This repository holds the PX4 Pro flight control solution for drones, with the main applications located in the src/modules directory. It also contains the PX4 Drone Middleware Platform, which provides drivers and middleware to run drones.
- Official Website: http://px4.io (License: BSD 3-clause, LICENSE.md)
- Supported airframes (more experimental types than listed here are supported):
- Multicopters
- Fixed wing
- VTOL
- Releases: Downloads
The PX4 Dev Team syncs up on its weekly dev call (connect via Mumble client).
- When: Tuesday 17:00 Central European Time, 11:00 Eastern Time, 08:00 Pacific Standard Time
- Server: sitl01.dronetest.io
- Port: 64738
- Password: px4
- The agenda is announced in advance on the PX4 Discuss
- Issues and PRs may be labelled "devcall" to flag them for discussion
Please refer to the user documentation and user forum for flying drones with the PX4 flight stack.
- Project / Founder - Lorenz Meier
- Dev Call - Ramon Roche
- Communication Architecture - Beat Kueng, Julian Oes
- UI / UX - Gus Grubba
- Multicopter Flight Control - Dennis Mannhart, Matthias Grob
- VTOL Flight Control - Roman Bapst, Andreas Antener, Sander Smeets
- Fixed Wing Flight Control - Daniel Agar, Paul Riseborough
- Racers - Anton Matosov
- OS / drivers - David Sidrane
- UAVCAN / Industrial - Pavel Kirienko
- State Estimation - James Goppert, Paul Riseborough
- VIO - Mohammed Kabir, Christoph Tobler
- Obstacle Avoidance - Vilhjalmur Vilhjalmsson
- Snapdragon - Mark Charlebois
- Intel Aero - Lucas de Marchi, Simone Guscetti
- Raspberry Pi / Navio - Beat Kueng
- Parrot Bebop - Michael Schaeuble
This repository contains code supporting these boards:
- Snapdragon Flight
- Intel Aero
- Raspberry PI with Navio 2
- Parrot Bebop 2
- FMUv1.x
- FMUv2.x (Pixhawk and Pixfalcon)
- FMUv3.x (Pixhawk 2)
- FMUv4.x (Pixhawk 3 Pro and Pixracer)
- FMUv5.x (ARM Cortex M7, future Pixhawk)
- AeroCore (v1 and v2)
- STM32F4Discovery (basic support) Tutorial
- MindPX V2.8 Tutorial
- MindRacer V1.2 Tutorial
The PX4 software and Pixhawk hardware (which has been designed for it) has been created in 2011 by Lorenz Meier.