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7 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
AdilZouitine
6986b46fa8 refactor(inference): improve timeout handling and report timeout percentage
- Commented out the timeout handling logic to prevent appending timeout values to the results.
- Added a print statement to display the percentage of timeouts during inference.
2025-09-24 14:50:58 +02:00
AdilZouitine
b1d72ac29c refactor(model): change tensor data type from bfloat16 to float32
- Updated image and state embeddings to use float32 for improved compatibility.
- Adjusted model parameters and hidden states to ensure consistent data type usage.
2025-09-24 14:33:11 +02:00
AdilZouitine
cffd545527 refactor(inference): improve timeout handling and enhance dummy observation generation
- Renamed TimeoutException to TimeoutExceptionError for clarity.
- Updated dummy observation generation to include a task string.
- Integrated pre-processing and post-processing steps in the main function.
- Added deep copy of dummy observations to prevent mutation during processing.
- Enhanced timeout handling to provide percentage of timeouts during inference.
2025-09-24 14:32:47 +02:00
Francesco Capuano
6eaf6a861a fix: single level loop 2025-09-24 01:06:13 +02:00
Francesco Capuano
cdd6cb606c add: inference benchmark 2025-09-23 22:34:52 +02:00
Jade Choghari
f6cd24be17 update
Signed-off-by: Jade Choghari <chogharijade@gmail.com>
2025-09-23 21:52:15 +02:00
Jade Choghari
54c6b8ae52 add file
Signed-off-by: Jade Choghari <chogharijade@gmail.com>
2025-09-23 21:52:14 +02:00
341 changed files with 8168 additions and 22647 deletions

View File

@@ -78,7 +78,7 @@ jobs:
python-version: ${{ env.PYTHON_VERSION }}
- name: Install lerobot with all extras
run: uv sync --all-extras --no-extra groot # TODO(Steven): Make flash-attn optional
run: uv sync --all-extras
- name: Run pytest (all extras)
run: uv run pytest tests -vv --maxfail=10

View File

@@ -119,7 +119,6 @@ jobs:
TRITON_CACHE_DIR: /home/user_lerobot/.cache/triton
container:
image: ${{ needs.build-docker-cpu-nightly.outputs.image_tag }} # zizmor: ignore[unpinned-images]
options: --shm-size "16gb"
credentials:
username: ${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_LEROBOT_USERNAME }}
password: ${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_LEROBOT_PASSWORD }}
@@ -159,36 +158,3 @@ jobs:
run: pytest tests -vv --maxfail=10
- name: Run end-to-end tests
run: make test-end-to-end
# This job runs multi-GPU training tests with 4 GPUs
nightly-multi-gpu-tests:
name: Nightly Multi-GPU Tests
needs: [build-docker-gpu-nightly]
runs-on:
group: aws-g4dn-12xlarge # Instance with 4 GPUs
env:
HF_HOME: /home/user_lerobot/.cache/huggingface
HF_LEROBOT_HOME: /home/user_lerobot/.cache/huggingface/lerobot
TORCH_HOME: /home/user_lerobot/.cache/torch
TRITON_CACHE_DIR: /home/user_lerobot/.cache/triton
CUDA_VISIBLE_DEVICES: "0,1,2,3"
container:
image: ${{ needs.build-docker-gpu-nightly.outputs.image_tag }} # zizmor: ignore[unpinned-images]
options: --gpus all --shm-size "16gb"
credentials:
username: ${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_LEROBOT_USERNAME }}
password: ${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_LEROBOT_PASSWORD }}
defaults:
run:
shell: bash
working-directory: /lerobot
steps:
- name: Verify GPU availability
run: |
nvidia-smi
python -c "import torch; print(f'PyTorch CUDA available: {torch.cuda.is_available()}'); print(f'Number of GPUs: {torch.cuda.device_count()}')"
- name: Run multi-GPU training tests
# TODO(Steven): Investigate why motors tests are failing in multi-GPU setup
run: pytest tests -vv --maxfail=10 --ignore=tests/motors/
timeout-minutes: 10

