot-gpu:unbound
# Ensures that only the latest action is built, canceling older runs.
@@ -48,7 +48,6 @@ jobs:
MUJOCO_GL: egl
HF_HOME: /mnt/cache/.cache/huggingface
HF_LEROBOT_HOME: /mnt/cache/.cache/huggingface/lerobot
HF_USER_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.LEROBOT_HF_USER }}
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v6
with:
@@ -80,11 +79,7 @@ jobs:
- name: Install lerobot with all extras
run: uv sync --extra all # TODO(Steven): Make flash-attn optional
- name: Login to Hugging Face
if: env.HF_USER_TOKEN != ''
run: |
uv run hf auth login --token "$HF_USER_TOKEN" --add-to-git-credential
uv run hf auth whoami
- name: Run pytest (all extras)
run: uv run pytest tests -vv
@@ -96,7 +91,6 @@ jobs:
name: Build and Push Docker
runs-on:
group: aws-general-8-plus
if: github.repository == 'huggingface/lerobot'
outputs:
image_tag: ${{ env.DOCKER_IMAGE_NAME }}
env:
@@ -142,7 +136,6 @@ jobs:
HF_LEROBOT_HOME: /home/user_lerobot/.cache/huggingface/lerobot
TORCH_HOME: /home/user_lerobot/.cache/torch
TRITON_CACHE_DIR: /home/user_lerobot/.cache/triton
HF_USER_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.LEROBOT_HF_USER }}
container:
image: ${{ needs.build-and-push-docker.outputs.image_tag }} # zizmor: ignore[unpinned-images]
options: --gpus all --shm-size "16gb"
@@ -154,11 +147,6 @@ jobs:
shell: bash
working-directory: /lerobot
steps:
- name: Login to Hugging Face
if: env.HF_USER_TOKEN != ''
run: |
hf auth login --token "$HF_USER_TOKEN" --add-to-git-credential
hf auth whoami
- name: Run pytest on GPU
run: pytest tests -vv
- name: Run end-to-end tests
@@ -174,19 +162,15 @@ jobs:
steps:
- name: Get Docker Hub Token and Delete Image
# zizmor: ignore[template-injection]
env:
DOCKERHUB_LEROBOT_USERNAME: ${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_LEROBOT_USERNAME }}
DOCKERHUB_LEROBOT_PASSWORD: ${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_LEROBOT_PASSWORD }}
IMAGE_FULL: ${{ needs.build-and-push-docker.outputs.image_tag }}
run: |
IMAGE_NAME=$(echo "$IMAGE_FULL" | cut -d':' -f1)
IMAGE_TAG=$(echo "$IMAGE_FULL" | cut -d':' -f2)
IMAGE_NAME=$(echo "${{ needs.build-and-push-docker.outputs.image_tag }}" | cut -d':' -f1)
IMAGE_TAG=$(echo "${{ needs.build-and-push-docker.outputs.image_tag }}" | cut -d':' -f2)
echo "Attempting to delete image: $IMAGE_NAME:$IMAGE_TAG"
TOKEN=$(curl -s -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-X POST \
-d "{\"username\": \"$DOCKERHUB_LEROBOT_USERNAME\", \"password\": \"$DOCKERHUB_LEROBOT_PASSWORD\"}" \
-d '{"username": "${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_LEROBOT_USERNAME }}", "password": "${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_LEROBOT_PASSWORD }}"}' \
https://hub.docker.com/v2/users/login/ | jq -r .token)
if [ "$TOKEN" == "null" ] || [ -z "$TOKEN" ]; then
@@ -197,7 +181,7 @@ jobs:
HTTP_RESPONSE=$(curl -s -o /dev/null -w "%{http_code}" \
-H "Authorization: JWT ${TOKEN}" \
-X DELETE \
https://hub.docker.com/v2/repositories/${IMAGE_NAME}/tags/$IMAGE_TAG)
https://hub.docker.com/v2/repositories/${IMAGE_NAME}/tags/${IMAGE_TAG}/)
if [ "$HTTP_RESPONSE" -eq 204 ]; then
echo "Successfully deleted Docker image tag: $IMAGE_NAME:$IMAGE_TAG"
+2 -2
View File
@@ -13,7 +13,7 @@
# limitations under the License.
default_language_version:
python: python3.12
python: python3.10
exclude: "tests/artifacts/.*\\.safetensors$"
@@ -55,7 +55,7 @@ repos:
rev: v3.21.0
hooks:
- id: pyupgrade
args: [--py312-plus]
args: [--py310-plus]
##### Markdown Quality #####
- repo: https://github.com/rbubley/mirrors-prettier
-25
View File
@@ -1,25 +0,0 @@
# AI Usage Policy
The LeRobot project welcomes contributions from everyone, and we have a few guidelines regarding AI usage to ensure high code quality, clear communication, and a healthy open-source ecosystem:
- **Please disclose significant AI assistance.** If you used AI tools (e.g., Copilot, Claude, Cursor, ChatGPT) to generate a substantial portion of your code or text, let us know in your PR description. Transparency helps us review your changes more effectively.
- **Own your code (The Human-in-the-Loop).** You must fully understand all the changes you are proposing. If you cannot explain what your AI-assisted code does or how it interacts with LeRobot's broader architecture, please take the time to learn and test it before submitting.
- **Keep issues and discussions focused.** You are welcome to use AI to help draft issues or PR descriptions, but please review and edit them carefully before posting. AI can often be overly verbose; trimming the noise and getting straight to the point helps our maintainers address your needs faster.
Our core maintainers also use AI tools to aid their workflows, but they do so while bringing deep contextual knowledge of the LeRobot codebase to validate the output. We ask all contributors to apply that same level of rigor.
## Remember the Human Maintainers
Please remember that LeRobot is maintained by a dedicated team of humans.
Every discussion, issue, and pull request is read and reviewed by real people. While AI tools can generate thousands of lines of code in seconds, reviewing that code still takes human time and energy. Submitting unverified or low-effort AI output puts an unfair burden on our maintainers.
Today, the quality of the AI output still heavily depends on the developer driving the tool. We ask that you respect our maintainers' time by thoroughly vetting, testing, and refining your submissions.
## AI is Welcome Here
LeRobot operates at the cutting edge of AI and robotics, and many of our maintainers actively embrace AI coding assistants as valuable productivity tools. We are a pro-AI project!
Our reason for having an AI policy is not an anti-AI stance. Rather, it exists to ensure that AI is used to enhance human contributions, not replace them with unverified noise. It's about how the tools are used, not the tools themselves.
We value the unique human insight you bring to the LeRobot community. Let AI empower your workflow, but always let your own judgment take the wheel.
+5 -5
View File
@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@
Everyone is welcome to contribute, and we value everybody's contribution. Code is not the only way to help the community. Answering questions, helping others, reaching out, and improving the documentation are immensely valuable.
Whichever way you choose to contribute, please be mindful to respect our [code of conduct](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md) and our [AI policy](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/AI_POLICY.md).
Whichever way you choose to contribute, please be mindful to respect our [code of conduct](./CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md).
## Ways to Contribute
@@ -14,7 +14,7 @@ You can contribute in many ways:
- **Documentation:** Improve examples, guides, and docstrings.
- **Feedback:** Submit tickets related to bugs or desired new features.
If you are unsure where to start, join our [Discord Channel](https://discord.gg/q8Dzzpym3f).
If you are unsure where to start, join our [Discord Channel](https://discord.gg/JkrYNdmw).
## Development Setup
@@ -32,7 +32,7 @@ git remote add upstream https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot.git
### 2. Environment Installation
Please follow our [Installation Guide](https://huggingface.co/docs/lerobot/installation) for the environment setup & installation from source.
Please follow our [Installation Guide](./docs/source/installation.mdx) for the environment setup & installation from source.
## Running Tests & Quality Checks
@@ -75,8 +75,8 @@ pytest -sv tests/test_specific_feature.py
Use the templates for required fields and examples.
- **Issues:** Follow the [ticket template](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/.github/ISSUE_TEMPLATE/bug-report.yml).
- **Pull requests:** Rebase on `upstream/main`, use a descriptive branch (don't work on `main`), run `pre-commit` and tests locally, and follow the [PR template](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/.github/PULL_REQUEST_TEMPLATE.md).
- **Issues:** Follow the [ticket template](./.github/ISSUE_TEMPLATE/bug-report.yml).
- **Pull requests:** Rebase on `upstream/main`, use a descriptive branch (don't work on `main`), run `pre-commit` and tests locally, and follow the [PR template](./.github/PULL_REQUEST_TEMPLATE.md).
One member of the LeRobot team will then review your contribution.
-1
View File
@@ -1,3 +1,2 @@
include src/lerobot/templates/lerobot_modelcard_template.md
include src/lerobot/datasets/card_template.md
include src/lerobot/envs/metaworld_config.json
+8 -27
View File
@@ -10,7 +10,6 @@
[![Status](https://img.shields.io/pypi/status/lerobot)](https://pypi.org/project/lerobot/)
[![Version](https://img.shields.io/pypi/v/lerobot)](https://pypi.org/project/lerobot/)
[![Contributor Covenant](https://img.shields.io/badge/Contributor%20Covenant-v2.1-ff69b4.svg)](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md)
[![Discord](https://img.shields.io/badge/Discord-Join_Us-5865F2?style=flat&logo=discord&logoColor=white)](https://discord.gg/q8Dzzpym3f)
</div>
@@ -100,11 +99,11 @@ lerobot-train \
--dataset.repo_id=lerobot/aloha_mobile_cabinet
```
| Category | Models |
| -------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
| **Imitation Learning** | [ACT](./docs/source/policy_act_README.md), [Diffusion](./docs/source/policy_diffusion_README.md), [VQ-BeT](./docs/source/policy_vqbet_README.md) |
| **Reinforcement Learning** | [HIL-SERL](./docs/source/hilserl.mdx), [TDMPC](./docs/source/policy_tdmpc_README.md) & QC-FQL (coming soon) |
| **VLAs Models** | [Pi0Fast](./docs/source/pi0fast.mdx), [Pi0.5](./docs/source/pi05.mdx), [GR00T N1.5](./docs/source/policy_groot_README.md), [SmolVLA](./docs/source/policy_smolvla_README.md), [XVLA](./docs/source/xvla.mdx) |
| Category | Models |
| -------------------------- | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| **Imitation Learning** | [ACT](./docs/source/policy_act_README.md), [Diffusion](./docs/source/policy_diffusion_README.md), [VQ-BeT](./docs/source/policy_vqbet_README.md) |
| **Reinforcement Learning** | [HIL-SERL](./docs/source/hilserl.mdx), [TDMPC](./docs/source/policy_tdmpc_README.md) & QC-FQL (coming soon) |
| **VLAs Models** | [Pi0.5](./docs/source/pi05.mdx), [GR00T N1.5](./docs/source/policy_groot_README.md), [SmolVLA](./docs/source/policy_smolvla_README.md), [XVLA](./docs/source/xvla.mdx) |
Similarly to the hardware, you can easily implement your own policy & leverage LeRobot's data collection, training, and visualization tools, and share your model to the HF Hub
@@ -128,14 +127,13 @@ Learn how to implement your own simulation environment or benchmark and distribu
## Resources
- **[Documentation](https://huggingface.co/docs/lerobot/index):** The complete guide to tutorials & API.
- **[Chinese Tutorials: LeRobot+SO-ARM101中文教程-同济子豪兄](https://zihao-ai.feishu.cn/wiki/space/7589642043471924447)** Detailed doc for assembling, teleoperate, dataset, train, deploy. Verified by Seed Studio and 5 global hackathon players.
- **[Discord](https://discord.gg/q8Dzzpym3f):** Join the `LeRobot` server to discuss with the community.
- **[Discord](https://discord.gg/3gxM6Avj):** Join the `LeRobot` server to discuss with the community.
- **[X](https://x.com/LeRobotHF):** Follow us on X to stay up-to-date with the latest developments.
- **[Robot Learning Tutorial](https://huggingface.co/spaces/lerobot/robot-learning-tutorial):** A free, hands-on course to learn robot learning using LeRobot.
## Citation
If you use LeRobot in your project, please cite the GitHub repository to acknowledge the ongoing development and contributors:
If you use LeRobot in your research, please cite:
```bibtex
@misc{cadene2024lerobot,
@@ -146,26 +144,9 @@ If you use LeRobot in your project, please cite the GitHub repository to acknowl
}
```
If you are referencing our research or the academic paper, please also cite our ICLR publication:
<details>
<summary><b>ICLR 2026 Paper</b></summary>
```bibtex
@inproceedings{cadenelerobot,
title={LeRobot: An Open-Source Library for End-to-End Robot Learning},
author={Cadene, Remi and Alibert, Simon and Capuano, Francesco and Aractingi, Michel and Zouitine, Adil and Kooijmans, Pepijn and Choghari, Jade and Russi, Martino and Pascal, Caroline and Palma, Steven and Shukor, Mustafa and Moss, Jess and Soare, Alexander and Aubakirova, Dana and Lhoest, Quentin and Gallou\'edec, Quentin and Wolf, Thomas},
booktitle={The Fourteenth International Conference on Learning Representations},
year={2026},
url={https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.22818}
}
```
</details>
## Contribute
We welcome contributions from everyone in the community! To get started, please read our [CONTRIBUTING.md](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/CONTRIBUTING.md) guide. Whether you're adding a new feature, improving documentation, or fixing a bug, your help and feedback are invaluable. We're incredibly excited about the future of open-source robotics and can't wait to work with you on what's next—thank you for your support!
We welcome contributions from everyone in the community! To get started, please read our [CONTRIBUTING.md](./CONTRIBUTING.md) guide. Whether you're adding a new feature, improving documentation, or fixing a bug, your help and feedback are invaluable. We're incredibly excited about the future of open-source robotics and can't wait to work with you on what's next—thank you for your support!
<p align="center">
<img alt="SO101 Video" src="./media/readme/so100_video.webp" width="640px">
-48
View File
@@ -1,48 +0,0 @@
# Security Policy
## Project Status & Philosophy
`lerobot` has so far been primarily a research and prototyping tool, which is why deployment security hasnt been a strong focus until now. As `lerobot` continues to be adopted and deployed in production, we are paying much closer attention to these kinds of issues.
Fortunately, being an open-source project, the community can also help by reporting and fixing vulnerabilities. We appreciate your efforts to responsibly disclose your findings and will make every effort to acknowledge your contributions.
## Reporting a Vulnerability
To report a security issue, please use the GitHub Security Advisory ["Report a Vulnerability"](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/security/advisories/new) tab.
The `lerobot` team will send a response indicating the next steps in handling your report. After the initial reply to your report, the security team will keep you informed of the progress towards a fix and full announcement, and may ask for additional information or guidance.
#### Hugging Face Security Team
Since this project is part of the Hugging Face ecosystem, feel free to submit vulnerability reports directly to: **[security@huggingface.co](mailto:security@huggingface.co)**. Someone from the HF security team will review the report and recommend next steps.
#### Open Source Disclosures
If reporting a vulnerability specific to the open-source codebase (and not the underlying Hub infrastructure), you may also use [Huntr](https://huntr.com), a vulnerability disclosure program for open source software.
## Supported Versions
Currently, we treat `lerobot` as a rolling release. We prioritize security updates for the latest available version (`main` branch).
| Version | Supported |
| -------- | --------- |
| Latest | ✅ |
| < Latest | ❌ |
## Secure Usage Guidelines
`lerobot` is tightly coupled to the Hugging Face Hub for sharing data and pretrained policies. When downloading artifacts uploaded by others, you expose yourself to risks. Please read below for recommendations to keep your runtime and robot environment safe.
### Remote Artefacts (Weights & Policies)
Models and policies uploaded to the Hugging Face Hub come in different formats. We heavily recommend uploading and downloading models in the [`safetensors`](https://github.com/huggingface/safetensors) format.
`safetensors` was developed specifically to prevent arbitrary code execution on your system, which is critical when running software on physical hardware/robots.
To avoid loading models from unsafe formats (e.g., `pickle`), you should ensure you are prioritizing `safetensors` files.
### Remote Code
Some models or environments on the Hub may require `trust_remote_code=True` to run custom architecture code.
Please **always** verify the content of the modeling files when using this argument. We recommend setting a specific `revision` (commit hash) when loading remote code to ensure you protect yourself from unverified updates to the repository.
+42 -42
View File
@@ -28,9 +28,9 @@ We don't expect the same optimal settings for a dataset of images from a simulat
For these reasons, we run this benchmark on four representative datasets:
- `lerobot/pusht_image`: (96 x 96 pixels) simulation with simple geometric shapes, fixed camera.
- `lerobot/aloha_mobile_shrimp_image`: (480 x 640 pixels) real-world indoor, moving camera.
- `lerobot/paris_street`: (720 x 1280 pixels) real-world outdoor, moving camera.
- `lerobot/kitchen`: (1080 x 1920 pixels) real-world indoor, fixed camera.
- `aliberts/aloha_mobile_shrimp_image`: (480 x 640 pixels) real-world indoor, moving camera.
- `aliberts/paris_street`: (720 x 1280 pixels) real-world outdoor, moving camera.
- `aliberts/kitchen`: (1080 x 1920 pixels) real-world indoor, fixed camera.
Note: The datasets used for this benchmark need to be image datasets, not video datasets.
@@ -179,7 +179,7 @@ python benchmark/video/run_video_benchmark.py \
--output-dir outputs/video_benchmark \
--repo-ids \
lerobot/pusht_image \
lerobot/aloha_mobile_shrimp_image \
aliberts/aloha_mobile_shrimp_image \
--vcodec libx264 libx265 \
--pix-fmt yuv444p yuv420p \
--g 2 20 None \
@@ -203,9 +203,9 @@ python benchmark/video/run_video_benchmark.py \
--output-dir outputs/video_benchmark \
--repo-ids \
lerobot/pusht_image \
lerobot/aloha_mobile_shrimp_image \
lerobot/paris_street \
lerobot/kitchen \
aliberts/aloha_mobile_shrimp_image \
aliberts/paris_street \
aliberts/kitchen \
--vcodec libx264 libx265 \
--pix-fmt yuv444p yuv420p \
--g 1 2 3 4 5 6 10 15 20 40 None \
@@ -221,9 +221,9 @@ python benchmark/video/run_video_benchmark.py \
--output-dir outputs/video_benchmark \
--repo-ids \
lerobot/pusht_image \
lerobot/aloha_mobile_shrimp_image \
lerobot/paris_street \
lerobot/kitchen \
aliberts/aloha_mobile_shrimp_image \
aliberts/paris_street \
aliberts/kitchen \
--vcodec libsvtav1 \
--pix-fmt yuv420p \
--g 1 2 3 4 5 6 10 15 20 40 None \
@@ -252,37 +252,37 @@ Since we're using av1 encoding, we're choosing the `pyav` decoder as `video_read
These tables show the results for `g=2` and `crf=30`, using `timestamps-modes=6_frames` and `backend=pyav`
| video_images_size_ratio | vcodec | pix_fmt | | | |
| --------------------------------- | ---------- | ------- | --------- | --------- | --------- |
| | libx264 | | libx265 | | libsvtav1 |
| repo_id | yuv420p | yuv444p | yuv420p | yuv444p | yuv420p |
| lerobot/pusht_image | **16.97%** | 17.58% | 18.57% | 18.86% | 22.06% |
| lerobot/aloha_mobile_shrimp_image | 2.14% | 2.11% | 1.38% | **1.37%** | 5.59% |
| lerobot/paris_street | 2.12% | 2.13% | **1.54%** | **1.54%** | 4.43% |
| lerobot/kitchen | 1.40% | 1.39% | **1.00%** | **1.00%** | 2.52% |
| video_images_size_ratio | vcodec | pix_fmt | | | |
| ---------------------------------- | ---------- | ------- | --------- | --------- | --------- |
| | libx264 | | libx265 | | libsvtav1 |
| repo_id | yuv420p | yuv444p | yuv420p | yuv444p | yuv420p |
| lerobot/pusht_image | **16.97%** | 17.58% | 18.57% | 18.86% | 22.06% |
| aliberts/aloha_mobile_shrimp_image | 2.14% | 2.11% | 1.38% | **1.37%** | 5.59% |
| aliberts/paris_street | 2.12% | 2.13% | **1.54%** | **1.54%** | 4.43% |
| aliberts/kitchen | 1.40% | 1.39% | **1.00%** | **1.00%** | 2.52% |
| video_images_load_time_ratio | vcodec | pix_fmt | | | |
| --------------------------------- | ------- | ------- | -------- | ------- | --------- |
| | libx264 | | libx265 | | libsvtav1 |
| repo_id | yuv420p | yuv444p | yuv420p | yuv444p | yuv420p |
| lerobot/pusht_image | 6.45 | 5.19 | **1.90** | 2.12 | 2.47 |
| lerobot/aloha_mobile_shrimp_image | 11.80 | 7.92 | 0.71 | 0.85 | **0.48** |
| lerobot/paris_street | 2.21 | 2.05 | 0.36 | 0.49 | **0.30** |
| lerobot/kitchen | 1.46 | 1.46 | 0.28 | 0.51 | **0.26** |
| video_images_load_time_ratio | vcodec | pix_fmt | | | |
| ---------------------------------- | ------- | ------- | -------- | ------- | --------- |
| | libx264 | | libx265 | | libsvtav1 |
| repo_id | yuv420p | yuv444p | yuv420p | yuv444p | yuv420p |
| lerobot/pusht_image | 6.45 | 5.19 | **1.90** | 2.12 | 2.47 |
| aliberts/aloha_mobile_shrimp_image | 11.80 | 7.92 | 0.71 | 0.85 | **0.48** |
| aliberts/paris_street | 2.21 | 2.05 | 0.36 | 0.49 | **0.30** |
| aliberts/kitchen | 1.46 | 1.46 | 0.28 | 0.51 | **0.26** |
| | | vcodec | pix_fmt | | | |
| --------------------------------- | -------- | -------- | ------------ | -------- | --------- | ------------ |
| | | libx264 | | libx265 | | libsvtav1 |
| repo_id | metric | yuv420p | yuv444p | yuv420p | yuv444p | yuv420p |
| lerobot/pusht_image | avg_mse | 2.90E-04 | **2.03E-04** | 3.13E-04 | 2.29E-04 | 2.19E-04 |
| | avg_psnr | 35.44 | 37.07 | 35.49 | **37.30** | 37.20 |
| | avg_ssim | 98.28% | **98.85%** | 98.31% | 98.84% | 98.72% |
| lerobot/aloha_mobile_shrimp_image | avg_mse | 2.76E-04 | 2.59E-04 | 3.17E-04 | 3.06E-04 | **1.30E-04** |
| | avg_psnr | 35.91 | 36.21 | 35.88 | 36.09 | **40.17** |
| | avg_ssim | 95.19% | 95.18% | 95.00% | 95.05% | **97.73%** |
| lerobot/paris_street | avg_mse | 6.89E-04 | 6.70E-04 | 4.03E-03 | 4.02E-03 | **3.09E-04** |
| | avg_psnr | 33.48 | 33.68 | 32.05 | 32.15 | **35.40** |
| | avg_ssim | 93.76% | 93.75% | 89.46% | 89.46% | **95.46%** |
| lerobot/kitchen | avg_mse | 2.50E-04 | 2.24E-04 | 4.28E-04 | 4.18E-04 | **1.53E-04** |
| | avg_psnr | 36.73 | 37.33 | 36.56 | 36.75 | **39.12** |
| | avg_ssim | 95.47% | 95.58% | 95.52% | 95.53% | **96.82%** |
| | | vcodec | pix_fmt | | | |
| ---------------------------------- | -------- | -------- | ------------ | -------- | --------- | ------------ |
| | | libx264 | | libx265 | | libsvtav1 |
| repo_id | metric | yuv420p | yuv444p | yuv420p | yuv444p | yuv420p |
| lerobot/pusht_image | avg_mse | 2.90E-04 | **2.03E-04** | 3.13E-04 | 2.29E-04 | 2.19E-04 |
| | avg_psnr | 35.44 | 37.07 | 35.49 | **37.30** | 37.20 |
| | avg_ssim | 98.28% | **98.85%** | 98.31% | 98.84% | 98.72% |
| aliberts/aloha_mobile_shrimp_image | avg_mse | 2.76E-04 | 2.59E-04 | 3.17E-04 | 3.06E-04 | **1.30E-04** |
| | avg_psnr | 35.91 | 36.21 | 35.88 | 36.09 | **40.17** |
| | avg_ssim | 95.19% | 95.18% | 95.00% | 95.05% | **97.73%** |
| aliberts/paris_street | avg_mse | 6.89E-04 | 6.70E-04 | 4.03E-03 | 4.02E-03 | **3.09E-04** |
| | avg_psnr | 33.48 | 33.68 | 32.05 | 32.15 | **35.40** |
| | avg_ssim | 93.76% | 93.75% | 89.46% | 89.46% | **95.46%** |
| aliberts/kitchen | avg_mse | 2.50E-04 | 2.24E-04 | 4.28E-04 | 4.18E-04 | **1.53E-04** |
| | avg_psnr | 36.73 | 37.33 | 36.56 | 36.75 | **39.12** |
| | avg_ssim | 95.47% | 95.58% | 95.52% | 95.53% | **96.82%** |
+2 -4
View File
@@ -24,7 +24,7 @@ ARG OS_VERSION=22.04
FROM nvidia/cuda:${CUDA_VERSION}-base-ubuntu${OS_VERSION}
# Define Python version argument
ARG PYTHON_VERSION=3.12
ARG PYTHON_VERSION=3.10
# Configure environment variables
ENV DEBIAN_FRONTEND=noninteractive \
@@ -73,7 +73,7 @@ ENV HOME=/home/user_lerobot \
RUN uv venv --python python${PYTHON_VERSION}
# Install Python dependencies for caching
COPY --chown=user_lerobot:user_lerobot setup.py pyproject.toml README.md MANIFEST.in ./
COPY --chown=user_lerobot:user_lerobot pyproject.toml README.md MANIFEST.in ./
COPY --chown=user_lerobot:user_lerobot src/ src/
ARG UNBOUND_DEPS=false
@@ -85,8 +85,6 @@ RUN if [ "$UNBOUND_DEPS" = "true" ]; then \
RUN uv pip install --no-cache ".[all]"
RUN chmod +x /lerobot/.venv/lib/python${PYTHON_VERSION}/site-packages/triton/backends/nvidia/bin/ptxas
# Copy the rest of the application source code
# Make sure to have the git-LFS files for testing
COPY --chown=user_lerobot:user_lerobot . .
+2 -4
View File
@@ -18,10 +18,8 @@
# docker build -f docker/Dockerfile.user -t lerobot-user .
# docker run -it --rm lerobot-user
# With USB physical access : docker run -it --device=/dev/ -v /dev/:/dev/ --rm lerobot-user
# Configure the base image
ARG PYTHON_VERSION=3.12
ARG PYTHON_VERSION=3.10
FROM python:${PYTHON_VERSION}-slim
# Configure environment variables
@@ -61,7 +59,7 @@ ENV HOME=/home/user_lerobot \
RUN uv venv
# Install Python dependencies for caching
COPY --chown=user_lerobot:user_lerobot setup.py pyproject.toml README.md MANIFEST.in ./
COPY --chown=user_lerobot:user_lerobot pyproject.toml README.md MANIFEST.in ./
COPY --chown=user_lerobot:user_lerobot src/ src/
ARG UNBOUND_DEPS=false
+2 -22
View File
@@ -7,6 +7,8 @@
- sections:
- local: il_robots
title: Imitation Learning for Robots
- local: cameras
title: Cameras
- local: bring_your_own_policies
title: Bring Your Own Policies
- local: integrate_hardware
@@ -17,10 +19,6 @@
title: Train RL in Simulation
- local: multi_gpu_training
title: Multi GPU training
- local: peft_training
title: Training with PEFT (e.g., LoRA)
- local: rename_map
title: Using Rename Map and Empty Cameras
title: "Tutorials"
- sections:
- local: lerobot-dataset-v3
@@ -29,10 +27,6 @@
title: Porting Large Datasets
- local: using_dataset_tools
title: Using the Dataset Tools
- local: dataset_subtask
title: Using Subtasks in the Dataset
- local: streaming_video_encoding
title: Streaming Video Encoding
title: "Datasets"
- sections:
- local: act
@@ -41,8 +35,6 @@
title: SmolVLA
- local: pi0
title: π₀ (Pi0)
- local: pi0fast
title: π₀-FAST (Pi0Fast)
- local: pi05
title: π₀.₅ (Pi05)
- local: groot
@@ -67,8 +59,6 @@
title: Environments from the Hub
- local: envhub_leisaac
title: Control & Train Robots in Sim (LeIsaac)
- local: envhub_isaaclab_arena
title: NVIDIA IsaacLab Arena Environments
- local: libero
title: Using Libero
- local: metaworld
@@ -103,19 +93,11 @@
title: Unitree G1
- local: earthrover_mini_plus
title: Earth Rover Mini
- local: omx
title: OMX
- local: openarm
title: OpenArm
title: "Robots"
- sections:
- local: phone_teleop
title: Phone
title: "Teleoperators"
- sections:
- local: cameras
title: Cameras
title: "Sensors"
- sections:
- local: torch_accelerators
title: PyTorch accelerators
@@ -125,8 +107,6 @@
title: Notebooks
- local: feetech
title: Updating Feetech Firmware
- local: damiao
title: Damiao Motors and CAN Bus
title: "Resources"
- sections:
- local: contributing
-3
View File
@@ -88,8 +88,5 @@ lerobot-record \
--dataset.repo_id=${HF_USER}/eval_act_your_dataset \
--dataset.num_episodes=10 \
--dataset.single_task="Your task description" \
--dataset.streaming_encoding=true \
--dataset.encoder_threads=2 \
# --dataset.vcodec=auto \
--policy.path=${HF_USER}/act_policy
```
+3 -4
View File
@@ -48,7 +48,7 @@ python -m lerobot.async_inference.robot_client \
--task="dummy" \ # POLICY: The task to run the policy on (`Fold my t-shirt`). Not necessarily defined for all policies, such as `act`
--policy_type=your_policy_type \ # POLICY: the type of policy to run (smolvla, act, etc)
--pretrained_name_or_path=user/model \ # POLICY: the model name/path on server to the checkpoint to run (e.g., lerobot/smolvla_base)
--policy_device=mps \ # POLICY: the device to run the policy on, on the server (cuda, mps, xpu, cpu)
--policy_device=mps \ # POLICY: the device to run the policy on, on the server
--actions_per_chunk=50 \ # POLICY: the number of actions to output at once
--chunk_size_threshold=0.5 \ # CLIENT: the threshold for the chunk size before sending a new observation to the server
--aggregate_fn_name=weighted_average \ # CLIENT: the function to aggregate actions on overlapping portions
@@ -169,7 +169,7 @@ python -m lerobot.async_inference.robot_client \
<!-- prettier-ignore-start -->
```python
import threading
from lerobot.robots.so_follower import SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower import SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.cameras.opencv.configuration_opencv import OpenCVCameraConfig
from lerobot.async_inference.configs import RobotClientConfig
from lerobot.async_inference.robot_client import RobotClient
@@ -195,7 +195,6 @@ client_cfg = RobotClientConfig(
robot=robot_cfg,
server_address="localhost:8080",
policy_device="mps",
client_device="cpu",
policy_type="smolvla",
pretrained_name_or_path="<user>/smolvla_async",
chunk_size_threshold=0.5,
@@ -310,4 +309,4 @@ Asynchronous inference represents a significant advancement in real-time robotic
- **Universal Compatibility**: Works with all LeRobot-supported policies, from lightweight ACT models to vision-language models like SmolVLA
Start experimenting with the default parameters, monitor your action queue sizes, and iteratively refine your setup to achieve optimal performance for your specific use case.
If you want to discuss this further, hop into our [Discord community](https://discord.gg/s3KuuzsPFb), or open an issue on our [GitHub repository](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/issues).
If you want to discuss this further, hop into our [Discord community](https://discord.gg/s3KuuzsPFb), or open an issue on our [GitHub repository](https://github.com/lerobot/lerobot/issues).
+4 -4
View File
@@ -32,7 +32,7 @@ version = "0.1.0"
dependencies = [
# your policy-specific dependencies
]
requires-python = ">= 3.12"
requires-python = ">= 3.11"
[build-system]
build-backend = # your-build-backend
@@ -82,7 +82,7 @@ Create your policy implementation by inheriting from LeRobot's base `PreTrainedP
# modeling_my_custom_policy.py
import torch
import torch.nn as nn
from typing import Any
from typing import Dict, Any
from lerobot.policies.pretrained import PreTrainedPolicy
from .configuration_my_custom_policy import MyCustomPolicyConfig
@@ -91,7 +91,7 @@ class MyCustomPolicy(PreTrainedPolicy):
config_class = MyCustomPolicyConfig
name = "my_custom_policy"
def __init__(self, config: MyCustomPolicyConfig, dataset_stats: dict[str, Any] = None):
def __init__(self, config: MyCustomPolicyConfig, dataset_stats: Dict[str, Any] = None):
super().__init__(config, dataset_stats)
...
```
@@ -102,7 +102,7 @@ Create processor functions:
```python
# processor_my_custom_policy.py
from typing import Any
from typing import Dict, Any
import torch
+81 -95
View File
@@ -1,22 +1,12 @@
# Cameras
LeRobot offers multiple options for video capture:
LeRobot offers multiple options for video capture, including phone cameras, built-in laptop cameras, external webcams, and Intel RealSense cameras. To efficiently record frames from most cameras, you can use either the `OpenCVCamera` or `RealSenseCamera` class. For additional compatibility details on the `OpenCVCamera` class, refer to the [Video I/O with OpenCV Overview](https://docs.opencv.org/4.x/d0/da7/videoio_overview.html).
| Class | Supported Cameras |
| ----------------- | ----------------------------------- |
| `OpenCVCamera` | Phone, built-in laptop, USB webcams |
| `ZMQCamera` | Network-connected cameras |
| `RealSenseCamera` | Intel RealSense (with depth) |
| `Reachy2Camera` | Reachy 2 robot cameras |
### Finding your camera
> [!TIP]
> For `OpenCVCamera` compatibility details, see the [Video I/O with OpenCV Overview](https://docs.opencv.org/4.x/d0/da7/videoio_overview.html).
To instantiate a camera, you need a camera identifier. This identifier might change if you reboot your computer or re-plug your camera, a behavior mostly dependant on your operating system.
### Find your camera
Every camera requires a unique identifier to be instantiated, allowing you to distinguish between multiple connected devices.
`OpenCVCamera` and `RealSenseCamera` support auto-discovery. Run the command below to list available devices and their identifiers. Note that these identifiers may change after rebooting your computer or re-plugging the camera, depending on your operating system.
To find the camera indices of the cameras plugged into your system, run the following script:
```bash
lerobot-find-cameras opencv # or realsense for Intel Realsense cameras
@@ -24,7 +14,7 @@ lerobot-find-cameras opencv # or realsense for Intel Realsense cameras
The output will look something like this if you have two cameras connected:
```bash
```
--- Detected Cameras ---
Camera #0:
Name: OpenCV Camera @ 0
@@ -43,37 +33,13 @@ Camera #0:
> [!WARNING]
> When using Intel RealSense cameras in `macOS`, you could get this [error](https://github.com/IntelRealSense/librealsense/issues/12307): `Error finding RealSense cameras: failed to set power state`, this can be solved by running the same command with `sudo` permissions. Note that using RealSense cameras in `macOS` is unstable.
`ZMQCamera` and `Reachy2Camera` do not support auto-discovery. They must be configured manually by providing their network address and port or robot SDK settings.
## Use Cameras
## Use cameras
Below are two examples, demonstrating how to work with the API.
### Frame access modes
All camera classes implement three access modes for capturing frames:
| Method | Behavior | Blocks? | Best For |
| ------------------------- | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | -------------- | ---------------------------------------- |
| `read()` | Waits for the camera hardware to return a frame. May block for a long time depending on the camera and SDK. | Yes | Simple scripts, sequential capture |
| `async_read(timeout_ms)` | Returns the latest unconsumed frame from background thread. Blocks only if buffer is empty, up to `timeout_ms`. Raises `TimeoutError` if no frame arrives. | With a timeout | Control loops synchronized to camera FPS |
| `read_latest(max_age_ms)` | Peeks at the most recent frame in buffer (may be stale). Raises `TimeoutError` if frame is older than `max_age_ms`. | No | UI visualization, logging, monitoring |
### Usage examples
The following examples show how to use the camera API to configure and capture frames from different camera types.
- **Blocking and non-blocking frame capture** using an OpenCV-based camera
- **Asynchronous frame capture** using an OpenCV-based camera
- **Color and depth capture** using an Intel RealSense camera
> [!WARNING]
> Failing to cleanly disconnect cameras can cause resource leaks. Use the context manager protocol to ensure automatic cleanup:
>
> ```python
> with OpenCVCamera(config) as camera:
> ...
> ```
>
> You can also call `connect()` and `disconnect()` manually, but always use a `finally` block for the latter.
<hfoptions id="shell_restart">
<hfoption id="Open CV Camera">
@@ -94,30 +60,16 @@ config = OpenCVCameraConfig(
)
# Instantiate and connect an `OpenCVCamera`, performing a warm-up read (default).
with OpenCVCamera(config) as camera:
# Read a frame synchronously — blocks until hardware delivers a new frame
frame = camera.read()
print(f"read() call returned frame with shape:", frame.shape)
# Read a frame asynchronously with a timeout — returns the latest unconsumed frame or waits up to timeout_ms for a new one
try:
for i in range(10):
frame = camera.async_read(timeout_ms=200)
print(f"async_read call returned frame {i} with shape:", frame.shape)
except TimeoutError as e:
print(f"No frame received within timeout: {e}")
# Instantly return a frame - returns the most recent frame captured by the camera
try:
initial_frame = camera.read_latest(max_age_ms=1000)
for i in range(10):
frame = camera.read_latest(max_age_ms=1000)
print(f"read_latest call returned frame {i} with shape:", frame.shape)
print(f"Was a new frame received by the camera? {not (initial_frame == frame).any()}")
except TimeoutError as e:
print(f"Frame too old: {e}")
camera = OpenCVCamera(config)
camera.connect()
# Read frames asynchronously in a loop via `async_read(timeout_ms)`
try:
for i in range(10):
frame = camera.async_read(timeout_ms=200)
print(f"Async frame {i} shape:", frame.shape)
finally:
camera.disconnect()
```
<!-- prettier-ignore-end -->
@@ -159,10 +111,10 @@ finally:
</hfoption>
</hfoptions>
## Use your phone's camera
## Use your phone
<hfoptions id="use phone">
<hfoption id="iPhone & macOS">
<hfoption id="Mac">
To use your iPhone as a camera on macOS, enable the Continuity Camera feature:
@@ -172,49 +124,83 @@ To use your iPhone as a camera on macOS, enable the Continuity Camera feature:
For more details, visit [Apple support](https://support.apple.com/en-gb/guide/mac-help/mchl77879b8a/mac).
Your iPhone should be detected automatically when running the camera setup script in the next section.
</hfoption>
<hfoption id="OBS virtual camera">
<hfoption id="Linux">
If you want to use your phone as a camera using OBS, follow these steps to set up a virtual camera.
If you want to use your phone as a camera on Linux, follow these steps to set up a virtual camera
1. _(Linux only) Install `v4l2loopback-dkms` and `v4l-utils`_. These packages create virtual camera devices and verify their settings. Install with:
1. _Install `v4l2loopback-dkms` and `v4l-utils`_. Those packages are required to create virtual camera devices (`v4l2loopback`) and verify their settings with the `v4l2-ctl` utility from `v4l-utils`. Install them using:
```bash
<!-- prettier-ignore-start -->
```python
sudo apt install v4l2loopback-dkms v4l-utils
```
<!-- prettier-ignore-end -->
2. _Install the [DroidCam app](https://droidcam.app) on your phone_. This app is available for both iOS and Android.
3. _Download and install [OBS Studio](https://obsproject.com)_.
4. _Download and install the [DroidCam OBS plugin](https://droidcam.app/obs)_.
5. _Start OBS Studio_.
2. _Install [DroidCam](https://droidcam.app) on your phone_. This app is available for both iOS and Android.
3. _Install [OBS Studio](https://obsproject.com)_. This software will help you manage the camera feed. Install it using [Flatpak](https://flatpak.org):
6. _Add your phone as a source_. Follow the instructions [here](https://droidcam.app/obs/usage). Be sure to set the resolution to `640x480` to avoid the watermarks.
7. _Adjust resolution settings_. In OBS Studio, go to `File > Settings > Video` or `OBS > Preferences... > Video`. Change the `Base(Canvas) Resolution` and the `Output(Scaled) Resolution` to `640x480` by manually typing it.
<!-- prettier-ignore-start -->
```python
flatpak install flathub com.obsproject.Studio
```
<!-- prettier-ignore-end -->
4. _Install the DroidCam OBS plugin_. This plugin integrates DroidCam with OBS Studio. Install it with:
<!-- prettier-ignore-start -->
```python
flatpak install flathub com.obsproject.Studio.Plugin.DroidCam
```
<!-- prettier-ignore-end -->
5. _Start OBS Studio_. Launch with:
<!-- prettier-ignore-start -->
```python
flatpak run com.obsproject.Studio
```
<!-- prettier-ignore-end -->
6. _Add your phone as a source_. Follow the instructions [here](https://droidcam.app/obs/usage). Be sure to set the resolution to `640x480`.
7. _Adjust resolution settings_. In OBS Studio, go to `File > Settings > Video`. Change the `Base(Canvas) Resolution` and the `Output(Scaled) Resolution` to `640x480` by manually typing it in.
8. _Start virtual camera_. In OBS Studio, follow the instructions [here](https://obsproject.com/kb/virtual-camera-guide).
9. _Verify the virtual camera setup and resolution_.
- **Linux**: Use `v4l2-ctl` to list devices and check resolution:
```bash
v4l2-ctl --list-devices # find VirtualCam and note its /dev/videoX path
v4l2-ctl -d /dev/videoX --get-fmt-video # replace with your VirtualCam path
```
You should see `VirtualCam` listed and resolution `640x480`.
- **macOS**: Open Photo Booth or FaceTime and select "OBS Virtual Camera" as the input.
- **Windows**: The native Camera app doesn't support virtual cameras. Use a video conferencing app (Zoom, Teams) or run `lerobot-find-cameras opencv` directly to verify.
9. _Verify the virtual camera setup_. Use `v4l2-ctl` to list the devices:
<details>
<summary><strong>Troubleshooting</strong></summary>
<!-- prettier-ignore-start -->
```python
v4l2-ctl --list-devices
```
<!-- prettier-ignore-end -->
> The virtual camera resolution is incorrect.
You should see an entry like:
Delete the virtual camera source and recreate it. The resolution cannot be changed after creation.
```
VirtualCam (platform:v4l2loopback-000):
/dev/video1
```
> Error reading frame in background thread for OpenCVCamera(X): OpenCVCamera(X) frame width=640 or height=480 do not match configured width=1920 or height=1080.
10. _Check the camera resolution_. Use `v4l2-ctl` to ensure that the virtual camera output resolution is `640x480`. Change `/dev/video1` to the port of your virtual camera from the output of `v4l2-ctl --list-devices`.
This error is caused by OBS Virtual Camera advertising a `1920x1080` resolution despite rescaling. The only fix for now is to comment out the width and height check in `_postprocess_image()`.
