
Depends on some improvements to Cyclone, source compatible with versions that lack those improvements. Signed-off-by: Erik Boasson <eb@ilities.com>
2.3 KiB
A ROS2 RMW implementation for Eclipse Cyclone DDS
With the code in this repository, it is possible to use ROS2 with Eclipse Cyclone DDS as the underlying DDS implementation.
Getting, building and using it
All it takes to get Cyclone DDS support into ROS2 is to clone this repository and the Cyclone DDS one in the ROS2 workspace source directory, and then run colcon build in the usual manner:
cd ros2_ws/src
git clone https://github.com/atolab/rmw_cyclonedds
git clone https://github.com/eclipse-cyclonedds/cyclonedds
cd ..
colcon build --symlink-install --cmake-args -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=RelWithDebInfo
export RMW_IMPLEMENTATION=rmw_cyclonedds_cpp
This seems to work fine on Linux with a binary ROS2 installation as well as when building ROS2 from source. On macOS it has only been tested in a source build on a machine in an "unsupported" configuration (macOS 10.14 with SIP enabled, instead of 10.12 with SIP disabled), and apart from a few details that are caused by the machine configuration, that works fine, too. There is no reason why it wouldn't work the same on Windows, but I haven't tried.
That said, Cyclone DDS has some prerequisites because it currently relies on Java and Maven to build
its IDL preprocessor, and so it is probably advisable to check its README for details. On an Ubuntu
18.04 system, sudo apt-get install maven default-jdk
will likely address that.
If you want to use a pre-existing installation of Cyclone DDS, you don't need to clone it, but you may have to tell CMake where to look for it using the CycloneDDS_DIR variable. That also appears to be the case if there are other packages in the ROS2 workspace that you would like to use Cyclone DDS directly instead of via the ROS2 abstraction.
Known limitations
There are a number of known limitations:
-
Cyclone DDS does not yet implement DDS Security. Consequently, there is no support for security in this RMW implementation either.
-
Deserialization only handles native format (it doesn't do any byte swapping). This is pure laziness, adding it is trivial.
-
Deserialization assumes the input is valid and will do terrible things if it isn't. Again, pure laziness, it's just adding some bounds checks and other validation code.