View File

@@ -82,14 +82,6 @@ jobs:
exit 1
fi
- name: Remove Tags with Git dependencies
# TODO(Steven): Temporary patch to remove pi from PyPi 0.4.0 release due to its reliance on git dependencies.
run: |
echo "::info:: Checking for Git dependencies to remove from pyproject.toml..."
grep -E '@ git\+https|lerobot\[pi\]' pyproject.toml | sed 's/^/::warning:: Removing line: /' || true
sed -E -i '/@ git\+https|lerobot\[pi\]/d' pyproject.toml
echo "::info:: Git dependencies removed. Proceeding with build."
- name: Install build dependencies
run: python -m pip install build
@@ -111,7 +103,7 @@ jobs:
- name: Publish to TestPyPI for pre-releases
# True for tags like 'v0.2.0-rc1'
if: startsWith(github.ref, 'refs/tags/v') && contains(github.ref, '-')
uses: pypa/gh-action-pypi-publish@v1.13.0 # zizmor: ignore[unpinned-uses, use-trusted-publishing]
uses: pypa/gh-action-pypi-publish@v1.12.4 # zizmor: ignore[unpinned-uses, use-trusted-publishing]
with:
repository-url: https://test.pypi.org/legacy/
verbose: true
@@ -119,7 +111,7 @@ jobs:
- name: Publish to PyPI
if: startsWith(github.ref, 'refs/tags/v') && !contains(github.ref, '-')
uses: pypa/gh-action-pypi-publish@v1.13.0 # zizmor: ignore[unpinned-uses, use-trusted-publishing]
uses: pypa/gh-action-pypi-publish@v1.12.4 # zizmor: ignore[unpinned-uses, use-trusted-publishing]
with:
verbose: true
print-hash: true
@@ -146,7 +138,7 @@ jobs:
- name: Setup uv and Python
uses: astral-sh/setup-uv@v6 # zizmor: ignore[unpinned-uses]
with:
enable-cache: true # zizmor: ignore[cache-poisoning]
enable-cache: true
version: ${{ env.UV_VERSION }}
python-version: ${{ env.PYTHON_VERSION }}
- name: Create uv virtual environment

View File

@@ -27,17 +27,15 @@ env:
This issue was closed because it has been stalled for 14 days with no activity.
Feel free to reopen if is still relevant, or to ping a collaborator if you have any questions.
CLOSE_PR_MESSAGE: >
This PR was closed because it has been stalled for 21 days with no activity.
This PR was closed because it has been stalled for 14 days with no activity.
Feel free to reopen if is still relevant, or to ping a collaborator if you have any questions.
WARN_ISSUE_MESSAGE: >
This issue has been automatically marked as stale because it has not had
recent activity (6 months). It will be closed if no further activity occurs.
Any change, comment or update to this issue will reset this count.
recent activity (1 year). It will be closed if no further activity occurs.
Thank you for your contributions.
WARN_PR_MESSAGE: >
This PR has been automatically marked as stale because it has not had
recent activity (1 year). It will be closed if no further activity occurs.
Any change, comment or update to this PR will reset this count.
Thank you for your contributions.
jobs:
@@ -58,10 +56,10 @@ jobs:
stale-pr-label: stale
exempt-issue-labels: never-stale
exempt-pr-labels: never-stale
days-before-issue-stale: 180
days-before-issue-stale: 180 # TODO(Steven): Will modify this to 90 after initial cleanup
days-before-issue-close: 14
days-before-pr-stale: 365
days-before-pr-close: 21
days-before-pr-stale: 180
days-before-pr-close: 14
delete-branch: true
close-issue-message: ${{ env.CLOSE_ISSUE_MESSAGE }}
close-pr-message: ${{ env.CLOSE_PR_MESSAGE }}