<!-- prettier-ignore-start -->
```python
v4l2-ctl -d /dev/video1 --get-fmt-video
```
<!-- prettier-ignore-end -->
</details>
You should see an entry like:
```
>>> Format Video Capture:
>>> Width/Height : 640/480
>>> Pixel Format : 'YUYV' (YUYV 4:2:2)
```
Troubleshooting: If the resolution is not correct you will have to delete the Virtual Camera port and try again as it cannot be changed.
If everything is set up correctly, you can proceed with the rest of the tutorial.
</hfoption>
</hfoptions>
If everything is set up correctly, your phone will appear as a standard OpenCV camera and can be used with `OpenCVCamera`.
-165
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@@ -1,165 +0,0 @@
# Damiao Motors and CAN Bus
This guide covers setup and usage of Damiao motors with LeRobot via CAN bus communication.
Currently, only Linux is supported, as the OpenArms CAN adapter only has drivers for Linux.
## Linux CAN Setup
Before using Damiao motors, you need to set up the CAN interface on your Linux system.
### Install CAN Utilities
```bash
sudo apt-get install can-utils
```
### Configure CAN Interface (Manual)
For standard CAN FD (recommended for OpenArms):
```bash
sudo ip link set can0 down
sudo ip link set can0 type can bitrate 1000000 dbitrate 5000000 fd on
sudo ip link set can0 up
```
For standard CAN (without FD):
```bash
sudo ip link set can0 down
sudo ip link set can0 type can bitrate 1000000
sudo ip link set can0 up
```
### Configure CAN Interface (Using LeRobot)
LeRobot provides a utility script to setup and test CAN interfaces:
```bash
# Setup multiple interfaces (e.g., OpenArms Followers with 2 CAN buses)
lerobot-setup-can --mode=setup --interfaces=can0,can1
```
## Debugging CAN Communication
Use the built-in debug tools to test motor communication:
```bash
# Test motors on all interfaces
lerobot-setup-can --mode=test --interfaces=can0,can1
# Run speed/latency test
lerobot-setup-can --mode=speed --interfaces=can0
```
The test mode will scan for motors (IDs 0x01-0x08) and report which ones respond. Example output:
```
can0: UP (CAN FD)
Motor 0x01 (joint_1): ✓ FOUND
→ Response 0x11 [FD]: 00112233...
Motor 0x02 (joint_2): ✓ FOUND
Motor 0x03 (joint_3): ✗ No response
...
Summary: 2/8 motors found
```
## Usage
### Basic Setup
```python
from lerobot.motors import Motor
from lerobot.motors.damiao import DamiaoMotorsBus
# Define your motors with send/receive CAN IDs
motors = {
"joint_1": Motor(id=0x01, motor_type_str="dm8009", recv_id=0x11),
"joint_2": Motor(id=0x02, motor_type_str="dm4340", recv_id=0x12),
"joint_3": Motor(id=0x03, motor_type_str="dm4310", recv_id=0x13),
}
# Create the bus
bus = DamiaoMotorsBus(
port="can0", # Linux socketcan interface
motors=motors,
)
# Connect
bus.connect()
```
### Reading Motor States
```python
# Read single motor position (degrees)
position = bus.read("Present_Position", "joint_1")
# Read from multiple motors
positions = bus.sync_read("Present_Position") # All motors
positions = bus.sync_read("Present_Position", ["joint_1", "joint_2"])
# Read all states at once (position, velocity, torque)
states = bus.sync_read_all_states()
# Returns: {'joint_1': {'position': 45.2, 'velocity': 1.3, 'torque': 0.5}, ...}
```
### Writing Motor Commands
```python
# Enable torque
bus.enable_torque()
# Set goal position (degrees)
bus.write("Goal_Position", "joint_1", 45.0)
# Set positions for multiple motors
bus.sync_write("Goal_Position", {
"joint_1": 45.0,
"joint_2": -30.0,
"joint_3": 90.0,
})
# Disable torque
bus.disable_torque()
```
## Configuration Options
| Parameter | Default | Description |
| -------------- | --------- | ----------------------------------------------------------- |
| `port` | - | CAN interface (`can0`) or serial port (`/dev/cu.usbmodem*`) |
| `use_can_fd` | `True` | Enable CAN FD for higher data rates |
| `bitrate` | `1000000` | Nominal bitrate (1 Mbps) |
| `data_bitrate` | `5000000` | CAN FD data bitrate (5 Mbps) |
## Motor Configuration
Each motor requires:
- `id`: CAN ID for sending commands
- `motor_type`: One of the supported motor types (e.g., `"dm8009"`, `"dm4340"`)
- `recv_id`: CAN ID for receiving responses
OpenArms default IDs follow the pattern: send ID `0x0N`, receive ID `0x1N` where N is the joint number.
## Troubleshooting
### No Response from Motors
1. **Check power**
2. **Verify CAN wiring**: Check CAN-H, CAN-L, and GND connections
3. **Check motor IDs**: Use Damiao Debugging Tools to verify/configure IDs
4. **Test CAN interface**: Run `candump can0` to see if messages are being received
5. **Run diagnostics**: `lerobot-setup-can --mode=test --interfaces=can0`
### Motor Timeout Parameter
If motors were configured with timeout=0, they won't respond to commands. Use Damiao Debugging Tools to set a non-zero timeout value.
### Verify CAN FD Status
```bash
ip -d link show can0 | grep fd
```
-278
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@@ -1,278 +0,0 @@
# Using Subtasks in LeRobot Datasets
Subtask support in robotics datasets has proven effective in improving robot reasoning and understanding. Subtasks are particularly useful for:
- **Hierarchical policies**: Building policies that include subtask predictions to visualize robot reasoning in real time
- **Reward modeling**: Helping reward models understand task progression (e.g., SARM-style stage-aware reward models)
- **Task decomposition**: Breaking down complex manipulation tasks into atomic, interpretable steps
LeRobotDataset now supports subtasks as part of its dataset structure, alongside tasks.
## What are Subtasks?
While a **task** describes the overall goal (e.g., "Pick up the apple and place it in the basket"), **subtasks** break down the execution into finer-grained steps:
1. "Approach the apple"
2. "Grasp the apple"
3. "Lift the apple"
4. "Move to basket"
5. "Release the apple"
Each frame in the dataset can be annotated with its corresponding subtask, enabling models to learn and predict these intermediate stages.
<img
src="https://huggingface.co/datasets/huggingface/documentation-images/resolve/main/lerobot/subtask-asset.png"
alt="An overview of subtask annotation showing how frames are labeled with intermediate subtask stages"
width="80%"
/>
<p>
<em>Figure: Overview of subtask annotation.</em>
</p>
**Reference:** _Subtask-learning based for robot self-assembly in flexible collaborative assembly in manufacturing_, Original Article, Published: 19 April 2022.
## Dataset Structure
Subtask information is stored in the dataset metadata:
```
my-dataset/
├── data/
│ └── ...
├── meta/
│ ├── info.json
│ ├── stats.json
│ ├── tasks.parquet
│ ├── subtasks.parquet # Subtask index → subtask string mapping
│ └── episodes/
│ └── ...
└── videos/
└── ...
```
### Subtasks Parquet File
The `meta/subtasks.parquet` file maps subtask indices to their natural language descriptions:
| subtask_index | subtask (index column) |
| ------------- | ---------------------- |
| 0 | "Approach the apple" |
| 1 | "Grasp the apple" |
| 2 | "Lift the apple" |
| ... | ... |
### Frame-Level Annotations
Each frame in the dataset can include a `subtask_index` field that references the subtasks parquet file:
```python
# Example frame data in the parquet file
{
"index": 42,
"timestamp": 1.4,
"episode_index": 0,
"task_index": 0,
"subtask_index": 2, # References "Lift the apple"
"observation.state": [...],
"action": [...],
}
```
## Annotating Datasets with Subtasks
We provide a HuggingFace Space for easily annotating any LeRobotDataset with subtasks:
**[https://huggingface.co/spaces/lerobot/annotate](https://huggingface.co/spaces/lerobot/annotate)**
After completing your annotation:
1. Click "Push to Hub" to upload your annotated dataset
2. You can also run the annotation space locally by following the instructions at [github.com/huggingface/lerobot-annotate](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot-annotate)
## Loading Datasets with Subtasks
When you load a dataset with subtask annotations, the subtask information is automatically available:
```python
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset
# Load a dataset with subtask annotations
dataset = LeRobotDataset("jadechoghari/collect-fruit-annotated")
# Access a sample
sample = dataset[100]
# The sample includes both task and subtask information
print(sample["task"]) # "Collect the fruit"
print(sample["subtask"]) # "Grasp the apple"
print(sample["task_index"]) # tensor(0)
print(sample["subtask_index"]) # tensor(2)
```
### Checking for Subtask Support
You can check if a dataset has subtask annotations:
```python
# Check if subtasks are available
has_subtasks = (
"subtask_index" in dataset.features
and dataset.meta.subtasks is not None
)
if has_subtasks:
print(f"Dataset has {len(dataset.meta.subtasks)} unique subtasks")
print("Subtasks:", list(dataset.meta.subtasks.index))
```
## Using Subtasks for Training
### With the Tokenizer Processor
The `TokenizerProcessor` automatically handles subtask tokenization for Vision-Language Action (VLA) models:
```python
from lerobot.processor.tokenizer_processor import TokenizerProcessor
from lerobot.processor.pipeline import ProcessorPipeline
# Create a tokenizer processor
tokenizer_processor = TokenizerProcessor(
tokenizer_name_or_path="google/paligemma-3b-pt-224",
padding="max_length",
max_length=64,
)
# The processor will automatically tokenize subtasks if present in the batch
# and add them to the observation under:
# - "observation.subtask.tokens"
# - "observation.subtask.attention_mask"
```
When subtasks are available in the batch, the tokenizer processor adds:
- `observation.subtask.tokens`: Tokenized subtask text
- `observation.subtask.attention_mask`: Attention mask for the subtask tokens
### DataLoader with Subtasks
```python
import torch
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset
dataset = LeRobotDataset("jadechoghari/collect-fruit-annotated")
dataloader = torch.utils.data.DataLoader(
dataset,
batch_size=16,
shuffle=True,
)
for batch in dataloader:
# Access subtask information in the batch
subtasks = batch["subtask"] # List of subtask strings
subtask_indices = batch["subtask_index"] # Tensor of subtask indices
# Use for training hierarchical policies or reward models
print(f"Batch subtasks: {set(subtasks)}")
```
## Example Datasets with Subtask Annotations
Try loading a dataset with subtask annotations:
```python
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset
# Example dataset with subtask annotations
dataset = LeRobotDataset("jadechoghari/collect-fruit-annotated")
# Explore the subtasks
print("Available subtasks:")
for subtask_name in dataset.meta.subtasks.index:
print(f" - {subtask_name}")
# Get subtask distribution
subtask_counts = {}
for i in range(len(dataset)):
sample = dataset[i]
subtask = sample["subtask"]
subtask_counts[subtask] = subtask_counts.get(subtask, 0) + 1
print("\nSubtask distribution:")
for subtask, count in sorted(subtask_counts.items(), key=lambda x: -x[1]):
print(f" {subtask}: {count} frames")
```
## Use Cases
### 1. Hierarchical Policy Training
Train policies that predict both actions and current subtask:
```python
class HierarchicalPolicy(nn.Module):
def __init__(self, num_subtasks):
super().__init__()
self.action_head = nn.Linear(hidden_dim, action_dim)
self.subtask_head = nn.Linear(hidden_dim, num_subtasks)
def forward(self, observations):
features = self.encoder(observations)
actions = self.action_head(features)
subtask_logits = self.subtask_head(features)
return actions, subtask_logits
```
### 2. Stage-Aware Reward Modeling (SARM)
Build reward models that understand task progression:
```python
# SARM predicts:
# - Stage: Which subtask is being executed (discrete)
# - Progress: How far along the subtask (continuous 0-1)
class SARMRewardModel(nn.Module):
def forward(self, observations):
features = self.encoder(observations)
stage_logits = self.stage_classifier(features)
progress = self.progress_regressor(features)
return stage_logits, progress
```
### 3. Progress Visualization
Monitor robot execution by tracking subtask progression:
```python
def visualize_execution(model, observations):
for t, obs in enumerate(observations):
action, subtask_logits = model(obs)
predicted_subtask = subtask_names[subtask_logits.argmax()]
print(f"t={t}: Executing '{predicted_subtask}'")
```
## API Reference
### LeRobotDataset Properties
| Property | Type | Description |
| --------------------------- | ---------------------- | ------------------------------------------ |
| `meta.subtasks` | `pd.DataFrame \| None` | DataFrame mapping subtask names to indices |
| `features["subtask_index"]` | `dict` | Feature spec for subtask_index if present |
### Sample Keys
When subtasks are available, each sample includes:
| Key | Type | Description |
| --------------- | -------------- | ------------------------------------ |
| `subtask_index` | `torch.Tensor` | Integer index of the current subtask |
| `subtask` | `str` | Natural language subtask description |
## Related Resources
- [SARM Paper](https://arxiv.org/pdf/2509.25358) - Stage-Aware Reward Modeling for Long Horizon Robot Manipulation
- [LeRobot Annotate Space](https://huggingface.co/spaces/lerobot/annotate) - Interactive annotation tool
- [LeRobotDataset v3.0](./lerobot-dataset-v3) - Dataset format documentation
+15 -47
View File
@@ -1,11 +1,5 @@
# EarthRover Mini Plus
<img
src="https://huggingface.co/datasets/huggingface/documentation-images/resolve/main/lerobot/Earth_Rover_Mini_5_240c9adc-4f9e-44b7-982f-5d1dc24af1d8.png.webp"
alt="EarthRover Mini Plus"
width="70%"
/>
The EarthRover Mini Plus is a fully open source mobile robot that connects through the cloud using the Frodobots SDK. This lets you control the robot and record datasets for training AI models.
## What You Need
@@ -13,47 +7,28 @@ The EarthRover Mini Plus is a fully open source mobile robot that connects throu
### Hardware
- EarthRover Mini robot
- Computer with Python 3.12 or newer
- Computer with Python 3.10 or newer
- Internet connection
### Setting Up the Frodobots SDK
The robot needs the [Frodobots SDK](https://github.com/frodobots-org/earth-rovers-sdk) running on your computer. Here's how:
The robot needs the [Frodobots SDK](https://github.com/Frodobots/earth-rovers-sdk) running on your computer. Here's how:
1. Download and install the SDK:
```bash
git clone https://github.com/frodobots-org/earth-rovers-sdk.git
git clone https://github.com/Frodobots/earth-rovers-sdk.git
cd earth-rovers-sdk
pip install -r requirements.txt
```
2. Save Credentials:
Write your .env variables with the SDK API key and bot name provided by the Frodobots team.
```bash
SDK_API_TOKEN=your_sdk_api_token_here
BOT_SLUG=your_bot_slug_here
CHROME_EXECUTABLE_PATH=/path/to/chrome_or_chromium
# Default value is MAP_ZOOM_LEVEL=18 https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Zoom_levels
MAP_ZOOM_LEVEL=18
MISSION_SLUG=your_mission_slug_here
# Image quality between 0.1 and 1.0 (default: 0.8)
# Recommended: 0.8 for better performance
IMAGE_QUALITY=0.8
# Image format: jpeg, png or webp (default: png)
# Recommended: jpeg for better performance and lower bandwidth usage
IMAGE_FORMAT=jpeg
```
3. Start the SDK:
2. Start the SDK:
```bash
hypercorn main:app --reload
```
4. Open your web browser and go to `http://localhost:8000`, then click "Join"
3. Open your web browser and go to `http://localhost:8000`, then click "Join"
The SDK gives you:
@@ -170,13 +145,13 @@ Once you can drive the robot well, you can start recording data to train AI mode
We use Hugging Face to store your data online. First, log in with your token from [Hugging Face settings](https://huggingface.co/settings/tokens):
```bash
hf auth login --token ${HUGGINGFACE_TOKEN} --add-to-git-credential
huggingface-cli login --token ${HUGGINGFACE_TOKEN} --add-to-git-credential
```
Store your Hugging Face username:
```bash
HF_USER=$(hf auth whoami | awk -F': *' 'NR==1 {print $2}')
HF_USER=$(huggingface-cli whoami | head -n 1)
echo $HF_USER
```
@@ -185,16 +160,13 @@ echo $HF_USER
Use the standard recording command:
```bash
lerobot-record \
python src/lerobot/scripts/lerobot_record.py \
--robot.type=earthrover_mini_plus \
--teleop.type=keyboard_rover \
--dataset.repo_id=your_username/dataset_name \
--dataset.num_episodes=2 \
--dataset.fps=10 \
--dataset.single_task="Navigate around obstacles" \
--dataset.streaming_encoding=true \
--dataset.encoder_threads=2 \
# --dataset.vcodec=auto \
--display_data=true
```
@@ -204,26 +176,22 @@ Replace `your_username/dataset_name` with your Hugging Face username and a name
Your dataset includes:
**Your Actions (2 features)**:
**Your Actions (2 things)**:
- `linear_velocity`: How much you moved forward/backward
- `angular_velocity`: How much you turned left/right
- How much you moved forward/backward
- How much you turned left/right
**Robot Observations (24 features)**:
**Robot Observations (12 things)**:
- Front camera video
- Rear camera video
- Current speed
- Battery level
- Orientation
- GPS (latitude, longitude, signal strength)
- Which way the robot is facing
- GPS location (latitude, longitude, signal strength)
- Network signal strength
- Vibration level
- Lamp state (on/off)
- Accelerometer (x, y, z)
- Gyroscope (x, y, z)
- Magnetometer (x, y, z)
- Wheel RPMs (4 wheels)
- Lamp status (on/off)
### Where Your Data Goes
+19 -26
View File
@@ -2,32 +2,14 @@
The **EnvHub** feature allows you to load simulation environments directly from the Hugging Face Hub with a single line of code. This unlocks a powerful new model for collaboration: instead of environments being locked away inside monolithic libraries, anyone can publish custom environments and share them with the community.
## What is EnvHub?
## Overview
EnvHub lets you create custom robotics simulation environments with your own robot models and scenarios, and make them easily usable by anyone through the LeRobot framework.
With EnvHub, you can:
EnvHub packages are stored on the Hugging Face Hub, and can be seamlessly pulled and used in your AI robotics projects through LeRobot with a single line of code.
Thanks to EnvHub, you can:
1. **Create and publish environments** to the Hugging Face Hub as Git repositories, and distribute complex physics simulations without packaging hassles
2. **Load environments** dynamically, without installing them as packages
3. **Version and track** environment changes using Git semantics
4. **Discover** new simulation tasks shared by the community
This design means you can go from discovering an interesting environment on the Hub to running experiments in seconds, or create your own custom robot and environment without worrying about dependency conflicts or complex installation procedures.
When you create an EnvHub package, you can build anything you want inside it and use any simulation tool you like: this is your own space to play with. The only requirement is that the package contains an `env.py` file that defines the environment and allows LeRobot to load and use your EnvHub package.
This `env.py` file needs to expose a small API so LeRobot can load and run it. In particular, you must provide a `make_env(n_envs: int = 1, use_async_envs: bool = False)` or `make_env(n_envs: int = 1, use_async_envs: bool = False, cfg: EnvConfig)` function, which is the main entry point for LeRobot. It should return one of:
- A `gym.vector.VectorEnv` (most common)
- A single `gym.Env` (will be automatically wrapped)
- A dict mapping `{suite_name: {task_id: VectorEnv}}` (for multi-task benchmarks)
You can also pass an `EnvConfig` object to `make_env` to configure the environment (e.g. the number of environments, task, camera name, initial states, control mode, episode length, etc.).
Finally, your environment must implement the standard `gym.vector.VectorEnv` interface so it works with LeRobot, including methods like `reset` and `step`.
- Load environments from the Hub instantly
- Share your custom simulation tasks with the community
- Version control your environments using Git
- Distribute complex physics simulations without packaging hassles
## Quick Start
@@ -47,6 +29,17 @@ env = make_env("lerobot/cartpole-env", trust_remote_code=True)
hash for reproducibility and security.
</Tip>
## What is EnvHub?
EnvHub is a framework that allows researchers and developers to:
1. **Publish environments** to the Hugging Face Hub as Git repositories
2. **Load environments** dynamically without installing them as packages
3. **Version and track** environment changes using Git semantics
4. **Discover** new simulation tasks shared by the community
This design means you can go from discovering an interesting environment on the Hub to running experiments in seconds, without worrying about dependency conflicts or complex installation procedures.
## Repository Structure
To make your environment loadable from the Hub, your repository must contain at minimum:
@@ -155,10 +148,10 @@ Upload your repository to Hugging Face:
pip install huggingface_hub
# Login to Hugging Face
hf auth login
huggingface-cli login
# Create a new repository
hf repo create my-org/my-custom-env
huggingface-cli repo create my-custom-env --type space --org my-org
# Initialize git and push
git init
-510
View File
@@ -1,510 +0,0 @@
# NVIDIA IsaacLab Arena & LeRobot
LeRobot EnvHub now supports **GPU-accelerated simulation** with IsaacLab Arena for policy evaluation at scale.
Train and evaluate imitation learning policies with high-fidelity simulation — all integrated into the LeRobot ecosystem.
<img
src="https://huggingface.co/nvidia/isaaclab-arena-envs/resolve/main/assets/Gr1OpenMicrowaveEnvironment.png"
alt="IsaacLab Arena - GR1 Microwave Environment"
style={{ maxWidth: "100%", borderRadius: "8px", marginBottom: "1rem" }}
/>
[IsaacLab Arena](https://github.com/isaac-sim/IsaacLab-Arena) integrates with NVIDIA IsaacLab to provide:
- 🤖 **Humanoid embodiments**: GR1, G1, Galileo with various configurations
- 🎯 **Manipulation & loco-manipulation tasks**: Door opening, pick-and-place, button pressing, and more
- ⚡ **GPU-accelerated rollouts**: Parallel environment execution on NVIDIA GPUs
- 🖼️ **RTX Rendering**: Evaluate vision-based policies with realistic rendering, reflections and refractions
- 📦 **LeRobot-compatible datasets**: Ready for training with GR00T N1x, PI0, SmolVLA, ACT, and Diffusion policies
- 🔄 **EnvHub integration**: Load environments from HuggingFace EnvHub with one line
## Installation
### Prerequisites
Hardware requirements are shared with Isaac Sim, and are detailed in [Isaac Sim Requirements](https://docs.isaacsim.omniverse.nvidia.com/5.1.0/installation/requirements.html).
- NVIDIA GPU with CUDA support
- NVIDIA driver compatible with IsaacSim 5.1.0
- Linux (Ubuntu 22.04 / 24.04)
### Setup
```bash
# 1. Create conda environment
conda create -y -n lerobot-arena python=3.11
conda activate lerobot-arena
conda install -y -c conda-forge ffmpeg=7.1.1
# 2. Install Isaac Sim 5.1.0
pip install "isaacsim[all,extscache]==5.1.0" --extra-index-url https://pypi.nvidia.com
# Accept NVIDIA EULA (required)
export ACCEPT_EULA=Y
export PRIVACY_CONSENT=Y
# 3. Install IsaacLab 2.3.0
git clone https://github.com/isaac-sim/IsaacLab.git
cd IsaacLab
git checkout v2.3.0
./isaaclab.sh -i
cd ..
# 4. Install IsaacLab Arena
git clone https://github.com/isaac-sim/IsaacLab-Arena.git
cd IsaacLab-Arena
git checkout release/0.1.1
pip install -e .
cd ..
# 5. Install LeRobot
git clone https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot.git
cd lerobot
pip install -e .
cd ..
# 6. Install additional dependencies
pip install onnxruntime==1.23.2 lightwheel-sdk==1.0.1 vuer[all]==0.0.70 qpsolvers==4.8.1
pip install numpy==1.26.0 # Isaac Sim 5.1 depends on numpy==1.26.0, this will be fixed in next release
```
## Evaluating Policies
### Pre-trained Policies
The following trained policies are available:
| Policy | Architecture | Task | Link |
| :-------------------------- | :----------- | :------------ | :----------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| pi05-arena-gr1-microwave | PI0.5 | GR1 Microwave | [HuggingFace](https://huggingface.co/nvidia/pi05-arena-gr1-microwave) |
| smolvla-arena-gr1-microwave | SmolVLA | GR1 Microwave | [HuggingFace](https://huggingface.co/nvidia/smolvla-arena-gr1-microwave) |
### Evaluate SmolVLA
```bash
pip install -e ".[smolvla]"
pip install numpy==1.26.0 # revert numpy to version 1.26
```
```bash
lerobot-eval \
--policy.path=nvidia/smolvla-arena-gr1-microwave \
--env.type=isaaclab_arena \
--env.hub_path=nvidia/isaaclab-arena-envs \
--rename_map='{"observation.images.robot_pov_cam_rgb": "observation.images.robot_pov_cam"}' \
--policy.device=cuda \
--env.environment=gr1_microwave \
--env.embodiment=gr1_pink \
--env.object=mustard_bottle \
--env.headless=false \
--env.enable_cameras=true \
--env.video=true \
--env.video_length=10 \
--env.video_interval=15 \
--env.state_keys=robot_joint_pos \
--env.camera_keys=robot_pov_cam_rgb \
--trust_remote_code=True \
--eval.batch_size=1
```
### Evaluate PI0.5
```bash
pip install -e ".[pi]"
pip install numpy==1.26.0 # revert numpy to version 1.26
```
<Tip>PI0.5 requires disabling torch compile for evaluation:</Tip>
```bash
TORCH_COMPILE_DISABLE=1 TORCHINDUCTOR_DISABLE=1 lerobot-eval \
--policy.path=nvidia/pi05-arena-gr1-microwave \
--env.type=isaaclab_arena \
--env.hub_path=nvidia/isaaclab-arena-envs \
--rename_map='{"observation.images.robot_pov_cam_rgb": "observation.images.robot_pov_cam"}' \
--policy.device=cuda \
--env.environment=gr1_microwave \
--env.embodiment=gr1_pink \
--env.object=mustard_bottle \
--env.headless=false \
--env.enable_cameras=true \
--env.video=true \
--env.video_length=15 \
--env.video_interval=15 \
--env.state_keys=robot_joint_pos \
--env.camera_keys=robot_pov_cam_rgb \
--trust_remote_code=True \
--eval.batch_size=1
```
<Tip>
To change the number of parallel environments, use the ```--eval.batch_size```
flag.
</Tip>
### What to Expect
During evaluation, you will see a progress bar showing the running success rate:
```
Stepping through eval batches: 8%|██████▍ | 4/50 [00:45<08:06, 10.58s/it, running_success_rate=25.0%]
```
### Video Recording
To enable video recording during evaluation, add the following flags to your command:
```bash
--env.video=true \
--env.video_length=15 \
--env.video_interval=15
```
For more details on video recording, see the [IsaacLab Recording Documentation](https://isaac-sim.github.io/IsaacLab/main/source/how-to/record_video.html).
<Tip>
When running headless with `--env.headless=true`, you must also enable cameras explicitly for camera enabled environments:
```bash
--env.headless=true --env.enable_cameras=true
```
</Tip>
### Output Directory
Evaluation videos are saved to the output directory with the following structure:
```
outputs/eval/<date>/<timestamp>_<env>_<policy>/videos/<task>_<env_id>/eval_episode_<n>.mp4
```
For example:
```
outputs/eval/2026-01-02/14-38-01_isaaclab_arena_smolvla/videos/gr1_microwave_0/eval_episode_0.mp4
```
## Training Policies
To learn more about training policies with LeRobot, please refer to the training documentation:
- [SmolVLA](./smolvla)
- [Pi0.5](./pi05)
- [GR00T N1.5](./groot)
Sample IsaacLab Arena datasets are available on HuggingFace Hub for experimentation:
| Dataset | Description | Frames |
| :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | :------------------------- | :----- |
| [Arena-GR1-Manipulation-Task](https://huggingface.co/datasets/nvidia/Arena-GR1-Manipulation-Task-v3) | GR1 microwave manipulation | ~4K |
| [Arena-G1-Loco-Manipulation-Task](https://huggingface.co/datasets/nvidia/Arena-G1-Loco-Manipulation-Task) | G1 loco-manipulation | ~4K |
## Environment Configuration
### Full Configuration Options
```python
from lerobot.envs.configs import IsaaclabArenaEnv
config = IsaaclabArenaEnv(
# Environment selection
environment="gr1_microwave", # Task environment
embodiment="gr1_pink", # Robot embodiment
object="power_drill", # Object to manipulate
# Simulation settings
episode_length=300, # Max steps per episode
headless=True, # Run without GUI
device="cuda:0", # GPU device
seed=42, # Random seed
# Observation configuration
state_keys="robot_joint_pos", # State observation keys (comma-separated)
camera_keys="robot_pov_cam_rgb", # Camera observation keys (comma-separated)
state_dim=54, # Expected state dimension
action_dim=36, # Expected action dimension
camera_height=512, # Camera image height
camera_width=512, # Camera image width
enable_cameras=True, # Enable camera observations
# Video recording
video=False, # Enable video recording
video_length=100, # Frames per video
video_interval=200, # Steps between recordings
# Advanced
mimic=False, # Enable mimic mode
teleop_device=None, # Teleoperation device
disable_fabric=False, # Disable fabric optimization
enable_pinocchio=True, # Enable Pinocchio for IK
)
```
### Using Environment Hub directly for advanced usage
Create a file called `test_env_load_arena.py` or [download from the EnvHub](https://huggingface.co/nvidia/isaaclab-arena-envs/blob/main/tests/test_env_load_arena.py):
```python
import logging
from dataclasses import asdict
from pprint import pformat
import torch
import tqdm
from lerobot.configs import parser
from lerobot.configs.eval import EvalPipelineConfig
@parser.wrap()
def main(cfg: EvalPipelineConfig):
"""Run random action rollout for IsaacLab Arena environment."""
logging.info(pformat(asdict(cfg)))
from lerobot.envs.factory import make_env
env_dict = make_env(
cfg.env,
n_envs=cfg.env.num_envs,
trust_remote_code=True,
)
env = next(iter(env_dict.values()))[0]
env.reset()
for _ in tqdm.tqdm(range(cfg.env.episode_length)):
with torch.inference_mode():
actions = env.action_space.sample()
obs, rewards, terminated, truncated, info = env.step(actions)
if terminated.any() or truncated.any():
obs, info = env.reset()
env.close()
if __name__ == "__main__":
main()
```
Run with:
```bash
python test_env_load_arena.py \
--env.environment=g1_locomanip_pnp \
--env.embodiment=gr1_pink \
--env.object=cracker_box \
--env.num_envs=4 \
--env.enable_cameras=true \
--env.seed=1000 \
--env.video=true \
--env.video_length=10 \
--env.video_interval=15 \
--env.headless=false \
--env.hub_path=nvidia/isaaclab-arena-envs \
--env.type=isaaclab_arena
```
## Creating New Environments
First create a new IsaacLab Arena environment by following the [IsaacLab Arena Documentation](https://isaac-sim.github.io/IsaacLab-Arena/release/0.1.1/index.html).
Clone our EnvHub repo:
```bash
git clone https://huggingface.co/nvidia/isaaclab-arena-envs
```
Modify the `example_envs.yaml` file based on your new environment.
[Upload](./envhub#step-3-upload-to-the-hub) your modified repo to HuggingFace EnvHub.
<Tip>
Your IsaacLab Arena environment code must be locally available during
evaluation. Users can clone your environment repository separately, or you can
bundle the environment code and assets directly in your EnvHub repo.
</Tip>
Then, when evaluating, use your new environment:
```bash
lerobot-eval \
--env.hub_path=<your-env-hub-path>/isaaclab-arena-envs \
--env.environment=<your new environment> \
...other flags...
```
We look forward to your contributions!
## Troubleshooting
### CUDA out of memory
Reduce `batch_size` or use a GPU with more VRAM:
```bash
--eval.batch_size=1
```
### EULA not accepted
Set environment variables before running:
```bash
export ACCEPT_EULA=Y
export PRIVACY_CONSENT=Y
```
### Video recording not working
Enable cameras when running headless:
```bash
--env.video=true --env.enable_cameras=true --env.headless=true
```
### Policy output dimension mismatch
Ensure `action_dim` matches your policy:
```bash
--env.action_dim=36
```
### libGLU.so.1 Errors during Isaac Sim initialization
Ensure you have the following dependencies installed, this is likely to happen on headless machines.
```bash
sudo apt update && sudo apt install -y libglu1-mesa libxt6
```
## See Also
- [EnvHub Documentation](./envhub.mdx) - General EnvHub usage
- [IsaacLab Arena GitHub](https://github.com/isaac-sim/IsaacLab-Arena)
- [IsaacLab Documentation](https://isaac-sim.github.io/IsaacLab/)
## Lightwheel LW-BenchHub
[Lightwheel](https://www.lightwheel.ai) is bringing `Lightwheel-Libero-Tasks` and `Lightwheel-RoboCasa-Tasks` with 268 tasks to the LeRobot ecosystem.
LW-BenchHub collects and generates large-scale datasets via teleoperation that comply with the LeRobot specification, enabling out-of-the-box training and evaluation workflows.
With the unified interface provided by EnvHub, developers can quickly build end-to-end experimental pipelines.
### Install
Assuming you followed the [Installation](#installation) steps, you can install LW-BenchHub with:
```bash
conda install pinocchio -c conda-forge -y
pip install numpy==1.26.0 # revert numpy to version 1.26
sudo apt-get install git-lfs && git lfs install
git clone https://github.com/LightwheelAI/lw_benchhub
git lfs pull # Ensure LFS files (e.g., .usd assets) are downloaded
cd lw_benchhub
pip install -e .
```
For more detailed instructions, please refer to the [LW-BenchHub Documentation](https://docs.lightwheel.net/lw_benchhub/usage/Installation).
### Lightwheel Tasks Dataset
LW-BenchHub datasets are available on HuggingFace Hub:
| Dataset | Description | Tasks | Frames |
| :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | :---------------------- | :---- | :----- |
| [Lightwheel-Tasks-X7S](https://huggingface.co/datasets/LightwheelAI/Lightwheel-Tasks-X7S) | X7S LIBERO and RoboCasa | 117 | ~10.3M |
| [Lightwheel-Tasks-Double-Piper](https://huggingface.co/datasets/LightwheelAI/Lightwheel-Tasks-Double-Piper) | Double-Piper LIBERO | 130 | ~6.0M |
| [Lightwheel-Tasks-G1-Controller](https://huggingface.co/datasets/LightwheelAI/Lightwheel-Tasks-G1-Controller) | G1-Controller LIBERO | 62 | ~2.7M |
| [Lightwheel-Tasks-G1-WBC](https://huggingface.co/datasets/LightwheelAI/Lightwheel-Tasks-G1-WBC) | G1-WBC RoboCasa | 32 | ~1.5M |
For training policies, refer to the [Training Policies](#training-policies) section.
### Evaluating Policies
#### Pre-trained Policies
The following trained policies are available:
| Policy | Architecture | Task | Layout | Robot | Link |
| :----------------------- | :----------- | :----------------------------- | :--------- | :-------------- | :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
| smolvla-double-piper-pnp | SmolVLA | L90K1PutTheBlackBowlOnThePlate | libero-1-1 | DoublePiper-Abs | [HuggingFace](https://huggingface.co/LightwheelAI/smolvla-double-piper-pnp/tree/main) |
#### Evaluate SmolVLA
```bash
lerobot-eval \
--policy.path=LightwheelAI/smolvla-double-piper-pnp \
--env.type=isaaclab_arena \
--rename_map='{"observation.images.left_hand_camera_rgb": "observation.images.left_hand", "observation.images.right_hand_camera_rgb": "observation.images.right_hand", "observation.images.first_person_camera_rgb": "observation.images.first_person"}' \
--env.hub_path=LightwheelAI/lw_benchhub_env \
--env.kwargs='{"config_path": "configs/envhub/example.yml"}' \
--trust_remote_code=true \
--env.state_keys=joint_pos \
--env.action_dim=12 \
--env.camera_keys=left_hand_camera_rgb,right_hand_camera_rgb,first_person_camera_rgb \
--policy.device=cuda \
--eval.batch_size=10 \
--eval.n_episodes=100
```
### Environment Configuration
Evaluation can be quickly launched by modifying the `robot`, `task`, and `layout` settings in the configuration file.
#### Full Configuration Options
```yml
# =========================
# Basic Settings
# =========================
disable_fabric: false
device: cuda:0
sensitivity: 1.0
step_hz: 50
enable_cameras: true
execute_mode: eval
episode_length_s: 20.0 # Episode length in seconds, increase if episodes timeout during eval
# =========================
# Robot Settings
# =========================
robot: DoublePiper-Abs # Robot type, DoublePiper-Abs, X7S-Abs, G1-Controller or G1-Controller-DecoupledWBC
robot_scale: 1.0
# =========================
# Task & Scene Settings
# =========================
task: L90K1PutTheBlackBowlOnThePlate # Task name
scene_backend: robocasa
task_backend: robocasa
debug_assets: null
layout: libero-1-1 # Layout and style ID
sources:
- objaverse
- lightwheel
- aigen_objs
object_projects: []
usd_simplify: false
seed: 42
# =========================
# Object Placement Retry Settings
# =========================
max_scene_retry: 4
max_object_placement_retry: 3
resample_objects_placement_on_reset: true
resample_robot_placement_on_reset: true
# =========================
# Replay Configuration Settings
# =========================
replay_cfgs:
add_camera_to_observation: true
render_resolution: [640, 480]
```
### See Also
- [LW-BenchHub GitHub](https://github.com/LightwheelAI/LW-BenchHub)
- [LW-BenchHub Documentation](https://docs.lightwheel.net/lw_benchhub/)
+3 -4
View File
@@ -137,8 +137,7 @@ from lerobot.teleoperators import ( # noqa: F401
Teleoperator,
TeleoperatorConfig,
make_teleoperator_from_config,
so_leader,
bi_so_leader,
so101_leader,
)
from lerobot.utils.robot_utils import precise_sleep
from lerobot.utils.utils import init_logging
@@ -197,7 +196,7 @@ def teleop_loop(teleop: Teleoperator, env: gym.Env, fps: int):
obs, info = env.reset()
dt_s = time.perf_counter() - loop_start
precise_sleep(max(1 / fps - dt_s, 0.0))
precise_sleep(1 / fps - dt_s)
loop_s = time.perf_counter() - loop_start
print(f"\ntime: {loop_s * 1e3:.2f}ms ({1 / loop_s:.0f} Hz)")
@@ -223,7 +222,7 @@ def teleoperate(cfg: TeleoperateConfig):
def main():
teleoperate(TeleoperateConfig(
teleop=so_leader.SO101LeaderConfig(
teleop=so101_leader.SO101LeaderConfig(
port="/dev/ttyACM0",
id='leader',
use_degrees=False,
+4 -13
View File
@@ -12,12 +12,6 @@ Developers and researchers can post-train GR00T N1.5 with their own real or synt
GR00T N1.5 (specifically the GR00T-N1.5-3B model) is built using pre-trained vision and language encoders. It utilizes a flow matching action transformer to model a chunk of actions, conditioned on vision, language, and proprioception.
<img
src="https://huggingface.co/datasets/huggingface/documentation-images/resolve/main/lerobot/lerobot-groot-paper1%20(1).png"
alt="An overview of GR00T"
width="80%"
/>
Its strong performance comes from being trained on an expansive and diverse humanoid dataset, which includes:
- Real captured data from robots.
