Vivek Aithal 4fa62f1464 Live torque (#25456)
* wip torqued

* add basic logic

* setup in manager

* check sanity and publish msg

* add first order filter to outputs

* wire up controlsd, and update gains

* rename intercept to offset

* add cloudlog, live values are not updated

* fix bugs, do not reset points for now

* fix crashes

* rename to main

* fix bugs, works offline

* fix float in cereal bug

* add latacc filter

* randomly choose points, approx for iid

* add variable decay

* local param to capnp instead of dict

* verify works in replay

* use torqued output in controlsd

* use in controlsd; use points from past routes

* controlsd bugfix

* filter before updating gains, needs to be replaced

* save all points to ensure smooth transition across routes, revert friction factor to 1.5

* add filters to prevent noisy low-speed data points; improve fit sanity

* add engaged buffer

* revert lat_acc thresh

* use paramsd realtime process config

* make latacc-to-torque generic, and overrideable

* move freq to 4Hz, avoid storing in np.array, don't publish points in the message

* float instead of np

* remove constant while storing pts

* rename slope, offset to lat_accet_factor, offset

* resolve issues

* use camelcase in all capnp params

* use camelcase everywhere

* reduce latacc threshold or sanity, add car_sane todo, save points properly

* add and check tag

* write param to disk at end of route

* remove args

* rebase op, cereal

* save on exit

* restore default handler

* cpu usage check

* add to process replay

* handle reset better, reduce unnecessary computation

* always publish raw values - useful for debug

* regen routes

* update refs

* checks on cache restore

* check tuning vals too

* clean that up

* reduce cpu usage

* reduce cpu usage by 75%

* cleanup

* optimize further

* handle reset condition better, don't put points in init, use only in corolla

* bump cereal after rebasing

* update refs

* Update common/params.cc

Co-authored-by: Adeeb Shihadeh <adeebshihadeh@gmail.com>

* remove unnecessary checks

* Update RELEASES.md

Co-authored-by: Adeeb Shihadeh <adeebshihadeh@gmail.com>
2022-09-19 15:19:26 -07:00
2022-09-19 15:19:26 -07:00
2022-09-07 20:38:24 -07:00
2022-09-19 15:19:26 -07:00
2022-09-19 15:19:26 -07:00
2021-01-05 12:50:23 -08:00
2020-01-17 10:25:50 -08:00
2022-01-12 23:07:06 -08:00
2022-01-10 23:14:30 -08:00
2020-05-11 10:40:49 -07:00
2022-08-31 23:12:26 -07:00
2020-01-17 10:22:00 -08:00
2022-07-08 00:23:46 -07:00
2021-10-07 16:32:44 -07:00
2020-01-17 10:22:00 -08:00
2022-05-02 16:48:04 -07:00
2022-08-30 15:10:52 -07:00
2022-08-30 15:10:52 -07:00
2022-08-30 11:20:55 -07:00
2020-05-14 15:36:56 -07:00
2022-09-19 15:19:26 -07:00
2022-08-13 23:28:44 -07:00

Table of Contents


What is openpilot?

openpilot is an open source driver assistance system. Currently, openpilot performs the functions of Adaptive Cruise Control (ACC), Automated Lane Centering (ALC), Forward Collision Warning (FCW), and Lane Departure Warning (LDW) for a growing variety of supported car makes, models, and model years. In addition, while openpilot is engaged, a camera-based Driver Monitoring (DM) feature alerts distracted and asleep drivers. See more about the vehicle integration and limitations.

Running on a dedicated device in a car

To use openpilot in a car, you need four things

  • A supported device to run this software: a comma three.
  • This software. The setup procedure of the comma three allows the user to enter a URL for custom software. The URL, openpilot.comma.ai will install the release version of openpilot. To install openpilot master, you can use installer.comma.ai/commaai/master, and replacing commaai with another GitHub username can install a fork.
  • One of the 200+ supported cars. We support Honda, Toyota, Hyundai, Nissan, Kia, Chrysler, Lexus, Acura, Audi, VW, and more. If your car is not supported but has adaptive cruise control and lane-keeping assist, it's likely able to run openpilot.
  • A car harness to connect to your car.

We have detailed instructions for how to mount the device in a car.

Running on PC

All openpilot services can run as usual on a PC without requiring special hardware or a car. You can also run openpilot on recorded or simulated data to develop or experiment with openpilot.

With openpilot's tools, you can plot logs, replay drives, and watch the full-res camera streams. See the tools README for more information.