View File

@@ -1,183 +0,0 @@
# Copyright 2025 The HuggingFace Inc. team. All rights reserved.
#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
# You may obtain a copy of the License at
#
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
# limitations under the License.
# This workflow handles full testing with unboud dependencies versions.
name: Unbound Dependency Tests
on:
# Allows running this workflow manually from the Actions tab
workflow_dispatch:
# Run on the 1st and 15th of every month at 09:00 UTC
schedule:
- cron: '0 2 1,15 * *'
permissions:
contents: read
# Sets up the environment variables
env:
UV_VERSION: "0.8.0"
PYTHON_VERSION: "3.10"
DOCKER_IMAGE_NAME: huggingface/lerobot-gpu:unbound
# Ensures that only the latest action is built, canceling older runs.
concurrency:
group: ${{ github.workflow }}-${{ github.head_ref || github.run_id }}
cancel-in-progress: true
jobs:
# This job runs the E2E tests + pytest with all unbound extras
full-tests:
name: Full Unbound Tests
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
env:
MUJOCO_GL: egl
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
with:
lfs: true
persist-credentials: false
- name: Install apt dependencies
run: |
sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install -y build-essential \
git curl libglib2.0-0 libegl1-mesa-dev ffmpeg libusb-1.0-0-dev \
speech-dispatcher libgeos-dev portaudio19-dev
- name: Setup uv and Python
uses: astral-sh/setup-uv@v6 # zizmor: ignore[unpinned-uses]
with:
enable-cache: true
version: ${{ env.UV_VERSION }}
python-version: ${{ env.PYTHON_VERSION }}
- name: Unbound dependencies
run: |
sed -i 's/,[[:space:]]*<[0-9\.]*//g' pyproject.toml
echo "Dependencies unbound:" && cat pyproject.toml
- name: Install lerobot with all extras
run: uv sync --all-extras --no-extra groot # TODO(Steven): Make flash-attn optional
- name: Run pytest (all extras)
run: uv run pytest tests -vv
- name: Run end-to-end tests
run: uv run make test-end-to-end
# This job builds a GPU enabled image for testing
build-and-push-docker:
name: Build and Push Docker
runs-on:
group: aws-general-8-plus
outputs:
image_tag: ${{ env.DOCKER_IMAGE_NAME }}
env:
GITHUB_REF: ${{ github.ref }}
steps:
- name: Install Git LFS
run: |
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install git-lfs
git lfs install
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
with:
lfs: true
persist-credentials: false
- name: Set up Docker Buildx
uses: docker/setup-buildx-action@v3 # zizmor: ignore[unpinned-uses]
with:
cache-binary: false
- name: Login to Docker Hub
uses: docker/login-action@v3 # zizmor: ignore[unpinned-uses]
with:
username: ${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_LEROBOT_USERNAME }}
password: ${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_LEROBOT_PASSWORD }}
- name: Build and push Docker image
uses: docker/build-push-action@v6 # zizmor: ignore[unpinned-uses]
with:
context: .
file: ./docker/Dockerfile.internal
push: true
tags: ${{ env.DOCKER_IMAGE_NAME }}
build-args: |
UNBOUND_DEPS=true
# This job runs pytest with all unbound extras in a GPU enabled host
# It runs everytime a test image is created
gpu-tests:
name: GPU Unbound Tests
needs: [build-and-push-docker]
runs-on:
group: aws-g6-4xlarge-plus
env:
HF_HOME: /home/user_lerobot/.cache/huggingface
HF_LEROBOT_HOME: /home/user_lerobot/.cache/huggingface/lerobot
TORCH_HOME: /home/user_lerobot/.cache/torch
TRITON_CACHE_DIR: /home/user_lerobot/.cache/triton
container:
image: ${{ needs.build-and-push-docker.outputs.image_tag }} # zizmor: ignore[unpinned-images]
options: --gpus all --shm-size "16gb"
credentials:
username: ${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_LEROBOT_USERNAME }}
password: ${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_LEROBOT_PASSWORD }}
defaults:
run:
shell: bash
working-directory: /lerobot
steps:
- name: Run pytest on GPU
run: pytest tests -vv
- name: Run end-to-end tests
run: make test-end-to-end
# This job deletes the test image recently created
# It runs everytime after the gpu-tests have finished
delete-unbound-image:
name: Delete Unbound Image
needs: [gpu-tests, build-and-push-docker]
if: always() && needs.build-and-push-docker.result == 'success'
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Get Docker Hub Token and Delete Image
# zizmor: ignore[template-injection]
run: |
IMAGE_NAME=$(echo "${{ needs.build-and-push-docker.outputs.image_tag }}" | cut -d':' -f1)
IMAGE_TAG=$(echo "${{ needs.build-and-push-docker.outputs.image_tag }}" | cut -d':' -f2)
echo "Attempting to delete image: $IMAGE_NAME:$IMAGE_TAG"
TOKEN=$(curl -s -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-X POST \
-d '{"username": "${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_LEROBOT_USERNAME }}", "password": "${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_LEROBOT_PASSWORD }}"}' \
https://hub.docker.com/v2/users/login/ | jq -r .token)
if [ "$TOKEN" == "null" ] || [ -z "$TOKEN" ]; then
echo "::error::Failed to get Docker Hub token."
exit 1
fi
HTTP_RESPONSE=$(curl -s -o /dev/null -w "%{http_code}" \
-H "Authorization: JWT ${TOKEN}" \
-X DELETE \
https://hub.docker.com/v2/repositories/${IMAGE_NAME}/tags/${IMAGE_TAG}/)
if [ "$HTTP_RESPONSE" -eq 204 ]; then
echo "Successfully deleted Docker image tag: $IMAGE_NAME:$IMAGE_TAG"
else
echo "::error::Failed to delete Docker image. HTTP status: $HTTP_RESPONSE"
exit 1
fi

