Using substitutions in launch files
Goal: Learn about substitutions in ROS 2 launch files
Tutorial level: Advanced
Time: 15 minutes
Table of Contents
Background
Launch files are used to start nodes, services and execute processes. This set of actions may have arguments, which affect their behavior. Substitutions can be used in arguments to provide more flexibility when describing reusable launch files. Substitutions are variables that are only evaluated during execution of the launch description and can be used to acquire specific information like a launch configuration, an environment variable, or to evaluate an arbitrary Python expression.
This tutorial shows usage examples of substitutions in ROS 2 launch files.
Prerequisites
This tutorial uses the turtlesim package.
This tutorial also assumes you have created a new package of build type ament_python
called launch_tutorial
.
Using substitutions
1 Parent launch file
Firstly, we will create a launch file that will call and pass arguments to another launch file.
To do this, create an example_main.launch.py
file in the /launch
folder of the launch_tutorial
package.
from launch_ros.substitutions import FindPackageShare
from launch import LaunchDescription
from launch.actions import IncludeLaunchDescription
from launch.launch_description_sources import PythonLaunchDescriptionSource
from launch.substitutions import PathJoinSubstitution, TextSubstitution
def generate_launch_description():
colors = {
'background_r': '200'
}
return LaunchDescription([
IncludeLaunchDescription(
PythonLaunchDescriptionSource([
PathJoinSubstitution([
FindPackageShare('launch_tutorial'),
'launch',
'example_substitutions.launch.py'
])
]),
launch_arguments={
'turtlesim_ns': 'turtlesim2',
'use_provided_red': 'True',
'new_background_r': TextSubstitution(text=str(colors['background_r']))
}.items()
)
])
In the example_main.launch.py
file, the FindPackageShare
substitution is used to find the path to the launch_tutorial
package.
The PathJoinSubstitution
substitution is then used to join the path to that package path with the example_substitutions.launch.py
file name.
PathJoinSubstitution([
FindPackageShare('launch_tutorial'),
'launch',
'example_substitutions.launch.py'
])
The launch_arguments
dictionary with turtlesim_ns
and use_provided_red
arguments is passed to the IncludeLaunchDescription
action.
The TextSubstitution
substitution is used to define the new_background_r
argument with the value of the background_r
key in the colors
dictionary.
launch_arguments={
'turtlesim_ns': 'turtlesim2',
'use_provided_red': 'True',
'new_background_r': TextSubstitution(text=str(colors['background_r']))
}.items()
2 Substitutions example launch file
Now create an example_substitutions.launch.py
file in the same folder.
from launch_ros.actions import Node
from launch import LaunchDescription
from launch.actions import DeclareLaunchArgument, ExecuteProcess, TimerAction
from launch.conditions import IfCondition
from launch.substitutions import LaunchConfiguration, PythonExpression
def generate_launch_description():
turtlesim_ns = LaunchConfiguration('turtlesim_ns')
use_provided_red = LaunchConfiguration('use_provided_red')
new_background_r = LaunchConfiguration('new_background_r')
turtlesim_ns_launch_arg = DeclareLaunchArgument(
'turtlesim_ns',
default_value='turtlesim1'
)
use_provided_red_launch_arg = DeclareLaunchArgument(
'use_provided_red',
default_value='False'
)
new_background_r_launch_arg = DeclareLaunchArgument(
'new_background_r',
default_value='200'
)
turtlesim_node = Node(
package='turtlesim',
namespace=turtlesim_ns,
executable='turtlesim_node',
name='sim'
)
spawn_turtle = ExecuteProcess(
cmd=[[
'ros2 service call ',
turtlesim_ns,
'/spawn ',
'turtlesim/srv/Spawn ',
'"{x: 2, y: 2, theta: 0.2}"'
]],
shell=True
)
change_background_r = ExecuteProcess(
cmd=[[
'ros2 param set ',
turtlesim_ns,
'/sim background_r ',
'120'
]],
shell=True
)
change_background_r_conditioned = ExecuteProcess(
condition=IfCondition(
PythonExpression([
new_background_r,
' == 200',
' and ',
use_provided_red
])
),
cmd=[[
'ros2 param set ',
turtlesim_ns,
'/sim background_r ',
new_background_r
]],
shell=True
)
return LaunchDescription([
turtlesim_ns_launch_arg,
use_provided_red_launch_arg,
new_background_r_launch_arg,
turtlesim_node,
spawn_turtle,
change_background_r,
TimerAction(
period=2.0,
actions=[change_background_r_conditioned],
)
])
In the example_substitutions.launch.py
file, turtlesim_ns
, use_provided_red
, and new_background_r
launch configurations are defined.