@@ -109,7 +103,7 @@ Once you have trained your model using your parameters you can run inference in
```bash
lerobot-record \
--robot.type=bi_so_follower \
--robot.type=bi_so100_follower \
--robot.left_arm_port=/dev/ttyACM1 \
--robot.right_arm_port=/dev/ttyACM0 \
--robot.id=bimanual_follower \
@@ -120,12 +114,9 @@ lerobot-record \
--display_data=true \
--dataset.repo_id=<user>/eval_groot-bimanual \
--dataset.num_episodes=10 \
--dataset.single_task="Grab and handover the red cube to the other arm" \
--dataset.streaming_encoding=true \
--dataset.encoder_threads=2 \
# --dataset.vcodec=auto \
--policy.path=<user>/groot-bimanual \ # your trained model
--dataset.episode_time_s=30 \
--dataset.single_task="Grab and handover the red cube to the other arm"
--policy.path=<user>/groot-bimanual # your trained model
--dataset.episode_time_s=30
--dataset.reset_time_s=10
```
+5 -11
View File
@@ -224,15 +224,12 @@ lerobot-record \
--teleop.port=/dev/tty.usbmodem1201 \
--teleop.id=right \
--teleop.side=right \
--dataset.repo_id=<USER>/hand_record_test_with_video_data \
--dataset.repo_id=nepyope/hand_record_test_with_video_data \
--dataset.single_task="Hand recording test with video data" \
--dataset.num_episodes=1 \
--dataset.episode_time_s=5 \
--dataset.push_to_hub=true \
--dataset.private=true \
--dataset.streaming_encoding=true \
--dataset.encoder_threads=2 \
# --dataset.vcodec=auto \
--display_data=true
```
@@ -244,7 +241,7 @@ lerobot-replay \
--robot.port=/dev/tty.usbmodem58760432281 \
--robot.id=right \
--robot.side=right \
--dataset.repo_id=<USER>/hand_record_test_with_camera \
--dataset.repo_id=nepyope/hand_record_test_with_camera \
--dataset.episode=0
```
@@ -252,13 +249,13 @@ lerobot-replay \
```bash
lerobot-train \
--dataset.repo_id=<USER>/hand_record_test_with_video_data \
--dataset.repo_id=nepyope/hand_record_test_with_video_data \
--policy.type=act \
--output_dir=outputs/train/hopejr_hand \
--job_name=hopejr \
--policy.device=mps \
--wandb.enable=true \
--policy.repo_id=<USER>/hand_test_policy
--policy.repo_id=nepyope/hand_test_policy
```
### Evaluate
@@ -273,11 +270,8 @@ lerobot-record \
--robot.side=right \
--robot.cameras='{"main": {"type": "opencv", "index_or_path": 0, "width": 640, "height": 480, "fps": 30}}' \
--display_data=false \
--dataset.repo_id=<USER>/eval_hopejr \
--dataset.repo_id=nepyope/eval_hopejr \
--dataset.single_task="Evaluate hopejr hand policy" \
--dataset.num_episodes=10 \
--dataset.streaming_encoding=true \
--dataset.encoder_threads=2 \
# --dataset.vcodec=auto \
--policy.path=outputs/train/hopejr_hand/checkpoints/last/pretrained_model
```
+16 -22
View File
@@ -58,8 +58,8 @@ lerobot-teleoperate \
<!-- prettier-ignore-start -->
```python
from lerobot.teleoperators.so_leader import SO101LeaderConfig, SO101Leader
from lerobot.robots.so_follower import SO101FollowerConfig, SO101Follower
from lerobot.teleoperators.so101_leader import SO101LeaderConfig, SO101Leader
from lerobot.robots.so101_follower import SO101FollowerConfig, SO101Follower
robot_config = SO101FollowerConfig(
port="/dev/tty.usbmodem58760431541",
@@ -159,13 +159,13 @@ We use the Hugging Face hub features for uploading your dataset. If you haven't
Add your token to the CLI by running this command:
```bash
hf auth login --token ${HUGGINGFACE_TOKEN} --add-to-git-credential
huggingface-cli login --token ${HUGGINGFACE_TOKEN} --add-to-git-credential
```
Then store your Hugging Face repository name in a variable:
```bash
HF_USER=$(NO_COLOR=1 hf auth whoami | awk -F': *' 'NR==1 {print $2}')
HF_USER=$(hf auth whoami | head -n 1)
echo $HF_USER
```
@@ -185,10 +185,7 @@ lerobot-record \
--display_data=true \
--dataset.repo_id=${HF_USER}/record-test \
--dataset.num_episodes=5 \
--dataset.single_task="Grab the black cube" \
--dataset.streaming_encoding=true \
# --dataset.vcodec=auto \
--dataset.encoder_threads=2
--dataset.single_task="Grab the black cube"
```
</hfoption>
<hfoption id="API example">
@@ -198,9 +195,9 @@ lerobot-record \
from lerobot.cameras.opencv.configuration_opencv import OpenCVCameraConfig
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset
from lerobot.datasets.utils import hw_to_dataset_features
from lerobot.robots.so_follower import SO100Follower, SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.teleoperators.so_leader.config_so100_leader import SO100LeaderConfig
from lerobot.teleoperators.so_leader.so100_leader import SO100Leader
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower import SO100Follower, SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.teleoperators.so100_leader.config_so100_leader import SO100LeaderConfig
from lerobot.teleoperators.so100_leader.so100_leader import SO100Leader
from lerobot.utils.control_utils import init_keyboard_listener
from lerobot.utils.utils import log_say
from lerobot.utils.visualization_utils import init_rerun
@@ -327,7 +324,7 @@ You can look for other LeRobot datasets on the hub by searching for `LeRobot` [t
You can also push your local dataset to the Hub manually, running:
```bash
hf upload ${HF_USER}/record-test ~/.cache/huggingface/lerobot/{repo-id} --repo-type dataset
huggingface-cli upload ${HF_USER}/record-test ~/.cache/huggingface/lerobot/{repo-id} --repo-type dataset
```
#### Record function
@@ -411,8 +408,8 @@ lerobot-replay \
import time
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset
from lerobot.robots.so_follower.config_so100_follower import SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so_follower.so100_follower import SO100Follower
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.config_so100_follower import SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.so100_follower import SO100Follower
from lerobot.utils.robot_utils import precise_sleep
from lerobot.utils.utils import log_say
@@ -435,7 +432,7 @@ for idx in range(dataset.num_frames):
}
robot.send_action(action)
precise_sleep(max(1.0 / dataset.fps - (time.perf_counter() - t0), 0.0))
precise_sleep(1.0 / dataset.fps - (time.perf_counter() - t0))
robot.disconnect()
```
@@ -491,7 +488,7 @@ If your local computer doesn't have a powerful GPU you could utilize Google Cola
Once training is done, upload the latest checkpoint with:
```bash
hf upload ${HF_USER}/act_so101_test \
huggingface-cli upload ${HF_USER}/act_so101_test \
outputs/train/act_so101_test/checkpoints/last/pretrained_model
```
@@ -499,7 +496,7 @@ You can also upload intermediate checkpoints with:
```bash
CKPT=010000
hf upload ${HF_USER}/act_so101_test${CKPT} \
huggingface-cli upload ${HF_USER}/act_so101_test${CKPT} \
outputs/train/act_so101_test/checkpoints/${CKPT}/pretrained_model
```
@@ -518,9 +515,6 @@ lerobot-record \
--display_data=false \
--dataset.repo_id=${HF_USER}/eval_so100 \
--dataset.single_task="Put lego brick into the transparent box" \
--dataset.streaming_encoding=true \
--dataset.encoder_threads=2 \
# --dataset.vcodec=auto \
# <- Teleop optional if you want to teleoperate in between episodes \
# --teleop.type=so100_leader \
# --teleop.port=/dev/ttyACM0 \
@@ -537,8 +531,8 @@ from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset
from lerobot.datasets.utils import hw_to_dataset_features
from lerobot.policies.act.modeling_act import ACTPolicy
from lerobot.policies.factory import make_pre_post_processors
from lerobot.robots.so_follower.config_so100_follower import SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so_follower.so100_follower import SO100Follower
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.config_so100_follower import SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.so100_follower import SO100Follower
from lerobot.scripts.lerobot_record import record_loop
from lerobot.utils.control_utils import init_keyboard_listener
from lerobot.utils.utils import log_say
+14 -70
View File
@@ -1,57 +1,30 @@
# Installation
This guide uses `conda` (via miniforge) to manage environments (recommended). If you prefer another environment manager (e.g. `uv`, `venv`), ensure you have Python >=3.12 and `ffmpeg` installed with the `libsvtav1` encoder, then skip ahead to [Environment Setup](#step-2-environment-setup).
## Step 1 (`conda` only): Install [`miniforge`](https://conda-forge.org/download/)
## Install [`miniforge`](https://conda-forge.org/download/)
```bash
wget "https://github.com/conda-forge/miniforge/releases/latest/download/Miniforge3-$(uname)-$(uname -m).sh"
bash Miniforge3-$(uname)-$(uname -m).sh
```
## Step 2: Environment Setup
## Environment Setup
Create a virtual environment with Python 3.12:
Create a virtual environment with Python 3.10, using conda:
<!-- prettier-ignore-start -->
<hfoptions id="create_venv">
<hfoption id="conda">
```bash
conda create -y -n lerobot python=3.12
conda create -y -n lerobot python=3.10
```
</hfoption>
<hfoption id="uv">
Then activate your conda environment, you have to do this each time you open a shell to use lerobot:
```bash
uv python install 3.12
uv venv --python 3.12
```
</hfoption>
</hfoptions>
<!-- prettier-ignore-end -->
Then activate your virtual environment, you have to do this each time you open a shell to use lerobot:
<!-- prettier-ignore-start -->
<hfoptions id="activate_venv">
<hfoption id="conda">```bash
conda activate lerobot
```</hfoption>
<hfoption id="uv">
```bash
# Linux/macOSsource
source .venv/bin/activate
# Windows PowerShell
source .venv\Scripts\Activate.ps1
```
</hfoption>
</hfoptions>
<!-- prettier-ignore-end -->
When using `conda`, install `ffmpeg` in your environment:
```bash
conda install ffmpeg -c conda-forge
ffmpeg -version # ffmpeg 8.X is not yet supported !
```
> [!TIP]
@@ -65,17 +38,7 @@ ffmpeg -version # ffmpeg 8.X is not yet supported !
>
> - _[On Linux only]_ If you want to bring your own ffmpeg: Install [ffmpeg build dependencies](https://trac.ffmpeg.org/wiki/CompilationGuide/Ubuntu#GettheDependencies) and [compile ffmpeg from source with libsvtav1](https://trac.ffmpeg.org/wiki/CompilationGuide/Ubuntu#libsvtav1), and make sure you use the corresponding ffmpeg binary to your install with `which ffmpeg`.
> [!NOTE]
> When installing LeRobot inside WSL (Windows Subsystem for Linux), make sure to install `evdev` with the following command:
>
> ```bash
> conda install evdev -c conda-forge
> ```
> [!IMPORTANT]
> If you are using `uv` you will have to install `ffmpeg` system-wide (outside of the virtual environment). You rely on `uv` and `torchcodec` ability to dynamically link to the system `ffmpeg`.
## Step 3: Install LeRobot 🤗
## Install LeRobot 🤗
### From Source
@@ -88,45 +51,23 @@ cd lerobot
Then, install the library in editable mode. This is useful if you plan to contribute to the code.
<!-- prettier-ignore-start -->
<hfoptions id="install_lerobot_src">
<hfoption id="conda">
```bash
pip install -e .
```
</hfoption>
<hfoption id="uv">
```bash
uv pip install -e .
```
</hfoption>
</hfoptions>
<!-- prettier-ignore-end -->
### Installation from PyPI
**Core Library:**
Install the base package with:
<!-- prettier-ignore-start -->
<hfoptions id="install_lerobot_pypi">
<hfoption id="conda">
```bash
pip install lerobot
```
</hfoption>
<hfoption id="uv">
```bash
uv pip install lerobot
```
</hfoption>
</hfoptions>
<!-- prettier-ignore-end -->
_This installs only the default dependencies._
**Extra Features:**
To install additional functionality, use one of the following (If you are using `uv`, replace `pip install` with `uv pip install` in the commands below.):
To install additional functionality, use one of the following:
```bash
pip install 'lerobot[all]' # All available features
@@ -140,10 +81,13 @@ _Replace `[...]` with your desired features._
For a full list of optional dependencies, see:
https://pypi.org/project/lerobot/
> [!NOTE]
> For lerobot 0.4.0, if you want to install pi, you will have to do: `pip install "lerobot[pi]@git+https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot.git"`
### Troubleshooting
If you encounter build errors, you may need to install additional dependencies: `cmake`, `build-essential`, and `ffmpeg libs`.
To install these for Linux run:
To install these for linux run:
```bash
sudo apt-get install cmake build-essential python3-dev pkg-config libavformat-dev libavcodec-dev libavdevice-dev libavutil-dev libswscale-dev libswresample-dev libavfilter-dev
@@ -153,7 +97,7 @@ For other systems, see: [Compiling PyAV](https://pyav.org/docs/develop/overview/
## Optional dependencies
LeRobot provides optional extras for specific functionalities. Multiple extras can be combined (e.g., `.[aloha,feetech]`). For all available extras, refer to `pyproject.toml`. If you are using `uv`, replace `pip install` with `uv pip install` in the commands below.
LeRobot provides optional extras for specific functionalities. Multiple extras can be combined (e.g., `.[aloha,feetech]`). For all available extras, refer to `pyproject.toml`.
### Simulations
+1 -1
View File
@@ -18,7 +18,7 @@ If you're using Feetech or Dynamixel motors, LeRobot provides built-in bus inter
- [`DynamixelMotorsBus`](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/src/lerobot/motors/dynamixel/dynamixel.py) for controlling Dynamixel servos
Please refer to the [`MotorsBus`](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/src/lerobot/motors/motors_bus.py) abstract class to learn about its API.
For a good example of how it can be used, you can have a look at our own [SO101 follower implementation](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/src/lerobot/robots/so_follower/so101_follower/so101_follower.py)
For a good example of how it can be used, you can have a look at our own [SO101 follower implementation](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/src/lerobot/robots/so101_follower/so101_follower.py)
Use these if compatible. Otherwise, you'll need to find or write a Python interface (not covered in this tutorial):
+3 -9
View File
@@ -1,11 +1,5 @@
# LeKiwi
<img
src="https://huggingface.co/datasets/huggingface/documentation-images/resolve/main/lerobot/1740517739083.jpeg"
alt="LeKiwi"
width="70%"
/>
In the steps below, we explain how to assemble the LeKiwi mobile robot.
## Source the parts
@@ -210,7 +204,7 @@ lerobot-calibrate \
<!-- prettier-ignore-start -->
```python
from lerobot.teleoperators.so_leader import SO100LeaderConfig, SO100Leader
from lerobot.teleoperators.so100_leader import SO100LeaderConfig, SO100Leader
config = SO100LeaderConfig(
port="/dev/tty.usbmodem58760431551",
@@ -279,13 +273,13 @@ We use the Hugging Face hub features for uploading your dataset. If you haven't
Add your token to the CLI by running this command:
```bash
hf auth login --token ${HUGGINGFACE_TOKEN} --add-to-git-credential
huggingface-cli login --token ${HUGGINGFACE_TOKEN} --add-to-git-credential
```
Then store your Hugging Face repository name in a variable:
```bash
HF_USER=$(hf auth whoami | awk -F': *' 'NR==1 {print $2}')
HF_USER=$(huggingface-cli whoami | head -n 1)
echo $HF_USER
```
+1 -4
View File
@@ -41,10 +41,7 @@ lerobot-record \
--display_data=true \
--dataset.repo_id=${HF_USER}/record-test \
--dataset.num_episodes=5 \
--dataset.single_task="Grab the black cube" \
--dataset.streaming_encoding=true \
# --dataset.vcodec=auto \
--dataset.encoder_threads=2
--dataset.single_task="Grab the black cube"
```
See the [recording guide](./il_robots#record-a-dataset) for more details.
-1
View File
@@ -42,7 +42,6 @@ lerobot-eval \
```
- `--env.task` picks the suite (`libero_object`, `libero_spatial`, etc.).
- `--env.task_ids` picks task ids to run (`[0]`, `[1,2,3]`, etc.). Omit this flag (or set it to `null`) to run all tasks in the suite.
- `--eval.batch_size` controls how many environments run in parallel.
- `--eval.n_episodes` sets how many episodes to run in total.
-197
View File
@@ -1,197 +0,0 @@
## Order and Assemble the parts
First, assemble the OMX hardware following the official assembly guide.
OMX Assembly Guide: https://ai.robotis.com/omx/assembly_guide_omx.html
OMX robots are shipped preconfigured from the factory. Motor IDs, communication parameters, and joint offsets are already set, so no additional motor setup or calibration is required before using LeRobot.
## Install LeRobot 🤗
To install LeRobot, follow our [Installation Guide](./installation)
In addition to these instructions, you need to install the Dynamixel SDK:
```bash
pip install -e ".[dynamixel]"
```
## Connect the robot
To find the port for each bus servo adapter, run this script:
```bash
lerobot-find-port
```
This command runs and when prompted, disconnect the USB cable from either the leader or follower arm and press Enter. The output will show 'The port of this MotorsBus is [port]'. This identifies the port for the disconnected arm. Repeat for the other arm to identify both ports.
<hfoptions id="find_port">
<hfoption id="Mac">
Example output on macOS:
```
Finding all available ports for the MotorBus.
['/dev/tty.usbmodem575E0032081', '/dev/tty.usbmodem575E0031751']
Remove the USB cable from your MotorsBus and press Enter when done.
[...Disconnect corresponding leader or follower arm and press Enter...]
The port of this MotorsBus is /dev/tty.usbmodem575E0032081
Reconnect the USB cable.
```
Where the found port is: `/dev/tty.usbmodem575E0032081` corresponding to your leader or follower arm.
</hfoption>
<hfoption id="Linux">
On Linux, we strongly recommend using udev rules to assign persistent and human-readable device names to the OMX leader and follower arms. This avoids issues where device names such as ttyACM0 and ttyACM1 change when the robot is unplugged, replugged, or when the system is rebooted.
#### 1. Find your device serial numbers
You should have obtained the port numbers like ../../ttyACM? for the leader and follower using `lerobot-find-port`. You can match those results with the serial numbers using the `ls -l /dev/serial/by-id/` command.
To create udev rules, you need the unique serial number for each OMX device. The easiest way is to list devices under:
```bash
ls -l /dev/serial/by-id/
```
You will see output similar to:
```bash
usb-ROBOTIS_OpenRB-150_228BDD7B503059384C2E3120FF0A2B19-if00 -> ../../ttyACM0
usb-ROBOTIS_OpenRB-150_67E1ED68503059384C2E3120FF092234-if00 -> ../../ttyACM1
```
In each line, the serial number is the long string after `usb-ROBOTIS_OpenRB-150_` and before `-if00`.
Follower serial: `228BDD7B503059384C2E3120FF0A2B19`
Leader serial: `67E1ED68503059384C2E3120FF092234`
#### 2. Create the udev rule
Create a new udev rule file:
```bash
sudo nano /etc/udev/rules.d/99-omx.rules
```
Paste the following lines, replacing the serial numbers with the values you found above:
```bash
SUBSYSTEM=="tty", ATTRS{idVendor}=="0403", ATTRS{serial}=="228BDD7B503059384C2E3120FF0A2B19", SYMLINK+="omx_follower"
SUBSYSTEM=="tty", ATTRS{idVendor}=="0403", ATTRS{serial}=="67E1ED68503059384C2E3120FF092234", SYMLINK+="omx_leader"
```
Save the file and reload udev rules:
```bash
sudo udevadm control --reload-rules
sudo udevadm trigger
```
Now unplug and replug both devices once.
#### 3. Verify the symlinks
Check that the persistent device names exist:
```bash
ls -l /dev/omx_follower /dev/omx_leader
```
You should see them pointing to ttyACM\* devices:
```bash
/dev/omx_follower -> ttyACM*
/dev/omx_leader -> ttyACM*
```
These names remain stable across reboots and reconnections.
</hfoption>
</hfoptions>
## Teleoperate
After identifying the correct ports, you can directly teleoperate the follower arm using the leader arm.
<hfoptions id="teleoperate">
<hfoption id="Mac">
### Teleoperate without camera
```bash
lerobot-teleoperate \
--robot.type=omx_follower \
--robot.port=<your_follower_port> \
--robot.id=omx_follower_arm \
--teleop.type=omx_leader \
--teleop.port=<your_leader_port> \
--teleop.id=omx_leader_arm
```
During teleoperation, motions of the leader arm are mirrored in real time by the follower arm. OMX is already preconfigured, teleoperation can begin immediately without any calibration steps.
### Teleoperate with camera
You can also enable camera input during teleoperation by providing a camera configuration for the follower arm.
```bash
lerobot-teleoperate \
--robot.type=omx_follower \
--robot.port=<your_follower_port> \
--robot.id=omx_follower_arm \
--robot.cameras="{front: {type: opencv, index_or_path: '/dev/video0', width: 640, height: 480, fps: 30}}" \
--teleop.type=omx_leader \
--teleop.port=<your_leader_port> \
--teleop.id=omx_leader_arm \
--display_data=true
```
When the camera is enabled, the camera stream is displayed in real time and synchronized with the robot state. This setup is useful for visual monitoring and can be reused later for demonstration recording and imitation learning.
</hfoption>
<hfoption id="Linux">
### Teleoperate without camera
```bash
lerobot-teleoperate \
--robot.type=omx_follower \
--robot.port=/dev/omx_follower \
--robot.id=omx_follower_arm \
--teleop.type=omx_leader \
--teleop.port=/dev/omx_leader \
--teleop.id=omx_leader_arm
```
During teleoperation, motions of the leader arm are mirrored in real time by the follower arm. OMX is already preconfigured, teleoperation can begin immediately without any calibration steps.
### Teleoperate with camera
You can also enable camera input during teleoperation by providing a camera configuration for the follower arm.
```bash
lerobot-teleoperate \
--robot.type=omx_follower \
--robot.port=/dev/omx_follower \
--robot.id=omx_follower_arm \
--robot.cameras="{front: {type: opencv, index_or_path: '/dev/video0', width: 640, height: 480, fps: 30}}" \
--teleop.type=omx_leader \
--teleop.port=/dev/omx_leader \
--teleop.id=omx_leader_arm \
--display_data=true
```
When the camera is enabled, the camera stream is displayed in real time and synchronized with the robot state. This setup is useful for visual monitoring and can be reused later for demonstration recording and imitation learning.
</hfoption>
</hfoptions>
Congrats 🎉, your robot is all set to learn a task on its own.
> If you have any questions or need help, please reach out on [Discord](https://discord.com/invite/robotis).
-276
View File
@@ -1,276 +0,0 @@
# OpenArm
[OpenArm](https://openarm.dev) is an open-source 7DOF humanoid arm designed for physical AI research and deployment.
To get your OpenArm, assembled or DIY, and join the global community, browse verified and certified manufacturers worldwide at [openarm.dev](https://openarm.dev).
## What's Unique?
- **Human-Scale Design**: OpenArm is designed with human-like proportions, scaled for a person around 160-165cm tall. This provides an optimal balance between practical reach and manageable inertia for safe, responsive operation.
- **Safety-First Architecture**: Built with QDD backdrivable motors and high compliance, OpenArm prioritizes safe human-robot interaction while maintaining practical payload capabilities (6.0kg peak / 4.1kg nominal) for real-world tasks.
- **Built for Durability**: Critical structural components use aluminum and stainless steel construction, ensuring robust performance for repetitive data collection and continuous research use.
- **Fully Accessible & Buildable**: Every component, from CNC parts and 3D-printed casings to electrical wiring is designed to be purchasable and buildable by individual researchers and labs, with complete fabrication data provided.
- **Practical & Affordable**: At $6,500 USD for a complete bimanual system, OpenArm delivers research-grade capabilities at a fraction of traditional humanoid robot costs.
## Platform Requirements
<Tip warning={true}>
**Linux Only**: OpenArm currently only works on Linux. The CAN bus USB adapter
does not have macOS drivers and has not been tested on Windows.
</Tip>
## Safety Guide
Before operating OpenArm, please read the [official safety guide](https://docs.openarm.dev/getting-started/safety-guide). Key points:
- **Secure installation**: Fasten the arm to a flat, stable surface with screws or clamps
- **Safe distance**: Keep body parts and objects outside the range of motion during operation
- **Protective equipment**: Always wear safety goggles; use additional PPE as needed
- **Payload limits**: Do not exceed specified payload limits (6.0kg peak / 4.1kg nominal per arm)
- **Emergency stop**: Know the location and operation of the emergency stop device
- **Regular inspection**: Check for loose screws, damaged mechanical limits, unusual noises, and wiring damage
## Hardware Setup
Follow the official [OpenArm hardware documentation](https://docs.openarm.dev) for:
- Bill of materials and sourcing
- 3D printing instructions
- Mechanical assembly
- Electrical wiring
The hardware repositories are available at [github.com/enactic/openarm](https://github.com/enactic/openarm).
## CAN Bus Setup
OpenArm uses CAN bus communication with Damiao motors. Once you have the CAN bus USB adapter plugged into your Linux PC, follow the [Damiao Motors and CAN Bus guide](./damiao) to configure the interface.
Quick setup:
```bash
# Setup CAN interfaces
lerobot-setup-can --mode=setup --interfaces=can0,can1
# Test motor communication
lerobot-setup-can --mode=test --interfaces=can0,can1
```
## Install LeRobot 🤗
Follow our [Installation Guide](./installation), then install the Damiao motor support:
```bash
pip install -e ".[damiao]"
```
## Usage
### Follower Arm (Robot)
<hfoptions id="follower">
<hfoption id="Command">
```bash
lerobot-calibrate \
--robot.type=openarm_follower \
--robot.port=can0 \
--robot.side=right \
--robot.id=my_openarm_follower
```
</hfoption>
<hfoption id="API example">
```python
from lerobot.robots.openarm_follower import OpenArmFollower, OpenArmFollowerConfig
config = OpenArmFollowerConfig(
port="can0",
side="right", # or "left" for left arm
id="my_openarm_follower",
)
follower = OpenArmFollower(config)
follower.connect()
# Read current state
obs = follower.get_observation()
print(obs)
# Send action (position in degrees)
action = {
"joint_1.pos": 0.0,
"joint_2.pos": 0.0,
"joint_3.pos": 0.0,
"joint_4.pos": 45.0,
"joint_5.pos": 0.0,
"joint_6.pos": 0.0,
"joint_7.pos": 0.0,
"gripper.pos": 0.0,
}
follower.send_action(action)
follower.disconnect()
```
</hfoption>
</hfoptions>
### Leader Arm (Teleoperator)
The leader arm is used for teleoperation - manually moving it to control the follower arm.
<hfoptions id="leader">
<hfoption id="Command">
```bash
lerobot-calibrate \
--teleop.type=openarm_leader \
--teleop.port=can1 \
--teleop.id=my_openarm_leader
```
</hfoption>
<hfoption id="API example">
```python
from lerobot.teleoperators.openarm_leader import OpenArmLeader, OpenArmLeaderConfig
config = OpenArmLeaderConfig(
port="can1",
id="my_openarm_leader",
manual_control=True, # Disable torque for manual movement
)
leader = OpenArmLeader(config)
leader.connect()
# Read current position (as action to send to follower)
action = leader.get_action()
print(action)
leader.disconnect()
```
</hfoption>
</hfoptions>
### Teleoperation
To teleoperate OpenArm with leader-follower control:
```bash
lerobot-teleoperate \
--robot.type=openarm_follower \
--robot.port=can0 \
--robot.side=right \
--robot.id=my_follower \
--teleop.type=openarm_leader \
--teleop.port=can1 \
--teleop.id=my_leader
```
### Bimanual Teleoperation
To teleoperate a bimanual OpenArm setup with two leader and two follower arms:
```bash
lerobot-teleoperate \
--robot.type=bi_openarm_follower \
--robot.left_arm_config.port=can0 \
--robot.left_arm_config.side=left \
--robot.right_arm_config.port=can1 \
--robot.right_arm_config.side=right \
--robot.id=my_bimanual_follower \
--teleop.type=bi_openarm_leader \
--teleop.left_arm_config.port=can2 \
--teleop.right_arm_config.port=can3 \
--teleop.id=my_bimanual_leader
```
### Recording Data
To record a dataset during teleoperation:
```bash
lerobot-record \
--robot.type=openarm_follower \
--robot.port=can0 \
--robot.side=right \
--robot.id=my_follower \
--teleop.type=openarm_leader \
--teleop.port=can1 \
--teleop.id=my_leader \
--repo-id=my_hf_username/my_openarm_dataset \
--fps=30 \
--num-episodes=10
```
## Configuration Options
### Follower Configuration
| Parameter | Default | Description |
| --------------------- | --------- | ---------------------------------------------------------- |
| `port` | - | CAN interface (e.g., `can0`) |
| `side` | `None` | Arm side: `"left"`, `"right"`, or `None` for custom limits |
| `use_can_fd` | `True` | Enable CAN FD for higher data rates |
| `can_bitrate` | `1000000` | Nominal bitrate (1 Mbps) |
| `can_data_bitrate` | `5000000` | CAN FD data bitrate (5 Mbps) |
| `max_relative_target` | `None` | Safety limit for relative target positions |
| `position_kp` | Per-joint | Position control proportional gains |
| `position_kd` | Per-joint | Position control derivative gains |
### Leader Configuration
| Parameter | Default | Description |
| ------------------ | --------- | ----------------------------------- |
| `port` | - | CAN interface (e.g., `can1`) |
| `manual_control` | `True` | Disable torque for manual movement |
| `use_can_fd` | `True` | Enable CAN FD for higher data rates |
| `can_bitrate` | `1000000` | Nominal bitrate (1 Mbps) |
| `can_data_bitrate` | `5000000` | CAN FD data bitrate (5 Mbps) |
## Motor Configuration
OpenArm uses Damiao motors with the following default configuration:
| Joint | Motor Type | Send ID | Recv ID |
| --------------------------- | ---------- | ------- | ------- |
| joint_1 (Shoulder pan) | DM8009 | 0x01 | 0x11 |
| joint_2 (Shoulder lift) | DM8009 | 0x02 | 0x12 |
| joint_3 (Shoulder rotation) | DM4340 | 0x03 | 0x13 |
| joint_4 (Elbow flex) | DM4340 | 0x04 | 0x14 |
| joint_5 (Wrist roll) | DM4310 | 0x05 | 0x15 |
| joint_6 (Wrist pitch) | DM4310 | 0x06 | 0x16 |
| joint_7 (Wrist rotation) | DM4310 | 0x07 | 0x17 |
| gripper | DM4310 | 0x08 | 0x18 |
## Troubleshooting
### No Response from Motors
1. Check power supply connections
2. Verify CAN wiring (CAN-H, CAN-L, GND)
3. Run diagnostics: `lerobot-setup-can --mode=test --interfaces=can0`
4. See the [Damiao troubleshooting guide](./damiao#troubleshooting) for more details
### CAN Interface Not Found
Ensure the CAN interface is configured:
```bash
ip link show can0
```
## Resources
- [OpenArm Website](https://openarm.dev)
- [OpenArm Documentation](https://docs.openarm.dev)
- [OpenArm GitHub](https://github.com/enactic/openarm)
- [Safety Guide](https://docs.openarm.dev/getting-started/safety-guide)
- [Damiao Motors and CAN Bus](./damiao)
-62
View File
@@ -1,62 +0,0 @@
# Parameter efficient fine-tuning with 🤗 PEFT
[🤗 PEFT](https://github.com/huggingface/peft) (Parameter-Efficient Fine-Tuning) is a library for efficiently adapting
large pretrained models such as pre-trained policies (e.g., SmolVLA, π₀, ...) to new tasks without training all
of the model's parameters while yielding comparable performance.
Install the `lerobot[peft]` optional package to enable PEFT support.
To read about all the possible methods of adaption, please refer to the [🤗 PEFT docs](https://huggingface.co/docs/peft/index).
## Training SmolVLA
In this section we'll show you how to train a pre-trained SmolVLA policy with PEFT on the libero dataset.
For brevity we're only training on the `libero_spatial` subset. We will use `lerobot/smolvla_base` as the model
to parameter efficiently fine-tune:
```
lerobot-train \
--policy.path=lerobot/smolvla_base \
--policy.repo_id=your_hub_name/my_libero_smolvla \
--dataset.repo_id=HuggingFaceVLA/libero \
--policy.output_features=null \
--policy.input_features=null \
--policy.optimizer_lr=1e-3 \
--policy.scheduler_decay_lr=1e-4 \
--env.type=libero \
--env.task=libero_spatial \
--steps=100000 \
--batch_size=32 \
--peft.method_type=LORA \
--peft.r=64
```
Note the `--peft.method_type` parameter that let's you select which PEFT method to use. Here we use
[LoRA](https://huggingface.co/docs/peft/main/en/package_reference/lora) (Low-Rank Adapter) which is probably the most
popular fine-tuning method to date. Low-rank adaption means that we only fine-tune a matrix with comparably low rank
instead of the full weight matrix. This rank can be specified using the `--peft.r` parameter. The higher the rank
the closer you get to full fine-tuning
There are more complex methods that have more parameters. These are not yet supported, feel free to raise an issue
if you want to see a specific PEFT method supported.
By default, PEFT will target the `q_proj` and `v_proj` layers of the LM expert in SmolVLA. It will also target the
state and action projection matrices as they are most likely task-dependent. If you need to target different layers
you can use `--peft.target_modules` to specify which layers to target. You can refer to the respective PEFT method's
documentation to see what inputs are supported, (e.g., [LoRA's target_modules documentation](https://huggingface.co/docs/peft/main/en/package_reference/lora#peft.LoraConfig.target_modules)).
Usually a list of suffixes or a regex are supported. For example, to target the MLPs of the `lm_expert` instead of
the `q` and `v` projections, use:
```
--peft.target_modules='(model\.vlm_with_expert\.lm_expert\..*\.(down|gate|up)_proj|.*\.(state_proj|action_in_proj|action_out_proj|action_time_mlp_in|action_time_mlp_out))'
```
In case you need to fully fine-tune a layer instead of just adapting it, you can supply a list of layer suffixes
to the `--peft.full_training_modules` parameter:
```
--peft.full_training_modules=["state_proj"]
```
The learning rate and the scheduled target learning rate can usually be scaled by a factor of 10 compared to the
learning rate used for full fine-tuning (e.g., 1e-4 normal, so 1e-3 using LoRA).
+13 -17
View File
@@ -44,7 +44,7 @@ Modify the examples to use `PhoneOS.IOS` or `PhoneOS.ANDROID` in `PhoneConfig`.
Teleoperation example:
```python
```36:43:examples/phone_so100_teleop.py
from lerobot.teleoperators.phone.config_phone import PhoneConfig, PhoneOS
teleop_config = PhoneConfig(phone_os=PhoneOS.IOS) # or PhoneOS.ANDROID
@@ -66,13 +66,12 @@ Run on of the examples scripts to teleoperate, record a dataset, replay a datase
All scripts assume you configured your robot (e.g., SO-100 follower) and set the correct serial port.
Additionally you need to **copy the URDF of the robot into the examples folder**. For the examples in this tutorial (using SO100/SO101), copy the `SO101` folder from the [SO-ARM100 repo](https://github.com/TheRobotStudio/SO-ARM100/blob/main/Simulation/SO101) into the `examples/phone_to_so100/` directory, so that the URDF file path becomes `examples/phone_to_so100/SO101/so101_new_calib.urdf`.
Additionally you need to **copy the urdf of the robot to the examples folder**. For the examples in this tutorial (Using SO100/SO101) it is highly recommended to use the urdf in the [SO-ARM100 repo](https://github.com/TheRobotStudio/SO-ARM100/blob/main/Simulation/SO101/so101_new_calib.urdf)
- Run this example to teleoperate:
```bash
cd examples/phone_to_so100
python teleoperate.py
python examples/phone_to_so100/teleoperate.py
```
After running the example:
@@ -85,29 +84,26 @@ Additionally you can customize mapping or safety limits by editing the processor
- Run this example to record a dataset, which saves absolute end effector observations and actions:
```bash
cd examples/phone_to_so100
python record.py
python examples/phone_to_so100/record.py
```
- Run this example to replay recorded episodes:
```bash
cd examples/phone_to_so100
python replay.py
python examples/phone_to_so100/replay.py
```
- Run this example to evaluate a pretrained policy:
```bash
cd examples/phone_to_so100
python evaluate.py
python examples/phone_to_so100/evaluate.py
```
### Important pipeline steps and options
- Kinematics are used in multiple steps. We use [Placo](https://github.com/Rhoban/placo) which is a wrapper around Pinocchio for handling our kinematics. We construct the kinematics object by passing the robot's URDF and target frame. We set `target_frame_name` to the gripper frame.
```python
```examples/phone_to_so100/teleoperate.py
kinematics_solver = RobotKinematics(
urdf_path="./SO101/so101_new_calib.urdf",
target_frame_name="gripper_frame_link",
@@ -118,7 +114,7 @@ Additionally you can customize mapping or safety limits by editing the processor
- The `MapPhoneActionToRobotAction` step converts the calibrated phone pose and inputs into target deltas and gripper commands, below is shown what the step outputs.
```python
```src/lerobot/teleoperators/phone/phone_processor.py
action["enabled"] = enabled
action["target_x"] = -pos[1] if enabled else 0.0
action["target_y"] = pos[0] if enabled else 0.0
@@ -131,7 +127,7 @@ Additionally you can customize mapping or safety limits by editing the processor
- The `EEReferenceAndDelta` step converts target deltas to an absolute desired EE pose, storing a reference on enable, the `end_effector_step_sizes` are the step sizes for the EE pose and can be modified to change the motion speed.
```python
```examples/phone_to_so100/teleoperate.py
EEReferenceAndDelta(
kinematics=kinematics_solver,
end_effector_step_sizes={"x": 0.5, "y": 0.5, "z": 0.5},
@@ -142,7 +138,7 @@ Additionally you can customize mapping or safety limits by editing the processor
- The `EEBoundsAndSafety` step clamps EE motion to a workspace and checks for large ee step jumps to ensure safety. The `end_effector_bounds` are the bounds for the EE pose and can be modified to change the workspace. The `max_ee_step_m` are the step limits for the EE pose and can be modified to change the safety limits.
```python
```examples/phone_to_so100/teleoperate.py
EEBoundsAndSafety(
end_effector_bounds={"min": [-1.0, -1.0, -1.0], "max": [1.0, 1.0, 1.0]},
max_ee_step_m=0.10,
@@ -151,7 +147,7 @@ Additionally you can customize mapping or safety limits by editing the processor
- The `GripperVelocityToJoint` step turns a velocitylike gripper input into absolute gripper position using the current measured state. The `speed_factor` is the factor by which the velocity is multiplied.
```python
```examples/phone_to_so100/teleoperate.py
GripperVelocityToJoint(speed_factor=20.0)
```
@@ -161,7 +157,7 @@ We use different IK initial guesses in the kinematic steps. As initial guess eit
- Closed loop (used in record/eval): sets `initial_guess_current_joints=True` so IK starts from the measured joints each frame.
```python
```examples/phone_to_so100/record.py
InverseKinematicsEEToJoints(
kinematics=kinematics_solver,
motor_names=list(robot.bus.motors.keys()),
@@ -171,7 +167,7 @@ We use different IK initial guesses in the kinematic steps. As initial guess eit
- Open loop (used in replay): sets `initial_guess_current_joints=False` so IK continues from the previous IK solution rather than the measured state. This preserves action stability when we replay without feedback.
```python
```examples/phone_to_so100/replay.py
InverseKinematicsEEToJoints(
kinematics=kinematics_solver,
motor_names=list(robot.bus.motors.keys()),
+6 -18
View File
@@ -6,12 +6,6 @@
π₀ represents a breakthrough in robotics as the first general-purpose robot foundation model developed by [Physical Intelligence](https://www.physicalintelligence.company/blog/pi0). Unlike traditional robot programs that are narrow specialists programmed for repetitive motions, π₀ is designed to be a generalist policy that can understand visual inputs, interpret natural language instructions, and control a variety of different robots across diverse tasks.
<img
src="https://huggingface.co/datasets/huggingface/documentation-images/resolve/main/lerobot/lerobot-pi0%20(1).png"
alt="An overview of Pi0"
width="85%"
/>
### The Vision for Physical Intelligence
As described by Physical Intelligence, while AI has achieved remarkable success in digital domains, from chess-playing to drug discovery, human intelligence still dramatically outpaces AI in the physical world. To paraphrase Moravec's paradox, winning a game of chess represents an "easy" problem for AI, but folding a shirt or cleaning up a table requires solving some of the most difficult engineering problems ever conceived. π₀ represents a first step toward developing artificial physical intelligence that enables users to simply ask robots to perform any task they want, just like they can with large language models.
@@ -34,6 +28,11 @@ As described by Physical Intelligence, while AI has achieved remarkable success
pip install -e ".[pi]"
```
> [!NOTE]
> For lerobot 0.4.0, if you want to install pi tag, you will have to do: `pip install "lerobot[pi]@git+https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot.git"`.
>
> This will be solved in the next patch release
## Training Data and Capabilities
π₀ is trained on the largest robot interaction dataset to date, combining three key data sources:
@@ -55,7 +54,7 @@ policy.type=pi0
For training π₀, you can use the standard LeRobot training script with the appropriate configuration:
```bash
lerobot-train \
python src/lerobot/scripts/lerobot_train.py \
--dataset.repo_id=your_dataset \
--policy.type=pi0 \
--output_dir=./outputs/pi0_training \
@@ -65,8 +64,6 @@ lerobot-train \
--policy.compile_model=true \
--policy.gradient_checkpointing=true \
--policy.dtype=bfloat16 \
--policy.freeze_vision_encoder=false \
--policy.train_expert_only=false \
--steps=3000 \
--policy.device=cuda \
--batch_size=32
@@ -82,15 +79,6 @@ lerobot-train \
- [lerobot/pi0_base](https://huggingface.co/lerobot/pi0_base)
- [lerobot/pi0_libero](https://huggingface.co/lerobot/pi0_libero) (specifically trained on the Libero dataset)
### Training Parameters Explained
| Parameter | Default | Description |
| ----------------------- | ------- | ------------------------------------------- |
| `freeze_vision_encoder` | `false` | Do not freeze the vision encoder |
| `train_expert_only` | `false` | Do not freeze the VLM, train all parameters |
**💡 Tip**: Setting `train_expert_only=true` freezes the VLM and trains only the action expert and projections, allowing finetuning with reduced memory usage.
## License
This model follows the **Apache 2.0 License**, consistent with the original [OpenPI repository](https://github.com/Physical-Intelligence/openpi).
+6 -12
View File
@@ -36,6 +36,11 @@ This diverse training mixture creates a "curriculum" that enables generalization
pip install -e ".[pi]"
```
> [!NOTE]
> For lerobot 0.4.0, if you want to install pi tag, you will have to do: `pip install "lerobot[pi]@git+https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot.git"`.
>
> This will be solved in the next patch release
## Usage
To use π₀.₅ in your LeRobot configuration, specify the policy type as:
@@ -51,7 +56,7 @@ policy.type=pi05
Here's a complete training command for finetuning the base π₀.₅ model on your own dataset:
```bash
lerobot-train \
python src/lerobot/scripts/lerobot_train.py\
--dataset.repo_id=your_dataset \
--policy.type=pi05 \
--output_dir=./outputs/pi05_training \
@@ -62,8 +67,6 @@ lerobot-train \
--policy.gradient_checkpointing=true \
--wandb.enable=true \
--policy.dtype=bfloat16 \
--policy.freeze_vision_encoder=false \
--policy.train_expert_only=false \
--steps=3000 \
--policy.device=cuda \
--batch_size=32
@@ -79,15 +82,6 @@ lerobot-train \
- [lerobot/pi05_base](https://huggingface.co/lerobot/pi05_base)
- [lerobot/pi05_libero](https://huggingface.co/lerobot/pi05_libero) (specifically trained on the Libero dataset)
### Training Parameters Explained
| Parameter | Default | Description |
| ----------------------- | ------- | ------------------------------------------- |
| `freeze_vision_encoder` | `false` | Do not freeze the vision encoder |
| `train_expert_only` | `false` | Do not freeze the VLM, train all parameters |
**💡 Tip**: Setting `train_expert_only=true` freezes the VLM and trains only the action expert and projections, allowing finetuning with reduced memory usage.
If your dataset is not converted with `quantiles`, you can convert it with the following command:
```bash
-241
View File
@@ -1,241 +0,0 @@
# π₀-FAST (Pi0-FAST)
π₀-FAST is a **Vision-Language-Action model for general robot control** that uses autoregressive next-token prediction to model continuous robot actions.
## Model Overview
π₀-FAST combines the power of Vision-Language Models with a novel action tokenization approach called **FAST (Frequency-space Action Sequence Tokenization)**. This enables training autoregressive VLAs on highly dexterous tasks that are impossible with standard binning-based discretization, while training **up to 5x faster** than diffusion-based approaches like π₀.
<img
src="https://huggingface.co/datasets/huggingface/documentation-images/resolve/main/lerobot/lerobot-pifast.png"
alt="An overview of Pi0-FAST"
width="85%"
/>
### Why FAST?
Standard approaches for robot action tokenization use simple per-dimension, per-timestep binning schemes. While passable for simple behaviors, this rapidly breaks down for complex and dexterous skills that require precision and high-frequency control.
FAST solves this by compressing action sequences using signal processing techniques, resulting in a dense sequence of action tokens that can be predicted autoregressively—just like language tokens.
### How FAST Tokenization Works
The FAST tokenizer compresses action sequences through the following steps:
1. **Normalize**: Take a continuous action chunk of shape `(H, D)` where `H` is the horizon and `D` is the action dimension. Normalize using one of the supported normalization methods (Quantiles recommended to handle outliers).
2. **Discrete Cosine Transform (DCT)**: Apply DCT (via scipy) to each action dimension separately. DCT is a compression algorithm commonly used in image and audio codecs (JPEG, MP3).
3. **Quantization**: Round and remove insignificant coefficients for each action dimension, producing a sparse frequency matrix.
4. **Flatten**: Flatten the matrix into a 1D vector, with low-frequency components first.
5. **Byte Pair Encoding (BPE)**: Train a BPE tokenizer to compress the DCT coefficients into dense action tokens, typically achieving **10x compression** over prior tokenization approaches.
This approach can transform **any existing VLM** into a VLA by training it to predict these FAST tokens.
## Installation Requirements
1. Install LeRobot by following our [Installation Guide](./installation).
2. Install π₀-FAST dependencies by running:
```bash
pip install -e ".[pi]"
```
## Training a Custom FAST Tokenizer
You have two options for the FAST tokenizer:
1. **Use the pre-trained tokenizer**: The `lerobot/fast-action-tokenizer` tokenizer was trained on 1M+ real robot action sequences and works as a general-purpose tokenizer.
2. **Train your own tokenizer**: For maximum performance on your specific dataset, you can finetune the tokenizer on your own data.