View File

@@ -26,7 +26,7 @@ repos:
##### General Code Quality & Formatting #####
- repo: https://github.com/pre-commit/pre-commit-hooks
rev: v6.0.0
rev: v5.0.0
hooks:
- id: check-added-large-files
args: ['--maxkb=1024']
@@ -39,20 +39,20 @@ repos:
- id: trailing-whitespace
- repo: https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff-pre-commit
rev: v0.14.1
rev: v0.12.4
hooks:
- id: ruff-format
- id: ruff
args: [--fix, --exit-non-zero-on-fix]
- repo: https://github.com/adhtruong/mirrors-typos
rev: v1.38.1
rev: v1.34.0
hooks:
- id: typos
args: [--force-exclude]
- repo: https://github.com/asottile/pyupgrade
rev: v3.21.0
rev: v3.20.0
hooks:
- id: pyupgrade
args: [--py310-plus]
@@ -68,12 +68,12 @@ repos:
##### Security #####
- repo: https://github.com/gitleaks/gitleaks
rev: v8.28.0
rev: v8.27.2
hooks:
- id: gitleaks
- repo: https://github.com/woodruffw/zizmor-pre-commit
rev: v1.15.2
rev: v1.11.0
hooks:
- id: zizmor
@@ -86,12 +86,11 @@ repos:
# TODO(Steven): Uncomment when ready to use
##### Static Analysis & Typing #####
- repo: https://github.com/pre-commit/mirrors-mypy
rev: v1.18.2
hooks:
- id: mypy
args: [--config-file=pyproject.toml]
exclude: ^(examples|benchmarks|tests)/
# - repo: https://github.com/pre-commit/mirrors-mypy
# rev: v1.16.0
# hooks:
# - id: mypy
# args: [--python-version=3.10]
##### Docstring Checks #####
# - repo: https://github.com/akaihola/darglint2

