Hi Adam,

I'm happy that you announced this package because we were planning to do the very same thing here at ELTE (Hungary) during the next semester. I nearly have any time with 7 exams still ahead of me but I may contact you after looking through this package.

I'm really interested in using Arduino-compatible devices with ROS. The first thing is that it's quite cheap and - though I'm not really an electronics-guy - easy to self-design, self-build. 

Keep up the good work!

Regards,
Bence Magyar
ELTE Information Science

2011/1/5 Adam Stambler <adasta@gmail.com>
Hello Folks,

     I am proud to announce a new tool for using Arduinos and AVR processors in ROS projects.  avr_bridge allows the AVR processors to directly publish or subscribe to ROS topics. This allows everything from Arduinos to custom robot boards to be first class ROS components.  This package can be found in Rutgers' new rutgers-ros-pkg.

    avr_bridge is meant to simplify the use of an Arduino and avr processors in a ROS based robot by providing a partial ROS implementation in avr c++. In hobbyist robotics, these microcontrollers are often used to read sensors and perform low level motor control. Every time a robot needs to interface with an AVR board, a new communication system is written. Typically they all use a usb-to-serial converter and either a custom binary or text based protocol. AVR bridge replaces these custom protocols with an automatically generated ROS communication stack that allows the AVR processors to directly publish or subscribe to ROS topics.

    avr_bridge has already been deployed on Rutger's PIPER robot  and in the communications layer for a Sparkfun imu driver. In the next few weeks, it will be deployed on our newest robot, the Rutgers IGVC entry as the communication layer on all of our custom, low level hardware.   By using avr_bridge to communicate with our PCs, we have cut down on redundant code and simplified the driver by allowing the avr_processor to directly publish msgs.   It is our hope that by extending ROS to the 8-bit microcontroller level we will see more open-source hardware that can be quickly integrated into cheap, custom robot platforms. 

Cheers,
Adam Stambler
Rutgers University

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