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Installation Dependencies

ROS Installation:

Install appropriate ROS distribution depending on linux version: ROS Download

Intel Realsense Installation:

Install Intel Realsense from the following link: Intel Realsense Installation

Follow the instructions to install the pre-built packages, including dev and debug.

OpenCV Installation:

This project leverages the Aruco AprilTag library from OpenCV, specifically the 36h11 tag family. This was introduced in the 3.4.2 version. Older versions of OpenCV will not be compatible with the current code.

As a precaution, install the latest version of OpenCV from the following link: OpenCV Installation.

Be sure to also include the OpenCV Contrib Libraries

Eigen Installation:

Install the Eigen library by following the instruction in this link: Eigen Installation

Install Hark:

To install the HARK Audio Library, visit the following link: HARK Installation. Install from source to be able to edit the source code (we will change some sampling rate parameters later). Make sure to install all the listed libraries!

Install hark_designer and harktool5_gui using prebuilt packages:

sudo apt install hark-designer
sudo apt install harktool5 harktool5-gui

Install ROS for HARK:

To install the HARK ROS Bridge: HARK ROS. Make sure to install from source Once you install the hark-ros-msgs directory, cd into it and run catkin_make. This will create a devel folder.

Change Code Parameters

hark/hark-linux-3.3.0/librecorder/ALSARecorder.cpp Change buffer time to 30000 in line 138:

unsigned buffer_time = 500000 //Change this to 30000 to enable real-time processing

LiDAR Pipeline

File Structure

The src folder is divided into two folders, cam_launch, and also combine_cloud. cam_launch handles the bulk of the LiDAR point cloud generation and processing, outputting the aggregated separated point clouds. There are two cpp files in cam_launch/src, launcher1.cpp and launcher2.cpp which are meant to interface with two separate LiDAR cameras. They both will stream the information to the combine_cloud node.

The combine_cloud node subscribes to the message topic of both LiDAR cameras, performs some minute adjustments to line up the two point clouds, and then publishes the aggregated point clouds under one topic. At the end of combine_cloud, we should have

Compiling the code

Follow tutorial listed here to create a catkin_workspace. After running catkin_make once, download the project files, and then copy the src directory into the catkin_ws directory in the previous step, replacing the src folder created by catkin_make.

Copy the hark message files in {HARK DOWNLOAD DIRECTORY}/hark-ros-msgs-{VERSION}/devel/include to catkin_ws/devel/include.

Run catkin_make another time. This should now build with no errors!

Running the Code

Run the following command with a realsense camera to make sure everything is functional:

rosrun cam_launch cam_launch1

If you run into errors, make sure there is a roscore running, and also make sure to source the devel/setup.bash file.

This will print out the camera model number. This will be different from the default camera number in the src/cam_launch/src/launcher1.cpp file. Change the CAM1_NAME parameter on line 75 to the appropriate serial number.

Recompile with catkin_make and run with rosrun cam_launch cam_launch1. Exit the scene while the terminal prints initializing, and once the latency is displayed, you may enter the scene.

Viewing Point Clouds

You can view the subtracted point clouds by utiling RVIZ. RVIZ comes with ROS installation. Run RVIZ with rviz in any terminal.

Subscribe to the appropriate topic. Note that the point cloud will not display due to an undefined coordinate frame. Establish a coordinate frame by running:

rosrun tf static_transform_publisher 0 0 0 0 0 0 map backgone1 30

on any terminal, making sure to source the devel/setup.bash directory if it is not found.

The separated point cloud should now be shown on RVIZ

Audio Pipline

Verifying HARK ROS Installation

While the cam_launch1 program is running, open up a separte terminal and run rostopic list. You should see a list of all the published topics, one of which is camera1/sources

This topic has messages of the form "HarkSource", which is included in the HARK-ROS package. To view these messages, we must source the environment by running source {HARK DOWNLOAD DIRECTORY}/hark-ros-msgs-{VERSION}/devel/setup.bash. Running rostopic echo camera1/sources will show the source information. Note that if there is only one source in the scene, there will be a dummy source of ID 100 spawned 180 degrees away from the subject.

Verifying HARK Installation

In a terminal, run hark_designer. This will open up a Firefox or Chrome page that loads the HARK Designer. Under File, browse to the HARK_Files directory in the github and load all the .n network files. Open up AudioProcess.n and verify that the system is loaded. Also, under the GHDSS node, ensure that the A_MATRIX points to the downloaded A_MATRIX.zip files in the repository. Note that this matrix is simply for testing purposes, and you must create your own A_MATRIX for a given room configuration. More information can be found when searching about HARK TF File Generation using TSP. Click through all the nodes and modify any file paths.

When running the AudioProcess process along with the LiDAR pipeline, we will be able to extract directional audio in real time with localization information provided by the LiDAR subtraction pipeline.

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