Creating a package
Goal: Create a new package using either CMake or Python, and run its executable.
Tutorial level: Beginner
Time: 15 minutes
Background
1 What is a ROS 2 package?
A package is an organizational unit for your ROS 2 code. If you want to be able to install your code or share it with others, then you’ll need it organized in a package. With packages, you can release your ROS 2 work and allow others to build and use it easily.
Package creation in ROS 2 uses ament as its build system and colcon as its build tool. You can create a package using either CMake or Python, which are officially supported, though other build types do exist.
2 What makes up a ROS 2 package?
ROS 2 Python and CMake packages each have their own minimum required contents:
CMakeLists.txtfile that describes how to build the code within the packageinclude/<package_name>directory containing the public headers for the packagepackage.xmlfile containing meta information about the packagesrcdirectory containing the source code for the package
package.xmlfile containing meta information about the packageresource/<package_name>marker file for the packagesetup.cfgis required when a package has executables, soros2 runcan find themsetup.pycontaining instructions for how to install the package<package_name>- a directory with the same name as your package, used by ROS 2 tools to find your package, contains__init__.py
The simplest possible package may have a file structure that looks like:
my_package/
CMakeLists.txt
include/my_package/
package.xml
src/
my_package/
package.xml
resource/my_package
setup.cfg
setup.py
my_package/
3 Packages in a workspace
A single workspace can contain as many packages as you want, each in their own folder. You can also have packages of different build types in one workspace (CMake, Python, etc.). You cannot have nested packages.
Best practice is to have a src folder within your workspace, and to create your packages in there.
This keeps the top level of the workspace “clean”.
A trivial workspace might look like:
workspace_folder/
src/
cpp_package_1/
CMakeLists.txt
include/cpp_package_1/
package.xml
src/
py_package_1/
package.xml
resource/py_package_1
setup.cfg
setup.py
py_package_1/
...
cpp_package_n/
CMakeLists.txt
include/cpp_package_n/
package.xml
src/
Prerequisites
You should have a ROS 2 workspace after following the instructions in the previous tutorial. You will create your package in this workspace.
Tasks
1 Create a package
First, source your ROS 2 installation.
Let’s use the workspace you created in the previous tutorial, ros2_ws, for your new package.
Make sure you are in the src folder before running the package creation command.
cd ~/ros2_ws/src
cd ~/ros2_ws/src
cd \ros2_ws\src
The command syntax for creating a new package in ROS 2 is:
ros2 pkg create --build-type ament_cmake --license Apache-2.0 <package_name>
ros2 pkg create --build-type ament_python --license Apache-2.0 <package_name>
For this tutorial, you will use the optional arguments --node-name and --license.
--node-name option creates a simple Hello World type executable in the package, and --license declares the license information for the package.
Enter the following command in your terminal:
ros2 pkg create --build-type ament_cmake --license Apache-2.0 --node-name my_node my_package
ros2 pkg create --build-type ament_python --license Apache-2.0 --node-name my_node my_package
You will now have a new folder within your workspace’s src directory called my_package.
After running the command, your terminal will return the message:
going to create a new package
package name: my_package
destination directory: /home/user/ros2_ws/src
package format: 3
version: 0.0.0
description: TODO: Package description
maintainer: ['<name> <email>']
licenses: ['Apache-2.0']
build type: ament_cmake
dependencies: []
node_name: my_node
creating folder ./my_package
creating ./my_package/package.xml
creating source and include folder
creating folder ./my_package/src
creating folder ./my_package/include/my_package
creating ./my_package/CMakeLists.txt
creating ./my_package/src/my_node.cpp
going to create a new package
package name: my_package
destination directory: /home/user/ros2_ws/src
package format: 3
version: 0.0.0
description: TODO: Package description
maintainer: ['<name> <email>']
licenses: ['Apache-2.0']
build type: ament_python
dependencies: []
node_name: my_node
creating folder ./my_package
creating ./my_package/package.xml
creating source folder
creating folder ./my_package/my_package
creating ./my_package/setup.py
creating ./my_package/setup.cfg
creating folder ./my_package/resource
creating ./my_package/resource/my_package
creating ./my_package/my_package/__init__.py
creating folder ./my_package/test
creating ./my_package/test/test_copyright.py
creating ./my_package/test/test_flake8.py
creating ./my_package/test/test_pep257.py
creating ./my_package/my_package/my_node.py
You can see the automatically generated files for the new package.
2 Build a package
Putting packages in a workspace is especially valuable because you can build many packages at once by running colcon build in the workspace root.
Otherwise, you would have to build each package individually.