### Training Your Own Tokenizer
```bash
lerobot-train-tokenizer \
--repo_id "user/my-lerobot-dataset" \
--action_horizon 10 \
--encoded_dims "0:6" \
--vocab_size 1024 \
--scale 10.0 \
--normalization_mode QUANTILES \
--output_dir "./my_fast_tokenizer" \
--push_to_hub \
--hub_repo_id "username/my-action-tokenizer"
```
### Key Tokenizer Parameters
| Parameter | Description | Default |
| ---------------------- | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | ------------ |
| `--repo_id` | LeRobot dataset repository ID | Required |
| `--action_horizon` | Number of future actions in each chunk | `10` |
| `--encoded_dims` | Comma-separated dimension ranges to encode (e.g., `"0:6,7:23"`) | `"0:6,7:23"` |
| `--vocab_size` | BPE vocabulary size | `1024` |
| `--scale` | DCT scaling factor for quantization | `10.0` |
| `--normalization_mode` | Normalization mode (`MEAN_STD`, `MIN_MAX`, `QUANTILES`, `QUANTILE10`, `IDENTITY`) | `QUANTILES` |
| `--sample_fraction` | Fraction of chunks to sample per episode | `0.1` |
## Usage
To use π₀-FAST in LeRobot, specify the policy type as:
```python
policy.type=pi0_fast
```
## Training
For training π₀-FAST, you can use the LeRobot training script:
```bash
lerobot-train \
--dataset.repo_id=your_dataset \
--policy.type=pi0_fast \
--output_dir=./outputs/pi0fast_training \
--job_name=pi0fast_training \
--policy.pretrained_path=lerobot/pi0_fast_base \
--policy.dtype=bfloat16 \
--policy.gradient_checkpointing=true \
--policy.chunk_size=10 \
--policy.n_action_steps=10 \
--policy.max_action_tokens=256 \
--steps=100000 \
--batch_size=4 \
--policy.device=cuda
```
### Key Training Parameters
| Parameter | Description | Default |
| -------------------------------------- | -------------------------------------------------- | ------------------------------- |
| `--policy.gradient_checkpointing=true` | Reduces memory usage significantly during training | `false` |
| `--policy.dtype=bfloat16` | Use mixed precision training for efficiency | `float32` |
| `--policy.chunk_size` | Number of action steps to predict (action horizon) | `50` |
| `--policy.n_action_steps` | Number of action steps to execute | `50` |
| `--policy.max_action_tokens` | Maximum number of FAST tokens per action chunk | `256` |
| `--policy.action_tokenizer_name` | FAST tokenizer to use | `lerobot/fast-action-tokenizer` |
| `--policy.compile_model=true` | Enable torch.compile for faster training | `false` |
## Inference
### KV-Caching for Fast Inference
π₀-FAST supports **KV-caching**, a widely used optimization in LLM inference. This caches the key-value pairs from the attention mechanism, avoiding redundant computation during autoregressive decoding.
```python
# KV-caching is enabled by default
policy.use_kv_cache=true
```
### Inference Example
```python
from lerobot.policies.pi0_fast import PI0FastPolicy, PI0FastConfig
# Load the policy
policy = PI0FastPolicy.from_pretrained("your-model-path")
# During inference
actions = policy.predict_action_chunk(batch)
```
## Model Architecture
π₀-FAST uses a PaliGemma-based architecture:
- **Vision Encoder**: SigLIP vision tower for image understanding
- **Language Model**: Gemma 2B for processing language instructions and predicting action tokens
The model takes images, text instructions, and robot state as input, and outputs discrete FAST tokens that are decoded back to continuous actions.
## Configuration Options
| Parameter | Description | Default |
| -------------------- | ----------------------------------------------- | ---------- |
| `paligemma_variant` | VLM backbone variant (`gemma_300m`, `gemma_2b`) | `gemma_2b` |
| `max_state_dim` | Maximum state vector dimension (padded) | `32` |
| `max_action_dim` | Maximum action vector dimension (padded) | `32` |
| `temperature` | Sampling temperature (0.0 for greedy) | `0.0` |
| `max_decoding_steps` | Maximum decoding steps | `256` |
| `use_kv_cache` | Enable KV caching for faster inference | `true` |
## Comparison with π₀
| Feature | π₀ | π₀-FAST |
| --------------------- | ------------------------- | ---------------------------- |
| Action Representation | Flow Matching (Diffusion) | Autoregressive Tokens (FAST) |
| Training Speed | 1x | **5x faster** |
| Dexterity | High | High |
| Inference Method | Iterative Denoising | Autoregressive Decoding |
| KV-Caching | N/A | Supported |
## Reproducing π₀Fast results
We reproduce the results of π₀Fast on the LIBERO benchmark using the LeRobot implementation. We take the LeRobot PiFast base model [lerobot/pi0fast-base](https://huggingface.co/lerobot/pi0fast-base) and finetune for an additional 40kk steps in bfloat16, with batch size of 256 on 8 H100 GPUs using the [HuggingFace LIBERO dataset](https://huggingface.co/datasets/HuggingFaceVLA/libero).
The finetuned model can be found here:
- **π₀Fast LIBERO**: [lerobot/pi0fast-libero](https://huggingface.co/lerobot/pi0fast-libero)
With the following training command:
```bash
lerobot-train \
--dataset.repo_id=lerobot/libero \
--output_dir=outputs/libero_pi0fast \
--job_name=libero_pi0fast \
--policy.path=lerobot/pi0fast_base \
--policy.dtype=bfloat16 \
--steps=100000 \
--save_freq=20000 \
--batch_size=4 \
--policy.device=cuda \
--policy.scheduler_warmup_steps=4000 \
--policy.scheduler_decay_steps=100000 \
--policy.scheduler_decay_lr=1e-5 \
--policy.gradient_checkpointing=true \
--policy.chunk_size=10 \
--policy.n_action_steps=10 \
--policy.max_action_tokens=256 \
--policy.empty_cameras=1 \
```
We then evaluate the finetuned model using the LeRobot LIBERO implementation, by running the following command:
```bash
tasks="libero_object,libero_spatial,libero_goal,libero_10"
lerobot-eval \
--policy.path=lerobot/pi0fast-libero \
--policy.max_action_tokens=256 \
--env.type=libero \
--policy.gradient_checkpointing=false \
--env.task=${tasks} \
--eval.batch_size=1 \
--eval.n_episodes=1 \
--rename_map='{"observation.images.image":"observation.images.base_0_rgb","observation.images.image2":"observation.images.left_wrist_0_rgb"}'
```
**Note:** We set `n_action_steps=10`, similar to the original OpenPI implementation.
### Results
We obtain the following results on the LIBERO benchmark:
| Model | LIBERO Spatial | LIBERO Object | LIBERO Goal | LIBERO 10 | Average |
| ----------- | -------------- | ------------- | ----------- | --------- | -------- |
| **π₀-fast** | 70.0 | 100.0 | 100.0 | 60.0 | **82.5** |
The full evaluation output folder, including videos, is available [here](https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1HXpwPTRm4hx6g1sF2P7OOqGG0TwPU7LQ?usp=sharing)
## License
This model follows the **Apache 2.0 License**, consistent with the original [OpenPI repository](https://github.com/Physical-Intelligence/openpi).
## References
- [FAST: Efficient Robot Action Tokenization](https://www.physicalintelligence.company/research/fast) - Physical Intelligence Blog
- [OpenPI Repository](https://github.com/Physical-Intelligence/openpi) - Original implementation
- [FAST Tokenizer on Hugging Face](https://huggingface.co/physical-intelligence/fast) - Pre-trained tokenizer
+4 -14
View File
@@ -1,30 +1,20 @@
# WALL-OSS
This repository contains the Hugging Face port of [**WALL-OSS**](https://x2robot.com/en/research/68bc2cde8497d7f238dde690), a Vision-Language-Action model for cross-embodiment robotic control based on Qwen2.5-VL with flow matching/FAST action prediction.
This repository contains the Hugging Face port of **WALL-OSS**, a Vision-Language-Action model for cross-embodiment robotic control based on Qwen2.5-VL with flow matching/FAST action prediction.
---
## Model Overview
| Feature | Description |
| ------------------ | ----------------------------------------------------- |
| ------------------ | ----------------------------------------------------- | --- |
| Base Model | Qwen2.5-VL (Vision-Language Model) |
| Action Prediction | Flow Matching (diffusion) or FAST (discrete tokens) |
| Architecture | Mixture of Experts (MoE) with action-specific routing |
| Architecture | Mixture of Experts (MoE) with action-specific routing | |
| Multi-Modal Inputs | Vision (images/videos), Language, Proprioception |
---
## Additional Resources
Paper: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2509.11766
Official Repository: https://github.com/X-Square-Robot/wall-x
Hugging Face: https://huggingface.co/x-square-robot
---
## Citation
If you use this work, please cite:
@@ -42,4 +32,4 @@ If you use this work, please cite:
## License
This model follows the **Apache 2.0 License**, consistent with the original [WallX repository](https://github.com/X-Square-Robot/wall-x).
This port follows the **Apache 2.0 License**.
+3 -3
View File
@@ -30,7 +30,7 @@ Each of these pipelines handle different conversions between different action an
Below is an example of the three pipelines that we use in the phone to SO-100 follower examples:
```python
```69:90:examples/phone_so100_record.py
phone_to_robot_ee_pose_processor = RobotProcessorPipeline[RobotAction, RobotAction]( # teleop -> dataset action
steps=[
MapPhoneActionToRobotAction(platform=teleop_config.phone_os),
@@ -84,7 +84,7 @@ Dataset features are determined by the keys saved in the dataset. Each step can
Below is and example of how we declare features with the `transform_features` method in the phone to SO-100 follower examples:
```python
```src/lerobot/robots/so100_follower/robot_kinematic_processor.py
def transform_features(
self, features: dict[PipelineFeatureType, dict[str, PolicyFeature]]
) -> dict[PipelineFeatureType, dict[str, PolicyFeature]]:
@@ -103,7 +103,7 @@ Here we declare what PolicyFeatures we modify in this step, so we know what feat
Below is an example of how we aggregate and merge features in the phone to SO-100 record example:
```python
```121:145:examples/phone_so100_record.py
features=combine_feature_dicts(
# Run the feature contract of the pipelines
# This tells you how the features would look like after the pipeline steps
+21 -42
View File
@@ -38,7 +38,6 @@ docker run --rm -it \
start_rviz:=true start_sdk_server:=true mujoco:=true
```
> [!NOTE]
> If MuJoCo runs slowly (low simulation frequency), append `-e LD_LIBRARY_PATH="/opt/host-libs:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH" \` to the previous command to improve performance:
>
> ```
@@ -142,7 +141,7 @@ If you choose this option but still want to use the VR teleoperation application
First add reachy2 and reachy2_teleoperator to the imports of the record script. Then you can use the following command:
```bash
lerobot-record \
python -m lerobot.record \
--robot.type=reachy2 \
--robot.ip_address=192.168.0.200 \
--robot.id=r2-0000 \
@@ -151,7 +150,6 @@ lerobot-record \
--teleop.type=reachy2_teleoperator \
--teleop.ip_address=192.168.0.200 \
--teleop.with_mobile_base=false \
--robot.with_torso_camera=true \
--dataset.repo_id=pollen_robotics/record_test \
--dataset.single_task="Reachy 2 recording test" \
--dataset.num_episodes=1 \
@@ -159,9 +157,6 @@ lerobot-record \
--dataset.fps=15 \
--dataset.push_to_hub=true \
--dataset.private=true \
--dataset.streaming_encoding=true \
--dataset.encoder_threads=2 \
# --dataset.vcodec=auto \
--display_data=true
```
@@ -170,7 +165,7 @@ lerobot-record \
**Extended setup overview (all options included):**
```bash
lerobot-record \
python -m lerobot.record \
--robot.type=reachy2 \
--robot.ip_address=192.168.0.200 \
--robot.use_external_commands=true \
@@ -182,8 +177,6 @@ lerobot-record \
--robot.with_left_teleop_camera=true \
--robot.with_right_teleop_camera=true \
--robot.with_torso_camera=false \
--robot.camera_width=640 \
--robot.camera_height=480 \
--robot.disable_torque_on_disconnect=false \
--robot.max_relative_target=5.0 \
--teleop.type=reachy2_teleoperator \
@@ -201,9 +194,6 @@ lerobot-record \
--dataset.fps=15 \
--dataset.push_to_hub=true \
--dataset.private=true \
--dataset.streaming_encoding=true \
--dataset.encoder_threads=2 \
# --dataset.vcodec=auto \
--display_data=true
```
@@ -222,10 +212,9 @@ Must be set to true if a compliant Reachy 2 is used to control another one.
From our initial tests, recording **all** joints when only some are moving can reduce model quality with certain policies.
To avoid this, you can exclude specific parts from recording and replay using:
```bash
````
--robot.with_<part>=false
```
```,
with `<part>` being one of : `mobile_base`, `l_arm`, `r_arm", `neck`, `antennas`.
It determine whether the corresponding part is recorded in the observations. True if not set.
@@ -233,60 +222,49 @@ By default, **all parts are recorded**.
The same per-part mechanism is available in `reachy2_teleoperator` as well.
```bash
--teleop.with\_<part>
```
````
--teleop.with\_<part>
```
with `<part>` being one of : `mobile_base`, `l_arm`, `r_arm", `neck`, `antennas`.
Determine whether the corresponding part is recorded in the actions. True if not set.
> **Important:** In a given session, the **enabled parts must match** on both the robot and the teleoperator.
> For example, if the robot runs with `--robot.with_mobile_base=false`, the teleoperator must disable the same part `--teleoperator.with_mobile_base=false`.
For example, if the robot runs with `--robot.with_mobile_base=false`, the teleoperator must disable the same part `--teleoperator.with_mobile_base=false`.
##### Use the relevant cameras
You can do the same for **cameras**. Enable or disable each camera with default parameters using:
You can do the same for **cameras**. By default, only the **teleoperation cameras** are recorded (both `left_teleop_camera` and `right_teleop_camera`). Enable or disable each camera with:
```bash
--robot.with_left_teleop_camera=<true|false> \
--robot.with_right_teleop_camera=<true|false> \
```
--robot.with_left_teleop_camera=<true|false>
--robot.with_right_teleop_camera=<true|false>
--robot.with_torso_camera=<true|false>
```
By default, no camera is recorded, all camera arguments are set to `false`.
If you want to, you can use custom `width` and `height` parameters for Reachy 2's cameras using the `--robot.camera_width` & `--robot.camera_height` argument:
````
```bash
--robot.camera_width=1920 \
--robot.camera_height=1080
```
This will change the resolution of all 3 default robot cameras (enabled by the above bool arguments).
If you want, you can add additional cameras other than the ones in the robot as usual with:
```bash
--robot.cameras="{ extra: {type: opencv, index_or_path: 42, width: 640, height: 480, fps: 30}}" \
```
## Step 2: Replay
Make sure the robot is configured with the same parts as the dataset:
```bash
lerobot-replay \
python -m lerobot.replay \
--robot.type=reachy2 \
--robot.ip_address=192.168.0.200 \
--robot.use_external_commands=false \
--robot.with_mobile_base=false \
--dataset.repo_id=pollen_robotics/record_test \
--dataset.episode=0
```
--display_data=true
````
## Step 3: Train
```bash
lerobot-train \
python -m lerobot.scripts.train \
--dataset.repo_id=pollen_robotics/record_test \
--policy.type=act \
--output_dir=outputs/train/reachy2_test \
@@ -299,9 +277,10 @@ lerobot-train \
## Step 4: Evaluate
```bash
lerobot-eval \
python -m lerobot.record \
--robot.type=reachy2 \
--robot.ip_address=192.168.0.200 \
--display_data=false \
--dataset.repo_id=pollen_robotics/eval_record_test \
--dataset.single_task="Evaluate reachy2 policy" \
--dataset.num_episodes=10 \
-114
View File
@@ -1,114 +0,0 @@
# Rename Map and Empty Cameras
When you train, evaluate, or record with a robot policy, your **dataset** or **environment** provides observations under one set of keys (e.g. `observation.images.front`, `observation.images.eagle`), while your **policy** expects another (e.g. `observation.images.image`, `observation.images.image2`). The **rename map** bridges that gap without changing the policy or data source.
> **Scope:** The rename map only renames **observation** keys (images and state). Action keys are not affected.
## Why observation keys don't always match
Policies have a fixed set of **input feature names** baked into their pretrained config. For example:
- [pi0fast-libero](https://huggingface.co/lerobot/pi0fast-libero) expects `observation.images.base_0_rgb` and `observation.images.left_wrist_0_rgb`.
- [xvla-base](https://huggingface.co/lerobot/xvla-base) expects `observation.images.image`, `observation.images.image2`, and `observation.images.image3`.
Your dataset might use different names entirely (e.g. `observation.images.front`, `observation.images.eagle`, `observation.images.glove`), and your eval environment might use yet another set. Rather than editing the policy config or renaming columns in the dataset, you pass a **rename map**: a JSON dictionary that maps source keys to the keys the policy expects. Renaming happens inside the preprocessor pipeline, so the policy always sees its expected keys.
## Using the rename map
Pass the mapping as a JSON string on the command line. The convention is always:
```
--rename_map='{"source_key": "policy_key", ...}'
```
where **source_key** is what the dataset or environment provides, and **policy_key** is what the policy expects.
Only listed keys are renamed; everything else passes through unchanged. Order of entries doesn't matter.
Supported policies: **PI0**, **PI05**, **PI0Fast**, **SmolVLA**, and **XVLA**.
### Training
Suppose you fine-tune [lerobot/xvla-base](https://huggingface.co/lerobot/xvla-base) on a dataset with images under `observation.images.front`, `observation.images.eagle`, and `observation.images.glove`. XVLA expects `observation.images.image`, `observation.images.image2`, and `observation.images.image3`:
```bash
lerobot-train \
--dataset.repo_id=YOUR_DATASET \
--output_dir=./outputs/xvla_training \
--job_name=xvla_training \
--policy.path="lerobot/xvla-base" \
--policy.repo_id="HF_USER/xvla-your-robot" \
--policy.dtype=bfloat16 \
--policy.action_mode=auto \
--steps=20000 \
--policy.device=cuda \
--policy.freeze_vision_encoder=false \
--policy.freeze_language_encoder=false \
--policy.train_policy_transformer=true \
--policy.train_soft_prompts=true \
--rename_map='{"observation.images.front": "observation.images.image", "observation.images.eagle": "observation.images.image2", "observation.images.glove": "observation.images.image3"}'
```
### Evaluation
A policy that expects `observation.images.base_0_rgb` and `observation.images.left_wrist_0_rgb` (e.g. [pi0fast-libero](https://huggingface.co/lerobot/pi0fast-libero)), but the LIBERO environment returns `observation.images.image` and `observation.images.image2`:
```bash
lerobot-eval \
--policy.path=lerobot/pi0fast-libero \
--env.type=libero \
... \
--rename_map='{"observation.images.image": "observation.images.base_0_rgb", "observation.images.image2": "observation.images.left_wrist_0_rgb"}'
```
### Recording
`lerobot-record` also supports rename maps, nested under the dataset config:
```bash
lerobot-record \ # When running inference
--policy.path="<user>/smolVLA_finetuned" \
... \
--dataset.rename_map='{"observation.images.glove2": "observation.images.image"}'
```
## Alternative: edit the policy config directly
If you always use the same dataset or environment, you can **edit the policy's `config.json`** so its observation keys match your data source. Then no rename map is needed.
The tradeoff: modifying the policy config ties it to one data source. A rename map keeps one policy usable across many datasets and environments.
## Empty cameras: fewer views than the policy expects
Some policies are built for a fixed number of image inputs. If your dataset has fewer cameras, you can set **`empty_cameras`** in the policy config instead of modifying the model architecture.
### How it works
Setting `empty_cameras=N` adds N placeholder image features to the policy config, named:
```
observation.images.empty_camera_0
observation.images.empty_camera_1
...
```
At runtime, these keys have no corresponding data in the batch. The policy fills them with masked dummy tensors (padded with `-1` for SigLIP-based vision encoders, with a zero attention mask), so the extra image slots are effectively ignored during training and inference.
### Example
XVLA-base has three visual inputs and `empty_cameras=0` by default. Your dataset only has two cameras:
1. Set `--policy.empty_cameras=1`.
2. The config adds a third key: `observation.images.empty_camera_0`.
3. Use the rename map for your two real cameras as usual.
4. The third slot is masked out — no fake images needed in your dataset.
## Quick reference
| Goal | What to do |
| ----------------------------------------- | --------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| Dataset keys ≠ policy keys | `--rename_map='{"dataset_key": "policy_key", ...}'` |
| Env keys ≠ policy keys (eval) | `--rename_map='{"env_key": "policy_key", ...}'` |
| Recording with different keys (inference) | `--dataset.rename_map='{"source_key": "policy_key", ...}'`. |
| Fewer cameras than policy expects | `--policy.empty_cameras=N` (supported by PI0, PI05, PI0Fast, SmolVLA, XVLA) |
| Avoid passing a rename map | Edit the policy's `config.json` so its keys match your data source |
+4 -10
View File
@@ -4,12 +4,6 @@ SARM (Stage-Aware Reward Modeling) is a video-based reward modeling framework fo
**Paper**: [SARM: Stage-Aware Reward Modeling for Long Horizon Robot Manipulation](https://arxiv.org/abs/2509.25358)
<img
src="https://huggingface.co/datasets/huggingface/documentation-images/resolve/main/lerobot/lerobot-sarm.png"
alt="An overview of SARM"
width="80%"
/>
## Why Reward Models?
Standard behavior cloning treats all demonstration frames equally, but real-world robot datasets are messy. They contain hesitations, corrections, and variable-quality trajectories. Reward models solve this by learning a generalizable notion of **task progress** from demonstrations: given video frames and a task description, they predict how close the robot is to completing the task (0→1). This learned "progress signal" can be used in multiple ways, two promising applications are: (1) **weighted imitation learning** (RA-BC), where high-progress frames receive more weight during policy training, and (2) **reinforcement learning**, where the reward model provides dense rewards for online or offline policy improvement.
@@ -269,7 +263,7 @@ This generates visualizations showing video frames with subtask boundaries overl
Train with **no annotations** - uses linear progress from 0 to 1:
```bash
lerobot-train \
python src/lerobot/scripts/lerobot_train.py \
--dataset.repo_id=your-username/your-dataset \
--policy.type=sarm \
--policy.annotation_mode=single_stage \
@@ -288,7 +282,7 @@ lerobot-train \
Train with **dense annotations only** (sparse auto-generated):
```bash
lerobot-train \
python src/lerobot/scripts/lerobot_train.py \
--dataset.repo_id=your-username/your-dataset \
--policy.type=sarm \
--policy.annotation_mode=dense_only \
@@ -307,7 +301,7 @@ lerobot-train \
Train with **both sparse and dense annotations**:
```bash
lerobot-train \
python src/lerobot/scripts/lerobot_train.py \
--dataset.repo_id=your-username/your-dataset \
--policy.type=sarm \
--policy.annotation_mode=dual \
@@ -468,7 +462,7 @@ This script:
Once you have the progress file, train your policy with RA-BC weighting. The progress file is auto-detected from the dataset path (`sarm_progress.parquet`). Currently PI0, PI0.5 and SmolVLA are supported with RA-BC:
```bash
lerobot-train \
python src/lerobot/scripts/lerobot_train.py \
--dataset.repo_id=your-username/your-dataset \
--policy.type=pi0 \
--use_rabc=true \
-3
View File
@@ -106,9 +106,6 @@ lerobot-record \
--dataset.repo_id=${HF_USER}/eval_DATASET_NAME_test \ # <- This will be the dataset name on HF Hub
--dataset.episode_time_s=50 \
--dataset.num_episodes=10 \
--dataset.streaming_encoding=true \
--dataset.encoder_threads=2 \
# --dataset.vcodec=auto \
# <- Teleop optional if you want to teleoperate in between episodes \
# --teleop.type=so100_leader \
# --teleop.port=/dev/ttyACM0 \
+4 -4
View File
@@ -103,7 +103,7 @@ lerobot-setup-motors \
<!-- prettier-ignore-start -->
```python
from lerobot.robots.so_follower import SO100Follower, SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower import SO100Follower, SO100FollowerConfig
config = SO100FollowerConfig(
port="/dev/tty.usbmodem585A0076841",
@@ -177,7 +177,7 @@ lerobot-setup-motors \
<!-- prettier-ignore-start -->
```python
from lerobot.teleoperators.so_leader import SO100Leader, SO100LeaderConfig
from lerobot.teleoperators.so100_leader import SO100Leader, SO100LeaderConfig
config = SO100LeaderConfig(
port="/dev/tty.usbmodem585A0076841",
@@ -579,7 +579,7 @@ lerobot-calibrate \
<!-- prettier-ignore-start -->
```python
from lerobot.robots.so_follower import SO100FollowerConfig, SO100Follower
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower import SO100FollowerConfig, SO100Follower
config = SO100FollowerConfig(
port="/dev/tty.usbmodem585A0076891",
@@ -617,7 +617,7 @@ lerobot-calibrate \
<!-- prettier-ignore-start -->
```python
from lerobot.teleoperators.so_leader import SO100LeaderConfig, SO100Leader
from lerobot.teleoperators.so100_leader import SO100LeaderConfig, SO100Leader
config = SO100LeaderConfig(
port="/dev/tty.usbmodem58760431551",
+4 -17
View File
@@ -1,18 +1,5 @@
# SO-101
<div style="display: flex; align-items: center; gap: 10px;">
<img
src="https://huggingface.co/datasets/huggingface/documentation-images/resolve/main/lerobot/SO101_Follower.webp"
alt="SO-101"
width="60%"
/>
<img
src="https://huggingface.co/datasets/huggingface/documentation-images/resolve/main/lerobot/SO101_Leader.webp"
alt="SO-101"
width="60%"
/>
</div>
In the steps below, we explain how to assemble our flagship robot, the SO-101.
## Source the parts
@@ -138,7 +125,7 @@ lerobot-setup-motors \
<!-- prettier-ignore-start -->
```python
from lerobot.robots.so_follower import SO101Follower, SO101FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so101_follower import SO101Follower, SO101FollowerConfig
config = SO101FollowerConfig(
port="/dev/tty.usbmodem585A0076841",
@@ -214,7 +201,7 @@ lerobot-setup-motors \
<!-- prettier-ignore-start -->
```python
from lerobot.teleoperators.so_leader import SO101Leader, SO101LeaderConfig
from lerobot.teleoperators.so101_leader import SO101Leader, SO101LeaderConfig
config = SO101LeaderConfig(
port="/dev/tty.usbmodem585A0076841",
@@ -377,7 +364,7 @@ lerobot-calibrate \
<!-- prettier-ignore-start -->
```python
from lerobot.robots.so_follower import SO101FollowerConfig, SO101Follower
from lerobot.robots.so101_follower import SO101FollowerConfig, SO101Follower
config = SO101FollowerConfig(
port="/dev/tty.usbmodem585A0076891",
@@ -426,7 +413,7 @@ lerobot-calibrate \
<!-- prettier-ignore-start -->
```python
from lerobot.teleoperators.so_leader import SO101LeaderConfig, SO101Leader
from lerobot.teleoperators.so101_leader import SO101LeaderConfig, SO101Leader
config = SO101LeaderConfig(
port="/dev/tty.usbmodem58760431551",
-155
View File
@@ -1,155 +0,0 @@
# Streaming Video Encoding Guide
## 1. Overview
Streaming video encoding eliminates the traditional PNG round-trip during video dataset recording. Instead of:
1. Capture frame -> write PNG to disk -> (at episode end) read PNG's -> encode to MP4 -> delete PNG's
Frames can be encoded in real-time during capture:
1. Capture frame -> queue to encoder thread -> encode to MP4 directly
This makes `save_episode()` near-instant (the video is already encoded by the time the episode ends) and removes the blocking wait that previously occurred between episodes, especially with multiple cameras in long episodes.
## 2. Tuning Parameters
| Parameter | CLI Flag | Type | Default | Description |
| ----------------------- | --------------------------------- | ------------- | ------------- | ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
| `streaming_encoding` | `--dataset.streaming_encoding` | `bool` | `True` | Enable real-time encoding during capture |
| `vcodec` | `--dataset.vcodec` | `str` | `"libsvtav1"` | Video codec. `"auto"` detects best HW encoder |
| `encoder_threads` | `--dataset.encoder_threads` | `int \| None` | `None` (auto) | Threads per encoder instance. `None` will leave the vcoded decide |
| `encoder_queue_maxsize` | `--dataset.encoder_queue_maxsize` | `int` | `60` | Max buffered frames per camera (~2s at 30fps). Consumes RAM |
## 3. Performance Considerations
Streaming encoding means the CPU is encoding video **during** the capture loop, not after. This creates a CPU budget that must be shared between:
- **Control loop** (reading cameras, control the robot, writing non-video data)
- **Encoder threads** (one pool per camera)
- **Rerun visualization** (if enabled)
- **OS and other processes**
### Resolution & Number of Cameras Impact
| Setup | Throughput (px/sec) | CPU Encoding Load | Notes |
| ------------------------- | ------------------- | ----------------- | ------------------------------ |
| 2camsx 640x480x3 @30fps | 55M | Low | Works on most systems |
| 2camsx 1280x720x3 @30fps | 165M | Moderate | Comfortable on modern systems |
| 2camsx 1920x1080x3 @30fps | 373M | High | Requires powerful high-end CPU |
### `encoder_threads` Tuning
This parameter controls how many threads each encoder instance uses internally:
- **Higher values** (e.g., 4-5): Faster encoding, but uses more CPU cores per camera. Good for high-end systems with many cores.
- **Lower values** (e.g., 1-2): Less CPU per camera, freeing cores for capture and visualization. Good for low-res images and capable CPUs.
- **`None` (default)**: Lets the codec decide. Information available in the codec logs.
### Backpressure and Frame Dropping
Each camera has a bounded queue (`encoder_queue_maxsize`, default 60 frames). When the encoder can't keep up:
1. The queue fills up (consuming RAM)
2. New frames are **dropped** (not blocked) — the capture loop continues uninterrupted
3. A warning is logged: `"Encoder queue full for {camera}, dropped N frame(s)"`
4. At episode end, total dropped frames per camera are reported
### Symptoms of Encoder Falling Behind
- **System feels laggy and freezes**: all CPUs are at 100%
- **Dropped frame warnings** in the log or lower frames/FPS than expected in the recorded dataset
- **Choppy robot movement**: If CPU is severely overloaded, even the capture loop may be affected
- **Accumulated rerun lag**: Visualization falls behind real-time
## 4. Hardware-Accelerated Encoding
### When to Use
Use HW encoding when:
- CPU is the bottleneck (dropped frames, choppy robot, rerun lag)
- You have compatible hardware (GPU or dedicated encoder)
- You're recording at high throughput (high resolution or with many cameras)
### Choosing a Codec
| Codec | CPU Usage | File Size | Quality | Notes |
| --------------------- | --------- | -------------- | ------- | ---------------------------------------------------------------- |
| `libsvtav1` (default) | High | Smallest | Best | Default. Best compression but most CPU-intensive |
| `h264` | Medium | ~30-50% larger | Good | Software H.264. Lower CPU |
| HW encoders | Very Low | Largest | Good | Offloads to dedicated hardware. Best for CPU-constrained systems |
### Available HW Encoders
| Encoder | Platform | Hardware | CLI Value |
| ------------------- | ------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | ------------------------------------ |
| `h264_videotoolbox` | macOS | Apple Silicon / Intel | `--dataset.vcodec=h264_videotoolbox` |
| `hevc_videotoolbox` | macOS | Apple Silicon / Intel | `--dataset.vcodec=hevc_videotoolbox` |
| `h264_nvenc` | Linux/Windows | NVIDIA GPU | `--dataset.vcodec=h264_nvenc` |
| `hevc_nvenc` | Linux/Windows | NVIDIA GPU | `--dataset.vcodec=hevc_nvenc` |
| `h264_vaapi` | Linux | Intel/AMD GPU | `--dataset.vcodec=h264_vaapi` |
| `h264_qsv` | Linux/Windows | Intel Quick Sync | `--dataset.vcodec=h264_qsv` |
| `auto` | Any | Probes the system for available HW encoders. Falls back to `libsvtav1` if no HW encoder is found | `--dataset.vcodec=auto` |
> [!NOTE]
> In order to use the HW accelerated encoders you might need to upgrade your GPU drivers.
> [!NOTE]
> `libsvtav1` is the default because it provides the best training performance; other vcodecs can reduce CPU usage and be faster, but they typically produce larger files and may affect training time.
## 5. Troubleshooting
| Symptom | Likely Cause | Fix |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------ | -------------------------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
| System freezes or choppy robot movement or Rerun visualization lag | CPU starved (100% load usage) | Close other apps, reduce encoding throughput, lower `encoder_threads`, use `h264`, use `display_data=False`. If the CPU continues to be at 100% then it might be insufficient for your setup, consider `--dataset.streaming_encoding=false` or HW encoding (`--dataset.vcodec=auto`) |
| "Encoder queue full" warnings or dropped frames in dataset | Encoder can't keep up (Queue overflow) | If CPU is not at 100%: Increase `encoder_threads`, increase `encoder_queue_maxsize` or use HW encoding (`--dataset.vcodec=auto`). |
| High RAM usage | Queue filling faster than encoding | `encoder_threads` too low or CPU insufficient. Reduce `encoder_queue_maxsize` or use HW encoding |
| Large video files | Using HW encoder or H.264 | Expected trade-off. Switch to `libsvtav1` if CPU allows |
| `save_episode()` still slow | `streaming_encoding` is `False` | Set `--dataset.streaming_encoding=true` |
| Encoder thread crash | Codec not available or invalid settings | Check `vcodec` is installed, try `--dataset.vcodec=auto` |
| Recorded dataset is missing frames | CPU/GPU starvation or occasional load spikes | If ~5% of frames are missing, your system is likely overloaded — follow the recommendations above. If fewer frames are missing (~2%), they are probably due to occasional transient load spikes (often at startup) and can be considered expected. |
## 6. Recommended Configurations
These estimates are conservative; we recommend testing them on your setup—start with a low load and increase it gradually.
### High-End Systems: modern 12+ cores (24+ threads)
A throughput between ~250-500M px/sec should be comfortable in CPU. For even better results try HW encoding if available.
```bash
# 3camsx 1280x720x3 @30fps: Defaults work well. Optionally increase encoder parallelism.
# 2camsx 1920x1080x3 @30fps: Defaults work well. Optionally increase encoder parallelism.
lerobot-record --dataset.encoder_threads=5 ...
# 3camsx 1920x1080x3 @30fps: Might require some tuning.
```
### Mid-Range Systems: modern 8+ cores (16+ threads) or Apple Silicon
A throughput between ~80-300M px/sec should be possible in CPU.
```bash
# 3camsx 640x480x3 @30fps: Defaults work well. Optionally decrease encoder parallelism.
# 2camsx 1280x720x3 @30fps: Defaults work well. Optionally decrease encoder parallelism.
lerobot-record --dataset.encoder_threads=2 ...
# 2camsx 1920x1080x3 @30fps: Might require some tuning.
```
### Low-Resource Systems: modern 4+ cores (8+ threads) or Raspberry Pi 5
On very constrained systems, streaming encoding may compete too heavily with the capture loop. Disabling it falls back to the PNG-based approach where encoding happens between episodes (blocking, but doesn't interfere with capture). Alternatively, record at a lower throughput to reduce both capture and encoding load. Consider also changing codec to `h264` and using batch encoding.
```bash
# 2camsx 640x480x3 @30fps: Requires some tuning.
# Use H.264, disable streaming, consider batching encoding
lerobot-record --dataset.vcodec=h264 --dataset.streaming_encoding=false ...
```
## 7. Closing note
Performance ultimately depends on your exact setup — frames-per-second, resolution, CPU cores and load, available memory, episode length, and the encoder you choose. Always test with your target workload, be mindful about your CPU & system capabilities and tune `encoder_threads`, `encoder_queue_maxsize`, and
`vcodec` reasonably. That said, a common practical configuration (for many applications) is three cameras at 640×480x3 @30fps; this usually runs fine with the default streaming video encoding settings in modern systems. Always verify your recorded dataset is healthy by comparing the video duration to the CLI episode duration and confirming the row count equals FPS × CLI duration.
+122 -216
View File
@@ -1,72 +1,23 @@
# Unitree G1
# Unitree G1 Robot Setup and Control
<img
src="https://huggingface.co/datasets/huggingface/documentation-images/resolve/main/lerobot/unitree_thumbnail.jpg"
alt="Unitree G1 locomanipulation demo"
style={{ width: "100%" }}
/>
This guide covers the complete setup process for the Unitree G1 humanoid, from initial connection to running gr00t_wbc locomotion.
The Unitree G1 humanoid is now supported in LeRobot! You can teleoperate, train locomanipulation policies, test in sim, and more. Both 29 and 23 DoF variants are supported.
## About the Unitree G1
We offer support for both 29 and 23 DOF G1. We introduce:
- **`unitree g1` robot class, handling low level communication with the humanoid**
- **ZMQ socket bridge** for remote communication over WiFi, allowing one to deploy policies remotely instead of over ethernet or directly on the Orin
- **GR00T locomotion policy** for bipedal walking and balance
- **MuJoCo simulation mode** for testing policies without the physical robot
---
## Part 1: Getting Started
## Part 1: Connect to Robot over Ethernet
### Install the Unitree SDK
### Step 1: Configure Your Computer's Ethernet Interface
Follow the [unitree_sdk2_python installation guide](https://github.com/unitreerobotics/unitree_sdk2_python#installation). Tested with `unitree_sdk2py==1.0.1` and `cyclonedds==0.10.2`:
```bash
conda create -y -n lerobot python=3.12
conda activate lerobot
git clone https://github.com/unitreerobotics/unitree_sdk2_python.git
cd unitree_sdk2_python
pip install -e .
cd ..
```
### Install LeRobot
```bash
conda install ffmpeg -c conda-forge
conda install -c conda-forge "pinocchio>=3.0.0,<4.0.0"
git clone https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot.git
cd lerobot
pip install -e '.[unitree_g1]'
```
<Tip>
For now, pinocchio must be installed from conda-forge (not pip) to include the
CasADi bindings needed for arm IK.
</Tip>
### Test the Installation (Simulation)
The simulation environment has its own dependencies. Check the Simulation environment dependencies: [Unitree G1 Mujoco EnvHub](https://huggingface.co/lerobot/unitree-g1-mujoco/tree/main).
```bash
pip install mujoco loguru msgpack msgpack-numpy
```
```bash
lerobot-teleoperate \
--robot.type=unitree_g1 \
--robot.is_simulation=true \
--teleop.type=unitree_g1 \
--teleop.id=wbc_unitree \
--robot.cameras='{"global_view": {"type": "zmq", "server_address": "localhost", "port": 5555, "camera_name": "head_camera", "width": 640, "height": 480, "fps": 30, "warmup_s": 5}}' \
--display_data=true \
--robot.controller=GrootLocomotionController
```
This will launch a [MuJoCo sim instance](https://huggingface.co/lerobot/unitree-g1-mujoco/tree/main) for the G1. You can connect a gamepad to your machine before launching in order to control the robot's locomotion in sim. We support both [HolosomaLocomotionController](https://github.com/amazon-far/holosoma) and [GrootLocomotionController](https://github.com/NVlabs/GR00T-WholeBodyControl) via `--robot.controller`.
- Press `9` to release the robot
- Press `7` / `8` to increase / decrease waist height
### Connect to the Physical Robot
The G1's Ethernet IP is fixed at `192.168.123.164`. Your machine must have a static IP on the same subnet: `192.168.123.x` where `x ≠ 164`.
Set a static IP on the same subnet as the robot:
```bash
# Replace 'enp131s0' with your ethernet interface name (check with `ip a`)
@@ -75,228 +26,183 @@ sudo ip addr add 192.168.123.200/24 dev enp131s0
sudo ip link set enp131s0 up
```
### SSH into the Robot
**Note**: The robot's Ethernet IP is fixed at `192.168.123.164`. Your computer must use `192.168.123.x` where x ≠ 164.
### Step 2: SSH into the Robot
```bash
ssh unitree@192.168.123.164
# Password: 123
```
### Share Internet via Ethernet
You should now be connected to the robot's onboard computer.
The G1 needs internet access to clone repos and install packages. Share your laptop's connection over Ethernet:
---
**On your laptop:**
```bash
sudo sysctl -w net.ipv4.ip_forward=1
# Replace wlp132s0f0 with your WiFi interface name
sudo iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -o wlp132s0f0 -s 192.168.123.0/24 -j MASQUERADE
sudo iptables -A FORWARD -i wlp132s0f0 -o enp131s0 -m state --state RELATED,ESTABLISHED -j ACCEPT
sudo iptables -A FORWARD -i enp131s0 -o wlp132s0f0 -j ACCEPT
```
**On the G1:**
```bash
sudo ip route del default 2>/dev/null || true
sudo ip route add default via 192.168.123.200 dev eth0
echo "nameserver 8.8.8.8" | sudo tee /etc/resolv.conf
# Verify
ping -c 3 8.8.8.8
```
### Install the Unitree SDK on the G1
Follow the [unitree_sdk2_python installation guide](https://github.com/unitreerobotics/unitree_sdk2_python#installation):
```bash
conda create -y -n lerobot python=3.12
conda activate lerobot
git clone https://github.com/unitreerobotics/unitree_sdk2_python.git
cd unitree_sdk2_python
python -m pip install -e .
cd ..
```
### Install LeRobot on the G1
```bash
git clone https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot.git
cd lerobot
conda install -c conda-forge "pinocchio>=3.0.0,<4.0.0"
python -m pip install -e '.[unitree_g1]'
```
<Tip>
For now, pinocchio must be installed from conda-forge (not pip) to include the
CasADi bindings needed for arm IK.
</Tip>
### (Optional) Enable WiFi on the Robot
For wireless SSH access, you can enable WiFi on the G1 (it's blocked by default):
## Part 2: Enable WiFi on the Robot
Once connected via Ethernet, follow these steps to enable WiFi:
### Step 1: Enable WiFi Hardware
```bash
# Unblock WiFi radio
sudo rfkill unblock wifi
sudo rfkill unblock all
# Bring up WiFi interface
sudo ip link set wlan0 up
# Enable NetworkManager control
sudo nmcli radio wifi on
sudo nmcli device set wlan0 managed yes
sudo systemctl restart NetworkManager
```
**Connect to a WiFi network:**
### Step 2: Enable Internet Forwarding
**On your laptop:**
```bash
# Enable IP forwarding
sudo sysctl -w net.ipv4.ip_forward=1
# Set up NAT (replace wlp132s0f0 with your WiFi interface)
sudo iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -o wlp132s0f0 -s 192.168.123.0/24 -j MASQUERADE
sudo iptables -A FORWARD -i wlp132s0f0 -o enp131s0 -m state --state RELATED,ESTABLISHED -j ACCEPT
sudo iptables -A FORWARD -i enp131s0 -o wlp132s0f0 -j ACCEPT
```
**On the robot:**
```bash
# Add laptop as default gateway
sudo ip route del default 2>/dev/null || true
sudo ip route add default via 192.168.123.200 dev eth0
echo "nameserver 8.8.8.8" | sudo tee /etc/resolv.conf
# Test connection
ping -c 3 8.8.8.8
```
### Step 3: Connect to WiFi Network
```bash
# List available networks
nmcli device wifi list
# Connect to your WiFi (example)
sudo nmcli connection add type wifi ifname wlan0 con-name "YourNetwork" ssid "YourNetwork"
sudo nmcli connection modify "YourNetwork" wifi-sec.key-mgmt wpa-psk
sudo nmcli connection modify "YourNetwork" wifi-sec.psk "YourPassword"
sudo nmcli connection modify "YourNetwork" connection.autoconnect yes
sudo nmcli connection up "YourNetwork"
# Check WiFi IP address
ip a show wlan0
```
You can then SSH over WiFi instead of Ethernet:
### Step 4: SSH Over WiFi
Once connected to WiFi, note the robot's IP address and disconnect the Ethernet cable. You can now SSH over WiFi:
```bash
ssh unitree@<ROBOT_WIFI_IP>
ssh unitree@<YOUR_ROBOT_IP>
# Password: 123
```
---
## Part 2: Teleoperation & Locomotion
### Run the Robot Server
On the robot (from `~/lerobot`):
```bash
cd ~/lerobot
python src/lerobot/robots/unitree_g1/run_g1_server.py --camera
```
### Run the Locomotion Policy
You can run the teleoperation client from your laptop over Ethernet, over WiFi (experimental), or directly on the robot itself. Mind potential latency introduced by your network.
