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Official URDF and SDF models of the iCub humanoid robot.

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icub-models

Repository containing models automatically generated from the CAD file by icub-model-generator.

The model contained in this repo are licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License (CC BY-SA 4.0) .

Usage

The model in the repo can be used either directly from the repo, or by installing them.

While the files can be used directly by pointing your software to their location, they are tipically used by software that uses either YARP, ROS or Gazebo. For this reason, the models are installed as part of the iCub ROS package (instructions) and following the YARP guidelines on installing configuration files.

To make sure that this models are found by the software even when they are not installed in system directories, tipically the YARP_DATA_DIRS for YARP, ROS_PACKAGE_PATH for ROS1, AMENT_PREFIX_PATH for ROS2 and the GAZEBO_MODEL_PATH for SDFormat enviromental variables are modified appropriatly.

From the source repo

In the case models are used from the repo, the first step is configure it with the following commands:

mkdir build
cd build
cmake ..

If <icub-models> is the location of the repo, some folders need to be appended to the mentioned env variables. On *nix system, this can be achived by adding to the .bashrc or equivalent file the following three lines:

export YARP_DATA_DIRS=${YARP_DATA_DIRS}:<icub-models>/build/iCub
export ROS_PACKAGE_PATH=${ROS_PACKAGE_PATH}:<icub-models>/build

By installing the models

To install the models instead, execute:

mkdir build
cd build
cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=<prefix> ..
cmake --build . --target install

Once the models are installed into a given prefix, edit the env variables as follows:

export YARP_DATA_DIRS=${YARP_DATA_DIRS}:<prefix>/share/iCub
export ROS_PACKAGE_PATH=${ROS_PACKAGE_PATH}:<prefix>/share
export AMENT_PREFIX_PATH=${AMENT_PREFIX_PATH}:<prefix>

Use the models with Gazebo

In order to use these models in Gazebo, set up the simulation environment following the instructions provided in the icub-gazebo repository, and add the following line to your .bashrc:

export GAZEBO_MODEL_PATH=${GAZEBO_MODEL_PATH}:<prefix>/share/iCub/robots:<prefix>/share

Note that only the models that are known to work fine with the default physics engine settings of Gazebo (iCubGazeboV2_5 and iCubGazeboV2_5_plus) are installed. If you want to make available in Gazebo all the models, enable the ICUB_MODELS_INSTALL_ALL_GAZEBO_MODELS CMake option.

Use the models from C++ helper library

In order to use these models in c++ application you can exploit the icub-models library. icub-models provides native CMake support which allows the library to be easily used in CMake projects. icub-models exports a CMake target called icub-models::icub-models which can be imported using the find_package CMake command and used by calling target_link_libraries as in the following example:

cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.0)
project(myproject)
find_package(icub-models REQUIRED)
add_executable(example example.cpp)
target_link_libraries(example icub-models::icub-models)

The example.cpp will contains

#include <iCubModels/iCubModels.h>
#include <iostream>

int main()
{
    std::cout << "Models have been installed in: " << iCubModels::getModelsPath() << std::endl;

    std::cout << "Available robots: " << std::endl;
    for (const auto& robot : iCubModels::getRobotNames())
    {
        std::cout << " - " << robot << ": " <<  iCubModels::getModelFile(robot) << std::endl;
    }

    return EXIT_SUCCESS;
}

Note: The ABI and the API of the C++ helper library has breaking changes only at major releases of the icub-models package.

Use the models from Python helper library

In order to use these models in python application you can exploit the icub-models module. icub-models provides a python package to called icub_models. You can install it via cmake

cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=<path/where/you/want/to/install> \
      -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release \
      -DICUB_MODELS_USES_PYTHON:BOOL=ON ..
cmake --build . --config Release --target install

Then the following script can be used to locate the models

import icub_models

print(f"Models have been installed in: {icub_models.get_models_path()}")

print(f"Available robots: {icub_models.get_robot_names()}")

for robot_name in icub_models.get_robot_names():
    print(f"{robot_name}: {icub_models.get_model_file(robot_name)}")

Change the orientation of the root frame

The iCub robot root frame is defined as x-backward, meaning that the x-axis points behind the robot. Nevertheless, in the robotics community, sometimes the root frame of a robot is defined as x-forward. As a consequence, to use the iCub models with software developed for the x-forward configuration (e.g. IHMC-ORS), might be necessary to quickly update the root frame orientation.
For this purpose, locate the joint <joint name="base_fixed_joint" type="fixed"> in the URDF model and perform the following substitution in the origin section:

-  <origin xyz="0 0 0" rpy="0 -0 0"/>
+  <origin xyz="0 0 0" rpy="0 -0 3.14159265358979323846"/>

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Official URDF and SDF models of the iCub humanoid robot.

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