They are used to store values of launch arguments in the above variables and to pass them to required actions.
These LaunchConfiguration
substitutions allow us to acquire the value of the launch argument in any part of the launch description.
DeclareLaunchArgument
is used to define the launch argument that can be passed from the above launch file or from the console.
turtlesim_ns = LaunchConfiguration('turtlesim_ns')
use_provided_red = LaunchConfiguration('use_provided_red')
new_background_r = LaunchConfiguration('new_background_r')
turtlesim_ns_launch_arg = DeclareLaunchArgument(
'turtlesim_ns',
default_value='turtlesim1'
)
use_provided_red_launch_arg = DeclareLaunchArgument(
'use_provided_red',
default_value='False'
)
new_background_r_launch_arg = DeclareLaunchArgument(
'new_background_r',
default_value='200'
)
The turtlesim_node
node with the namespace
set to turtlesim_ns
LaunchConfiguration
substitution is defined.
turtlesim_node = Node(
package='turtlesim',
namespace=turtlesim_ns,
executable='turtlesim_node',
name='sim'
)
Afterwards, the ExecuteProcess
action called spawn_turtle
is defined with the corresponding cmd
argument.
This command makes a call to the spawn service of the turtlesim node.
Additionally, the LaunchConfiguration
substitution is used to get the value of the turtlesim_ns
launch argument to construct a command string.
spawn_turtle = ExecuteProcess(
cmd=[[
'ros2 service call ',
turtlesim_ns,
'/spawn ',
'turtlesim/srv/Spawn ',
'"{x: 2, y: 2, theta: 0.2}"'
]],
shell=True
)
The same approach is used for the change_background_r
and change_background_r_conditioned
actions that change the turtlesim background’s red color parameter.
The difference is that the change_background_r_conditioned
action is only executed if the provided new_background_r
argument equals 200
and the use_provided_red
launch argument is set to True
.
The evaluation inside the IfCondition
is done using the PythonExpression
substitution.
change_background_r = ExecuteProcess(
cmd=[[
'ros2 param set ',
turtlesim_ns,
'/sim background_r ',
'120'
]],
shell=True
)
change_background_r_conditioned = ExecuteProcess(
condition=IfCondition(
PythonExpression([
new_background_r,
' == 200',
' and ',
use_provided_red
])
),
cmd=[[
'ros2 param set ',
turtlesim_ns,
'/sim background_r ',
new_background_r
]],
shell=True
)
Launching example
Now you can launch the example_main.launch.py
file using the ros2 launch
command.
ros2 launch launch_tutorial example_main.launch.py
This will do the following:
Start a turtlesim node with a blue background
Spawn the second turtle
Change the color to purple
Change the color to pink after two seconds if the provided
background_r
argument is200
anduse_provided_red
argument isTrue
Modifying launch arguments
If you want to change the provided launch arguments, you can either update them in launch_arguments
dictionary in the example_main.launch.py
or launch the example_substitutions.launch.py
with preferred arguments.
To see arguments that may be given to the launch file, run the following command:
ros2 launch launch_tutorial example_substitutions.launch.py --show-args
This will show the arguments that may be given to the launch file and their default values.
Arguments (pass arguments as '<name>:=<value>'):
'turtlesim_ns':
no description given
(default: 'turtlesim1')
'use_provided_red':
no description given
(default: 'False')
'new_background_r':
no description given
(default: '200')
Now you can pass the desired arguments to the launch file as follows:
ros2 launch launch_tutorial example_substitutions.launch.py turtlesim_ns:='turtlesim3' use_provided_red:='True' new_background_r:=200
Documentation
The launch documentation provides detailed information about available substitutions.
Summary
In this tutorial, you learned about using substitutions in launch files. You learned about their possibilities and capabilities to create reusable launch files.
You can now learn more about using event handlers in launch files which are used to define a complex set of rules which can be used to dynamically modify the launch file.