**From your laptop:**
```bash
lerobot-teleoperate \
--robot.type=unitree_g1 \
--robot.is_simulation=false \
--robot.robot_ip=<ROBOT_IP> \
--teleop.type=unitree_g1 \
--teleop.id=wbc_unitree \
--robot.cameras='{"global_view": {"type": "zmq", "server_address": "<ROBOT_IP>", "port": 5555, "camera_name": "head_camera", "width": 640, "height": 480, "fps": 30}}' \
--display_data=true \
--robot.controller=HolosomaLocomotionController
```
We support both [GrootLocomotionController](https://github.com/NVlabs/GR00T-WholeBodyControl) and [HolosomaLocomotionController](https://github.com/amazon-far/holosoma) via `--robot.controller`.
Replace `<YOUR_ROBOT_IP>` with your robot's actual WiFi IP address (e.g., `172.18.129.215`).
---
## Part 3: Loco-Manipulation with the Homunculus Exoskeleton
## Part 3: Robot Server Setup
We provide a loco-manipulation solution via the Homunculus Exoskeleton — an open-source 7 DoF exoskeleton for whole-body control. Check it out [here](https://github.com/nepyope/hmc_exo).
### Step 1: Install LeRobot on the Orin
### Calibrate
SSH into the robot and install LeRobot:
```bash
lerobot-calibrate \
--teleop.type=unitree_g1 \
--teleop.left_arm_config.port=/dev/ttyACM1 \
--teleop.right_arm_config.port=/dev/ttyACM0 \
--teleop.id=exo
ssh unitree@<YOUR_ROBOT_IP>
conda create -y -n lerobot python=3.10
conda activate lerobot
git clone https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot.git
cd lerobot
pip install -e '.[unitree_g1]'
git clone https://github.com/unitreerobotics/unitree_sdk2_python.git
cd unitree_sdk2_python && pip install -e .
```
During calibration move each joint through its entire range. After fitting, move the joint in a neutral position and press `n` to advance.
**Note**: The Unitree SDK requires CycloneDDS v0.10.2 to be installed. See the [Unitree SDK documentation](https://github.com/unitreerobotics/unitree_sdk2_python) for details.
### Record a Dataset
### Step 2: Run the Robot Server
On the robot:
```bash
lerobot-record \
--robot.type=unitree_g1 \
--robot.is_simulation=true \
--robot.cameras='{"global_view": {"type": "zmq", "server_address": "localhost", "port": 5555, "camera_name": "head_camera", "width": 640, "height": 480, "fps": 30}}' \
--teleop.type=unitree_g1 \
--teleop.left_arm_config.port=/dev/ttyACM1 \
--teleop.right_arm_config.port=/dev/ttyACM0 \
--teleop.id=exo \
--dataset.repo_id=your-username/dataset-name \
--dataset.single_task="Test" \
--dataset.num_episodes=2 \
--dataset.episode_time_s=5 \
--dataset.reset_time_s=5 \
--dataset.push_to_hub=true \
--dataset.streaming_encoding=true \
--dataset.encoder_threads=2
python src/lerobot/robots/unitree_g1/run_g1_server.py
```
> **Note:** Omit `--teleop.left_arm_config.port` and `--teleop.right_arm_config.port` if you're only using the joystick.
Example dataset: [nepyope/unitree_box_move_blue_full](https://huggingface.co/datasets/nepyope/unitree_box_move_blue_full)
**Important**: Keep this terminal running. The server must be active for remote control.
---
## Part 4: Training & Inference
## Part 4: Running GR00T Locomotion
### Train
With the robot server running, you can now control the robot from your laptop.
### Step 1: Install LeRobot on your machine
```bash
python src/lerobot/scripts/lerobot_train.py \
--dataset.repo_id=your-username/dataset-name \
--policy.type=pi05 \
--output_dir=./outputs/pi05_training \
--job_name=pi05_training \
--policy.repo_id=your-username/your-repo-id \
--policy.pretrained_path=lerobot/pi05_base \
--policy.compile_model=true \
--policy.gradient_checkpointing=true \
--wandb.enable=true \
--policy.dtype=bfloat16 \
--policy.freeze_vision_encoder=false \
--policy.train_expert_only=false \
--steps=3000 \
--policy.device=cuda \
--batch_size=32
conda create -y -n lerobot python=3.10
conda activate lerobot
git clone https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot.git
cd lerobot
pip install -e '.[unitree_g1]'
git clone https://github.com/unitreerobotics/unitree_sdk2_python.git
cd unitree_sdk2_python && pip install -e .
```
### Inference with RTC
### Step 2: Update Robot IP in Config
Once trained, we recommend deploying policies using inference-time RTC:
Edit the config file to match your robot's WiFi IP:
```python
# In src/lerobot/robots/unitree_g1/config_unitree_g1.py
robot_ip: str = "<YOUR_ROBOT_IP>" # Replace with your robot's WiFi IP.
```
**Note**: When running directly on the G1 (not remotely), set `robot_ip: str = "127.0.0.1"` instead.
### Step 3: Run the Locomotion Policy
```bash
python examples/rtc/eval_with_real_robot.py \
--policy.path=your-username/your-repo-id \
--policy.device=cuda \
--robot.type=unitree_g1 \
--robot.is_simulation=false \
--robot.controller=HolosomaLocomotionController \
--robot.cameras='{"global_view": {"type": "zmq", "server_address": "<ROBOT_IP>", "port": 5555, "camera_name": "head_camera", "width": 640, "height": 480, "fps": 30}}' \
--task="task_description" \
--duration=1000 \
--fps=30 \
--rtc.enabled=true
# Run GR00T locomotion controller
python examples/unitree_g1/gr00t_locomotion.py --repo-id "nepyope/GR00T-WholeBodyControl_g1"
```
### Step 4: Control with Remote
- **Left stick**: Forward/backward and left/right movement
- **Right stick**: Rotation
- **R1 button**: Raise waist height
- **R2 button**: Lower waist height
Press `Ctrl+C` to stop the policy.
---
## Extra: Running in Simulation Mode (MuJoCo)
You can now test and develop policies without a physical robot using MuJoCo. to do so set `is_simulation=True` in config.
## Additional Resources
- [Unitree SDK Documentation](https://github.com/unitreerobotics/unitree_sdk2_python)
- [GR00T-WholeBodyControl](https://github.com/NVlabs/GR00T-WholeBodyControl)
- [Holosoma](https://github.com/amazon-far/holosoma)
- [GR00T Policy Repository](https://huggingface.co/nepyope/GR00T-WholeBodyControl_g1)
- [LeRobot Documentation](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot)
- [Unitree IL LeRobot](https://github.com/unitreerobotics/unitree_IL_lerobot)
- [Unitree_IL_Lerobot](https://github.com/unitreerobotics/unitree_IL_lerobot)
---
_Last updated: March 2026_
_Last updated: December 2025_
+6 -38
View File
@@ -12,7 +12,6 @@ LeRobot provides several utilities for manipulating datasets:
4. **Add Features** - Add new features to a dataset
5. **Remove Features** - Remove features from a dataset
6. **Convert to Video** - Convert image-based datasets to video format for efficient storage
7. **Show the Info of Datasets** - Show the summary of datasets information such as number of episode etc.
The core implementation is in `lerobot.datasets.dataset_tools`.
An example script detailing how to use the tools API is available in `examples/dataset/use_dataset_tools.py`.
@@ -96,26 +95,26 @@ Convert an image-based dataset to video format, creating a new LeRobotDataset wh
# Local-only: Save to a custom output directory (no hub push)
lerobot-edit-dataset \
--repo_id lerobot/pusht_image \
--operation.type convert_image_to_video \
--operation.type convert_to_video \
--operation.output_dir /path/to/output/pusht_video
# Save with new repo_id (local storage)
lerobot-edit-dataset \
--repo_id lerobot/pusht_image \
--new_repo_id lerobot/pusht_video \
--operation.type convert_image_to_video
--operation.type convert_to_video
# Convert and push to Hugging Face Hub
lerobot-edit-dataset \
--repo_id lerobot/pusht_image \
--new_repo_id lerobot/pusht_video \
--operation.type convert_image_to_video \
--operation.type convert_to_video \
--push_to_hub true
# Convert with custom video codec and quality settings
lerobot-edit-dataset \
--repo_id lerobot/pusht_image \
--operation.type convert_image_to_video \
--operation.type convert_to_video \
--operation.output_dir outputs/pusht_video \
--operation.vcodec libsvtav1 \
--operation.pix_fmt yuv420p \
@@ -125,23 +124,16 @@ lerobot-edit-dataset \
# Convert only specific episodes
lerobot-edit-dataset \
--repo_id lerobot/pusht_image \
--operation.type convert_image_to_video \
--operation.type convert_to_video \
--operation.output_dir outputs/pusht_video \
--operation.episode_indices "[0, 1, 2, 5, 10]"
# Convert with multiple workers for parallel processing
lerobot-edit-dataset \
--repo_id lerobot/pusht_image \
--operation.type convert_image_to_video \
--operation.type convert_to_video \
--operation.output_dir outputs/pusht_video \
--operation.num_workers 8
# For memory-constrained systems, users can now specify limits:
lerobot-edit-dataset \
--repo_id lerobot/pusht_image \
--operation.type convert_to_video \
--operation.max_episodes_per_batch 50 \
--operation.max_frames_per_batch 10000
```
**Parameters:**
@@ -157,30 +149,6 @@ lerobot-edit-dataset \
**Note:** The resulting dataset will be a proper LeRobotDataset with all cameras encoded as videos in the `videos/` directory, with parquet files containing only metadata (no raw image data). All episodes, stats, and tasks are preserved.
### Show the information of datasets
Show the information of datasets such as number of episode, number of frame, File size and so on.
No change will be made to the dataset
```bash
# Show dataset information without feature details
lerobot-edit-dataset \
--repo_id lerobot/pusht_image \
--operation.type info \
# Show dataset information with feature details
lerobot-edit-dataset \
--repo_id lerobot/pusht_image \
--operation.type info \
--operation.show_features true
```
**Parameters:**
- `parameters`: The flag to control show or no show dataset information with feature details.(default=false)
### Push to Hub
Add the `--push_to_hub true` flag to any command to automatically upload the resulting dataset to the Hugging Face Hub:
+1 -7
View File
@@ -8,12 +8,6 @@ X Square Robots WALL-OSS is now integrated into Hugging Faces LeRobot ecos
The WALL-OSS team is building the embodied foundation model to capture and compress the world's most valuable data: the continuous, high-fidelity stream of physical interaction. By creating a direct feedback loop between the model's decisions and the body's lived experience, the emergence of a truly generalizable intelligence is enabled—one that understands not just how the world works, but how to act effectively within it.
<img
src="https://huggingface.co/datasets/huggingface/documentation-images/resolve/main/lerobot/walloss-lerobot-paper.png"
alt="An overview of WALL-OSS"
width="85%"
/>
Technically, WALL-OSS introduces a tightly coupled multimodal architecture (tightly-coupled MoE structure) that integrates both discrete and continuous action modeling strategies. Through a two-stage training pipeline (Inspiration → Integration), the model gradually unifies semantic reasoning and high-frequency action generation. Its core innovations include:
- **Embodied perceptionenhanced multimodal pretraining**: Large-scale training on unified visionlanguageaction data to strengthen spatial, causal, and manipulation understanding.
@@ -45,7 +39,7 @@ policy.type=wall_x
For training WallX, you can use the standard LeRobot training script with the appropriate configuration:
```bash
lerobot-train \
python src/lerobot/scripts/lerobot_train.py \
--dataset.repo_id=your_dataset \
--policy.type=wall_x \
--output_dir=./outputs/wallx_training \
+1 -1
View File
@@ -154,7 +154,7 @@ lerobot-train \
```bash
lerobot-train \
--dataset.repo_id=<USER>/bimanual-so100-handover-cube \
--dataset.repo_id=pepijn223/bimanual-so100-handover-cube \
--output_dir=./outputs/xvla_bimanual \
--job_name=xvla_so101_training \
--policy.path="lerobot/xvla-base" \
+19 -19
View File
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@ lerobot-replay \
--robot.type=so100_follower \
--robot.port=/dev/tty.usbmodem58760431541 \
--robot.id=black \
--dataset.repo_id=<USER>/record-test \
--dataset.repo_id=aliberts/record-test \
--dataset.episode=2
```
"""
@@ -41,7 +41,8 @@ from lerobot.robots import ( # noqa: F401
RobotConfig,
koch_follower,
make_robot_from_config,
so_follower,
so100_follower,
so101_follower,
)
from lerobot.utils.constants import ACTION
from lerobot.utils.robot_utils import precise_sleep
@@ -57,7 +58,7 @@ class DatasetReplayConfig:
repo_id: str
# Episode to replay.
episode: int
# Root directory where the dataset will be stored (e.g. 'dataset/path'). If None, defaults to $HF_LEROBOT_HOME/repo_id.
# Root directory where the dataset will be stored (e.g. 'dataset/path').
root: str | Path | None = None
# Limit the frames per second. By default, uses the policy fps.
fps: int = 30
@@ -81,25 +82,24 @@ def replay(cfg: ReplayConfig):
actions = dataset.hf_dataset.select_columns(ACTION)
robot.connect()
try:
log_say("Replaying episode", cfg.play_sounds, blocking=True)
for idx in range(dataset.num_frames):
start_episode_t = time.perf_counter()
log_say("Replaying episode", cfg.play_sounds, blocking=True)
for idx in range(dataset.num_frames):
start_episode_t = time.perf_counter()
action_array = actions[idx][ACTION]
action = {}
for i, name in enumerate(dataset.features[ACTION]["names"]):
key = f"{name.removeprefix('main_')}.pos"
action[key] = action_array[i].item()
action_array = actions[idx][ACTION]
action = {}
for i, name in enumerate(dataset.features[ACTION]["names"]):
key = f"{name.removeprefix('main_')}.pos"
action[key] = action_array[i].item()
action["shoulder_lift.pos"] = -(action["shoulder_lift.pos"] - 90)
action["elbow_flex.pos"] -= 90
robot.send_action(action)
action["shoulder_lift.pos"] = -(action["shoulder_lift.pos"] - 90)
action["elbow_flex.pos"] -= 90
robot.send_action(action)
dt_s = time.perf_counter() - start_episode_t
precise_sleep(max(1 / dataset.fps - dt_s, 0.0))
finally:
robot.disconnect()
dt_s = time.perf_counter() - start_episode_t
precise_sleep(1 / dataset.fps - dt_s)
robot.disconnect()
if __name__ == "__main__":
+1 -2
View File
@@ -32,8 +32,7 @@ import torch
from huggingface_hub import HfApi
import lerobot
from lerobot.datasets.dataset_metadata import LeRobotDatasetMetadata
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset, LeRobotDatasetMetadata
def main():
-490
View File
@@ -1,490 +0,0 @@
#!/usr/bin/env python
# Copyright 2025 The HuggingFace Inc. team. All rights reserved.
#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
# You may obtain a copy of the License at
#
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
# limitations under the License.
"""
SLURM-distributed SARM RA-BC annotation pipeline.
Computes SARM progress values for all frames in a dataset, distributed across
SLURM workers, then merges the shards into a single sarm_progress.parquet.
Two subcommands, each a separate SLURM submission:
compute N workers, each computes progress for a subset of episodes
aggregate 1 worker, merges N shards into sarm_progress.parquet, pushes to hub
Usage:
python slurm_compute_rabc.py compute \\
--repo-id user/dataset --reward-model-path user/sarm_model \\
--stride 10 --device cpu --workers 50 --partition cpu
python slurm_compute_rabc.py aggregate \\
--repo-id user/dataset --reward-model-path user/sarm_model \\
--partition cpu --push-to-hub
"""
import argparse
from pathlib import Path
from datatrove.executor import LocalPipelineExecutor
from datatrove.executor.slurm import SlurmPipelineExecutor
from datatrove.pipeline.base import PipelineStep
class ComputeProgressShards(PipelineStep):
"""Each worker computes SARM progress for its assigned episodes."""
def __init__(
self, repo_id, reward_model_path, stride=1, head_mode="sparse", device="cpu", shard_dir="rabc_shards"
):
super().__init__()
if stride < 1:
raise ValueError(f"stride must be >= 1, got {stride}")
self.repo_id = repo_id
self.reward_model_path = reward_model_path
self.stride = stride
self.head_mode = head_mode
self.device = device
self.shard_dir = shard_dir
def run(self, data=None, rank: int = 0, world_size: int = 1):
import logging
from pathlib import Path
import numpy as np
import pyarrow as pa
import pyarrow.parquet as pq
import torch
from tqdm import tqdm
from lerobot.policies.sarm.compute_rabc_weights import (
generate_all_frame_indices,
interpolate_progress,
load_sarm_resources,
)
from lerobot.utils.utils import init_logging
init_logging()
dataset, reward_model, preprocess = load_sarm_resources(
self.repo_id,
self.reward_model_path,
self.device,
)
if hasattr(preprocess, "eval"):
preprocess.eval()
for step in preprocess.steps:
if hasattr(step, "eval"):
step.eval()
image_key = reward_model.config.image_key
state_key = reward_model.config.state_key
frame_gap = reward_model.config.frame_gap
center_idx = reward_model.config.n_obs_steps // 2
dual_mode = reward_model.config.uses_dual_heads
compute_sparse = self.head_mode in ("sparse", "both") or not dual_mode
compute_dense = self.head_mode in ("dense", "both") and dual_mode
my_episodes = list(range(dataset.num_episodes))[rank::world_size]
if not my_episodes:
logging.info(f"Rank {rank}: no episodes assigned")
return
logging.info(f"Rank {rank}: {len(my_episodes)} / {dataset.num_episodes} episodes")
all_rows = []
for ep_idx in tqdm(my_episodes, desc=f"Rank {rank}"):
ep = dataset.meta.episodes[ep_idx]
ep_start, ep_end = ep["dataset_from_index"], ep["dataset_to_index"]
task = dataset[ep_start].get("task", "perform the task")
all_ep_indices = generate_all_frame_indices(ep_start, ep_end, frame_gap)
if self.stride > 1:
compute_indices = [i for i in all_ep_indices if (i - ep_start) % self.stride == 0]
if (ep_end - 1) not in compute_indices:
compute_indices.append(ep_end - 1)
compute_indices = sorted(set(compute_indices))
else:
compute_indices = all_ep_indices
frame_results = {}
for qi in tqdm(compute_indices, desc=f" Ep {ep_idx}", leave=False):
try:
sample = dataset[qi]
batch = {
image_key: sample[image_key],
"task": task,
"index": qi,
"episode_index": ep_idx,
}
if state_key in sample:
batch[state_key] = sample[state_key]
with torch.no_grad():
processed = preprocess(batch)
vf = processed["video_features"].to(self.device)
tf = processed["text_features"].to(self.device)
sf = processed.get("state_features")
if sf is not None:
sf = sf.to(self.device)
lengths = processed.get("lengths")
sparse_val = dense_val = np.nan
if compute_sparse:
r = reward_model.calculate_rewards(
text_embeddings=tf,
video_embeddings=vf,
state_features=sf,
lengths=lengths,
return_all_frames=True,
head_mode="sparse",
)
sparse_val = float(r[0, center_idx] if r.ndim == 2 else r[center_idx])
if compute_dense:
r = reward_model.calculate_rewards(
text_embeddings=tf,
video_embeddings=vf,
state_features=sf,
lengths=lengths,
return_all_frames=True,
head_mode="dense",
)
dense_val = float(r[0, center_idx] if r.ndim == 2 else r[center_idx])
frame_results[qi] = (sparse_val, dense_val)
except Exception as e:
logging.warning(f"Failed frame {qi}: {e}")
if not frame_results:
logging.warning(f"Episode {ep_idx}: all frames failed, skipping")
continue
# Interpolate to all frames in this episode
computed_idx = np.array(sorted(frame_results.keys()))
all_frame_arr = np.arange(ep_start, ep_end)
sparse_vals = np.array([frame_results[i][0] for i in computed_idx]) if compute_sparse else None
dense_vals = np.array([frame_results[i][1] for i in computed_idx]) if compute_dense else None
if self.stride > 1 and len(computed_idx) > 1:
if compute_sparse:
sparse_vals = interpolate_progress(computed_idx, sparse_vals, all_frame_arr)
if compute_dense:
dense_vals = interpolate_progress(computed_idx, dense_vals, all_frame_arr)
output_frames = all_frame_arr
else:
# Use only successfully computed frames to avoid indexing mismatch on failures
output_frames = computed_idx
for i, fi in enumerate(output_frames):
row = {"index": int(fi), "episode_index": ep_idx, "frame_index": int(fi - ep_start)}
if compute_sparse:
row["progress_sparse"] = float(sparse_vals[i])
if compute_dense:
row["progress_dense"] = float(dense_vals[i])
all_rows.append(row)
if all_rows:
import pandas as pd
df = pd.DataFrame(all_rows).sort_values("index").reset_index(drop=True)
table = pa.Table.from_pandas(df, preserve_index=False)
table = table.replace_schema_metadata({b"reward_model_path": self.reward_model_path.encode()})
shard_dir = Path(self.shard_dir)
shard_dir.mkdir(parents=True, exist_ok=True)
out = shard_dir / f"shard_{rank:05d}.parquet"
pq.write_table(table, out)
logging.info(f"Rank {rank}: saved {len(df)} rows to {out}")
class AggregateProgress(PipelineStep):
"""Merge all shard parquets into final sarm_progress.parquet."""
def __init__(self, repo_id, reward_model_path, shard_dir="rabc_shards", push_to_hub=False):
super().__init__()
self.repo_id = repo_id
self.reward_model_path = reward_model_path
self.shard_dir = shard_dir
self.push_to_hub = push_to_hub
def run(self, data=None, rank: int = 0, world_size: int = 1):
import datetime
import logging
import os
from pathlib import Path
import pandas as pd
import pyarrow as pa
import pyarrow.parquet as pq
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset
from lerobot.utils.utils import init_logging
init_logging()
if rank != 0:
return
shard_dir = Path(self.shard_dir)
shards = sorted(shard_dir.glob("shard_*.parquet"))
if not shards:
raise FileNotFoundError(f"No shards found in {shard_dir}")
# Log shard modification time range to help detect stale files
mtimes = [os.path.getmtime(s) for s in shards]
oldest = datetime.datetime.fromtimestamp(min(mtimes)).isoformat(timespec="seconds")
newest = datetime.datetime.fromtimestamp(max(mtimes)).isoformat(timespec="seconds")
logging.info(f"Aggregating {len(shards)} shards (oldest: {oldest}, newest: {newest})")
df = pd.concat([pd.read_parquet(s) for s in shards], ignore_index=True)
df = df.sort_values("index").reset_index(drop=True)
table = pa.Table.from_pandas(df, preserve_index=False)
table = table.replace_schema_metadata({b"reward_model_path": self.reward_model_path.encode()})
temp_ds = LeRobotDataset(self.repo_id, download_videos=False)
out_path = Path(temp_ds.root) / "sarm_progress.parquet"
out_path.parent.mkdir(parents=True, exist_ok=True)
pq.write_table(table, out_path)
logging.info(f"Saved {len(df)} rows to {out_path}")
for col in ["progress_sparse", "progress_dense"]:
if col in df.columns:
v = df[col].dropna()
logging.info(
f"{col}: mean={v.mean():.4f} std={v.std():.4f} min={v.min():.4f} max={v.max():.4f}"
)
if self.push_to_hub:
from huggingface_hub import HfApi
api = HfApi()
hub_path = "sarm_progress.parquet"
logging.info(f"Uploading to {self.repo_id}/{hub_path}")
api.upload_file(
path_or_fileobj=str(out_path),
path_in_repo=hub_path,
repo_id=self.repo_id,
repo_type="dataset",
)
logging.info(f"Uploaded: https://huggingface.co/datasets/{self.repo_id}/blob/main/{hub_path}")
def make_compute_executor(
repo_id,
reward_model_path,
stride,
head_mode,
device,
shard_dir,
logs_dir,
job_name,
slurm,
workers,
partition,
cpus_per_task,
mem_per_cpu,
):
kwargs = {
"pipeline": [
ComputeProgressShards(repo_id, reward_model_path, stride, head_mode, device, str(shard_dir)),
],
"logging_dir": str(logs_dir / job_name),
}
if slurm:
kwargs.update(
{
"job_name": job_name,
"tasks": workers,
"workers": workers,
"time": "24:00:00",
"partition": partition,
"cpus_per_task": cpus_per_task,
"sbatch_args": {"mem-per-cpu": mem_per_cpu},
}
)
return SlurmPipelineExecutor(**kwargs)
kwargs.update({"tasks": workers, "workers": 1})
return LocalPipelineExecutor(**kwargs)
def make_aggregate_executor(
repo_id,
reward_model_path,
shard_dir,
logs_dir,
job_name,
slurm,
partition,
cpus_per_task,
mem_per_cpu,
push_to_hub,
):
kwargs = {
"pipeline": [
AggregateProgress(repo_id, reward_model_path, str(shard_dir), push_to_hub),
],
"logging_dir": str(logs_dir / job_name),
}
if slurm:
kwargs.update(
{
"job_name": job_name,
"tasks": 1,
"workers": 1,
"time": "02:00:00",
"partition": partition,
"cpus_per_task": cpus_per_task,
"sbatch_args": {"mem-per-cpu": mem_per_cpu},
}
)
return SlurmPipelineExecutor(**kwargs)
kwargs.update({"tasks": 1, "workers": 1})
return LocalPipelineExecutor(**kwargs)
def _add_shared_args(p):
p.add_argument(
"--repo-id",
type=str,
required=True,
help="Hugging Face repository identifier, e.g. 'user/dataset'.",
)
p.add_argument(
"--shard-dir",
type=Path,
default=Path("rabc_shards"),
help="Directory to read/write per-rank parquet shards.",
)
p.add_argument(
"--logs-dir",
type=Path,
default=Path("logs"),
help="Directory for datatrove logs.",
)
p.add_argument(
"--job-name",
type=str,
default=None,
help="SLURM job name (defaults to rabc_<subcommand>).",
)
p.add_argument(
"--slurm",
type=int,
default=1,
help="1 = submit via SLURM; 0 = run locally (useful for debugging).",
)
p.add_argument(
"--partition",
type=str,
default=None,
help="SLURM partition to submit to.",
)
p.add_argument(
"--cpus-per-task",
type=int,
default=4,
help="Number of CPUs per SLURM task.",
)
p.add_argument(
"--mem-per-cpu",
type=str,
default="4G",
help="Memory per CPU, e.g. '4G' or '1950M'.",
)
def main():
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(
description="SLURM-distributed SARM RA-BC annotation pipeline",
formatter_class=argparse.RawDescriptionHelpFormatter,
)
sub = parser.add_subparsers(dest="command", required=True)
# compute subcommand
cp = sub.add_parser(
"compute",
help="Distribute progress computation across SLURM workers.",
)
_add_shared_args(cp)
cp.add_argument(
"--reward-model-path",
type=str,
required=True,
help="Path or HF repo id of the SARM reward model.",
)
cp.add_argument(
"--stride",
type=int,
default=1,
help="Compute every Nth frame; intermediate frames are interpolated (must be >= 1).",
)
cp.add_argument(
"--head-mode",
type=str,
default="sparse",
choices=["sparse", "dense", "both"],
help="Which reward head(s) to compute.",
)
cp.add_argument(
"--device",
type=str,
default="cpu",
help="Device for reward model inference, e.g. 'cpu' or 'cuda'.",
)
cp.add_argument(
"--workers",
type=int,
default=50,
help="Number of parallel SLURM tasks (one shard per worker).",
)
# aggregate subcommand
ap = sub.add_parser(
"aggregate",
help="Merge per-rank shards into a single sarm_progress.parquet.",
)
_add_shared_args(ap)
ap.add_argument(
"--reward-model-path",
type=str,
required=True,
help="Path or HF repo id of the SARM reward model (stored in parquet metadata).",
)
ap.add_argument(
"--push-to-hub",
action="store_true",
help="Upload sarm_progress.parquet to the Hugging Face Hub after aggregation.",
)
args = parser.parse_args()
job_name = args.job_name or f"rabc_{args.command}"
kwargs = vars(args)
kwargs["slurm"] = kwargs.pop("slurm") == 1
kwargs["job_name"] = job_name
command = kwargs.pop("command")
executor = make_compute_executor(**kwargs) if command == "compute" else make_aggregate_executor(**kwargs)
executor.run()
if __name__ == "__main__":
main()
+44 -46
View File
@@ -14,8 +14,8 @@
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
# limitations under the License.
from lerobot.datasets.feature_utils import hw_to_dataset_features
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset
from lerobot.datasets.utils import hw_to_dataset_features
from lerobot.policies.act.modeling_act import ACTPolicy
from lerobot.policies.factory import make_pre_post_processors
from lerobot.processor import make_default_processors
@@ -78,24 +78,40 @@ def main():
listener, events = init_keyboard_listener()
init_rerun(session_name="lekiwi_evaluate")
try:
if not robot.is_connected:
raise ValueError("Robot is not connected!")
if not robot.is_connected:
raise ValueError("Robot is not connected!")
print("Starting evaluate loop...")
recorded_episodes = 0
while recorded_episodes < NUM_EPISODES and not events["stop_recording"]:
log_say(f"Running inference, recording eval episode {recorded_episodes} of {NUM_EPISODES}")
print("Starting evaluate loop...")
recorded_episodes = 0
while recorded_episodes < NUM_EPISODES and not events["stop_recording"]:
log_say(f"Running inference, recording eval episode {recorded_episodes} of {NUM_EPISODES}")
# Main record loop
# Main record loop
record_loop(
robot=robot,
events=events,
fps=FPS,
policy=policy,
preprocessor=preprocessor, # Pass the pre and post policy processors
postprocessor=postprocessor,
dataset=dataset,
control_time_s=EPISODE_TIME_SEC,
single_task=TASK_DESCRIPTION,
display_data=True,
teleop_action_processor=teleop_action_processor,
robot_action_processor=robot_action_processor,
robot_observation_processor=robot_observation_processor,
)
# Reset the environment if not stopping or re-recording
if not events["stop_recording"] and (
(recorded_episodes < NUM_EPISODES - 1) or events["rerecord_episode"]
):
log_say("Reset the environment")
record_loop(
robot=robot,
events=events,
fps=FPS,
policy=policy,
preprocessor=preprocessor, # Pass the pre and post policy processors
postprocessor=postprocessor,
dataset=dataset,
control_time_s=EPISODE_TIME_SEC,
single_task=TASK_DESCRIPTION,
display_data=True,
@@ -104,42 +120,24 @@ def main():
robot_observation_processor=robot_observation_processor,
)
# Reset the environment if not stopping or re-recording
if not events["stop_recording"] and (
(recorded_episodes < NUM_EPISODES - 1) or events["rerecord_episode"]
):
log_say("Reset the environment")
record_loop(
robot=robot,
events=events,
fps=FPS,
control_time_s=EPISODE_TIME_SEC,
single_task=TASK_DESCRIPTION,
display_data=True,
teleop_action_processor=teleop_action_processor,
robot_action_processor=robot_action_processor,
robot_observation_processor=robot_observation_processor,
)
if events["rerecord_episode"]:
log_say("Re-record episode")
events["rerecord_episode"] = False
events["exit_early"] = False
dataset.clear_episode_buffer()
continue
if events["rerecord_episode"]:
log_say("Re-record episode")
events["rerecord_episode"] = False
events["exit_early"] = False
dataset.clear_episode_buffer()
continue
# Save episode
dataset.save_episode()
recorded_episodes += 1
# Save episode
dataset.save_episode()
recorded_episodes += 1
# Clean up
log_say("Stop recording")
robot.disconnect()
listener.stop()
finally:
# Clean up
log_say("Stop recording")
robot.disconnect()
listener.stop()
dataset.finalize()
dataset.push_to_hub()
dataset.finalize()
dataset.push_to_hub()
if __name__ == "__main__":
+46 -47
View File
@@ -14,14 +14,14 @@
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
# limitations under the License.
from lerobot.datasets.feature_utils import hw_to_dataset_features
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset
from lerobot.datasets.utils import hw_to_dataset_features
from lerobot.processor import make_default_processors
from lerobot.robots.lekiwi.config_lekiwi import LeKiwiClientConfig
from lerobot.robots.lekiwi.lekiwi_client import LeKiwiClient
from lerobot.scripts.lerobot_record import record_loop
from lerobot.teleoperators.keyboard import KeyboardTeleop, KeyboardTeleopConfig
from lerobot.teleoperators.so_leader import SO100Leader, SO100LeaderConfig
from lerobot.teleoperators.so100_leader import SO100Leader, SO100LeaderConfig
from lerobot.utils.constants import ACTION, OBS_STR
from lerobot.utils.control_utils import init_keyboard_listener
from lerobot.utils.utils import log_say
@@ -74,23 +74,40 @@ def main():
listener, events = init_keyboard_listener()
init_rerun(session_name="lekiwi_record")
try:
if not robot.is_connected or not leader_arm.is_connected or not keyboard.is_connected:
raise ValueError("Robot or teleop is not connected!")
if not robot.is_connected or not leader_arm.is_connected or not keyboard.is_connected:
raise ValueError("Robot or teleop is not connected!")
print("Starting record loop...")
recorded_episodes = 0
while recorded_episodes < NUM_EPISODES and not events["stop_recording"]:
log_say(f"Recording episode {recorded_episodes}")
print("Starting record loop...")
recorded_episodes = 0
while recorded_episodes < NUM_EPISODES and not events["stop_recording"]:
log_say(f"Recording episode {recorded_episodes}")
# Main record loop
# Main record loop
record_loop(
robot=robot,
events=events,
fps=FPS,
dataset=dataset,
teleop=[leader_arm, keyboard],
control_time_s=EPISODE_TIME_SEC,
single_task=TASK_DESCRIPTION,
display_data=True,
teleop_action_processor=teleop_action_processor,
robot_action_processor=robot_action_processor,
robot_observation_processor=robot_observation_processor,
)
# Reset the environment if not stopping or re-recording
if not events["stop_recording"] and (
(recorded_episodes < NUM_EPISODES - 1) or events["rerecord_episode"]
):
log_say("Reset the environment")
record_loop(
robot=robot,
events=events,
fps=FPS,
dataset=dataset,
teleop=[leader_arm, keyboard],
control_time_s=EPISODE_TIME_SEC,
control_time_s=RESET_TIME_SEC,
single_task=TASK_DESCRIPTION,
display_data=True,
teleop_action_processor=teleop_action_processor,
@@ -98,44 +115,26 @@ def main():
robot_observation_processor=robot_observation_processor,
)
# Reset the environment if not stopping or re-recording
if not events["stop_recording"] and (
(recorded_episodes < NUM_EPISODES - 1) or events["rerecord_episode"]
):
log_say("Reset the environment")
record_loop(
robot=robot,
events=events,
fps=FPS,
teleop=[leader_arm, keyboard],
control_time_s=RESET_TIME_SEC,
single_task=TASK_DESCRIPTION,
display_data=True,
teleop_action_processor=teleop_action_processor,
robot_action_processor=robot_action_processor,
robot_observation_processor=robot_observation_processor,
)
if events["rerecord_episode"]:
log_say("Re-record episode")
events["rerecord_episode"] = False
events["exit_early"] = False
dataset.clear_episode_buffer()
continue
if events["rerecord_episode"]:
log_say("Re-record episode")
events["rerecord_episode"] = False
events["exit_early"] = False
dataset.clear_episode_buffer()
continue
# Save episode
dataset.save_episode()
recorded_episodes += 1
# Save episode
dataset.save_episode()
recorded_episodes += 1
finally:
# Clean up
log_say("Stop recording")
robot.disconnect()
leader_arm.disconnect()
keyboard.disconnect()
listener.stop()
# Clean up
log_say("Stop recording")
robot.disconnect()
leader_arm.disconnect()
keyboard.disconnect()
listener.stop()
dataset.finalize()
dataset.push_to_hub()
dataset.finalize()
dataset.push_to_hub()
if __name__ == "__main__":
+15 -17
View File
@@ -42,27 +42,25 @@ def main():
# Connect to the robot
robot.connect()
try:
if not robot.is_connected:
raise ValueError("Robot is not connected!")
if not robot.is_connected:
raise ValueError("Robot is not connected!")
print("Starting replay loop...")
log_say(f"Replaying episode {EPISODE_IDX}")
for idx in range(len(episode_frames)):
t0 = time.perf_counter()
print("Starting replay loop...")
log_say(f"Replaying episode {EPISODE_IDX}")
for idx in range(len(episode_frames)):
t0 = time.perf_counter()
# Get recorded action from dataset
action = {
name: float(actions[idx][ACTION][i])
for i, name in enumerate(dataset.features[ACTION]["names"])
}
# Get recorded action from dataset
action = {
name: float(actions[idx][ACTION][i]) for i, name in enumerate(dataset.features[ACTION]["names"])
}
# Send action to robot
_ = robot.send_action(action)
# Send action to robot
_ = robot.send_action(action)
precise_sleep(max(1.0 / dataset.fps - (time.perf_counter() - t0), 0.0))
finally:
robot.disconnect()
precise_sleep(max(1.0 / dataset.fps - (time.perf_counter() - t0), 0.0))
robot.disconnect()
if __name__ == "__main__":
+1 -1
View File
@@ -18,7 +18,7 @@ import time
from lerobot.robots.lekiwi import LeKiwiClient, LeKiwiClientConfig
from lerobot.teleoperators.keyboard.teleop_keyboard import KeyboardTeleop, KeyboardTeleopConfig
from lerobot.teleoperators.so_leader import SO100Leader, SO100LeaderConfig
from lerobot.teleoperators.so100_leader import SO100Leader, SO100LeaderConfig
from lerobot.utils.robot_utils import precise_sleep
from lerobot.utils.visualization_utils import init_rerun, log_rerun_data
+47 -48
View File
@@ -16,13 +16,15 @@
from lerobot.cameras.opencv.configuration_opencv import OpenCVCameraConfig
from lerobot.configs.types import FeatureType, PolicyFeature
from lerobot.datasets.feature_utils import combine_feature_dicts
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset
from lerobot.datasets.pipeline_features import aggregate_pipeline_dataset_features, create_initial_features
from lerobot.datasets.utils import combine_feature_dicts
from lerobot.model.kinematics import RobotKinematics
from lerobot.policies.act.modeling_act import ACTPolicy
from lerobot.policies.factory import make_pre_post_processors
from lerobot.processor import (
RobotAction,
RobotObservation,
RobotProcessorPipeline,
make_default_teleop_action_processor,
)
@@ -32,13 +34,13 @@ from lerobot.processor.converters import (
transition_to_observation,
transition_to_robot_action,
)
from lerobot.robots.so_follower import SO100Follower, SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so_follower.robot_kinematic_processor import (
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.config_so100_follower import SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.robot_kinematic_processor import (
ForwardKinematicsJointsToEE,
InverseKinematicsEEToJoints,
)
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.so100_follower import SO100Follower
from lerobot.scripts.lerobot_record import record_loop
from lerobot.types import RobotAction, RobotObservation
from lerobot.utils.control_utils import init_keyboard_listener
from lerobot.utils.utils import log_say
from lerobot.utils.visualization_utils import init_rerun
@@ -141,24 +143,38 @@ def main():
listener, events = init_keyboard_listener()
init_rerun(session_name="phone_so100_evaluate")
try:
if not robot.is_connected:
raise ValueError("Robot is not connected!")
if not robot.is_connected:
raise ValueError("Robot is not connected!")
print("Starting evaluate loop...")
episode_idx = 0
for episode_idx in range(NUM_EPISODES):
log_say(f"Running inference, recording eval episode {episode_idx + 1} of {NUM_EPISODES}")
print("Starting evaluate loop...")
episode_idx = 0
for episode_idx in range(NUM_EPISODES):
log_say(f"Running inference, recording eval episode {episode_idx + 1} of {NUM_EPISODES}")
# Main record loop
# Main record loop
record_loop(
robot=robot,
events=events,
fps=FPS,
policy=policy,
preprocessor=preprocessor, # Pass the pre and post policy processors
postprocessor=postprocessor,
dataset=dataset,
control_time_s=EPISODE_TIME_SEC,
single_task=TASK_DESCRIPTION,
display_data=True,
teleop_action_processor=make_default_teleop_action_processor(),
robot_action_processor=robot_ee_to_joints_processor,
robot_observation_processor=robot_joints_to_ee_pose_processor,
)
# Reset the environment if not stopping or re-recording
if not events["stop_recording"] and ((episode_idx < NUM_EPISODES - 1) or events["rerecord_episode"]):
log_say("Reset the environment")
record_loop(
robot=robot,
events=events,
fps=FPS,
policy=policy,
preprocessor=preprocessor, # Pass the pre and post policy processors
postprocessor=postprocessor,
dataset=dataset,
control_time_s=EPISODE_TIME_SEC,
single_task=TASK_DESCRIPTION,
display_data=True,
@@ -167,41 +183,24 @@ def main():
robot_observation_processor=robot_joints_to_ee_pose_processor,
)
# Reset the environment if not stopping or re-recording
if not events["stop_recording"] and (
(episode_idx < NUM_EPISODES - 1) or events["rerecord_episode"]
):
log_say("Reset the environment")
record_loop(
robot=robot,
events=events,
fps=FPS,
control_time_s=EPISODE_TIME_SEC,
single_task=TASK_DESCRIPTION,
display_data=True,
teleop_action_processor=make_default_teleop_action_processor(),
robot_action_processor=robot_ee_to_joints_processor,
robot_observation_processor=robot_joints_to_ee_pose_processor,
)
if events["rerecord_episode"]:
log_say("Re-record episode")
events["rerecord_episode"] = False
events["exit_early"] = False
dataset.clear_episode_buffer()
continue
if events["rerecord_episode"]:
log_say("Re-record episode")
events["rerecord_episode"] = False
events["exit_early"] = False
dataset.clear_episode_buffer()
continue
# Save episode
dataset.save_episode()
episode_idx += 1
# Save episode
dataset.save_episode()
episode_idx += 1
finally:
# Clean up
log_say("Stop recording")
robot.disconnect()
listener.stop()
# Clean up
log_say("Stop recording")
robot.disconnect()
listener.stop()
dataset.finalize()
dataset.push_to_hub()
dataset.finalize()
dataset.push_to_hub()
if __name__ == "__main__":
+46 -49
View File
@@ -15,30 +15,30 @@
# limitations under the License.
from lerobot.cameras.opencv.configuration_opencv import OpenCVCameraConfig
from lerobot.datasets.feature_utils import combine_feature_dicts
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset
from lerobot.datasets.pipeline_features import aggregate_pipeline_dataset_features, create_initial_features
from lerobot.datasets.utils import combine_feature_dicts
from lerobot.model.kinematics import RobotKinematics
from lerobot.processor import RobotProcessorPipeline
from lerobot.processor import RobotAction, RobotObservation, RobotProcessorPipeline
from lerobot.processor.converters import (
observation_to_transition,
robot_action_observation_to_transition,
transition_to_observation,
transition_to_robot_action,
)
from lerobot.robots.so_follower import SO100Follower, SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so_follower.robot_kinematic_processor import (
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.config_so100_follower import SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.robot_kinematic_processor import (
EEBoundsAndSafety,
EEReferenceAndDelta,
ForwardKinematicsJointsToEE,
GripperVelocityToJoint,
InverseKinematicsEEToJoints,
)
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.so100_follower import SO100Follower
from lerobot.scripts.lerobot_record import record_loop
from lerobot.teleoperators.phone.config_phone import PhoneConfig, PhoneOS
from lerobot.teleoperators.phone.phone_processor import MapPhoneActionToRobotAction
from lerobot.teleoperators.phone.teleop_phone import Phone
from lerobot.types import RobotAction, RobotObservation
from lerobot.utils.control_utils import init_keyboard_listener
from lerobot.utils.utils import log_say
from lerobot.utils.visualization_utils import init_rerun
@@ -150,23 +150,38 @@ def main():
listener, events = init_keyboard_listener()
init_rerun(session_name="phone_so100_record")
try:
if not robot.is_connected or not phone.is_connected:
raise ValueError("Robot or teleop is not connected!")