View File

@@ -72,6 +72,7 @@ post it.
Look at our implementations for [datasets](./src/lerobot/datasets/), [policies](./src/lerobot/policies/),
environments ([aloha](https://github.com/huggingface/gym-aloha),
[xarm](https://github.com/huggingface/gym-xarm),
[pusht](https://github.com/huggingface/gym-pusht))
and follow the same api design.
@@ -137,7 +138,7 @@ Follow these steps to start contributing:
4. for development, we advise to use a tool like `poetry` or `uv` instead of just `pip` to easily track our dependencies.
Follow the instructions to [install poetry](https://python-poetry.org/docs/#installation) (use a version >=2.1.0) or to [install uv](https://docs.astral.sh/uv/getting-started/installation/#installation-methods) if you don't have one of them already.
Set up a development environment with conda:
Set up a development environment with conda or miniconda:
```bash
conda create -y -n lerobot-dev python=3.10 && conda activate lerobot-dev

View File

@@ -119,9 +119,10 @@ test-tdmpc-ete-train:
--policy.type=tdmpc \
--policy.device=$(DEVICE) \
--policy.push_to_hub=false \
--env.type=pusht \
--env.type=xarm \
--env.task=XarmLift-v0 \
--env.episode_length=5 \
--dataset.repo_id=lerobot/pusht_image \
--dataset.repo_id=lerobot/xarm_lift_medium \
--dataset.image_transforms.enable=true \
--dataset.episodes="[0]" \
--batch_size=2 \
@@ -139,10 +140,9 @@ test-tdmpc-ete-eval:
lerobot-eval \
--policy.path=tests/outputs/tdmpc/checkpoints/000002/pretrained_model \
--policy.device=$(DEVICE) \
--env.type=pusht \
--env.type=xarm \
--env.episode_length=5 \
--env.observation_height=96 \
--env.observation_width=96 \
--env.task=XarmLift-v0 \
--eval.n_episodes=1 \
--eval.batch_size=1

View File

@@ -104,14 +104,14 @@ LeRobot works with Python 3.10+ and PyTorch 2.2+.
### Environment Setup
Create a virtual environment with Python 3.10 and activate it, e.g. with [`miniforge`](https://conda-forge.org/download/):
Create a virtual environment with Python 3.10 and activate it, e.g. with [`miniconda`](https://docs.anaconda.com/free/miniconda/index.html):
```bash
conda create -y -n lerobot python=3.10
conda activate lerobot
```
When using `conda`, install `ffmpeg` in your environment:
When using `miniconda`, install `ffmpeg` in your environment:
```bash
conda install ffmpeg -c conda-forge
@@ -185,11 +185,6 @@ _Replace `[...]` with your desired features._
For a full list of optional dependencies, see:
https://pypi.org/project/lerobot/
> [!NOTE]
> For lerobot 0.4.0, if you want to install pi tags, you will have to do: `pip install "lerobot[pi]@git+https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot.git"`.
>
> This will be solved in the next patch release
### Weights & Biases
To use [Weights and Biases](https://docs.wandb.ai/quickstart) for experiment tracking, log in with
@@ -202,7 +197,7 @@ wandb login
### Visualize datasets
Check out [example 1](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/examples/dataset/load_lerobot_dataset.py) that illustrates how to use our dataset class which automatically downloads data from the Hugging Face hub.
Check out [example 1](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/examples/1_load_lerobot_dataset.py) that illustrates how to use our dataset class which automatically downloads data from the Hugging Face hub.
You can also locally visualize episodes from a dataset on the hub by executing our script from the command line:
@@ -212,13 +207,13 @@ lerobot-dataset-viz \
--episode-index 0
```
or from a dataset in a local folder with the `root` option and the `--mode local` (in the following case the dataset will be searched for in `./my_local_data_dir/lerobot/pusht`)
or from a dataset in a local folder with the `root` option and the `--local-files-only` (in the following case the dataset will be searched for in `./my_local_data_dir/lerobot/pusht`)
```bash
lerobot-dataset-viz \
--repo-id lerobot/pusht \
--root ./my_local_data_dir \
--mode local \
--local-files-only 1 \
--episode-index 0
```
@@ -315,7 +310,7 @@ To upload these to the hub, run the following:
huggingface-cli upload ${hf_user}/${repo_name} path/to/pretrained_model
```
See [lerobot_eval.py](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/src/lerobot/scripts/lerobot_eval.py) for an example of how other people may use your policy.
See [eval.py](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/src/lerobot/scripts/eval.py) for an example of how other people may use your policy.
### Acknowledgment
@@ -342,3 +337,7 @@ If you want, you can cite this work with:
## Star History
[![Star History Chart](https://api.star-history.com/svg?repos=huggingface/lerobot&type=Timeline)](https://star-history.com/#huggingface/lerobot&Timeline)
```
```