You can also run openpilot in simulation with the CARLA simulator. This allows openpilot to drive around a virtual car on your Ubuntu machine. The whole setup should only take a few minutes but does require a decent GPU.

A PC running openpilot can also control your vehicle if it is connected to a webcam, a black panda, and a harness.

Community and Contributing

openpilot is developed by comma and by users like you. We welcome both pull requests and issues on GitHub. Bug fixes and new car ports are encouraged. Check out the contributing docs.

Documentation related to openpilot development can be found on docs.comma.ai. Information about running openpilot (e.g. FAQ, fingerprinting, troubleshooting, custom forks, community hardware) should go on the wiki.

You can add support for your car by following guides we have written for Brand and Model ports. Generally, a car with adaptive cruise control and lane keep assist is a good candidate. Join our Discord to discuss car ports: most car makes have a dedicated channel.

Want to get paid to work on openpilot? comma is hiring.

And follow us on Twitter.

User Data and comma Account

By default, openpilot uploads the driving data to our servers. You can also access your data through comma connect. We use your data to train better models and improve openpilot for everyone.

openpilot is open source software: the user is free to disable data collection if they wish to do so.

openpilot logs the road-facing cameras, CAN, GPS, IMU, magnetometer, thermal sensors, crashes, and operating system logs. The driver-facing camera is only logged if you explicitly opt-in in settings. The microphone is not recorded.

By using openpilot, you agree to our Privacy Policy. You understand that use of this software or its related services will generate certain types of user data, which may be logged and stored at the sole discretion of comma. By accepting this agreement, you grant an irrevocable, perpetual, worldwide right to comma for the use of this data.

Safety and Testing

  • openpilot observes ISO26262 guidelines, see SAFETY.md for more details.
  • openpilot has software-in-the-loop tests that run on every commit.
  • The code enforcing the safety model lives in panda and is written in C, see code rigor for more details.
  • panda has software-in-the-loop safety tests.
  • Internally, we have a hardware-in-the-loop Jenkins test suite that builds and unit tests the various processes.
  • panda has additional hardware-in-the-loop tests.
  • We run the latest openpilot in a testing closet containing 10 comma devices continuously replaying routes.

Directory Structure

.
├── cereal              # The messaging spec and libs used for all logs
├── common              # Library like functionality we've developed here
├── docs                # Documentation
├── opendbc             # Files showing how to interpret data from cars
├── panda               # Code used to communicate on CAN
├── third_party         # External libraries
├── pyextra             # Extra python packages
└── system              # Generic services
    ├── camerad         # Driver to capture images from the camera sensors
    ├── clocksd         # Broadcasts current time
    ├── hardware        # Hardware abstraction classes
    ├── logcatd         # systemd journal as a service
    └── proclogd        # Logs information from /proc
└── selfdrive           # Code needed to drive the car
    ├── assets          # Fonts, images, and sounds for UI
    ├── athena          # Allows communication with the app
    ├── boardd          # Daemon to talk to the board
    ├── car             # Car specific code to read states and control actuators
    ├── controls        # Planning and controls
    ├── debug           # Tools to help you debug and do car ports
    ├── locationd       # Precise localization and vehicle parameter estimation
    ├── loggerd         # Logger and uploader of car data
    ├── manager         # Daemon that starts/stops all other daemons as needed
    ├── modeld          # Driving and monitoring model runners
    ├── monitoring      # Daemon to determine driver attention
    ├── navd            # Turn-by-turn navigation
    ├── sensord         # IMU interface code
    ├── test            # Unit tests, system tests, and a car simulator
    └── ui              # The UI

Licensing

openpilot is released under the MIT license. Some parts of the software are released under other licenses as specified.

Any user of this software shall indemnify and hold harmless Comma.ai, Inc. and its directors, officers, employees, agents, stockholders, affiliates, subcontractors and customers from and against all allegations, claims, actions, suits, demands, damages, liabilities, obligations, losses, settlements, judgments, costs and expenses (including without limitation attorneys fees and costs) which arise out of, relate to or result from any use of this software by user.

THIS IS ALPHA QUALITY SOFTWARE FOR RESEARCH PURPOSES ONLY. THIS IS NOT A PRODUCT. YOU ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR COMPLYING WITH LOCAL LAWS AND REGULATIONS. NO WARRANTY EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED.


openpilot tests Total alerts Language grade: Python Language grade: C/C++ codecov

Languages
Python 70%
C 16.2%
C++ 5.7%
Cuda 4.2%
Metal 1.2%
Other 2.4%