if not robot.is_connected or not phone.is_connected:
raise ValueError("Robot or teleop is not connected!")
print("Starting record loop. Move your phone to teleoperate the robot...")
episode_idx = 0
while episode_idx < NUM_EPISODES and not events["stop_recording"]:
log_say(f"Recording episode {episode_idx + 1} of {NUM_EPISODES}")
print("Starting record loop. Move your phone to teleoperate the robot...")
episode_idx = 0
while episode_idx < NUM_EPISODES and not events["stop_recording"]:
log_say(f"Recording episode {episode_idx + 1} of {NUM_EPISODES}")
# Main record loop
# Main record loop
record_loop(
robot=robot,
events=events,
fps=FPS,
teleop=phone,
dataset=dataset,
control_time_s=EPISODE_TIME_SEC,
single_task=TASK_DESCRIPTION,
display_data=True,
teleop_action_processor=phone_to_robot_ee_pose_processor,
robot_action_processor=robot_ee_to_joints_processor,
robot_observation_processor=robot_joints_to_ee_pose,
)
# Reset the environment if not stopping or re-recording
if not events["stop_recording"] and (episode_idx < NUM_EPISODES - 1 or events["rerecord_episode"]):
log_say("Reset the environment")
record_loop(
robot=robot,
events=events,
fps=FPS,
teleop=phone,
dataset=dataset,
control_time_s=EPISODE_TIME_SEC,
control_time_s=RESET_TIME_SEC,
single_task=TASK_DESCRIPTION,
display_data=True,
teleop_action_processor=phone_to_robot_ee_pose_processor,
@@ -174,43 +189,25 @@ def main():
robot_observation_processor=robot_joints_to_ee_pose,
)
# Reset the environment if not stopping or re-recording
if not events["stop_recording"] and (
episode_idx < NUM_EPISODES - 1 or events["rerecord_episode"]
):
log_say("Reset the environment")
record_loop(
robot=robot,
events=events,
fps=FPS,
teleop=phone,
control_time_s=RESET_TIME_SEC,
single_task=TASK_DESCRIPTION,
display_data=True,
teleop_action_processor=phone_to_robot_ee_pose_processor,
robot_action_processor=robot_ee_to_joints_processor,
robot_observation_processor=robot_joints_to_ee_pose,
)
if events["rerecord_episode"]:
log_say("Re-recording episode")
events["rerecord_episode"] = False
events["exit_early"] = False
dataset.clear_episode_buffer()
continue
if events["rerecord_episode"]:
log_say("Re-recording episode")
events["rerecord_episode"] = False
events["exit_early"] = False
dataset.clear_episode_buffer()
continue
# Save episode
dataset.save_episode()
episode_idx += 1
# Save episode
dataset.save_episode()
episode_idx += 1
finally:
# Clean up
log_say("Stop recording")
robot.disconnect()
phone.disconnect()
listener.stop()
# Clean up
log_say("Stop recording")
robot.disconnect()
phone.disconnect()
listener.stop()
dataset.finalize()
dataset.push_to_hub()
dataset.finalize()
dataset.push_to_hub()
if __name__ == "__main__":
+24 -26
View File
@@ -18,16 +18,16 @@ import time
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset
from lerobot.model.kinematics import RobotKinematics
from lerobot.processor import RobotProcessorPipeline
from lerobot.processor import RobotAction, RobotObservation, RobotProcessorPipeline
from lerobot.processor.converters import (
robot_action_observation_to_transition,
transition_to_robot_action,
)
from lerobot.robots.so_follower import SO100Follower, SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so_follower.robot_kinematic_processor import (
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.config_so100_follower import SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.robot_kinematic_processor import (
InverseKinematicsEEToJoints,
)
from lerobot.types import RobotAction, RobotObservation
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.so100_follower import SO100Follower
from lerobot.utils.constants import ACTION
from lerobot.utils.robot_utils import precise_sleep
from lerobot.utils.utils import log_say
@@ -74,34 +74,32 @@ def main():
# Connect to the robot
robot.connect()
try:
if not robot.is_connected:
raise ValueError("Robot is not connected!")
if not robot.is_connected:
raise ValueError("Robot is not connected!")
print("Starting replay loop...")
log_say(f"Replaying episode {EPISODE_IDX}")
for idx in range(len(episode_frames)):
t0 = time.perf_counter()
print("Starting replay loop...")
log_say(f"Replaying episode {EPISODE_IDX}")
for idx in range(len(episode_frames)):
t0 = time.perf_counter()
# Get recorded action from dataset
ee_action = {
name: float(actions[idx][ACTION][i])
for i, name in enumerate(dataset.features[ACTION]["names"])
}
# Get recorded action from dataset
ee_action = {
name: float(actions[idx][ACTION][i]) for i, name in enumerate(dataset.features[ACTION]["names"])
}
# Get robot observation
robot_obs = robot.get_observation()
# Get robot observation
robot_obs = robot.get_observation()
# Dataset EE -> robot joints
joint_action = robot_ee_to_joints_processor((ee_action, robot_obs))
# Dataset EE -> robot joints
joint_action = robot_ee_to_joints_processor((ee_action, robot_obs))
# Send action to robot
_ = robot.send_action(joint_action)
# Send action to robot
_ = robot.send_action(joint_action)
precise_sleep(max(1.0 / dataset.fps - (time.perf_counter() - t0), 0.0))
finally:
# Clean up
robot.disconnect()
precise_sleep(1.0 / dataset.fps - (time.perf_counter() - t0))
# Clean up
robot.disconnect()
if __name__ == "__main__":
+4 -4
View File
@@ -16,22 +16,22 @@
import time
from lerobot.model.kinematics import RobotKinematics
from lerobot.processor import RobotProcessorPipeline
from lerobot.processor import RobotAction, RobotObservation, RobotProcessorPipeline
from lerobot.processor.converters import (
robot_action_observation_to_transition,
transition_to_robot_action,
)
from lerobot.robots.so_follower import SO100Follower, SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so_follower.robot_kinematic_processor import (
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.config_so100_follower import SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.robot_kinematic_processor import (
EEBoundsAndSafety,
EEReferenceAndDelta,
GripperVelocityToJoint,
InverseKinematicsEEToJoints,
)
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.so100_follower import SO100Follower
from lerobot.teleoperators.phone.config_phone import PhoneConfig, PhoneOS
from lerobot.teleoperators.phone.phone_processor import MapPhoneActionToRobotAction
from lerobot.teleoperators.phone.teleop_phone import Phone
from lerobot.types import RobotAction, RobotObservation
from lerobot.utils.robot_utils import precise_sleep
from lerobot.utils.visualization_utils import init_rerun, log_rerun_data
+1 -2
View File
@@ -22,8 +22,7 @@ from pathlib import Path
import numpy as np
import tensorflow_datasets as tfds
from lerobot.datasets.dataset_metadata import LeRobotDatasetMetadata
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset, LeRobotDatasetMetadata
from lerobot.utils.utils import get_elapsed_time_in_days_hours_minutes_seconds
DROID_SHARDS = 2048
+2 -2
View File
@@ -26,7 +26,7 @@ from huggingface_hub import HfApi
from huggingface_hub.constants import REPOCARD_NAME
from port_droid import DROID_SHARDS
from lerobot.datasets.dataset_metadata import CODEBASE_VERSION, LeRobotDatasetMetadata
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import CODEBASE_VERSION, LeRobotDatasetMetadata
from lerobot.datasets.utils import create_lerobot_dataset_card
from lerobot.utils.utils import init_logging
@@ -155,7 +155,7 @@ class UploadDataset(PipelineStep):
from datasets.utils.tqdm import disable_progress_bars
from huggingface_hub import CommitOperationAdd, preupload_lfs_files
from lerobot.datasets.dataset_metadata import LeRobotDatasetMetadata
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDatasetMetadata
from lerobot.utils.utils import init_logging
init_logging()
+11 -12
View File
@@ -27,8 +27,8 @@ measuring consistency and ground truth alignment.
Usage:
# Basic usage with smolvla policy
uv run python examples/rtc/eval_dataset.py \
--policy.path=<USER>/smolvla_check_rtc_last3 \
--dataset.repo_id=<USER>/check_rtc \
--policy.path=helper2424/smolvla_check_rtc_last3 \
--dataset.repo_id=helper2424/check_rtc \
--rtc.execution_horizon=8 \
--device=mps \
--rtc.max_guidance_weight=10.0 \
@@ -58,16 +58,16 @@ Usage:
--device=cuda
uv run python examples/rtc/eval_dataset.py \
--policy.path=<USER>/reuben_pi0 \
--dataset.repo_id=<USER>/so101_cube_in_cup \
--policy.path=lipsop/reuben_pi0 \
--dataset.repo_id=ReubenLim/so101_cube_in_cup \
--rtc.execution_horizon=8 \
--device=cuda
# With torch.compile for faster inference (PyTorch 2.0+)
# Note: CUDA graphs disabled by default due to in-place ops in denoising loop
uv run python examples/rtc/eval_dataset.py \
--policy.path=<USER>/smolvla_check_rtc_last3 \
--dataset.repo_id=<USER>/check_rtc \
--policy.path=helper2424/smolvla_check_rtc_last3 \
--dataset.repo_id=helper2424/check_rtc \
--rtc.execution_horizon=8 \
--device=mps \
--use_torch_compile=true \
@@ -75,8 +75,8 @@ Usage:
# With torch.compile on CUDA (CUDA graphs disabled by default)
uv run python examples/rtc/eval_dataset.py \
--policy.path=<USER>/smolvla_check_rtc_last3 \
--dataset.repo_id=<USER>/check_rtc \
--policy.path=helper2424/smolvla_check_rtc_last3 \
--dataset.repo_id=helper2424/check_rtc \
--rtc.execution_horizon=8 \
--device=cuda \
--use_torch_compile=true \
@@ -84,8 +84,8 @@ Usage:
# Enable CUDA graphs (advanced - may cause tensor aliasing errors)
uv run python examples/rtc/eval_dataset.py \
--policy.path=<USER>/smolvla_check_rtc_last3 \
--dataset.repo_id=<USER>/check_rtc \
--policy.path=helper2424/smolvla_check_rtc_last3 \
--dataset.repo_id=helper2424/check_rtc \
--use_torch_compile=true \
--torch_compile_backend=inductor \
--torch_compile_mode=max-autotune \
@@ -113,9 +113,8 @@ from lerobot.configs import parser
from lerobot.configs.default import DatasetConfig
from lerobot.configs.policies import PreTrainedConfig
from lerobot.configs.types import RTCAttentionSchedule
from lerobot.datasets.dataset_metadata import LeRobotDatasetMetadata
from lerobot.datasets.factory import resolve_delta_timestamps
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset, LeRobotDatasetMetadata
from lerobot.policies.factory import get_policy_class, make_pre_post_processors
from lerobot.policies.rtc.configuration_rtc import RTCConfig
from lerobot.policies.rtc.debug_visualizer import RTCDebugVisualizer
+7 -20
View File
@@ -28,7 +28,7 @@ For simulation environments, see eval_with_simulation.py
Usage:
# Run RTC with Real robot with RTC
uv run examples/rtc/eval_with_real_robot.py \
--policy.path=<USER>/smolvla_check_rtc_last3 \
--policy.path=helper2424/smolvla_check_rtc_last3 \
--policy.device=mps \
--rtc.enabled=true \
--rtc.execution_horizon=20 \
@@ -41,7 +41,7 @@ Usage:
# Run RTC with Real robot without RTC
uv run examples/rtc/eval_with_real_robot.py \
--policy.path=<USER>/smolvla_check_rtc_last3 \
--policy.path=helper2424/smolvla_check_rtc_last3 \
--policy.device=mps \
--rtc.enabled=false \
--robot.type=so100_follower \
@@ -53,7 +53,7 @@ Usage:
# Run RTC with Real robot with pi0.5 policy
uv run examples/rtc/eval_with_real_robot.py \
--policy.path=<USER>/pi05_check_rtc \
--policy.path=helper2424/pi05_check_rtc \
--policy.device=mps \
--rtc.enabled=true \
--rtc.execution_horizon=20 \
@@ -78,11 +78,10 @@ from torch import Tensor
from lerobot.cameras.opencv.configuration_opencv import OpenCVCameraConfig # noqa: F401
from lerobot.cameras.realsense.configuration_realsense import RealSenseCameraConfig # noqa: F401
from lerobot.cameras.zmq.configuration_zmq import ZMQCameraConfig # noqa: F401
from lerobot.configs import parser
from lerobot.configs.policies import PreTrainedConfig
from lerobot.configs.types import RTCAttentionSchedule
from lerobot.datasets.feature_utils import build_dataset_frame, hw_to_dataset_features
from lerobot.datasets.utils import build_dataset_frame, hw_to_dataset_features
from lerobot.policies.factory import get_policy_class, make_pre_post_processors
from lerobot.policies.rtc.action_queue import ActionQueue
from lerobot.policies.rtc.configuration_rtc import RTCConfig
@@ -95,10 +94,9 @@ from lerobot.rl.process import ProcessSignalHandler
from lerobot.robots import ( # noqa: F401
Robot,
RobotConfig,
bi_so_follower,
koch_follower,
so_follower,
unitree_g1,
so100_follower,
so101_follower,
)
from lerobot.robots.utils import make_robot_from_config
from lerobot.utils.constants import OBS_IMAGES
@@ -457,18 +455,7 @@ def demo_cli(cfg: RTCDemoConfig):
if cfg.policy.type == "pi05" or cfg.policy.type == "pi0":
config.compile_model = cfg.use_torch_compile
if config.use_peft:
from peft import PeftConfig, PeftModel
peft_pretrained_path = cfg.policy.pretrained_path
peft_config = PeftConfig.from_pretrained(peft_pretrained_path)
policy = policy_class.from_pretrained(
pretrained_name_or_path=peft_config.base_model_name_or_path, config=config
)
policy = PeftModel.from_pretrained(policy, peft_pretrained_path, config=peft_config)
else:
policy = policy_class.from_pretrained(cfg.policy.pretrained_path, config=config)
policy = policy_class.from_pretrained(cfg.policy.pretrained_path, config=config)
# Turn on RTC
policy.config.rtc_config = cfg.rtc
+47 -48
View File
@@ -16,13 +16,15 @@
from lerobot.cameras.opencv.configuration_opencv import OpenCVCameraConfig
from lerobot.configs.types import FeatureType, PolicyFeature
from lerobot.datasets.feature_utils import combine_feature_dicts
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset
from lerobot.datasets.pipeline_features import aggregate_pipeline_dataset_features, create_initial_features
from lerobot.datasets.utils import combine_feature_dicts
from lerobot.model.kinematics import RobotKinematics
from lerobot.policies.act.modeling_act import ACTPolicy
from lerobot.policies.factory import make_pre_post_processors
from lerobot.processor import (
RobotAction,
RobotObservation,
RobotProcessorPipeline,
make_default_teleop_action_processor,
)
@@ -32,13 +34,13 @@ from lerobot.processor.converters import (
transition_to_observation,
transition_to_robot_action,
)
from lerobot.robots.so_follower import SO100Follower, SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so_follower.robot_kinematic_processor import (
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.config_so100_follower import SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.robot_kinematic_processor import (
ForwardKinematicsJointsToEE,
InverseKinematicsEEToJoints,
)
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.so100_follower import SO100Follower
from lerobot.scripts.lerobot_record import record_loop
from lerobot.types import RobotAction, RobotObservation
from lerobot.utils.control_utils import init_keyboard_listener
from lerobot.utils.utils import log_say
from lerobot.utils.visualization_utils import init_rerun
@@ -141,24 +143,38 @@ def main():
listener, events = init_keyboard_listener()
init_rerun(session_name="so100_so100_evaluate")
try:
if not robot.is_connected:
raise ValueError("Robot is not connected!")
if not robot.is_connected:
raise ValueError("Robot is not connected!")
print("Starting evaluate loop...")
episode_idx = 0
for episode_idx in range(NUM_EPISODES):
log_say(f"Running inference, recording eval episode {episode_idx + 1} of {NUM_EPISODES}")
print("Starting evaluate loop...")
episode_idx = 0
for episode_idx in range(NUM_EPISODES):
log_say(f"Running inference, recording eval episode {episode_idx + 1} of {NUM_EPISODES}")
# Main record loop
# Main record loop
record_loop(
robot=robot,
events=events,
fps=FPS,
policy=policy,
preprocessor=preprocessor, # Pass the pre and post policy processors
postprocessor=postprocessor,
dataset=dataset,
control_time_s=EPISODE_TIME_SEC,
single_task=TASK_DESCRIPTION,
display_data=True,
teleop_action_processor=make_default_teleop_action_processor(),
robot_action_processor=robot_ee_to_joints_processor,
robot_observation_processor=robot_joints_to_ee_pose_processor,
)
# Reset the environment if not stopping or re-recording
if not events["stop_recording"] and ((episode_idx < NUM_EPISODES - 1) or events["rerecord_episode"]):
log_say("Reset the environment")
record_loop(
robot=robot,
events=events,
fps=FPS,
policy=policy,
preprocessor=preprocessor, # Pass the pre and post policy processors
postprocessor=postprocessor,
dataset=dataset,
control_time_s=EPISODE_TIME_SEC,
single_task=TASK_DESCRIPTION,
display_data=True,
@@ -167,41 +183,24 @@ def main():
robot_observation_processor=robot_joints_to_ee_pose_processor,
)
# Reset the environment if not stopping or re-recording
if not events["stop_recording"] and (
(episode_idx < NUM_EPISODES - 1) or events["rerecord_episode"]
):
log_say("Reset the environment")
record_loop(
robot=robot,
events=events,
fps=FPS,
control_time_s=EPISODE_TIME_SEC,
single_task=TASK_DESCRIPTION,
display_data=True,
teleop_action_processor=make_default_teleop_action_processor(),
robot_action_processor=robot_ee_to_joints_processor,
robot_observation_processor=robot_joints_to_ee_pose_processor,
)
if events["rerecord_episode"]:
log_say("Re-record episode")
events["rerecord_episode"] = False
events["exit_early"] = False
dataset.clear_episode_buffer()
continue
if events["rerecord_episode"]:
log_say("Re-record episode")
events["rerecord_episode"] = False
events["exit_early"] = False
dataset.clear_episode_buffer()
continue
# Save episode
dataset.save_episode()
episode_idx += 1
# Save episode
dataset.save_episode()
episode_idx += 1
finally:
# Clean up
log_say("Stop recording")
robot.disconnect()
listener.stop()
# Clean up
log_say("Stop recording")
robot.disconnect()
listener.stop()
dataset.finalize()
dataset.push_to_hub()
dataset.finalize()
dataset.push_to_hub()
if __name__ == "__main__":
+48 -51
View File
@@ -16,26 +16,27 @@
from lerobot.cameras.opencv.configuration_opencv import OpenCVCameraConfig
from lerobot.datasets.feature_utils import combine_feature_dicts
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset
from lerobot.datasets.pipeline_features import aggregate_pipeline_dataset_features, create_initial_features
from lerobot.datasets.utils import combine_feature_dicts
from lerobot.model.kinematics import RobotKinematics
from lerobot.processor import RobotProcessorPipeline
from lerobot.processor import RobotAction, RobotObservation, RobotProcessorPipeline
from lerobot.processor.converters import (
observation_to_transition,
robot_action_observation_to_transition,
transition_to_observation,
transition_to_robot_action,
)
from lerobot.robots.so_follower import SO100Follower, SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so_follower.robot_kinematic_processor import (
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.config_so100_follower import SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.robot_kinematic_processor import (
EEBoundsAndSafety,
ForwardKinematicsJointsToEE,
InverseKinematicsEEToJoints,
)
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.so100_follower import SO100Follower
from lerobot.scripts.lerobot_record import record_loop
from lerobot.teleoperators.so_leader import SO100Leader, SO100LeaderConfig
from lerobot.types import RobotAction, RobotObservation
from lerobot.teleoperators.so100_leader.config_so100_leader import SO100LeaderConfig
from lerobot.teleoperators.so100_leader.so100_leader import SO100Leader
from lerobot.utils.control_utils import init_keyboard_listener
from lerobot.utils.utils import log_say
from lerobot.utils.visualization_utils import init_rerun
@@ -147,23 +148,38 @@ def main():
listener, events = init_keyboard_listener()
init_rerun(session_name="recording_phone")
try:
if not leader.is_connected or not follower.is_connected:
raise ValueError("Robot or teleop is not connected!")
if not leader.is_connected or not follower.is_connected:
raise ValueError("Robot or teleop is not connected!")
print("Starting record loop...")
episode_idx = 0
while episode_idx < NUM_EPISODES and not events["stop_recording"]:
log_say(f"Recording episode {episode_idx + 1} of {NUM_EPISODES}")
print("Starting record loop...")
episode_idx = 0
while episode_idx < NUM_EPISODES and not events["stop_recording"]:
log_say(f"Recording episode {episode_idx + 1} of {NUM_EPISODES}")
# Main record loop
# Main record loop
record_loop(
robot=follower,
events=events,
fps=FPS,
teleop=leader,
dataset=dataset,
control_time_s=EPISODE_TIME_SEC,
single_task=TASK_DESCRIPTION,
display_data=True,
teleop_action_processor=leader_joints_to_ee,
robot_action_processor=ee_to_follower_joints,
robot_observation_processor=follower_joints_to_ee,
)
# Reset the environment if not stopping or re-recording
if not events["stop_recording"] and (episode_idx < NUM_EPISODES - 1 or events["rerecord_episode"]):
log_say("Reset the environment")
record_loop(
robot=follower,
events=events,
fps=FPS,
teleop=leader,
dataset=dataset,
control_time_s=EPISODE_TIME_SEC,
control_time_s=RESET_TIME_SEC,
single_task=TASK_DESCRIPTION,
display_data=True,
teleop_action_processor=leader_joints_to_ee,
@@ -171,44 +187,25 @@ def main():
robot_observation_processor=follower_joints_to_ee,
)
# Reset the environment if not stopping or re-recording
if not events["stop_recording"] and (
episode_idx < NUM_EPISODES - 1 or events["rerecord_episode"]
):
log_say("Reset the environment")
record_loop(
robot=follower,
events=events,
fps=FPS,
teleop=leader,
control_time_s=RESET_TIME_SEC,
single_task=TASK_DESCRIPTION,
display_data=True,
teleop_action_processor=leader_joints_to_ee,
robot_action_processor=ee_to_follower_joints,
robot_observation_processor=follower_joints_to_ee,
)
if events["rerecord_episode"]:
log_say("Re-recording episode")
events["rerecord_episode"] = False
events["exit_early"] = False
dataset.clear_episode_buffer()
continue
if events["rerecord_episode"]:
log_say("Re-recording episode")
events["rerecord_episode"] = False
events["exit_early"] = False
dataset.clear_episode_buffer()
continue
# Save episode
dataset.save_episode()
episode_idx += 1
# Save episode
dataset.save_episode()
episode_idx += 1
# Clean up
log_say("Stop recording")
leader.disconnect()
follower.disconnect()
listener.stop()
finally:
# Clean up
log_say("Stop recording")
leader.disconnect()
follower.disconnect()
listener.stop()
dataset.finalize()
dataset.push_to_hub()
dataset.finalize()
dataset.push_to_hub()
if __name__ == "__main__":
+23 -26
View File
@@ -19,16 +19,16 @@ import time
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset
from lerobot.model.kinematics import RobotKinematics
from lerobot.processor import RobotProcessorPipeline
from lerobot.processor import RobotAction, RobotObservation, RobotProcessorPipeline
from lerobot.processor.converters import (
robot_action_observation_to_transition,
transition_to_robot_action,
)
from lerobot.robots.so_follower import SO100Follower, SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so_follower.robot_kinematic_processor import (
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.config_so100_follower import SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.robot_kinematic_processor import (
InverseKinematicsEEToJoints,
)
from lerobot.types import RobotAction, RobotObservation
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.so100_follower import SO100Follower
from lerobot.utils.constants import ACTION
from lerobot.utils.robot_utils import precise_sleep
from lerobot.utils.utils import log_say
@@ -75,35 +75,32 @@ def main():
# Connect to the robot
robot.connect()
try:
if not robot.is_connected:
raise ValueError("Robot is not connected!")
if not robot.is_connected:
raise ValueError("Robot is not connected!")
print("Starting replay loop...")
log_say(f"Replaying episode {EPISODE_IDX}")
for idx in range(len(episode_frames)):
t0 = time.perf_counter()
print("Starting replay loop...")
log_say(f"Replaying episode {EPISODE_IDX}")
for idx in range(len(episode_frames)):
t0 = time.perf_counter()
# Get recorded action from dataset
ee_action = {
name: float(actions[idx][ACTION][i])
for i, name in enumerate(dataset.features[ACTION]["names"])
}
# Get recorded action from dataset
ee_action = {
name: float(actions[idx][ACTION][i]) for i, name in enumerate(dataset.features[ACTION]["names"])
}
# Get robot observation
robot_obs = robot.get_observation()
# Get robot observation
robot_obs = robot.get_observation()
# Dataset EE -> robot joints
joint_action = robot_ee_to_joints_processor((ee_action, robot_obs))
# Dataset EE -> robot joints
joint_action = robot_ee_to_joints_processor((ee_action, robot_obs))
# Send action to robot
_ = robot.send_action(joint_action)
# Send action to robot
_ = robot.send_action(joint_action)
precise_sleep(max(1.0 / dataset.fps - (time.perf_counter() - t0), 0.0))
precise_sleep(1.0 / dataset.fps - (time.perf_counter() - t0))
finally:
# Clean up
robot.disconnect()
# Clean up
robot.disconnect()
if __name__ == "__main__":
+6 -5
View File
@@ -17,20 +17,21 @@
import time
from lerobot.model.kinematics import RobotKinematics
from lerobot.processor import RobotProcessorPipeline
from lerobot.processor import RobotAction, RobotObservation, RobotProcessorPipeline
from lerobot.processor.converters import (
robot_action_observation_to_transition,
robot_action_to_transition,
transition_to_robot_action,
)
from lerobot.robots.so_follower import SO100Follower, SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so_follower.robot_kinematic_processor import (
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.config_so100_follower import SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.robot_kinematic_processor import (
EEBoundsAndSafety,
ForwardKinematicsJointsToEE,
InverseKinematicsEEToJoints,
)
from lerobot.teleoperators.so_leader import SO100Leader, SO100LeaderConfig
from lerobot.types import RobotAction, RobotObservation
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.so100_follower import SO100Follower
from lerobot.teleoperators.so100_leader.config_so100_leader import SO100LeaderConfig
from lerobot.teleoperators.so100_leader.so100_leader import SO100Leader
from lerobot.utils.robot_utils import precise_sleep
from lerobot.utils.visualization_utils import init_rerun, log_rerun_data
+2 -3
View File
@@ -19,9 +19,8 @@ from pathlib import Path
import torch
from lerobot.configs.types import FeatureType
from lerobot.datasets.dataset_metadata import LeRobotDatasetMetadata
from lerobot.datasets.feature_utils import dataset_to_policy_features
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset, LeRobotDatasetMetadata
from lerobot.datasets.utils import dataset_to_policy_features
from lerobot.policies.diffusion.configuration_diffusion import DiffusionConfig
from lerobot.policies.diffusion.modeling_diffusion import DiffusionPolicy
from lerobot.policies.factory import make_pre_post_processors
+2 -2
View File
@@ -20,9 +20,9 @@ from pathlib import Path
import torch
from lerobot.configs.types import FeatureType
from lerobot.datasets.dataset_metadata import LeRobotDatasetMetadata
from lerobot.datasets.feature_utils import dataset_to_policy_features
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDatasetMetadata
from lerobot.datasets.streaming_dataset import StreamingLeRobotDataset
from lerobot.datasets.utils import dataset_to_policy_features
from lerobot.policies.act.configuration_act import ACTConfig
from lerobot.policies.act.modeling_act import ACTPolicy
from lerobot.policies.factory import make_pre_post_processors
@@ -5,9 +5,8 @@ from pathlib import Path
import torch
from lerobot.configs.types import FeatureType
from lerobot.datasets.dataset_metadata import LeRobotDatasetMetadata
from lerobot.datasets.feature_utils import dataset_to_policy_features
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset, LeRobotDatasetMetadata
from lerobot.datasets.utils import dataset_to_policy_features
from lerobot.policies.act.configuration_act import ACTConfig
from lerobot.policies.act.modeling_act import ACTPolicy
from lerobot.policies.factory import make_pre_post_processors
+3 -2
View File
@@ -1,11 +1,12 @@
import torch
from lerobot.cameras.opencv.configuration_opencv import OpenCVCameraConfig
from lerobot.datasets.dataset_metadata import LeRobotDatasetMetadata
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDatasetMetadata
from lerobot.policies.act.modeling_act import ACTPolicy
from lerobot.policies.factory import make_pre_post_processors
from lerobot.policies.utils import build_inference_frame, make_robot_action
from lerobot.robots.so_follower import SO100Follower, SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.config_so100_follower import SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.so100_follower import SO100Follower
MAX_EPISODES = 5
MAX_STEPS_PER_EPISODE = 20
+1 -2
View File
@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ from lerobot.async_inference.configs import RobotClientConfig
from lerobot.async_inference.helpers import visualize_action_queue_size
from lerobot.async_inference.robot_client import RobotClient
from lerobot.cameras.opencv.configuration_opencv import OpenCVCameraConfig
from lerobot.robots.so_follower import SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower import SO100FollowerConfig
def main():
@@ -30,7 +30,6 @@ def main():
robot=robot_cfg,
server_address=server_address,
policy_device="mps",
client_device="cpu",
policy_type="act",
pretrained_name_or_path="<user>/robot_learning_tutorial_act",
chunk_size_threshold=0.5, # g
@@ -5,9 +5,8 @@ from pathlib import Path
import torch
from lerobot.configs.types import FeatureType
from lerobot.datasets.dataset_metadata import LeRobotDatasetMetadata
from lerobot.datasets.feature_utils import dataset_to_policy_features
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset, LeRobotDatasetMetadata
from lerobot.datasets.utils import dataset_to_policy_features
from lerobot.policies.diffusion.configuration_diffusion import DiffusionConfig
from lerobot.policies.diffusion.modeling_diffusion import DiffusionPolicy
from lerobot.policies.factory import make_pre_post_processors
@@ -1,11 +1,12 @@
import torch
from lerobot.cameras.opencv.configuration_opencv import OpenCVCameraConfig
from lerobot.datasets.dataset_metadata import LeRobotDatasetMetadata
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDatasetMetadata
from lerobot.policies.diffusion.modeling_diffusion import DiffusionPolicy
from lerobot.policies.factory import make_pre_post_processors
from lerobot.policies.utils import build_inference_frame, make_robot_action
from lerobot.robots.so_follower import SO100Follower, SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.config_so100_follower import SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.so100_follower import SO100Follower
MAX_EPISODES = 5
MAX_STEPS_PER_EPISODE = 20
+3 -2
View File
@@ -1,11 +1,12 @@
import torch
from lerobot.cameras.opencv.configuration_opencv import OpenCVCameraConfig
from lerobot.datasets.feature_utils import hw_to_dataset_features
from lerobot.datasets.utils import hw_to_dataset_features
from lerobot.policies.factory import make_pre_post_processors
from lerobot.policies.pi0.modeling_pi0 import PI0Policy
from lerobot.policies.utils import build_inference_frame, make_robot_action
from lerobot.robots.so_follower import SO100Follower, SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.config_so100_follower import SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.so100_follower import SO100Follower
MAX_EPISODES = 5
MAX_STEPS_PER_EPISODE = 20
+3 -3
View File
@@ -6,16 +6,16 @@ from queue import Empty, Full
import torch
import torch.optim as optim
from lerobot.datasets.feature_utils import hw_to_dataset_features
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset
from lerobot.datasets.utils import hw_to_dataset_features
from lerobot.envs.configs import HILSerlProcessorConfig, HILSerlRobotEnvConfig
from lerobot.policies.sac.configuration_sac import SACConfig
from lerobot.policies.sac.modeling_sac import SACPolicy
from lerobot.policies.sac.reward_model.modeling_classifier import Classifier
from lerobot.rl.buffer import ReplayBuffer
from lerobot.rl.gym_manipulator import make_robot_env
from lerobot.robots.so_follower import SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.teleoperators.so_leader import SO100LeaderConfig
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower import SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.teleoperators.so100_leader import SO100LeaderConfig
from lerobot.teleoperators.utils import TeleopEvents
LOG_EVERY = 10
@@ -1,11 +1,12 @@
import torch
from lerobot.cameras.opencv.configuration_opencv import OpenCVCameraConfig
from lerobot.datasets.feature_utils import hw_to_dataset_features
from lerobot.datasets.utils import hw_to_dataset_features
from lerobot.policies.factory import make_pre_post_processors
from lerobot.policies.smolvla.modeling_smolvla import SmolVLAPolicy
from lerobot.policies.utils import build_inference_frame, make_robot_action
from lerobot.robots.so_follower import SO100Follower, SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.config_so100_follower import SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.so100_follower import SO100Follower
MAX_EPISODES = 5
MAX_STEPS_PER_EPISODE = 20
+347
View File
@@ -0,0 +1,347 @@
#!/usr/bin/env python
# Copyright 2025 The HuggingFace Inc. team. All rights reserved.
#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
# You may obtain a copy of the License at
#
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
# limitations under the License.
"""
Example: GR00T Locomotion with Pre-loaded Policies
This example demonstrates the NEW pattern for loading GR00T policies externally
and passing them to the robot class.
"""
import argparse
import logging
import threading
import time
from collections import deque
import numpy as np
import onnxruntime as ort
from huggingface_hub import hf_hub_download
from lerobot.robots.unitree_g1.config_unitree_g1 import UnitreeG1Config
from lerobot.robots.unitree_g1.unitree_g1 import UnitreeG1
logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)
GROOT_DEFAULT_ANGLES = np.zeros(29, dtype=np.float32)
GROOT_DEFAULT_ANGLES[[0, 6]] = -0.1 # hip pitch
GROOT_DEFAULT_ANGLES[[3, 9]] = 0.3 # knee
GROOT_DEFAULT_ANGLES[[4, 10]] = -0.2 # ankle pitch
MISSING_JOINTS = []
G1_MODEL = "g1_23" # or "g1_29"
if G1_MODEL == "g1_23":
MISSING_JOINTS = [12, 14, 20, 21, 27, 28] # waist yaw/pitch, wrist pitch/yaw
LOCOMOTION_ACTION_SCALE = 0.25
LOCOMOTION_CONTROL_DT = 0.02
ANG_VEL_SCALE: float = 0.25
DOF_POS_SCALE: float = 1.0
DOF_VEL_SCALE: float = 0.05
CMD_SCALE: list = [2.0, 2.0, 0.25]
DEFAULT_GROOT_REPO_ID = "nepyope/GR00T-WholeBodyControl_g1"
def load_groot_policies(
repo_id: str = DEFAULT_GROOT_REPO_ID,
) -> tuple[ort.InferenceSession, ort.InferenceSession]:
"""Load GR00T dual-policy system (Balance + Walk) from Hugging Face Hub.
Args:
repo_id: Hugging Face Hub repository ID containing the ONNX policies.
"""
logger.info(f"Loading GR00T dual-policy system from Hugging Face Hub ({repo_id})...")
# Download ONNX policies from Hugging Face Hub
balance_path = hf_hub_download(
repo_id=repo_id,
filename="GR00T-WholeBodyControl-Balance.onnx",
)
walk_path = hf_hub_download(
repo_id=repo_id,
filename="GR00T-WholeBodyControl-Walk.onnx",
)
# Load ONNX policies
policy_balance = ort.InferenceSession(balance_path)
policy_walk = ort.InferenceSession(walk_path)
logger.info("GR00T policies loaded successfully")
return policy_balance, policy_walk
class GrootLocomotionController:
"""
Handles GR00T-style locomotion control for the Unitree G1 robot.
This controller manages:
- Dual-policy system (Balance + Walk)
- 29-joint observation processing
- 15D action output (legs + waist)
- Policy inference and motor command generation
"""
def __init__(self, policy_balance, policy_walk, robot, config):
self.policy_balance = policy_balance
self.policy_walk = policy_walk
self.robot = robot
self.config = config
self.locomotion_cmd = np.array([0.0, 0.0, 0.0], dtype=np.float32) # vx, vy, theta_dot
# GR00T-specific state
self.groot_qj_all = np.zeros(29, dtype=np.float32)
self.groot_dqj_all = np.zeros(29, dtype=np.float32)
self.groot_action = np.zeros(15, dtype=np.float32)
self.groot_obs_single = np.zeros(86, dtype=np.float32)
self.groot_obs_history = deque(maxlen=6)
self.groot_obs_stacked = np.zeros(516, dtype=np.float32)
self.groot_height_cmd = 0.74 # Default base height
self.groot_orientation_cmd = np.array([0.0, 0.0, 0.0], dtype=np.float32)
# input to gr00t is 6 frames (6*86D=516)
for _ in range(6):
self.groot_obs_history.append(np.zeros(86, dtype=np.float32))
# Thread management
self.locomotion_running = False
self.locomotion_thread = None
logger.info("GrootLocomotionController initialized")
def groot_locomotion_run(self):
# get current observation
robot_state = self.robot.get_observation()
if robot_state is None:
return
# get command from remote controller
if robot_state.wireless_remote is not None:
self.robot.remote_controller.set(robot_state.wireless_remote)
if self.robot.remote_controller.button[0]: # R1 - raise waist
self.groot_height_cmd += 0.001
self.groot_height_cmd = np.clip(self.groot_height_cmd, 0.50, 1.00)
if self.robot.remote_controller.button[4]: # R2 - lower waist
self.groot_height_cmd -= 0.001
self.groot_height_cmd = np.clip(self.groot_height_cmd, 0.50, 1.00)
else:
self.robot.remote_controller.lx = 0.0
self.robot.remote_controller.ly = 0.0
self.robot.remote_controller.rx = 0.0
self.robot.remote_controller.ry = 0.0
self.locomotion_cmd[0] = self.robot.remote_controller.ly # forward/backward
self.locomotion_cmd[1] = self.robot.remote_controller.lx * -1 # left/right
self.locomotion_cmd[2] = self.robot.remote_controller.rx * -1 # rotation rate
for i in range(29):
self.groot_qj_all[i] = robot_state.motor_state[i].q
self.groot_dqj_all[i] = robot_state.motor_state[i].dq
# adapt observation for g1_23dof
for idx in MISSING_JOINTS:
self.groot_qj_all[idx] = 0.0
self.groot_dqj_all[idx] = 0.0
# Scale joint positions and velocities
qj_obs = self.groot_qj_all.copy()
dqj_obs = self.groot_dqj_all.copy()
# express imu data in gravity frame of reference
quat = robot_state.imu_state.quaternion
ang_vel = np.array(robot_state.imu_state.gyroscope, dtype=np.float32)
gravity_orientation = self.robot.get_gravity_orientation(quat)
# scale joint positions and velocities before policy inference
qj_obs = (qj_obs - GROOT_DEFAULT_ANGLES) * DOF_POS_SCALE
dqj_obs = dqj_obs * DOF_VEL_SCALE
ang_vel_scaled = ang_vel * ANG_VEL_SCALE
# build single frame observation
self.groot_obs_single[:3] = self.locomotion_cmd * np.array(CMD_SCALE)
self.groot_obs_single[3] = self.groot_height_cmd
self.groot_obs_single[4:7] = self.groot_orientation_cmd
self.groot_obs_single[7:10] = ang_vel_scaled
self.groot_obs_single[10:13] = gravity_orientation
self.groot_obs_single[13:42] = qj_obs
self.groot_obs_single[42:71] = dqj_obs
self.groot_obs_single[71:86] = self.groot_action # 15D previous actions
# Add to history and stack observations (6 frames × 86D = 516D)
self.groot_obs_history.append(self.groot_obs_single.copy())
# Stack all 6 frames into 516D vector
for i, obs_frame in enumerate(self.groot_obs_history):
start_idx = i * 86
end_idx = start_idx + 86
self.groot_obs_stacked[start_idx:end_idx] = obs_frame
# Run policy inference (ONNX) with 516D stacked observation
cmd_magnitude = np.linalg.norm(self.locomotion_cmd)
selected_policy = (
self.policy_balance if cmd_magnitude < 0.05 else self.policy_walk
) # balance/standing policy for small commands, walking policy for movement commands
# run policy inference
ort_inputs = {selected_policy.get_inputs()[0].name: np.expand_dims(self.groot_obs_stacked, axis=0)}
ort_outs = selected_policy.run(None, ort_inputs)
self.groot_action = ort_outs[0].squeeze()
# transform action back to target joint positions
target_dof_pos_15 = GROOT_DEFAULT_ANGLES[:15] + self.groot_action * LOCOMOTION_ACTION_SCALE
# command motors
for i in range(15):
motor_idx = i
self.robot.msg.motor_cmd[motor_idx].q = target_dof_pos_15[i]
self.robot.msg.motor_cmd[motor_idx].qd = 0
self.robot.msg.motor_cmd[motor_idx].kp = self.robot.kp[motor_idx]
self.robot.msg.motor_cmd[motor_idx].kd = self.robot.kd[motor_idx]
self.robot.msg.motor_cmd[motor_idx].tau = 0
# adapt action for g1_23dof
for joint_idx in MISSING_JOINTS:
self.robot.msg.motor_cmd[joint_idx].q = 0.0
self.robot.msg.motor_cmd[joint_idx].qd = 0
self.robot.msg.motor_cmd[joint_idx].kp = self.robot.kp[joint_idx]
self.robot.msg.motor_cmd[joint_idx].kd = self.robot.kd[joint_idx]
self.robot.msg.motor_cmd[joint_idx].tau = 0
# send action to robot
self.robot.send_action(self.robot.msg)
def _locomotion_thread_loop(self):
"""Background thread that runs the locomotion policy at specified rate."""
logger.info("Locomotion thread started")
while self.locomotion_running:
start_time = time.time()
try:
self.groot_locomotion_run()
except Exception as e:
logger.error(f"Error in locomotion loop: {e}")
# Sleep to maintain control rate
elapsed = time.time() - start_time
sleep_time = max(0, LOCOMOTION_CONTROL_DT - elapsed)
time.sleep(sleep_time)
logger.info("Locomotion thread stopped")
def start_locomotion_thread(self):
if self.locomotion_running:
logger.warning("Locomotion thread already running")
return
logger.info("Starting locomotion control thread...")
self.locomotion_running = True
self.locomotion_thread = threading.Thread(target=self._locomotion_thread_loop, daemon=True)
self.locomotion_thread.start()
logger.info("Locomotion control thread started!")
def stop_locomotion_thread(self):
if not self.locomotion_running:
return
logger.info("Stopping locomotion control thread...")
self.locomotion_running = False
if self.locomotion_thread:
self.locomotion_thread.join(timeout=2.0)
logger.info("Locomotion control thread stopped")
def reset_robot(self):
"""Move robot legs to default standing position over 2 seconds (arms are not moved)."""
total_time = 3.0
num_step = int(total_time / self.robot.control_dt)
# Only control legs, not arms (first 12 joints)
default_pos = GROOT_DEFAULT_ANGLES # First 12 values are leg angles
dof_size = len(default_pos)
# Get current lowstate
robot_state = self.robot.get_observation()
# Record the current leg positions
init_dof_pos = np.zeros(dof_size, dtype=np.float32)
for i in range(dof_size):
init_dof_pos[i] = robot_state.motor_state[i].q
# Move legs to default pos
for i in range(num_step):
alpha = i / num_step
for motor_idx in range(dof_size):
target_pos = default_pos[motor_idx]
self.robot.msg.motor_cmd[motor_idx].q = (
init_dof_pos[motor_idx] * (1 - alpha) + target_pos * alpha
)
self.robot.msg.motor_cmd[motor_idx].qd = 0
self.robot.msg.motor_cmd[motor_idx].kp = self.robot.kp[motor_idx]
self.robot.msg.motor_cmd[motor_idx].kd = self.robot.kd[motor_idx]
self.robot.msg.motor_cmd[motor_idx].tau = 0
self.robot.msg.crc = self.robot.crc.Crc(self.robot.msg)
self.robot.lowcmd_publisher.Write(self.robot.msg)
time.sleep(self.robot.control_dt)
logger.info("Reached default position (legs only)")
if __name__ == "__main__":
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description="GR00T Locomotion Controller for Unitree G1")
parser.add_argument(
"--repo-id",
type=str,
default=DEFAULT_GROOT_REPO_ID,
help=f"Hugging Face Hub repo ID for GR00T policies (default: {DEFAULT_GROOT_REPO_ID})",
)
args = parser.parse_args()
# load policies
policy_balance, policy_walk = load_groot_policies(repo_id=args.repo_id)
# initialize robot
config = UnitreeG1Config()
robot = UnitreeG1(config)
# initialize gr00t locomotion controller
groot_controller = GrootLocomotionController(
policy_balance=policy_balance,
policy_walk=policy_walk,
robot=robot,
config=config,
)
# reset legs and start locomotion thread
try:
groot_controller.reset_robot()
groot_controller.start_locomotion_thread()
# log status
logger.info("Robot initialized with GR00T locomotion policies")
logger.info("Locomotion controller running in background thread")
logger.info("Press Ctrl+C to stop")
# keep robot alive
while True:
time.sleep(1.0)
except KeyboardInterrupt:
print("\nStopping locomotion...")
groot_controller.stop_locomotion_thread()
print("Done!")