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,400 @@
"""
Benchmark memory footprint and inference latency of a policy on arbitrary devices.
This script loads a pretrained policy directly (similar to the async inference server)
and generates dummy input data based on the policy's input_features to perform
accurate benchmarking without requiring datasets.
"""
import argparse
import os
import signal
import statistics
from contextlib import contextmanager
from copy import deepcopy
from datetime import datetime
from pathlib import Path
import psutil
import torch
from tqdm import tqdm
from lerobot.configs.types import FeatureType
from lerobot.policies.factory import get_policy_class, make_pre_post_processors
from lerobot.policies.pretrained import PreTrainedPolicy
class TimeoutExceptionError(Exception):
pass
@contextmanager
def timeout(seconds):
def signal_handler(signum, frame):
raise TimeoutExceptionError(f"Timed out after {seconds} seconds")
# On Windows, signal is not available, so we can't use this timeout mechanism
if not hasattr(signal, "SIGALRM"):
yield
return
old_handler = signal.signal(signal.SIGALRM, signal_handler)
try:
# signal.alarm expects integer seconds
# for float seconds, we can use setitimer
signal.setitimer(signal.ITIMER_REAL, seconds)
yield
finally:
signal.setitimer(signal.ITIMER_REAL, 0)
signal.signal(signal.SIGALRM, old_handler)
def bytes_to_human(n: int) -> str:
for unit in ["B", "KB", "MB", "GB", "TB"]:
if n < 1024:
return f"{n:.2f} {unit}"
n /= 1024
return f"{n:.2f} PB"
def percentile(values: list[float], p: float) -> float:
if not values:
return float("nan")
k = (len(values) - 1) * (p / 100.0)
f = int(k)
c = min(f + 1, len(values) - 1)
if f == c:
return values[f]
return values[f] + (values[c] - values[f]) * (k - f)
def generate_dummy_observation(input_features: dict, device: str = "cpu") -> dict:
"""Generate dummy observation data based on policy input features."""
dummy_obs = {}
for key, feature in input_features.items():
shape = feature.shape
if feature.type == FeatureType.VISUAL:
# Images: random values in [0, 1] range (already normalized)
dummy_obs[key] = torch.rand(shape, dtype=torch.float32, device=device)
elif feature.type in [FeatureType.STATE, FeatureType.ACTION, FeatureType.ENV]:
# State/action/env: random normal distribution
dummy_obs[key] = torch.randn(shape, dtype=torch.float32, device=device)
else:
# Default: random normal for unknown types
dummy_obs[key] = torch.randn(shape, dtype=torch.float32, device=device)
# # Add batch dimension
# for key in dummy_obs:
# dummy_obs[key] = dummy_obs[key].unsqueeze(0)
# Add task string for language-conditioned policies
dummy_obs["task"] = " this is a dummy task"
return dummy_obs
def main():
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description="Policy inference benchmark")
parser.add_argument(
"--policy-id", type=str, required=True, help="Model ID or local path to pretrained policy"
)
parser.add_argument(
"--policy-type", type=str, required=True, help="Type of policy (smolvla, act, diffusion, etc.)"
)
parser.add_argument(
"--device", type=str, default="mps", choices=["cuda", "cpu", "mps"], help="Device to run on"
)
parser.add_argument("--seed", type=int, default=42, help="Random seed")
parser.add_argument(
"--num-samples", type=int, default=100, help="Number of inference samples to benchmark"
)
parser.add_argument("--warmup", type=int, default=10, help="Number of warmup samples (not timed)")
parser.add_argument(
"--output-dir", type=str, default="outputs/benchmarks", help="Directory to save benchmark results"
)
parser.add_argument(
"--timeout",
type=float,
default=0.3,
help="Timeout for each inference pass in seconds (default: 0.3s = 300ms)",
)
args = parser.parse_args()
# Seed & deterministic-ish setup
torch.manual_seed(args.seed)
if args.device == "cuda":
torch.cuda.manual_seed_all(args.seed)
torch.backends.cudnn.benchmark = False
torch.backends.cudnn.deterministic = False # leave False to avoid perf cliffs
# Resolve device availability
device = args.device.lower()
if device == "cuda" and not torch.cuda.is_available():
