If a Sendable like SendableChooser is destroyed and recreated, it leaves
a stale object in the Sendable registry. Using this object results in a
crash. This patch avoids using the stale object.
We should remove stale objects from the global registry upon object
destruction, but this fixes the crashing issue for now.
Closes#2818.
Co-authored-by: Tyler Veness <calcmogul@gmail.com>
Previously this sent just the raw analog value; the scaled value is likely what users expect.
Co-authored-by: Corey Applegate <coreya@centralmcgowan.com>
Currently, teams have to make a Notifier to run feedback controllers
more often than the TimedRobot loop period of 20ms (running TimedRobot
more often than this is not advised). This lets users add callbacks to
the main robot loop that run at a user-defined period. This allows
running feedback controllers more often, but does so synchronously with
TimedRobot so there aren't any thread safety issues.
Based on run of include-what-you-use.org to identify unused include files in various .h and .cpp files.
The changes mostly fall into 3 categories:
- Actually unused includes - copy-paste errors, not removing includes after cleaning up code, etc
- A too-broad include used where a more specific (and hopefully smaller) header will do
- Interface .h files including headers only needed by the .cpp implementation - moving from .h to .cpp
will mean that code which uses the .h doesn't pay the price of processing the header file they don't need
Old behavior is available via StepTimingAsync.
This makes it significantly easier to use simulation timing with notifiers.
Also update tests to use simulation framework. This also speeds up the
timing-dependent tests by using simulation timing. ResourceLock is used
in the Java tests to prevent parallel execution.
While we're here, tweak HAL Notifier implementation:
- Use wait_for instead of wait_until in WaitForNotifierAlarm
- Check for triggerTime = UINT64_MAX in UpdateNotifierAlarm
Some vestigial functions were never removed, and C++ single-jointed arm
sim was missing a flag for disabling gravity simulation. This is useful
for mechanisms like turrets.
Fixes#2738.
This includes physics simulation support for arms/elevator models, as well as differential drivetrains.
Swerve might be added at a later date.
Co-authored-by: Claudius Tewari <cttewari@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Prateek Machiraju <prateek.machiraju@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Tyler Veness <calcmogul@gmail.com>
This avoids users having to call both IsOperatorControl() and IsEnabled() to figure out if their robot is
enabled and in the teleop state. The expression above involves calling two methods that each have their
own lock.
These new methods should only involve locking one mutex, since only one call is made to HAL_GetControlWord().
The wpimath library is a new library designed to separate the reusable math functionality
from the common utility library (wpiutil) and the hardware-dependent library (wpilibc/j).
Package names / include file names were NOT changed to minimize breakage. In a future year
it would be good to revamp these for a more uniform user experience and to reduce the risk
of accidental naming conflicts.
While theoretically all of this functionality could be placed into wpiutil, several pieces
of this library (e.g. DARE) are very time-consuming to compile, so it's nice to avoid this
expense for users who only want cscore or ntcore. It also allows for easy future separation
of build tasks vs number of workers on memory-constrained machines.
This moves the following functionality from wpiutil into wpimath:
- Eigen
- ejml
- Drake
- DARE
- wpiutil.math package (Matrix etc)
- units
And the following functionality from wpilibc/j into wpimath:
- Geometry
- Kinematics
- Spline
- Trajectory
- LinearFilter
- MedianFilter
- Feed-forward controllers
Remove WaitForCachedData as it's no longer required.
Also properly handle caching / transition detection logic that occurs at the
WPILib level.
This also changes DriverStation::IsNewControlData() to check for WPILib-level
caching instead of wrapping the HAL function.
Using GetAverageVoltage will reduce the noise in potentiometer reading. Potentiometers are unlikely to be used where the minimal lag averaging introduces would impact control loop stability.
When not direct mapped, make index constructors private and add factory
functions for channel and index.
Co-authored-by: GabrielDeml <gabrielddeml@gmail.com>
pose.Translation().X() and pose.Translation.Y() are common operations,
so shortening them to pose.X() and pose.Y() would be convenient.
Java uses the getX() convention so that is used instead of X() for Java.
Also move some things in HAL for consistency.
WAS:
C++:
- C APIs: #include "mockdata/AccelerometerData.h"
- User side class: #include "simulation/AccelerometerSim.h"
Java:
- JNI APIs: hal.sim.mockdata.AccelerometerData (and a few classes in hal.sim)
- User side classes: hal.sim.AccelerometerSim
IS:
C++:
- C APIs: #include "hal/simulation/AccelerometerData.h"
- C++ class: #include "frc/simulation/AccelerometerSim.h"
Java:
- JNI APIs: hal.simulation.AccelerometerData
- User side class: wpilibj.simulation.AccelerometerSim
The most common mistake users (including contributors to WPILib) seem to make while creating new constraints is ignoring some sort of edge case that causes the calculated minimum acceleration to be greater than the calculated maximum acceleration.
This specialized exception, with its detailed error message, should make it easier and quicker for said users to debug and fix bugs within their constraints.
Co-authored-by: Tyler Veness <calcmogul@gmail.com>
If the 64 bit FPGA timer rolls over, a 32 bit value is added for
the rollover, an artifact of when it was a 32 bit timer.
The 64 bit microsecond timer won't rollover for 500k years so remove the
check for simplicity.
Fixes#2504