+117 -74
View File
@@ -25,11 +25,11 @@ discord = "https://discord.gg/s3KuuzsPFb"
[project]
name = "lerobot"
version = "0.5.1"
version = "0.4.3"
description = "🤗 LeRobot: State-of-the-art Machine Learning for Real-World Robotics in Pytorch"
dynamic = ["readme"]
readme = "README.md"
license = { text = "Apache-2.0" }
requires-python = ">=3.12"
requires-python = ">=3.10"
authors = [
{ name = "Rémi Cadène", email = "re.cadene@gmail.com" },
{ name = "Simon Alibert", email = "alibert.sim@gmail.com" },
@@ -50,8 +50,7 @@ classifiers = [
"Intended Audience :: Education",
"Intended Audience :: Science/Research",
"License :: OSI Approved :: Apache Software License",
"Programming Language :: Python :: 3.12",
"Programming Language :: Python :: 3.13",
"Programming Language :: Python :: 3.10",
"Topic :: Software Development :: Build Tools",
"Topic :: Scientific/Engineering :: Artificial Intelligence",
]
@@ -60,30 +59,28 @@ keywords = ["lerobot", "huggingface", "robotics", "machine learning", "artifici
dependencies = [
# Hugging Face dependencies
"datasets>=4.0.0,<5.0.0",
"datasets>=4.0.0,<4.2.0",
"diffusers>=0.27.2,<0.36.0",
"huggingface-hub>=1.0.0,<2.0.0",
"huggingface-hub[hf-transfer,cli]>=0.34.2,<0.36.0",
"accelerate>=1.10.0,<2.0.0",
# Core dependencies
"numpy>=2.0.0,<2.3.0", # NOTE: Explicitly listing numpy helps the resolver converge faster. Upper bound imposed by opencv-python-headless.
"setuptools>=71.0.0,<81.0.0",
"cmake>=3.29.0.1,<4.2.0",
"packaging>=24.2,<26.0",
"torch>=2.2.1,<2.11.0",
"torchcodec>=0.2.1,<0.11.0; sys_platform != 'win32' and (sys_platform != 'linux' or (platform_machine != 'aarch64' and platform_machine != 'arm64' and platform_machine != 'armv7l')) and (sys_platform != 'darwin' or platform_machine != 'x86_64')",
"torchvision>=0.21.0,<0.26.0",
"einops>=0.8.0,<0.9.0",
"opencv-python-headless>=4.9.0,<4.14.0",
"opencv-python-headless>=4.9.0,<4.13.0",
"av>=15.0.0,<16.0.0",
"jsonlines>=4.0.0,<5.0.0",
"pynput>=1.7.8,<1.9.0",
"packaging>=24.2,<26.0",
"pynput>=1.7.7,<1.9.0",
"pyserial>=3.5,<4.0",
"wandb>=0.20.0,<0.22.0", # TODO: Bumb dependency (compatible with protobuf)
"wandb>=0.24.0,<0.25.0",
"draccus==0.10.0", # TODO: Relax version constraint
"torch>=2.2.1,<2.8.0", # TODO: Bumb dependency
"torchcodec>=0.2.1,<0.6.0; sys_platform != 'win32' and (sys_platform != 'linux' or (platform_machine != 'aarch64' and platform_machine != 'arm64' and platform_machine != 'armv7l')) and (sys_platform != 'darwin' or platform_machine != 'x86_64')", # TODO: Bumb dependency
"torchvision>=0.21.0,<0.23.0", # TODO: Bumb dependency
"draccus==0.10.0", # TODO: Remove ==
"gymnasium>=1.1.1,<2.0.0",
"rerun-sdk>=0.24.0,<0.27.0",
@@ -98,56 +95,43 @@ dependencies = [
# Common
pygame-dep = ["pygame>=2.5.1,<2.7.0"]
placo-dep = ["placo>=0.9.6,<0.9.17"]
transformers-dep = ["transformers>=5.3.0,<6.0.0"]
grpcio-dep = ["grpcio==1.73.1", "protobuf>=6.31.1,<6.32.0"]
can-dep = ["python-can>=4.2.0,<5.0.0"]
peft-dep = ["peft>=0.18.0,<1.0.0"]
scipy-dep = ["scipy>=1.14.0,<2.0.0"]
qwen-vl-utils-dep = ["qwen-vl-utils>=0.0.11,<0.1.0"]
matplotlib-dep = ["matplotlib>=3.10.3,<4.0.0", "contourpy>=1.3.0,<2.0.0"] # NOTE: Explicitly listing contourpy helps the resolver converge faster.
placo-dep = ["placo>=0.9.6,<0.10.0"]
transformers-dep = ["transformers>=4.57.1,<5.0.0"]
grpcio-dep = ["grpcio==1.73.1", "protobuf==6.31.0"] # TODO: Bumb dependency (compatible with wandb)
# Motors
feetech = ["feetech-servo-sdk>=1.0.0,<2.0.0"]
dynamixel = ["dynamixel-sdk>=3.7.31,<3.9.0"]
damiao = ["lerobot[can-dep]"]
robstride = ["lerobot[can-dep]"]
# Robots
openarms = ["lerobot[damiao]"]
gamepad = ["lerobot[pygame-dep]", "hidapi>=0.14.0,<0.15.0"]
hopejr = ["lerobot[feetech]", "lerobot[pygame-dep]"]
lekiwi = ["lerobot[feetech]", "pyzmq>=26.2.1,<28.0.0"]
unitree_g1 = [
# "unitree-sdk2==1.0.1",
"pyzmq>=26.2.1,<28.0.0",
"onnxruntime>=1.16.0,<2.0.0",
"onnx>=1.16.0,<2.0.0",
"meshcat>=0.3.0,<0.4.0",
"lerobot[matplotlib-dep]",
"lerobot[pygame-dep]",
"onnxruntime>=1.16.0"
]
reachy2 = ["reachy2_sdk>=1.0.15,<1.1.0"]
reachy2 = ["reachy2_sdk>=1.0.14,<1.1.0"]
kinematics = ["lerobot[placo-dep]"]
intelrealsense = [
"pyrealsense2>=2.55.1.6486,<2.57.0 ; sys_platform != 'darwin'",
"pyrealsense2-macosx>=2.54,<2.57.0 ; sys_platform == 'darwin'",
"pyrealsense2-macosx>=2.54,<2.55.0 ; sys_platform == 'darwin'",
]
phone = ["hebi-py>=2.8.0,<2.12.0", "teleop>=0.1.0,<0.2.0", "fastapi<1.0", "lerobot[scipy-dep]"]
phone = ["hebi-py>=2.8.0,<2.12.0", "teleop>=0.1.0,<0.2.0", "fastapi<1.0"]
# Policies
wallx = [
"lerobot[transformers-dep]",
"lerobot[peft]",
"lerobot[scipy-dep]",
"torchdiffeq>=0.2.4,<0.3.0",
"lerobot[qwen-vl-utils-dep]",
"transformers==4.49.0",
"peft==0.17.1",
"scipy==1.15.3",
"torchdiffeq==0.2.5",
"qwen_vl_utils==0.0.11"
]
pi = ["lerobot[transformers-dep]", "lerobot[scipy-dep]"]
pi = ["transformers @ git+https://github.com/huggingface/transformers.git@fix/lerobot_openpi"]
smolvla = ["lerobot[transformers-dep]", "num2words>=0.5.14,<0.6.0", "accelerate>=1.7.0,<2.0.0", "safetensors>=0.4.3,<1.0.0"]
groot = [
"lerobot[transformers-dep]",
"lerobot[peft]",
"peft>=0.13.0,<1.0.0",
"dm-tree>=0.1.8,<1.0.0",
"timm>=1.0.0,<1.1.0",
"safetensors>=0.4.3,<1.0.0",
@@ -156,13 +140,12 @@ groot = [
"ninja>=1.11.1,<2.0.0",
"flash-attn>=2.5.9,<3.0.0 ; sys_platform != 'darwin'"
]
sarm = ["lerobot[transformers-dep]", "faker>=33.0.0,<35.0.0", "lerobot[matplotlib-dep]", "lerobot[qwen-vl-utils-dep]"]
sarm = ["lerobot[transformers-dep]", "faker>=33.0.0,<35.0.0", "matplotlib>=3.10.3,<4.0.0", "qwen-vl-utils>=0.0.14"]
xvla = ["lerobot[transformers-dep]"]
hilserl = ["lerobot[transformers-dep]", "gym-hil>=0.1.13,<0.2.0", "lerobot[grpcio-dep]", "lerobot[placo-dep]"]
# Features
async = ["lerobot[grpcio-dep]", "lerobot[matplotlib-dep]"]
peft = ["lerobot[transformers-dep]", "lerobot[peft-dep]"]
async = ["lerobot[grpcio-dep]", "matplotlib>=3.10.3,<4.0.0"]
# Development
dev = ["pre-commit>=3.7.0,<5.0.0", "debugpy>=1.8.1,<1.9.0", "lerobot[grpcio-dep]", "grpcio-tools==1.73.1", "mypy>=1.19.1"]
@@ -170,19 +153,13 @@ test = ["pytest>=8.1.0,<9.0.0", "pytest-timeout>=2.4.0,<3.0.0", "pytest-cov>=5.0
video_benchmark = ["scikit-image>=0.23.2,<0.26.0", "pandas>=2.2.2,<2.4.0"]
# Simulation
# NOTE: Explicitly listing scipy helps flatten the dependecy tree.
aloha = ["gym-aloha>=0.1.2,<0.2.0", "lerobot[scipy-dep]"]
aloha = ["gym-aloha>=0.1.2,<0.2.0"]
pusht = ["gym-pusht>=0.1.5,<0.2.0", "pymunk>=6.6.0,<7.0.0"] # TODO: Fix pymunk version in gym-pusht instead
libero = ["lerobot[transformers-dep]", "hf-libero>=0.1.3,<0.2.0; sys_platform == 'linux'", "lerobot[scipy-dep]"]
metaworld = ["metaworld==3.0.0", "lerobot[scipy-dep]"]
libero = ["lerobot[transformers-dep]", "hf-libero>=0.1.3,<0.2.0"]
metaworld = ["metaworld==3.0.0"]
# All
all = [
# NOTE(resolver hint): scipy is pulled in transitively via lerobot[scipy-dep] through
# multiple extras (aloha, metaworld, pi, wallx, phone). Listing it explicitly
# helps pip's resolver converge by constraining scipy early, before it encounters
# the loose scipy requirements from transitive deps like dm-control and metaworld.
"scipy>=1.14.0,<2.0.0",
"lerobot[dynamixel]",
"lerobot[gamepad]",
"lerobot[hopejr]",
@@ -190,8 +167,8 @@ all = [
"lerobot[reachy2]",
"lerobot[kinematics]",
"lerobot[intelrealsense]",
"lerobot[wallx]",
"lerobot[pi]",
# "lerobot[wallx]",
# "lerobot[pi]", TODO(Pepijn): Update pi to transformers v5
"lerobot[smolvla]",
# "lerobot[groot]", TODO(Steven): Gr00t requires specific installation instructions for flash-attn
"lerobot[xvla]",
@@ -203,11 +180,9 @@ all = [
"lerobot[aloha]",
"lerobot[pusht]",
"lerobot[phone]",
"lerobot[libero]; sys_platform == 'linux'",
"lerobot[libero]",
"lerobot[metaworld]",
"lerobot[sarm]",
"lerobot[peft]",
# "lerobot[unitree_g1]", TODO: Unitree requires specific installation instructions for unitree_sdk2
"lerobot[sarm]"
]
[project.scripts]
@@ -220,23 +195,18 @@ lerobot-setup-motors="lerobot.scripts.lerobot_setup_motors:main"
lerobot-teleoperate="lerobot.scripts.lerobot_teleoperate:main"
lerobot-eval="lerobot.scripts.lerobot_eval:main"
lerobot-train="lerobot.scripts.lerobot_train:main"
lerobot-train-tokenizer="lerobot.scripts.lerobot_train_tokenizer:main"
lerobot-dataset-viz="lerobot.scripts.lerobot_dataset_viz:main"
lerobot-info="lerobot.scripts.lerobot_info:main"
lerobot-find-joint-limits="lerobot.scripts.lerobot_find_joint_limits:main"
lerobot-imgtransform-viz="lerobot.scripts.lerobot_imgtransform_viz:main"
lerobot-edit-dataset="lerobot.scripts.lerobot_edit_dataset:main"
lerobot-setup-can="lerobot.scripts.lerobot_setup_can:main"
# ---------------- Tool Configurations ----------------
[tool.setuptools.package-data]
lerobot = ["envs/*.json"]
[tool.setuptools.packages.find]
where = ["src"]
[tool.ruff]
target-version = "py312"
target-version = "py310"
line-length = 110
exclude = ["tests/artifacts/**/*.safetensors", "*_pb2.py", "*_pb2_grpc.py"]
@@ -305,7 +275,6 @@ default.extend-ignore-identifiers-re = [
"thw",
"inpt",
"ROBOTIS",
"OT_VALUE"
]
# TODO: Uncomment when ready to use
@@ -328,7 +297,7 @@ default.extend-ignore-identifiers-re = [
# Uncomment [tool.mypy] first, then uncomment individual module overrides as they get proper type annotations
[tool.mypy]
python_version = "3.12"
python_version = "3.10"
ignore_missing_imports = true
follow_imports = "skip"
# warn_return_any = true
@@ -380,9 +349,9 @@ ignore_errors = false
module = "lerobot.cameras.*"
ignore_errors = false
[[tool.mypy.overrides]]
module = "lerobot.motors.*"
ignore_errors = false
# [[tool.mypy.overrides]]
# module = "lerobot.motors.*"
# ignore_errors = false
# [[tool.mypy.overrides]]
# module = "lerobot.robots.*"
@@ -412,3 +381,77 @@ ignore_errors = false
# [[tool.mypy.overrides]]
# module = "lerobot.scripts.*"
# ignore_errors = false
[tool.uv]
# wallx requires transformers==4.49.0 which conflicts with other extras that need >=4.53.0
conflicts = [
[
{ extra = "wallx" },
{ extra = "transformers-dep" },
],
[
{ extra = "wallx" },
{ extra = "pi" },
],
[
{ extra = "wallx" },
{ extra = "smolvla" },
],
[
{ extra = "wallx" },
{ extra = "groot" },
],
[
{ extra = "wallx" },
{ extra = "xvla" },
],
[
{ extra = "wallx" },
{ extra = "sarm" },
],
[
{ extra = "wallx" },
{ extra = "hilserl" },
],
[
{ extra = "wallx" },
{ extra = "libero" },
],
[
{ extra = "wallx" },
{ extra = "all" },
],
# pi uses custom branch which conflicts with transformers-dep
[
{ extra = "pi" },
{ extra = "transformers-dep" },
],
[
{ extra = "pi" },
{ extra = "smolvla" },
],
[
{ extra = "pi" },
{ extra = "groot" },
],
[
{ extra = "pi" },
{ extra = "xvla" },
],
[
{ extra = "pi" },
{ extra = "sarm" },
],
[
{ extra = "pi" },
{ extra = "hilserl" },
],
[
{ extra = "pi" },
{ extra = "libero" },
],
[
{ extra = "pi" },
{ extra = "all" },
],
]
+276 -175
View File
@@ -1,73 +1,76 @@
#
# This file is autogenerated by pip-compile with Python 3.12
# This file is autogenerated by pip-compile with Python 3.10
# by the following command:
#
# pip-compile --output-file=requirements-macos.txt requirements.in
#
-e .[all]
# via -[all]
absl-py==2.4.0
absl-py==2.3.1
# via
# dm-control
# dm-env
# dm-tree
# labmaze
# mujoco
accelerate==1.13.0
# tensorboard
accelerate==1.11.0
# via
# lerobot
# peft
aiohappyeyeballs==2.6.1
# via aiohttp
aiohttp==3.13.3
aiohttp==3.13.1
# via fsspec
aiosignal==1.4.0
# via aiohttp
annotated-doc==0.0.4
# via
# fastapi
# typer
annotated-types==0.7.0
# via pydantic
anyio==4.12.1
antlr4-python3-runtime==4.9.3
# via
# hydra-core
# omegaconf
anyio==4.11.0
# via
# httpx
# starlette
# watchfiles
asttokens==3.0.1
asttokens==3.0.0
# via stack-data
async-timeout==5.0.1
# via aiohttp
attrs==25.4.0
# via
# aiohttp
# dm-tree
# jsonlines
# jsonschema
# referencing
# rerun-sdk
av==15.1.0
# via lerobot
bddl==1.0.1
# via libero
certifi==2025.10.5
# via
# lerobot
# qwen-vl-utils
certifi==2026.2.25
# via
# httpcore
# httpx
# requests
# sentry-sdk
cffi==2.0.0
# via pymunk
cfgv==3.5.0
cfgv==3.4.0
# via pre-commit
charset-normalizer==3.4.5
charset-normalizer==3.4.4
# via requests
click==8.3.1
click==8.3.0
# via
# typer
# uvicorn
# wandb
cloudpickle==3.1.2
# via gymnasium
cmake==4.1.3
cloudpickle==3.1.1
# via
# gymnasium
# libero
cmake==4.1.0
# via lerobot
cmeel==0.59.0
cmeel==0.57.3
# via
# cmeel-assimp
# cmeel-boost
@@ -105,17 +108,15 @@ cmeel-zlib==1.3.1
# via cmeel-assimp
coal-library==3.0.1
# via pin
contourpy==1.3.3
# via
# lerobot
# matplotlib
coverage[toml]==7.13.4
contourpy==1.3.2
# via matplotlib
coverage[toml]==7.11.0
# via pytest-cov
cycler==0.12.1
# via matplotlib
datasets==4.6.1
datasets==4.1.1
# via lerobot
debugpy==1.8.20
debugpy==1.8.17
# via lerobot
decorator==5.2.1
# via ipython
@@ -129,7 +130,7 @@ dill==0.4.0
# multiprocess
distlib==0.4.0
# via virtualenv
dm-control==1.0.37
dm-control==1.0.34
# via gym-aloha
dm-env==1.6
# via dm-control
@@ -137,55 +138,69 @@ dm-tree==0.1.9
# via
# dm-control
# dm-env
# lerobot
docopt==0.6.2
# via num2words
draccus==0.10.0
# via lerobot
dynamixel-sdk==3.8.4
# via lerobot
easydict==1.13
# via libero
egl-probe @ git+https://github.com/huggingface/egl_probe.git
# via
# libero
# robomimic
eigenpy==3.10.3
# via coal-library
einops==0.8.2
# via lerobot
eiquadprog==1.2.9
# via placo
etils[epath,epy]==1.14.0
# via mujoco
executing==2.2.1
# via stack-data
faker==34.0.2
# via lerobot
farama-notifications==0.0.4
# via gymnasium
fastapi==0.135.1
einops==0.8.1
# via
# lerobot
# teleop
# libero
eiquadprog==1.2.9
# via placo
etils[epath,epy]==1.13.0
# via mujoco
exceptiongroup==1.3.0
# via
# anyio
# ipython
# pytest
executing==2.2.1
# via stack-data
farama-notifications==0.0.4
# via gymnasium
fastapi==0.119.1
# via teleop
fastjsonschema==2.21.2
# via nbformat
feetech-servo-sdk==1.0.0
# via lerobot
filelock==3.25.0
filelock==3.20.0
# via
# datasets
# diffusers
# huggingface-hub
# python-discovery
# torch
# transformers
# virtualenv
fonttools==4.61.1
fonttools==4.60.1
# via matplotlib
frozenlist==1.8.0
# via
# aiohttp
# aiosignal
fsspec[http]==2026.2.0
fsspec[http]==2025.9.0
# via
# datasets
# etils
# huggingface-hub
# torch
future==1.0.0
# via libero
gitdb==4.0.12
# via gitpython
gitpython==3.1.46
gitpython==3.1.45
# via wandb
glfw==2.10.0
# via
@@ -197,6 +212,7 @@ grpcio==1.73.1
# lerobot
# reachy2-sdk
# reachy2-sdk-api
# tensorboard
grpcio-tools==1.73.1
# via
# lerobot
@@ -207,67 +223,71 @@ gym-hil==0.1.13
# via lerobot
gym-pusht==0.1.6
# via lerobot
gymnasium==1.2.3
gymnasium==1.2.1
# via
# gym-aloha
# gym-hil
# gym-pusht
# lerobot
# libero
# metaworld
h11==0.16.0
# via
# httpcore
# uvicorn
# via uvicorn
h5py==3.15.1
# via robomimic
hebi-py==2.11.0
# via lerobot
hf-xet==1.3.2
hf-transfer==0.1.9
# via huggingface-hub
hf-xet==1.1.10
# via huggingface-hub
hidapi==0.14.0.post4
# via
# gym-hil
# lerobot
httpcore==1.0.9
# via httpx
httptools==0.7.1
# via uvicorn
httpx==0.28.1
# via
# datasets
# huggingface-hub
huggingface-hub==1.6.0
huggingface-hub[cli,hf-transfer]==0.35.3
# via
# accelerate
# datasets
# diffusers
# lerobot
# peft
# timm
# tokenizers
# transformers
identify==2.6.17
hydra-core==1.3.2
# via libero
identify==2.6.15
# via pre-commit
idna==3.11
# via
# anyio
# httpx
# requests
# yarl
imageio[ffmpeg]==2.37.2
imageio[ffmpeg]==2.37.0
# via
# gym-aloha
# gym-hil
# lerobot
# metaworld
# robomimic
# scikit-image
imageio-ffmpeg==0.6.0
# via imageio
importlib-metadata==8.7.1
# via
# imageio
# robomimic
importlib-metadata==8.7.0
# via diffusers
importlib-resources==6.5.2
# via etils
iniconfig==2.3.0
# via pytest
ipython==9.11.0
inquirerpy==0.3.4
# via huggingface-hub
ipython==8.37.0
# via meshcat
ipython-pygments-lexers==1.1.1
# via ipython
ischedule==1.2.7
# via placo
jedi==0.19.2
@@ -276,24 +296,44 @@ jinja2==3.1.6
# via torch
jsonlines==4.0.0
# via lerobot
jsonschema==4.25.1
# via nbformat
jsonschema-specifications==2025.9.1
# via jsonschema
jupyter-core==5.9.1
# via nbformat
jupytext==1.18.1
# via bddl
kiwisolver==1.4.9
# via matplotlib
labmaze==1.0.6
# via dm-control
lazy-loader==0.5
lazy-loader==0.4
# via scikit-image
librt==0.8.1
# via mypy
libero @ git+https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot-libero.git@main
# via lerobot
llvmlite==0.45.1
# via numba
lxml==6.0.2
# via dm-control
markdown==3.9
# via tensorboard
markdown-it-py==4.0.0
# via rich
# via
# jupytext
# mdit-py-plugins
markupsafe==3.0.3
# via jinja2
matplotlib==3.10.8
# via lerobot
# via
# jinja2
# werkzeug
matplotlib==3.10.7
# via
# lerobot
# libero
matplotlib-inline==0.2.1
# via ipython
mdit-py-plugins==0.5.0
# via jupytext
mdurl==0.1.2
# via markdown-it-py
mergedeep==1.3.4
@@ -306,35 +346,41 @@ mock-serial==0.0.1
# via lerobot
mpmath==1.3.0
# via sympy
mujoco==3.5.0
mujoco==3.3.7
# via
# dm-control
# gym-aloha
# gym-hil
# libero
# metaworld
multidict==6.7.1
# robosuite
multidict==6.7.0
# via
# aiohttp
# yarl
multiprocess==0.70.18
multiprocess==0.70.16
# via datasets
mypy==1.19.1
# via lerobot
mypy-extensions==1.1.0
# via typing-inspect
nbformat==5.10.4
# via jupytext
networkx==3.4.2
# via
# mypy
# typing-inspect
networkx==3.6.1
# via
# bddl
# scikit-image
# torch
nodeenv==1.10.0
ninja==1.13.0
# via lerobot
nodeenv==1.9.1
# via pre-commit
num2words==0.5.14
# via lerobot
numba==0.62.1
# via robosuite
numpy==2.2.6
# via
# accelerate
# bddl
# cmeel-boost
# contourpy
# datasets
@@ -343,14 +389,16 @@ numpy==2.2.6
# dm-env
# dm-tree
# gymnasium
# h5py
# hebi-py
# imageio
# labmaze
# lerobot
# libero
# matplotlib
# meshcat
# metaworld
# mujoco
# numba
# opencv-python
# opencv-python-headless
# pandas
@@ -358,18 +406,26 @@ numpy==2.2.6
# pyquaternion
# reachy2-sdk
# rerun-sdk
# robomimic
# robosuite
# scikit-image
# scipy
# shapely
# teleop
# tensorboard
# tensorboardx
# tifffile
# torchvision
# transformers
# transforms3d
opencv-python==4.13.0.92
omegaconf==2.3.0
# via hydra-core
opencv-python==4.12.0.88
# via
# gym-pusht
# libero
# reachy2-sdk
# robosuite
opencv-python-headless==4.12.0.88
# via lerobot
orderly-set==5.5.0
@@ -379,87 +435,97 @@ packaging==25.0
# accelerate
# datasets
# huggingface-hub
# hydra-core
# jupytext
# lazy-loader
# lerobot
# matplotlib
# peft
# pytest
# qwen-vl-utils
# reachy2-sdk
# scikit-image
# tensorboard
# tensorboardx
# transformers
# wandb
pandas==2.3.3
# via
# datasets
# lerobot
parso==0.8.6
parso==0.8.5
# via jedi
pathspec==1.0.4
# via mypy
peft==0.18.1
peft==0.17.1
# via lerobot
pexpect==4.9.0
# via ipython
pillow==12.1.1
pfzy==0.3.4
# via inquirerpy
pillow==12.0.0
# via
# diffusers
# imageio
# lerobot
# matplotlib
# meshcat
# qwen-vl-utils
# rerun-sdk
# robosuite
# scikit-image
# tensorboard
# torchvision
pin==3.4.0
# via placo
placo==0.9.16
placo==0.9.14
# via lerobot
platformdirs==4.9.4
platformdirs==4.5.0
# via
# python-discovery
# jupyter-core
# virtualenv
# wandb
pluggy==1.6.0
# via
# pytest
# pytest-cov
pre-commit==4.5.1
pre-commit==4.3.0
# via lerobot
prompt-toolkit==3.0.52
# via ipython
# via
# inquirerpy
# ipython
propcache==0.4.1
# via
# aiohttp
# yarl
protobuf==6.31.1
protobuf==6.31.0
# via
# dm-control
# grpcio-tools
# lerobot
# reachy2-sdk
# reachy2-sdk-api
# tensorboard
# tensorboardx
# wandb
psutil==7.2.2
psutil==7.1.1
# via
# accelerate
# imageio
# peft
# robomimic
ptyprocess==0.7.0
# via pexpect
pure-eval==0.2.3
# via stack-data
pyarrow==23.0.1
pyarrow==21.0.0
# via
# datasets
# rerun-sdk
pycparser==3.0
pycparser==2.23
# via cffi
pydantic==2.12.5
pydantic==2.12.3
# via
# fastapi
# wandb
pydantic-core==2.41.5
pydantic-core==2.41.4
# via pydantic
pygame==2.6.1
# via
@@ -469,35 +535,33 @@ pygame==2.6.1
pygments==2.19.2
# via
# ipython
# ipython-pygments-lexers
# pytest
# rich
pymunk==6.11.1
# via
# gym-pusht
# lerobot
pyngrok==7.5.1
pyngrok==7.4.1
# via meshcat
pynput==1.8.1
# via
# gym-hil
# lerobot
pyobjc-core==12.1
pyobjc-core==12.0
# via
# pyobjc-framework-applicationservices
# pyobjc-framework-cocoa
# pyobjc-framework-coretext
# pyobjc-framework-quartz
pyobjc-framework-applicationservices==12.1
pyobjc-framework-applicationservices==12.0
# via pynput
pyobjc-framework-cocoa==12.1
pyobjc-framework-cocoa==12.0
# via
# pyobjc-framework-applicationservices
# pyobjc-framework-coretext
# pyobjc-framework-quartz
pyobjc-framework-coretext==12.1
pyobjc-framework-coretext==12.0
# via pyobjc-framework-applicationservices
pyobjc-framework-quartz==12.1
pyobjc-framework-quartz==12.0
# via
# pynput
# pyobjc-framework-applicationservices
@@ -506,13 +570,13 @@ pyopengl==3.1.10
# via
# dm-control
# mujoco
pyparsing==3.3.2
pyparsing==3.2.5
# via
# dm-control
# matplotlib
pyquaternion==0.9.9
# via reachy2-sdk
pyrealsense2-macosx==2.56.5
pyrealsense2-macosx==2.54.2
# via lerobot
pyserial==3.5
# via
@@ -521,6 +585,7 @@ pyserial==3.5
# lerobot
pytest==8.4.2
# via
# bddl
# lerobot
# pytest-cov
# pytest-timeout
@@ -531,14 +596,11 @@ pytest-timeout==2.4.0
# via lerobot
python-dateutil==2.9.0.post0
# via
# faker
# matplotlib
# pandas
python-discovery==1.1.1
# via virtualenv
python-dotenv==1.2.2
python-dotenv==1.1.1
# via uvicorn
pytz==2026.1.post1
pytz==2025.2
# via pandas
pyyaml==6.0.3
# via
@@ -547,10 +609,13 @@ pyyaml==6.0.3
# draccus
# hebi-py
# huggingface-hub
# jupytext
# omegaconf
# peft
# pre-commit
# pyngrok
# pyyaml-include
# timm
# transformers
# uvicorn
# wandb
@@ -560,13 +625,15 @@ pyzmq==27.1.0
# via
# lerobot
# meshcat
qwen-vl-utils==0.0.14
# via lerobot
reachy2-sdk==1.0.15
reachy2-sdk==1.0.14
# via lerobot
reachy2-sdk-api==1.0.21
# via reachy2-sdk
regex==2026.2.28
referencing==0.37.0
# via
# jsonschema
# jsonschema-specifications
regex==2025.10.23
# via
# diffusers
# transformers
@@ -575,150 +642,184 @@ requests==2.32.5
# datasets
# diffusers
# dm-control
# qwen-vl-utils
# huggingface-hub
# teleop
# transformers
# wandb
rerun-sdk==0.26.2
rerun-sdk==0.26.1
# via lerobot
rhoban-cmeel-jsoncpp==1.9.4.9
# via placo
rich==14.3.3
# via typer
safetensors==0.7.0
robomimic==0.2.0
# via libero
robosuite==1.4.0
# via libero
rpds-py==0.28.0
# via
# jsonschema
# referencing
safetensors==0.6.2
# via
# accelerate
# diffusers
# lerobot
# peft
# timm
# transformers
scikit-image==0.25.2
# via
# gym-pusht
# lerobot
scipy==1.17.1
scipy==1.15.3
# via
# dm-control
# lerobot
# metaworld
# robosuite
# scikit-image
# torchdiffeq
sentry-sdk==2.54.0
sentry-sdk==2.42.1
# via wandb
shapely==2.1.2
# via gym-pusht
shellingham==1.5.4
# via typer
six==1.17.0
# via
# pynput
# python-dateutil
smmap==5.0.3
smmap==5.0.2
# via gitdb
sniffio==1.3.1
# via anyio
stack-data==0.6.3
# via ipython
starlette==0.52.1
starlette==0.48.0
# via fastapi
sympy==1.14.0
# via torch
teleop==0.1.4
teleop==0.1.2
# via lerobot
termcolor==3.3.0
# via lerobot
tifffile==2026.3.3
tensorboard==2.20.0
# via robomimic
tensorboard-data-server==0.7.2
# via tensorboard
tensorboardx==2.6.4
# via robomimic
termcolor==3.1.0
# via
# lerobot
# robomimic
thop==0.1.1.post2209072238
# via libero
tifffile==2025.5.10
# via scikit-image
tokenizers==0.22.2
timm==1.0.20
# via lerobot
tokenizers==0.22.1
# via transformers
toml==0.10.2
# via draccus
torch==2.10.0
tomli==2.3.0
# via
# cmeel
# coverage
# jupytext
# pytest
torch==2.7.1
# via
# accelerate
# lerobot
# peft
# torchdiffeq
# robomimic
# thop
# timm
# torchvision
torchcodec==0.10.0
torchcodec==0.5
# via lerobot
torchdiffeq==0.2.5
# via lerobot
torchvision==0.25.0
# via lerobot
tornado==6.5.4
torchvision==0.22.1
# via
# lerobot
# robomimic
# timm
tornado==6.5.2
# via meshcat
tqdm==4.67.3
tqdm==4.67.1
# via
# datasets
# dm-control
# huggingface-hub
# peft
# robomimic
# transformers
traitlets==5.14.3
# via
# ipython
# jupyter-core
# matplotlib-inline
transformers==5.3.0
# nbformat
transformers==4.57.1
# via
# lerobot
# libero
# peft
transforms3d==0.4.2
# via teleop
typer==0.24.1
# via
# huggingface-hub
# transformers
typing-extensions==4.15.0
# via
# aiosignal
# anyio
# etils
# faker
# exceptiongroup
# fastapi
# gymnasium
# huggingface-hub
# mypy
# ipython
# multidict
# pydantic
# pydantic-core
# referencing
# rerun-sdk
# starlette
# torch
# typing-inspect
# typing-inspection
# uvicorn
# virtualenv
# wandb
typing-inspect==0.9.0
# via draccus
typing-inspection==0.4.2
# via
# fastapi
# pydantic
tzdata==2025.3
# via pydantic
tzdata==2025.2
# via pandas
u-msgpack-python==2.8.0
# via meshcat
urllib3==2.6.3
urllib3==2.5.0
# via
# requests
# sentry-sdk
uvicorn[standard]==0.41.0
uvicorn[standard]==0.38.0
# via teleop
uvloop==0.22.1
# via uvicorn
virtualenv==21.1.0
virtualenv==20.35.3
# via pre-commit
wandb==0.24.2
# via lerobot
wandb==0.21.4
# via
# lerobot
# libero
watchfiles==1.1.1
# via uvicorn
wcwidth==0.6.0
wcwidth==0.2.14
# via prompt-toolkit
websocket-client==1.9.0
# via teleop
websockets==16.0
websockets==15.0.1
# via uvicorn
wrapt==2.1.2
werkzeug==3.1.3
# via tensorboard
wrapt==2.0.0
# via dm-tree
xxhash==3.6.0
# via datasets
yarl==1.23.0
yarl==1.22.0
# via aiohttp
zipp==3.23.0
# via
+187 -208
View File
@@ -1,12 +1,12 @@
#
# This file is autogenerated by pip-compile with Python 3.12
# This file is autogenerated by pip-compile with Python 3.10
# by the following command:
#
# pip-compile --output-file=requirements-ubuntu.txt requirements.in
#
-e .[all]
# via -[all]
absl-py==2.4.0
absl-py==2.3.1
# via
# dm-control
# dm-env
@@ -14,33 +14,30 @@ absl-py==2.4.0
# labmaze
# mujoco
# tensorboard
accelerate==1.13.0
accelerate==1.11.0
# via
# lerobot
# peft
aiohappyeyeballs==2.6.1
# via aiohttp
aiohttp==3.13.3
aiohttp==3.13.1
# via fsspec
aiosignal==1.4.0
# via aiohttp
annotated-doc==0.0.4
# via
# fastapi
# typer
annotated-types==0.7.0
# via pydantic
antlr4-python3-runtime==4.9.3
# via
# hydra-core
# omegaconf
anyio==4.12.1
anyio==4.11.0
# via
# httpx
# starlette
# watchfiles
asttokens==3.0.1
asttokens==3.0.0
# via stack-data
async-timeout==5.0.1
# via aiohttp
attrs==25.4.0
# via
# aiohttp
@@ -50,35 +47,30 @@ attrs==25.4.0
# referencing
# rerun-sdk
av==15.1.0
# via
# lerobot
# qwen-vl-utils
# via lerobot
bddl==1.0.1
# via hf-libero
certifi==2026.2.25
# via libero
certifi==2025.10.5
# via
# httpcore
# httpx
# requests
# sentry-sdk
cffi==2.0.0
# via pymunk
cfgv==3.5.0
cfgv==3.4.0
# via pre-commit
charset-normalizer==3.4.5
charset-normalizer==3.4.4
# via requests
click==8.3.1
click==8.3.0
# via
# typer
# uvicorn
# wandb
cloudpickle==3.1.2
cloudpickle==3.1.1
# via
# gymnasium
# hf-libero
cmake==4.1.3
# libero
cmake==4.1.0
# via lerobot
cmeel==0.59.0
cmeel==0.57.3
# via
# cmeel-assimp
# cmeel-boost
@@ -116,24 +108,20 @@ cmeel-zlib==1.3.1
# via cmeel-assimp
coal-library==3.0.1
# via pin
contourpy==1.3.3
# via
# lerobot
# matplotlib
coverage[toml]==7.13.4
contourpy==1.3.2
# via matplotlib
coverage[toml]==7.11.0
# via pytest-cov
cuda-bindings==12.9.4
# via torch
cuda-pathfinder==1.4.1
# via cuda-bindings
cycler==0.12.1
# via matplotlib
datasets==4.6.1
datasets==4.1.1
# via lerobot
debugpy==1.8.20
debugpy==1.8.17
# via lerobot
decorator==5.2.1
# via ipython
decord==0.6.0
# via lerobot
deepdiff==8.6.1
# via lerobot
diffusers==0.35.2
@@ -144,7 +132,7 @@ dill==0.4.0
# multiprocess
distlib==0.4.0
# via virtualenv
dm-control==1.0.37
dm-control==1.0.34
# via gym-aloha
dm-env==1.6
# via dm-control
@@ -152,6 +140,7 @@ dm-tree==0.1.9
# via
# dm-control
# dm-env
# lerobot
docopt==0.6.2
# via num2words
draccus==0.10.0
@@ -159,60 +148,66 @@ draccus==0.10.0
dynamixel-sdk==3.8.4
# via lerobot
easydict==1.13
# via hf-libero
egl-probe==1.0.2
# via robomimic
# via libero
egl-probe @ git+https://github.com/huggingface/egl_probe.git
# via
# libero
# robomimic
eigenpy==3.10.3
# via coal-library
einops==0.8.2
einops==0.8.1
# via
# hf-libero
# flash-attn
# lerobot
# libero
eiquadprog==1.2.9
# via placo
etils[epath,epy]==1.14.0
etils[epath,epy]==1.13.0
# via mujoco
evdev==1.9.3
evdev==1.9.2
# via pynput
exceptiongroup==1.3.0
# via
# anyio
# ipython
# pytest
executing==2.2.1
# via stack-data
faker==34.0.2
# via lerobot
farama-notifications==0.0.4
# via gymnasium
fastapi==0.135.1
# via
# lerobot
# teleop
fastapi==0.119.1
# via teleop
fastjsonschema==2.21.2
# via nbformat
feetech-servo-sdk==1.0.0
# via lerobot
filelock==3.25.0
filelock==3.20.0
# via
# datasets
# diffusers
# huggingface-hub
# python-discovery
# torch
# transformers
# virtualenv
fonttools==4.61.1
flash-attn==2.8.3
# via lerobot
fonttools==4.60.1
# via matplotlib
frozenlist==1.8.0
# via
# aiohttp
# aiosignal
fsspec[http]==2026.2.0
fsspec[http]==2025.9.0
# via
# datasets
# etils
# huggingface-hub
# torch
future==1.0.0
# via hf-libero
# via libero
gitdb==4.0.12
# via gitpython
gitpython==3.1.46
gitpython==3.1.45
# via wandb
glfw==2.10.0
# via
@@ -235,60 +230,50 @@ gym-hil==0.1.13
# via lerobot
gym-pusht==0.1.6
# via lerobot
gymnasium==1.2.3
gymnasium==1.2.1
# via
# gym-aloha
# gym-hil
# gym-pusht
# hf-libero
# lerobot
# libero
# metaworld
h11==0.16.0
# via
# httpcore
# uvicorn
h5py==3.16.0
# via uvicorn
h5py==3.15.1
# via robomimic
hebi-py==2.11.0
# via lerobot
hf-egl-probe==1.0.2
# via hf-libero
hf-libero==0.1.3
# via lerobot
hf-xet==1.3.2
hf-transfer==0.1.9
# via huggingface-hub
hf-xet==1.1.10
# via huggingface-hub
hidapi==0.14.0.post4
# via
# gym-hil
# lerobot
httpcore==1.0.9
# via httpx
httptools==0.7.1
# via uvicorn
httpx==0.28.1
# via
# datasets
# huggingface-hub
huggingface-hub==1.6.0
huggingface-hub[cli,hf-transfer]==0.35.3
# via
# accelerate
# datasets
# diffusers
# lerobot
# peft
# timm
# tokenizers
# transformers
hydra-core==1.3.2
# via hf-libero
identify==2.6.17
# via libero
identify==2.6.15
# via pre-commit
idna==3.11
# via
# anyio
# httpx
# requests
# yarl
imageio[ffmpeg]==2.37.2
imageio[ffmpeg]==2.37.0
# via
# gym-aloha
# gym-hil
@@ -300,14 +285,16 @@ imageio-ffmpeg==0.6.0
# via
# imageio
# robomimic
importlib-metadata==8.7.1
importlib-metadata==8.7.0
# via diffusers
importlib-resources==6.5.2
# via etils
iniconfig==2.3.0
# via pytest
ipython==9.11.0
inquirerpy==0.3.4
# via huggingface-hub
ipython==8.37.0
# via meshcat
ipython-pygments-lexers==1.1.1
# via ipython
ischedule==1.2.7
# via placo
jedi==0.19.2
@@ -316,41 +303,40 @@ jinja2==3.1.6
# via torch
jsonlines==4.0.0
# via lerobot
jsonschema==4.26.0
jsonschema==4.25.1
# via nbformat
jsonschema-specifications==2025.9.1
# via jsonschema
jupyter-core==5.9.1
# via nbformat
jupytext==1.19.1
jupytext==1.18.1
# via bddl
kiwisolver==1.4.9
# via matplotlib
labmaze==1.0.6
# via dm-control
lazy-loader==0.5
lazy-loader==0.4
# via scikit-image
librt==0.8.1
# via mypy
llvmlite==0.46.0
libero @ git+https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot-libero.git@main
# via lerobot
llvmlite==0.45.1
# via numba
lxml==6.0.2
# via dm-control
markdown==3.10.2
markdown==3.9
# via tensorboard
markdown-it-py==4.0.0
# via
# jupytext
# mdit-py-plugins
# rich
markupsafe==3.0.3
# via
# jinja2
# werkzeug
matplotlib==3.10.8
matplotlib==3.10.7
# via
# hf-libero
# lerobot
# libero
matplotlib-inline==0.2.1
# via ipython
mdit-py-plugins==0.5.0
@@ -367,38 +353,36 @@ mock-serial==0.0.1
# via lerobot
mpmath==1.3.0
# via sympy
mujoco==3.5.0
mujoco==3.3.7
# via
# dm-control
# gym-aloha
# gym-hil
# hf-libero
# libero
# metaworld
# robosuite
multidict==6.7.1
multidict==6.7.0
# via
# aiohttp
# yarl
multiprocess==0.70.18
multiprocess==0.70.16
# via datasets
mypy==1.19.1
# via lerobot
mypy-extensions==1.1.0
# via
# mypy
# typing-inspect
# via typing-inspect
nbformat==5.10.4
# via jupytext
networkx==3.6.1
networkx==3.4.2
# via
# bddl
# scikit-image
# torch
nodeenv==1.10.0
ninja==1.13.0
# via lerobot
nodeenv==1.9.1
# via pre-commit
num2words==0.5.14
# via lerobot
numba==0.64.0
numba==0.62.1
# via robosuite
numpy==2.2.6
# via
@@ -407,6 +391,7 @@ numpy==2.2.6
# cmeel-boost
# contourpy
# datasets
# decord
# diffusers
# dm-control
# dm-env
@@ -414,10 +399,9 @@ numpy==2.2.6
# gymnasium
# h5py
# hebi-py
# hf-libero
# imageio
# labmaze
# lerobot
# libero
# matplotlib
# meshcat
# metaworld
@@ -442,51 +426,49 @@ numpy==2.2.6
# torchvision
# transformers
# transforms3d
nvidia-cublas-cu12==12.8.4.1
nvidia-cublas-cu12==12.6.4.1
# via
# nvidia-cudnn-cu12
# nvidia-cusolver-cu12
# torch
nvidia-cuda-cupti-cu12==12.8.90
nvidia-cuda-cupti-cu12==12.6.80
# via torch
nvidia-cuda-nvrtc-cu12==12.8.93
nvidia-cuda-nvrtc-cu12==12.6.77
# via torch
nvidia-cuda-runtime-cu12==12.8.90
nvidia-cuda-runtime-cu12==12.6.77
# via torch
nvidia-cudnn-cu12==9.10.2.21
nvidia-cudnn-cu12==9.5.1.17
# via torch
nvidia-cufft-cu12==11.3.3.83
nvidia-cufft-cu12==11.3.0.4
# via torch
nvidia-cufile-cu12==1.13.1.3
nvidia-cufile-cu12==1.11.1.6
# via torch
nvidia-curand-cu12==10.3.9.90
nvidia-curand-cu12==10.3.7.77
# via torch
nvidia-cusolver-cu12==11.7.3.90
nvidia-cusolver-cu12==11.7.1.2
# via torch
nvidia-cusparse-cu12==12.5.8.93
nvidia-cusparse-cu12==12.5.4.2
# via
# nvidia-cusolver-cu12
# torch
nvidia-cusparselt-cu12==0.7.1
nvidia-cusparselt-cu12==0.6.3
# via torch
nvidia-nccl-cu12==2.27.5
nvidia-nccl-cu12==2.26.2
# via torch
nvidia-nvjitlink-cu12==12.8.93
nvidia-nvjitlink-cu12==12.6.85
# via
# nvidia-cufft-cu12
# nvidia-cusolver-cu12
# nvidia-cusparse-cu12
# torch
nvidia-nvshmem-cu12==3.4.5
# via torch
nvidia-nvtx-cu12==12.8.90
nvidia-nvtx-cu12==12.6.77
# via torch
omegaconf==2.3.0
# via hydra-core
opencv-python==4.13.0.92
opencv-python==4.12.0.88
# via
# gym-pusht
# hf-libero
# libero
# reachy2-sdk
# robosuite
opencv-python-headless==4.12.0.88
@@ -505,7 +487,6 @@ packaging==25.0
# matplotlib
# peft
# pytest
# qwen-vl-utils
# reachy2-sdk
# scikit-image
# tensorboard
@@ -516,21 +497,21 @@ pandas==2.3.3
# via
# datasets
# lerobot
parso==0.8.6
parso==0.8.5
# via jedi
pathspec==1.0.4
# via mypy
peft==0.18.1
peft==0.17.1
# via lerobot
pexpect==4.9.0
# via ipython
pillow==12.1.1
pfzy==0.3.4
# via inquirerpy
pillow==12.0.0