print("[!] CUDA requested but unavailable. Falling back to CPU.")
device = "cpu"
elif device == "mps" and not (hasattr(torch.backends, "mps") and torch.backends.mps.is_available()):
print("[!] MPS requested but unavailable. Falling back to CPU.")
device = "cpu"
use_cuda = device == "cuda"
# Create output directory and log file
output_dir = Path(args.output_dir)
output_dir.mkdir(parents=True, exist_ok=True)
timestamp = datetime.now().strftime("%Y%m%d_%H%M%S")
policy_name = args.policy_id.replace("/", "_").replace("\\", "_")
log_file = output_dir / f"benchmark_{args.policy_type}_{policy_name}_{device}_{timestamp}.txt"
# Load policy directly from pretrained (similar to async inference server)
print(f"Loading policy {args.policy_type} from {args.policy_id}...")
policy_class = get_policy_class(args.policy_type)
policy: PreTrainedPolicy = policy_class.from_pretrained(args.policy_id)
policy.eval()
policy.to(device, torch.float32)
policy.config.device = device
preprocessor, postprocessor = make_pre_post_processors(policy.config)
print(f"Policy loaded on {device}")
print(f"Input features: {list(policy.config.input_features.keys())}")
print(f"Output features: {list(policy.config.output_features.keys())}")
# Generate dummy observation based on policy input features
dummy_observation = generate_dummy_observation(policy.config.input_features, device)
dummy_observation["task"] = "this is a dummy task"
# Helper to sync for fair timings
def _sync(dev_=device):
if dev_ == "cuda" and torch.cuda.is_available():
torch.cuda.synchronize()
elif dev_ == "mps" and hasattr(torch, "mps"):
try:
torch.mps.synchronize()
except AttributeError:
pass # MPS sync not available in this PyTorch version
# Warmup (to stabilize kernels/caches)
print("Warming up...")
with torch.no_grad():
policy.reset()
preprocessor.reset()
postprocessor.reset()
orginal_dummy_observation = deepcopy(dummy_observation)
for _ in range(args.warmup):
dummy_observation_model = deepcopy(orginal_dummy_observation)
dummy_observation_model = preprocessor(dummy_observation_model)
action_model = policy.select_action(dummy_observation_model)
_ = postprocessor(action_model)
policy.reset()
_sync()
# Memory footprint before timing
process = psutil.Process(os.getpid())
rss_before = process.memory_info().rss
if use_cuda:
torch.cuda.reset_peak_memory_stats()
# PyTorch timing with Event objects for more accurate GPU timing
print(f"Running benchmark: {args.num_samples} samples...")
if use_cuda:
# Use CUDA Events for precise GPU timing
start_events = []
end_events = []
timeout_count = 0
orginal_dummy_observation = deepcopy(dummy_observation)
with torch.no_grad():
for forward in tqdm(range(args.num_samples), desc="Trials"):
start_event = torch.cuda.Event(enable_timing=True)
end_event = torch.cuda.Event(enable_timing=True)
try:
dummy_observation_model = deepcopy(orginal_dummy_observation)
dummy_observation_model = preprocessor(dummy_observation)
with timeout(args.timeout):
start_event.record()
action_model = policy.select_action(dummy_observation_model)
end_event.record()
_ = postprocessor(action_model)
policy.reset()
start_events.append(start_event)
end_events.append(end_event)
except TimeoutExceptionError:
timeout_count += 1
# Add placeholder for timeout
start_events.append(None)
end_events.append(None)
print(f"\n[!] Timeout on forward {forward + 1}")
continue
# Synchronize and collect timing results
torch.cuda.synchronize()
per_forward_ms = []
for start_event, end_event in zip(start_events, end_events, strict=True):
if start_event is None:
# per_forward_ms.append(args.timeout * 1000)
continue
else:
per_forward_ms.append(start_event.elapsed_time(end_event))
if timeout_count > 0:
print(f"[!] {timeout_count} inference passes timed out (>{args.timeout * 1000:.1f}ms)")
else:
# Use simple time.perf_counter for CPU/MPS timing with timeout
import time
per_forward_ms = []
timeout_count = 0
with torch.no_grad():
for sample in tqdm(range(args.num_samples), desc="Samples"):
try:
dummy_observation_model = deepcopy(orginal_dummy_observation)