Return to the root of your workspace:
cd ~/ros2_ws
cd ~/ros2_ws
cd \ros2_ws
Now you can build your packages:
colcon build
colcon build
colcon build --merge-install
Windows doesn’t allow long paths, so merge-install will combine all the paths into the install directory.
Recall from the last tutorial that you also have the ros_tutorials packages in your ros2_ws.
You might have noticed that running colcon build also built the turtlesim package.
That’s fine when you only have a few packages in your workspace, but when there are many packages, colcon build can take a long time.
To build only the my_package package next time, you can run:
colcon build --packages-select my_package
3 Source the setup file
To use your new package and executable, first open a new terminal and source your main ROS 2 installation.
Then, from inside the ros2_ws directory, run the following command to source your workspace:
source install/local_setup.bash
. install/local_setup.bash
call install/local_setup.bat
Now that your workspace has been added to your path, you will be able to use your new package’s executables.
4 Use the package
To run the executable you created using the --node-name argument during package creation, enter the command:
ros2 run my_package my_node
Which will return a message to your terminal:
hello world my_package package
Hi from my_package.
5 Examine package contents
Inside ros2_ws/src/my_package, you will see the files and folders that ros2 pkg create automatically generated:
CMakeLists.txt include package.xml src
my_node.cpp is inside the src directory.
This is where all your custom C++ nodes will go in the future.
my_package package.xml resource setup.cfg setup.py test
my_node.py is inside the my_package directory.
This is where all your custom Python nodes will go in the future.
6 Customize package.xml
You may have noticed in the return message after creating your package that the fields description and license contain TODO notes.
That’s because the package description and license declaration are not automatically set, but are required if you ever want to release your package.
The maintainer field may also need to be filled in.
From ros2_ws/src/my_package, open package.xml using your preferred text editor:
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<?xml-model
href="http://download.ros.org/schema/package_format3.xsd"
schematypens="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema"?>
<package format="3">
<name>my_package</name>
<version>0.0.0</version>
<description>TODO: Package description</description>
<maintainer email="user@todo.todo">user</maintainer>
<license>TODO: License declaration</license>
<buildtool_depend>ament_cmake</buildtool_depend>
<test_depend>ament_lint_auto</test_depend>
<test_depend>ament_lint_common</test_depend>
<export>
<build_type>ament_cmake</build_type>
</export>
</package>
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<?xml-model
href="http://download.ros.org/schema/package_format3.xsd"
schematypens="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema"?>
<package format="3">
<name>my_package</name>
<version>0.0.0</version>
<description>TODO: Package description</description>
<maintainer email="user@todo.todo">user</maintainer>
<license>TODO: License declaration</license>
<test_depend>ament_copyright</test_depend>
<test_depend>ament_flake8</test_depend>
<test_depend>ament_pep257</test_depend>
<test_depend>python3-pytest</test_depend>
<export>
<build_type>ament_python</build_type>
</export>
</package>
Input your name and email on the maintainer line if it hasn’t been automatically populated for you.
Then, edit the description line to summarize the package:
<description>Beginner client libraries tutorials practice package</description>
Then, update the license line.
You can read more about open source licenses here.
Since this package is only for practice, it’s safe to use any license.
We’ll use Apache-2.0:
<license>Apache-2.0</license>
Don’t forget to save once you’re done editing.
Below the license tag, you will see some tag names ending with _depend.
This is where your package.xml would list its dependencies on other packages, for colcon to search for.
my_package is simple and doesn’t have any dependencies, but you will see this space being utilized in upcoming tutorials.
You’re all done for now!
The setup.py file contains the same description, maintainer and license fields as package.xml, so you need to set those as well.
They need to match exactly in both files.
The version and name (package_name) also need to match exactly, and should be automatically populated in both files.
Open setup.py with your preferred text editor.
from setuptools import find_packages, setup
package_name = 'my_py_pkg'
setup(
name=package_name,
version='0.0.0',
packages=find_packages(exclude=['test']),
data_files=[
('share/ament_index/resource_index/packages',
['resource/' + package_name]),
('share/' + package_name, ['package.xml']),
],
install_requires=['setuptools'],
zip_safe=True,
maintainer='TODO',
maintainer_email='TODO',
description='TODO: Package description',
license='TODO: License declaration',
tests_require=['pytest'],
entry_points={
'console_scripts': [
'my_node = my_py_pkg.my_node:main'
],
},
)
Edit the maintainer, maintainer_email, and description lines to match package.xml.
Don’t forget to save the file.
Summary
You’ve created a package to organize your code and make it easy to use for others.
Your package was automatically populated with the necessary files, and then you used colcon to build it so you can use its executables in your local environment.
Next steps
Next, let’s add something meaningful to a package. You’ll start with a simple publisher/subscriber system, which you can choose to write in either C++ or Python.