# via
# diffusers
# imageio
# lerobot
# matplotlib
# meshcat
# qwen-vl-utils
# rerun-sdk
# robosuite
# scikit-image
@@ -538,27 +519,28 @@ pillow==12.1.1
# torchvision
pin==3.4.0
# via placo
placo==0.9.16
placo==0.9.14
# via lerobot
platformdirs==4.9.4
platformdirs==4.5.0
# via
# jupyter-core
# python-discovery
# virtualenv
# wandb
pluggy==1.6.0
# via
# pytest
# pytest-cov
pre-commit==4.5.1
pre-commit==4.3.0
# via lerobot
prompt-toolkit==3.0.52
# via ipython
# via
# inquirerpy
# ipython
propcache==0.4.1
# via
# aiohttp
# yarl
protobuf==6.31.1
protobuf==6.31.0
# via
# dm-control
# grpcio-tools
@@ -568,7 +550,7 @@ protobuf==6.31.1
# tensorboard
# tensorboardx
# wandb
psutil==7.2.2
psutil==7.1.1
# via
# accelerate
# imageio
@@ -578,17 +560,17 @@ ptyprocess==0.7.0
# via pexpect
pure-eval==0.2.3
# via stack-data
pyarrow==23.0.1
pyarrow==21.0.0
# via
# datasets
# rerun-sdk
pycparser==3.0
pycparser==2.23
# via cffi
pydantic==2.12.5
pydantic==2.12.3
# via
# fastapi
# wandb
pydantic-core==2.41.5
pydantic-core==2.41.4
# via pydantic
pygame==2.6.1
# via
@@ -598,14 +580,12 @@ pygame==2.6.1
pygments==2.19.2
# via
# ipython
# ipython-pygments-lexers
# pytest
# rich
pymunk==6.11.1
# via
# gym-pusht
# lerobot
pyngrok==7.5.1
pyngrok==7.4.1
# via meshcat
pynput==1.8.1
# via
@@ -615,7 +595,7 @@ pyopengl==3.1.10
# via
# dm-control
# mujoco
pyparsing==3.3.2
pyparsing==3.2.5
# via
# dm-control
# matplotlib
@@ -641,16 +621,13 @@ pytest-timeout==2.4.0
# via lerobot
python-dateutil==2.9.0.post0
# via
# faker
# matplotlib
# pandas
python-discovery==1.1.1
# via virtualenv
python-dotenv==1.2.2
python-dotenv==1.1.1
# via uvicorn
python-xlib==0.33
# via pynput
pytz==2026.1.post1
pytz==2025.2
# via pandas
pyyaml==6.0.3
# via
@@ -665,6 +642,7 @@ pyyaml==6.0.3
# pre-commit
# pyngrok
# pyyaml-include
# timm
# transformers
# uvicorn
# wandb
@@ -674,9 +652,7 @@ pyzmq==27.1.0
# via
# lerobot
# meshcat
qwen-vl-utils==0.0.14
# via lerobot
reachy2-sdk==1.0.15
reachy2-sdk==1.0.14
# via lerobot
reachy2-sdk-api==1.0.21
# via reachy2-sdk
@@ -684,7 +660,7 @@ referencing==0.37.0
# via
# jsonschema
# jsonschema-specifications
regex==2026.2.28
regex==2025.10.23
# via
# diffusers
# transformers
@@ -693,62 +669,60 @@ requests==2.32.5
# datasets
# diffusers
# dm-control
# qwen-vl-utils
# huggingface-hub
# teleop
# transformers
# wandb
rerun-sdk==0.26.2
rerun-sdk==0.26.1
# via lerobot
rhoban-cmeel-jsoncpp==1.9.4.9
# via placo
rich==14.3.3
# via typer
robomimic==0.2.0
# via hf-libero
# via libero
robosuite==1.4.0
# via hf-libero
rpds-py==0.30.0
# via libero
rpds-py==0.28.0
# via
# jsonschema
# referencing
safetensors==0.7.0
safetensors==0.6.2
# via
# accelerate
# diffusers
# lerobot
# peft
# timm
# transformers
scikit-image==0.25.2
# via
# gym-pusht
# lerobot
scipy==1.17.1
scipy==1.15.3
# via
# dm-control
# lerobot
# metaworld
# robosuite
# scikit-image
# torchdiffeq
sentry-sdk==2.54.0
sentry-sdk==2.42.1
# via wandb
shapely==2.1.2
# via gym-pusht
shellingham==1.5.4
# via typer
six==1.17.0
# via
# pynput
# python-dateutil
# python-xlib
smmap==5.0.3
smmap==5.0.2
# via gitdb
sniffio==1.3.1
# via anyio
stack-data==0.6.3
# via ipython
starlette==0.52.1
starlette==0.48.0
# via fastapi
sympy==1.14.0
# via torch
teleop==0.1.4
teleop==0.1.2
# via lerobot
tensorboard==2.20.0
# via robomimic
@@ -756,38 +730,46 @@ tensorboard-data-server==0.7.2
# via tensorboard
tensorboardx==2.6.4
# via robomimic
termcolor==3.3.0
termcolor==3.1.0
# via
# lerobot
# robomimic
thop==0.1.1.post2209072238
# via hf-libero
tifffile==2026.3.3
# via libero
tifffile==2025.5.10
# via scikit-image
tokenizers==0.22.2
timm==1.0.20
# via lerobot
tokenizers==0.22.1
# via transformers
toml==0.10.2
# via draccus
torch==2.10.0
tomli==2.3.0
# via
# cmeel
# coverage
# jupytext
# pytest
torch==2.7.1
# via
# accelerate
# flash-attn
# lerobot
# peft
# robomimic
# thop
# torchdiffeq
# timm
# torchvision
torchcodec==0.10.0
torchcodec==0.5
# via lerobot
torchdiffeq==0.2.5
# via lerobot
torchvision==0.25.0
torchvision==0.22.1
# via
# lerobot
# robomimic
tornado==6.5.4
# timm
tornado==6.5.2
# via meshcat
tqdm==4.67.3
tqdm==4.67.1
# via
# datasets
# dm-control
@@ -801,29 +783,26 @@ traitlets==5.14.3
# jupyter-core
# matplotlib-inline
# nbformat
transformers==5.3.0
transformers==4.57.1
# via
# hf-libero
# lerobot
# libero
# peft
transforms3d==0.4.2
# via teleop
triton==3.6.0
triton==3.3.1
# via torch
typer==0.24.1
# via
# huggingface-hub
# transformers
typing-extensions==4.15.0
# via
# aiosignal
# anyio
# etils
# faker
# exceptiongroup
# fastapi
# gymnasium
# huggingface-hub
# mypy
# ipython
# multidict
# pydantic
# pydantic-core
# referencing
@@ -832,46 +811,46 @@ typing-extensions==4.15.0
# torch
# typing-inspect
# typing-inspection
# uvicorn
# virtualenv
# wandb
typing-inspect==0.9.0
# via draccus
typing-inspection==0.4.2
# via
# fastapi
# pydantic
tzdata==2025.3
# via pydantic
tzdata==2025.2
# via pandas
u-msgpack-python==2.8.0
# via meshcat
urllib3==2.6.3
urllib3==2.5.0
# via
# requests
# sentry-sdk
uvicorn[standard]==0.41.0
uvicorn[standard]==0.38.0
# via teleop
uvloop==0.22.1
# via uvicorn
virtualenv==21.1.0
virtualenv==20.35.3
# via pre-commit
wandb==0.24.2
wandb==0.21.4
# via
# hf-libero
# lerobot
# libero
watchfiles==1.1.1
# via uvicorn
wcwidth==0.6.0
wcwidth==0.2.14
# via prompt-toolkit
websocket-client==1.9.0
# via teleop
websockets==16.0
websockets==15.0.1
# via uvicorn
werkzeug==3.1.6
werkzeug==3.1.3
# via tensorboard
wrapt==2.1.2
wrapt==2.0.0
# via dm-tree
xxhash==3.6.0
# via datasets
yarl==1.23.0
yarl==1.22.0
# via aiohttp
zipp==3.23.0
# via
+4 -4
View File
@@ -1,9 +1,9 @@
# requirements.in
# requirements-macos.txt was generated on macOS and is platform-specific (macOS 26.3.1 25D2128 arm64).
# Darwin MacBook-Pro.local 25.3.0 Darwin Kernel Version 25.3.0: Wed Jan 28 20:54:55 PST 2026; root:xnu-12377.91.3~2/RELEASE_ARM64_T8132 arm64
# requirements-macos.txt was generated on macOS and is platform-specific (macOS 26.0.1 25A362 arm64).
# Darwin MacBook-Pro.local 25.0.0 Darwin Kernel Version 25.0.0: Wed Sep 17 21:42:08 PDT 2025; root:xnu-12377.1.9~141/RELEASE_ARM64_T8132 arm64
# requirements-ubuntu.txt was generated on Linux and is platform-specific (Ubuntu 24.04.4 LTS x86_64).
# Linux lerobot-linux 6.17.0-14-generic #14~24.04.1-Ubuntu SMP PREEMPT_DYNAMIC Thu Jan 15 15:52:10 UTC 2 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux
# requirements-ubuntu.txt was generated on Linux and is platform-specific (Ubuntu 24.04.3 LTS x86_64).
# Linux mlerobot-linux 6.14.0-33-generic #33~24.04.1-Ubuntu SMP PREEMPT_DYNAMIC Fri Sep 19 17:02:30 UTC 2 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux
-e .[all]
-72
View File
@@ -1,72 +0,0 @@
# Copyright 2025 The HuggingFace Inc. team. All rights reserved.
#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
# You may obtain a copy of the License at
#
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
# limitations under the License.
from setuptools import setup
def get_version_from_toml() -> str:
"""Return the project's version string parsed from `pyproject.toml`.
The function scans `pyproject.toml` line-by-line looking for a line
that starts with ``version`` (for example: ``version = "1.2.3"``)
and returns the value without surrounding quotes. If no such line is
found a :class:`ValueError` is raised.
Returns:
The version string from `pyproject.toml` (e.g. ``"1.2.3"`` ->
``1.2.3``).
"""
version = None
with open("pyproject.toml", encoding="utf-8") as f:
for line in f:
if line.strip().startswith("version"):
version = line.split("=")[1].strip().strip('"')
break
if version is None:
raise ValueError("Version not found in pyproject.toml")
return version
def read_long_description() -> str:
"""Read and return the project's long description for setup.
This function reads `README.md` and replaces image links that point
to the local `./media/` directory with absolute raw GitHub URLs that
reference the release tag corresponding to the version parsed from
`pyproject.toml` (for example, ``v1.2.3``). The modified README
content is returned as a string suitable for passing to
``setuptools.setup(long_description=...)``.
Returns:
The README content with rewritten media links.
"""
with open("README.md", encoding="utf-8") as f:
content = f.read()
version = get_version_from_toml()
git_tag = f"v{version}"
base_raw_url = f"https://raw.githubusercontent.com/huggingface/lerobot/{git_tag}/"
content = content.replace('src="./media/', f'src="{base_raw_url}media/')
return content
setup(
long_description=read_long_description(),
long_description_content_type="text/markdown",
)
-10
View File
@@ -126,12 +126,6 @@ class RobotClientConfig:
# Device configuration
policy_device: str = field(default="cpu", metadata={"help": "Device for policy inference"})
client_device: str = field(
default="cpu",
metadata={
"help": "Device to move actions to after receiving from server (e.g., for downstream planners)"
},
)
# Control behavior configuration
chunk_size_threshold: float = field(default=0.5, metadata={"help": "Threshold for chunk size control"})
@@ -167,9 +161,6 @@ class RobotClientConfig:
if not self.policy_device:
raise ValueError("policy_device cannot be empty")
if not self.client_device:
raise ValueError("client_device cannot be empty")
if self.chunk_size_threshold < 0 or self.chunk_size_threshold > 1:
raise ValueError(f"chunk_size_threshold must be between 0 and 1, got {self.chunk_size_threshold}")
@@ -193,7 +184,6 @@ class RobotClientConfig:
"policy_type": self.policy_type,
"pretrained_name_or_path": self.pretrained_name_or_path,
"policy_device": self.policy_device,
"client_device": self.client_device,
"chunk_size_threshold": self.chunk_size_threshold,
"fps": self.fps,
"actions_per_chunk": self.actions_per_chunk,
+2 -2
View File
@@ -23,7 +23,7 @@ DEFAULT_INFERENCE_LATENCY = 1 / DEFAULT_FPS
DEFAULT_OBS_QUEUE_TIMEOUT = 2
# All action chunking policies
SUPPORTED_POLICIES = ["act", "smolvla", "diffusion", "tdmpc", "vqbet", "pi0", "pi05", "groot"]
SUPPORTED_POLICIES = ["act", "smolvla", "diffusion", "tdmpc", "vqbet", "pi0", "pi05"]
# TODO: Add all other robots
SUPPORTED_ROBOTS = ["so100_follower", "so101_follower", "bi_so_follower", "omx_follower"]
SUPPORTED_ROBOTS = ["so100_follower", "so101_follower", "bi_so100_follower", "omx_follower"]
+3 -4
View File
@@ -18,12 +18,11 @@ import os
import time
from dataclasses import dataclass, field
from pathlib import Path
from typing import Any
import torch
from lerobot.configs.types import PolicyFeature
from lerobot.datasets.feature_utils import build_dataset_frame, hw_to_dataset_features
from lerobot.datasets.utils import build_dataset_frame, hw_to_dataset_features
# NOTE: Configs need to be loaded for the client to be able to instantiate the policy config
from lerobot.policies import ( # noqa: F401
@@ -40,8 +39,8 @@ from lerobot.utils.utils import init_logging
Action = torch.Tensor
# observation as received from the robot (can be numpy arrays, floats, etc.)
RawObservation = dict[str, Any]
# observation as received from the robot
RawObservation = dict[str, torch.Tensor]
# observation as those recorded in LeRobot dataset (keys are different)
LeRobotObservation = dict[str, torch.Tensor]
+4 -4
View File
@@ -39,13 +39,15 @@ import grpc
import torch
from lerobot.policies.factory import get_policy_class, make_pre_post_processors
from lerobot.processor import PolicyProcessorPipeline
from lerobot.processor import (
PolicyAction,
PolicyProcessorPipeline,
)
from lerobot.transport import (
services_pb2, # type: ignore
services_pb2_grpc, # type: ignore
)
from lerobot.transport.utils import receive_bytes_in_chunks
from lerobot.types import PolicyAction
from .configs import PolicyServerConfig
from .constants import SUPPORTED_POLICIES
@@ -379,8 +381,6 @@ class PolicyServer(services_pb2_grpc.AsyncInferenceServicer):
action_tensor = torch.stack(processed_actions, dim=1).squeeze(0)
self.logger.debug(f"Postprocessed action shape: {action_tensor.shape}")
action_tensor = action_tensor.detach().cpu()
"""5. Convert to TimedAction list"""
action_chunk = self._time_action_chunk(
observation_t.get_timestamp(), list(action_tensor), observation_t.get_timestep()
+6 -23
View File
@@ -25,7 +25,6 @@ python src/lerobot/async_inference/robot_client.py \
--policy_type=act \
--pretrained_name_or_path=user/model \
--policy_device=mps \
--client_device=cpu \
--actions_per_chunk=50 \
--chunk_size_threshold=0.5 \
--aggregate_fn_name=weighted_average \
@@ -52,20 +51,21 @@ from lerobot.cameras.realsense.configuration_realsense import RealSenseCameraCon
from lerobot.robots import ( # noqa: F401
Robot,
RobotConfig,
bi_so_follower,
bi_so100_follower,
koch_follower,
make_robot_from_config,
omx_follower,
so_follower,
so100_follower,
so101_follower,
)
from lerobot.transport import (
services_pb2, # type: ignore
services_pb2_grpc, # type: ignore
)
from lerobot.transport.utils import grpc_channel_options, send_bytes_in_chunks
from lerobot.utils.import_utils import register_third_party_plugins
from .configs import RobotClientConfig
from .constants import SUPPORTED_ROBOTS
from .helpers import (
Action,
FPSTracker,
@@ -286,21 +286,6 @@ class RobotClient:
timed_actions = pickle.loads(actions_chunk.data) # nosec
deserialize_time = time.perf_counter() - deserialize_start
# Log device type of received actions
if len(timed_actions) > 0:
received_device = timed_actions[0].get_action().device.type
self.logger.debug(f"Received actions on device: {received_device}")
# Move actions to client_device (e.g., for downstream planners that need GPU)
client_device = self.config.client_device
if client_device != "cpu":
for timed_action in timed_actions:
if timed_action.get_action().device.type != client_device:
timed_action.action = timed_action.get_action().to(client_device)
self.logger.debug(f"Converted actions to device: {client_device}")
else:
self.logger.debug(f"Actions kept on device: {client_device}")
self.action_chunk_size = max(self.action_chunk_size, len(timed_actions))
# Calculate network latency if we have matching observations
@@ -485,9 +470,8 @@ class RobotClient:
def async_client(cfg: RobotClientConfig):
logging.info(pformat(asdict(cfg)))
# TODO: Assert if checking robot support is still needed with the plugin system
# if cfg.robot.type not in SUPPORTED_ROBOTS:
# raise ValueError(f"Robot {cfg.robot.type} not yet supported!")
if cfg.robot.type not in SUPPORTED_ROBOTS:
raise ValueError(f"Robot {cfg.robot.type} not yet supported!")
client = RobotClient(cfg)
@@ -513,5 +497,4 @@ def async_client(cfg: RobotClientConfig):
if __name__ == "__main__":
register_third_party_plugins()
async_client() # run the client
+1 -1
View File
@@ -13,5 +13,5 @@
# limitations under the License.
from .camera import Camera
from .configs import CameraConfig, ColorMode, Cv2Backends, Cv2Rotation
from .configs import CameraConfig, ColorMode, Cv2Rotation
from .utils import make_cameras_from_configs
+18 -82
View File
@@ -15,12 +15,11 @@
# limitations under the License.
import abc
import warnings
from typing import Any
from numpy.typing import NDArray # type: ignore # TODO: add type stubs for numpy.typing
from .configs import CameraConfig
from .configs import CameraConfig, ColorMode
class Camera(abc.ABC):
@@ -31,12 +30,20 @@ class Camera(abc.ABC):
Manages basic camera properties (FPS, resolution) and core operations:
- Connection/disconnection
- Frame capture (sync/async/latest)
- Frame capture (sync/async)
Attributes:
fps (int | None): Configured frames per second
width (int | None): Frame width in pixels
height (int | None): Frame height in pixels
Example:
class MyCamera(Camera):
def __init__(self, config): ...
@property
def is_connected(self) -> bool: ...
def connect(self, warmup=True): ...
# Plus other required methods
"""
def __init__(self, config: CameraConfig):
@@ -49,32 +56,6 @@ class Camera(abc.ABC):
self.width: int | None = config.width
self.height: int | None = config.height
def __enter__(self):
"""
Context manager entry.
Automatically connects to the camera.
"""
self.connect()
return self
def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_value, traceback) -> None:
"""
Context manager exit.
Automatically disconnects, ensuring resources are released even on error.
"""
self.disconnect()
def __del__(self) -> None:
"""
Destructor safety net.
Attempts to disconnect if the object is garbage collected without cleanup.
"""
try:
if self.is_connected:
self.disconnect()
except Exception: # nosec B110
pass
@property
@abc.abstractmethod
def is_connected(self) -> bool:
@@ -108,10 +89,12 @@ class Camera(abc.ABC):
pass
@abc.abstractmethod
def read(self) -> NDArray[Any]:
"""Capture and return a single frame from the camera synchronously.
def read(self, color_mode: ColorMode | None = None) -> NDArray[Any]:
"""Capture and return a single frame from the camera.
This is a blocking call that will wait for the hardware and its SDK.
Args:
color_mode: Desired color mode for the output frame. If None,
uses the camera's default color mode.
Returns:
np.ndarray: Captured frame as a numpy array.
@@ -120,64 +103,17 @@ class Camera(abc.ABC):
@abc.abstractmethod
def async_read(self, timeout_ms: float = ...) -> NDArray[Any]:
"""Return the most recent new frame.
This method retrieves the latest frame captured by the background thread.
If a new frame is already available in the buffer (captured since the last call),
it returns it immediately.
It blocks up to `timeout_ms` only if the buffer is empty or if the latest frame
was already consumed by a previous `async_read` call.
Essentially, this method return the latest unconsumed frame, waiting if necessary
for a new one to arrive within the specified timeout.
Usage:
- Ideal for control loops where you want to ensure every processed frame
is fresh, effectively synchronizing your loop to the camera's FPS.
- Causes of a timeout usually include: very low camera FPS, heavy processing load,
or if the camera is disconnected.
"""Asynchronously capture and return a single frame from the camera.
Args:
timeout_ms: Maximum time to wait for a new frame in milliseconds.
Defaults to 200ms (0.2s).
timeout_ms: Maximum time to wait for a frame in milliseconds.
Defaults to implementation-specific timeout.
Returns:
np.ndarray: Captured frame as a numpy array.
Raises:
TimeoutError: If no new frame arrives within `timeout_ms`.
"""
pass
def read_latest(self, max_age_ms: int = 500) -> NDArray[Any]:
"""Return the most recent frame captured immediately (Peeking).
This method is non-blocking and returns whatever is currently in the
memory buffer. The frame may be stale,
meaning it could have been captured a while ago (hanging camera scenario e.g.).
Usage:
Ideal for scenarios requiring zero latency or decoupled frequencies & when
we want a guaranteed frame, such as UI visualization, logging, or
non-critical monitoring.
Returns:
NDArray[Any]: The frame image (numpy array).
Raises:
TimeoutError: If the latest frame is older than `max_age_ms`.
NotConnectedError: If the camera is not connected.
RuntimeError: If the camera is connected but has not captured any frames yet.
"""
warnings.warn(
f"{self.__class__.__name__}.read_latest() is not implemented. "
"Please override read_latest(); it will be required in future releases.",
FutureWarning,
stacklevel=2,
)
return self.async_read()
@abc.abstractmethod
def disconnect(self) -> None:
"""Disconnect from the camera and release resources."""
-23
View File
@@ -25,10 +25,6 @@ class ColorMode(str, Enum):
RGB = "rgb"
BGR = "bgr"
@classmethod
def _missing_(cls, value: object) -> None:
raise ValueError(f"`color_mode` is expected to be in {list(cls)}, but {value} is provided.")
class Cv2Rotation(int, Enum):
NO_ROTATION = 0
@@ -36,25 +32,6 @@ class Cv2Rotation(int, Enum):
ROTATE_180 = 180
ROTATE_270 = -90
@classmethod
def _missing_(cls, value: object) -> None:
raise ValueError(f"`rotation` is expected to be in {list(cls)}, but {value} is provided.")
# Subset from https://docs.opencv.org/3.4/d4/d15/group__videoio__flags__base.html
class Cv2Backends(int, Enum):
ANY = 0
V4L2 = 200
DSHOW = 700
PVAPI = 800
ANDROID = 1000
AVFOUNDATION = 1200
MSMF = 1400
@classmethod
def _missing_(cls, value: object) -> None:
raise ValueError(f"`backend` is expected to be in {list(cls)}, but {value} is provided.")
@dataclass(kw_only=True)
class CameraConfig(draccus.ChoiceRegistry, abc.ABC): # type: ignore # TODO: add type stubs for draccus
+65 -116
View File
@@ -32,11 +32,10 @@ if platform.system() == "Windows" and "OPENCV_VIDEOIO_MSMF_ENABLE_HW_TRANSFORMS"
os.environ["OPENCV_VIDEOIO_MSMF_ENABLE_HW_TRANSFORMS"] = "0"
import cv2 # type: ignore # TODO: add type stubs for OpenCV
from lerobot.utils.decorators import check_if_already_connected, check_if_not_connected
from lerobot.utils.errors import DeviceNotConnectedError
from lerobot.utils.errors import DeviceAlreadyConnectedError, DeviceNotConnectedError
from ..camera import Camera
from ..utils import get_cv2_rotation
from ..utils import get_cv2_backend, get_cv2_rotation
from .configuration_opencv import ColorMode, OpenCVCameraConfig
# NOTE(Steven): The maximum opencv device index depends on your operating system. For instance,
@@ -71,24 +70,34 @@ class OpenCVCamera(Camera):
Example:
```python
from lerobot.cameras.opencv import OpenCVCamera
from lerobot.cameras.configuration_opencv import OpenCVCameraConfig
from lerobot.cameras.configuration_opencv import OpenCVCameraConfig, ColorMode, Cv2Rotation
# Basic usage with camera index 0
config = OpenCVCameraConfig(index_or_path=0)
camera = OpenCVCamera(config)
camera.connect()
# Read 1 frame synchronously (blocking)
# Read 1 frame synchronously
color_image = camera.read()
print(color_image.shape)
# Read 1 frame asynchronously (waits for new frame with a timeout)
# Read 1 frame asynchronously
async_image = camera.async_read()
# Get the latest frame immediately (no wait, returns timestamp)
latest_image, timestamp = camera.read_latest()
# When done, properly disconnect the camera using
camera.disconnect()
# Example with custom settings
custom_config = OpenCVCameraConfig(
index_or_path='/dev/video0', # Or use an index
fps=30,
width=1280,
height=720,
color_mode=ColorMode.RGB,
rotation=Cv2Rotation.ROTATE_90
)
custom_camera = OpenCVCamera(custom_config)
# ... connect, read, disconnect ...
```
"""
@@ -114,11 +123,10 @@ class OpenCVCamera(Camera):
self.stop_event: Event | None = None
self.frame_lock: Lock = Lock()
self.latest_frame: NDArray[Any] | None = None
self.latest_timestamp: float | None = None
self.new_frame_event: Event = Event()
self.rotation: int | None = get_cv2_rotation(config.rotation)
self.backend: int = config.backend
self.backend: int = get_cv2_backend()
if self.height and self.width:
self.capture_width, self.capture_height = self.width, self.height
@@ -133,23 +141,20 @@ class OpenCVCamera(Camera):
"""Checks if the camera is currently connected and opened."""
return isinstance(self.videocapture, cv2.VideoCapture) and self.videocapture.isOpened()
@check_if_already_connected
def connect(self, warmup: bool = True) -> None:
"""
Connects to the OpenCV camera specified in the configuration.
Initializes the OpenCV VideoCapture object, sets desired camera properties
(FPS, width, height), starts the background reading thread and performs initial checks.
Args:
warmup (bool): If True, waits at connect() time until at least one valid frame
has been captured by the background thread. Defaults to True.
(FPS, width, height), and performs initial checks.
Raises:
DeviceAlreadyConnectedError: If the camera is already connected.
ConnectionError: If the specified camera index/path is not found or fails to open.
RuntimeError: If the camera opens but fails to apply requested settings.
ConnectionError: If the specified camera index/path is not found or the camera is found but fails to open.
RuntimeError: If the camera opens but fails to apply requested FPS/resolution settings.
"""
if self.is_connected:
raise DeviceAlreadyConnectedError(f"{self} is already connected.")
# Use 1 thread for OpenCV operations to avoid potential conflicts or
# blocking in multi-threaded applications, especially during data collection.
@@ -165,20 +170,15 @@ class OpenCVCamera(Camera):
)
self._configure_capture_settings()
self._start_read_thread()
if warmup and self.warmup_s > 0:
if warmup:
start_time = time.time()
while time.time() - start_time < self.warmup_s:
self.async_read(timeout_ms=self.warmup_s * 1000)
self.read()
time.sleep(0.1)
with self.frame_lock:
if self.latest_frame is None:
raise ConnectionError(f"{self} failed to capture frames during warmup.")
logger.info(f"{self} connected.")
@check_if_not_connected
def _configure_capture_settings(self) -> None:
"""
Applies the specified FOURCC, FPS, width, and height settings to the connected camera.
@@ -196,8 +196,11 @@ class OpenCVCamera(Camera):
Raises:
RuntimeError: If the camera fails to set any of the specified properties
to the requested value.
DeviceNotConnectedError: If the camera is not connected.
DeviceNotConnectedError: If the camera is not connected when attempting
to configure settings.
"""
if not self.is_connected:
raise DeviceNotConnectedError(f"Cannot configure settings for {self} as it is not connected.")
# Set FOURCC first (if specified) as it can affect available FPS/resolution options
if self.config.fourcc is not None:
@@ -336,18 +339,6 @@ class OpenCVCamera(Camera):
return found_cameras_info
def _read_from_hardware(self) -> NDArray[Any]:
if self.videocapture is None:
raise DeviceNotConnectedError(f"{self} videocapture is not initialized")
ret, frame = self.videocapture.read()
if not ret:
raise RuntimeError(f"{self} read failed (status={ret}).")
return frame
@check_if_not_connected
def read(self, color_mode: ColorMode | None = None) -> NDArray[Any]:
"""
Reads a single frame synchronously from the camera.
@@ -355,6 +346,11 @@ class OpenCVCamera(Camera):
This is a blocking call. It waits for the next available frame from the
camera hardware via OpenCV.
Args:
color_mode (Optional[ColorMode]): If specified, overrides the default
color mode (`self.color_mode`) for this read operation (e.g.,
request RGB even if default is BGR).
Returns:
np.ndarray: The captured frame as a NumPy array in the format
(height, width, channels), using the specified or default
@@ -366,31 +362,34 @@ class OpenCVCamera(Camera):
received frame dimensions don't match expectations before rotation.
ValueError: If an invalid `color_mode` is requested.
"""
if not self.is_connected:
raise DeviceNotConnectedError(f"{self} is not connected.")
start_time = time.perf_counter()
if color_mode is not None:
logger.warning(
f"{self} read() color_mode parameter is deprecated and will be removed in future versions."
)
if self.videocapture is None:
raise DeviceNotConnectedError(f"{self} videocapture is not initialized")
if self.thread is None or not self.thread.is_alive():
raise RuntimeError(f"{self} read thread is not running.")
ret, frame = self.videocapture.read()
self.new_frame_event.clear()
frame = self.async_read(timeout_ms=10000)
if not ret or frame is None:
raise RuntimeError(f"{self} read failed (status={ret}).")
processed_frame = self._postprocess_image(frame, color_mode)
read_duration_ms = (time.perf_counter() - start_time) * 1e3
logger.debug(f"{self} read took: {read_duration_ms:.1f}ms")
return frame
return processed_frame
def _postprocess_image(self, image: NDArray[Any]) -> NDArray[Any]:
def _postprocess_image(self, image: NDArray[Any], color_mode: ColorMode | None = None) -> NDArray[Any]:
"""
Applies color conversion, dimension validation, and rotation to a raw frame.
Args:
image (np.ndarray): The raw image frame (expected BGR format from OpenCV).
color_mode (Optional[ColorMode]): The target color mode (RGB or BGR). If None,
uses the instance's default `self.color_mode`.
Returns:
np.ndarray: The processed image frame.
@@ -400,10 +399,11 @@ class OpenCVCamera(Camera):
RuntimeError: If the raw frame dimensions do not match the configured
`width` and `height`.
"""
requested_color_mode = self.color_mode if color_mode is None else color_mode
if self.color_mode not in (ColorMode.RGB, ColorMode.BGR):
if requested_color_mode not in (ColorMode.RGB, ColorMode.BGR):
raise ValueError(
f"Invalid color mode '{self.color_mode}'. Expected {ColorMode.RGB} or {ColorMode.BGR}."
f"Invalid color mode '{requested_color_mode}'. Expected {ColorMode.RGB} or {ColorMode.BGR}."
)
h, w, c = image.shape
@@ -417,7 +417,7 @@ class OpenCVCamera(Camera):
raise RuntimeError(f"{self} frame channels={c} do not match expected 3 channels (RGB/BGR).")
processed_image = image
if self.color_mode == ColorMode.RGB:
if requested_color_mode == ColorMode.RGB:
processed_image = cv2.cvtColor(image, cv2.COLOR_BGR2RGB)
if self.rotation in [cv2.ROTATE_90_CLOCKWISE, cv2.ROTATE_90_COUNTERCLOCKWISE, cv2.ROTATE_180]:
@@ -431,7 +431,7 @@ class OpenCVCamera(Camera):
On each iteration:
1. Reads a color frame
2. Stores result in latest_frame and updates timestamp (thread-safe)
2. Stores result in latest_frame (thread-safe)
3. Sets new_frame_event to notify listeners
Stops on DeviceNotConnectedError, logs other errors and continues.
@@ -439,37 +439,30 @@ class OpenCVCamera(Camera):
if self.stop_event is None:
raise RuntimeError(f"{self}: stop_event is not initialized before starting read loop.")
failure_count = 0
while not self.stop_event.is_set():
try:
raw_frame = self._read_from_hardware()
processed_frame = self._postprocess_image(raw_frame)
capture_time = time.perf_counter()
color_image = self.read()
with self.frame_lock:
self.latest_frame = processed_frame
self.latest_timestamp = capture_time
self.latest_frame = color_image
self.new_frame_event.set()
failure_count = 0
except DeviceNotConnectedError:
break
except Exception as e:
if failure_count <= 10:
failure_count += 1
logger.warning(f"Error reading frame in background thread for {self}: {e}")
else:
raise RuntimeError(f"{self} exceeded maximum consecutive read failures.") from e
logger.warning(f"Error reading frame in background thread for {self}: {e}")
def _start_read_thread(self) -> None:
"""Starts or restarts the background read thread if it's not running."""
self._stop_read_thread()
if self.thread is not None and self.thread.is_alive():
self.thread.join(timeout=0.1)
if self.stop_event is not None:
self.stop_event.set()
self.stop_event = Event()
self.thread = Thread(target=self._read_loop, args=(), name=f"{self}_read_loop")
self.thread.daemon = True
self.thread.start()
time.sleep(0.1)
def _stop_read_thread(self) -> None:
"""Signals the background read thread to stop and waits for it to join."""
@@ -482,12 +475,6 @@ class OpenCVCamera(Camera):
self.thread = None
self.stop_event = None
with self.frame_lock:
self.latest_frame = None
self.latest_timestamp = None
self.new_frame_event.clear()
@check_if_not_connected
def async_read(self, timeout_ms: float = 200) -> NDArray[Any]:
"""
Reads the latest available frame asynchronously.
@@ -495,7 +482,6 @@ class OpenCVCamera(Camera):
This method retrieves the most recent frame captured by the background
read thread. It does not block waiting for the camera hardware directly,
but may wait up to timeout_ms for the background thread to provide a frame.
It is best effort under high FPS.
Args:
timeout_ms (float): Maximum time in milliseconds to wait for a frame
@@ -510,14 +496,17 @@ class OpenCVCamera(Camera):
TimeoutError: If no frame becomes available within the specified timeout.
RuntimeError: If an unexpected error occurs.
"""
if not self.is_connected:
raise DeviceNotConnectedError(f"{self} is not connected.")
if self.thread is None or not self.thread.is_alive():
raise RuntimeError(f"{self} read thread is not running.")
self._start_read_thread()
if not self.new_frame_event.wait(timeout=timeout_ms / 1000.0):
thread_alive = self.thread is not None and self.thread.is_alive()
raise TimeoutError(
f"Timed out waiting for frame from camera {self} after {timeout_ms} ms. "
f"Read thread alive: {self.thread.is_alive()}."
f"Read thread alive: {thread_alive}."
)
with self.frame_lock:
@@ -529,41 +518,6 @@ class OpenCVCamera(Camera):
return frame
@check_if_not_connected
def read_latest(self, max_age_ms: int = 500) -> NDArray[Any]:
"""Return the most recent frame captured immediately (Peeking).
This method is non-blocking and returns whatever is currently in the
memory buffer. The frame may be stale,
meaning it could have been captured a while ago (hanging camera scenario e.g.).
Returns:
NDArray[Any]: The frame image (numpy array).
Raises:
TimeoutError: If the latest frame is older than `max_age_ms`.
DeviceNotConnectedError: If the camera is not connected.
RuntimeError: If the camera is connected but has not captured any frames yet.
"""
if self.thread is None or not self.thread.is_alive():
raise RuntimeError(f"{self} read thread is not running.")
with self.frame_lock:
frame = self.latest_frame
timestamp = self.latest_timestamp
if frame is None or timestamp is None:
raise RuntimeError(f"{self} has not captured any frames yet.")
age_ms = (time.perf_counter() - timestamp) * 1e3
if age_ms > max_age_ms:
raise TimeoutError(
f"{self} latest frame is too old: {age_ms:.1f} ms (max allowed: {max_age_ms} ms)."
)
return frame
def disconnect(self) -> None:
"""
Disconnects from the camera and cleans up resources.
@@ -584,9 +538,4 @@ class OpenCVCamera(Camera):
self.videocapture.release()
self.videocapture = None
with self.frame_lock:
self.latest_frame = None
self.latest_timestamp = None
self.new_frame_event.clear()
logger.info(f"{self} disconnected.")

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