dummy_observation_model = preprocessor(dummy_observation_model)
with timeout(args.timeout):
start_time = time.perf_counter()
action_model = policy.select_action(dummy_observation_model)
end_time = time.perf_counter()
policy.reset()
per_forward_ms.append((end_time - start_time) * 1000) # Convert to ms
except TimeoutExceptionError:
timeout_count += 1
# per_forward_ms.append(args.timeout * 1000)
print(f"\n[!] Timeout on sample {sample + 1}")
continue
if timeout_count > 0:
print(f"[!] {timeout_count} inference passes timed out (>{args.timeout * 1000:.1f}ms)")
print(f"Timeout percentage: {timeout_count / args.num_samples * 100:.1f}%")
# Memory footprint after timing
rss_after = process.memory_info().rss
rss_delta = rss_after - rss_before
cuda_peak = torch.cuda.max_memory_allocated() if use_cuda else 0
# Sort timing results for percentile calculations
per_forward_ms_sorted = sorted(per_forward_ms)
mean_ms = statistics.fmean(per_forward_ms) if per_forward_ms else float("nan")
std_ms = statistics.pstdev(per_forward_ms) if len(per_forward_ms) > 1 else 0.0
min_ms = per_forward_ms_sorted[0] if per_forward_ms_sorted else float("nan")
max_ms = per_forward_ms_sorted[-1] if per_forward_ms_sorted else float("nan")
p50_ms = percentile(per_forward_ms_sorted, 50)
p95_ms = percentile(per_forward_ms_sorted, 95)
# Model size
num_params = sum(p.numel() for p in policy.parameters())
# Prepare results for logging
results = {
"timestamp": datetime.now().isoformat(),
"policy_type": args.policy_type,
"policy_id": args.policy_id,
"device": device,
"num_trials": args.num_samples,
"forwards_per_trial": 1,
"warmup": args.warmup,
"timeout_ms": args.timeout * 1000,
"seed": args.seed,
"num_params": num_params,
"timeout_count": timeout_count,
"latency_mean_ms": mean_ms,
"latency_std_ms": std_ms,
"latency_min_ms": min_ms,
"latency_max_ms": max_ms,
"latency_p50_ms": p50_ms,
"latency_p95_ms": p95_ms,
"cpu_rss_before": rss_before,
"cpu_rss_after": rss_after,
"cpu_rss_delta": rss_delta,
"cuda_peak_alloc": cuda_peak,
"input_features": list(policy.config.input_features.keys()),
"output_features": list(policy.config.output_features.keys()),
}
# Format and write results to log file
log_content = f"""
=== LeRobot Policy Inference Benchmark ===
Timestamp: {results["timestamp"]}
Policy: {results["policy_type"]} ({results["policy_id"]})
Device: {results["device"]}
Seed: {results["seed"]}
=== Model Information ===
Parameters: {results["num_params"]:,}
Input Features: {", ".join(results["input_features"])}
Output Features: {", ".join(results["output_features"])}
=== Benchmark Configuration ===
Samples: {results["num_trials"]}
Warmup: {results["warmup"]}
Total Measurements: {len(per_forward_ms)}
Timeout: {results["timeout_ms"]:.1f}ms
Timeouts: {results["timeout_count"]} / {results["num_trials"]}
=== Latency Results (ms) ===
Mean: {results["latency_mean_ms"]:.3f}
Std Dev: {results["latency_std_ms"]:.3f}
Min: {results["latency_min_ms"]:.3f}
Max: {results["latency_max_ms"]:.3f}
P50: {results["latency_p50_ms"]:.3f}
P95: {results["latency_p95_ms"]:.3f}
=== Memory Footprint ===
CPU RSS Before: {bytes_to_human(results["cpu_rss_before"])}
CPU RSS After: {bytes_to_human(results["cpu_rss_after"])}{bytes_to_human(results["cpu_rss_delta"])})
"""
if use_cuda:
log_content += f"CUDA Peak: {bytes_to_human(results['cuda_peak_alloc'])} (reset before timing)\n"
log_content += f"""
=== Raw Timing Data (first 20 measurements, ms) ===
{", ".join(f"{t:.3f}" for t in per_forward_ms[:20])}
{"..." if len(per_forward_ms) > 20 else ""}
=== Summary Statistics ===
Timing Method: {"CUDA Events" if use_cuda else "torch.utils.benchmark.Timer"}
Device Available: {torch.cuda.is_available() if device == "cuda" else torch.backends.mps.is_available() if device == "mps" else True}
PyTorch Version: {torch.__version__}
Benchmark completed successfully at {datetime.now().strftime("%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S")}
"""
# Write to log file
with open(log_file, "w") as f:
f.write(log_content)
# Print to console (shorter version)
print("\n=== Inference Benchmark Results ===")
print(f"Policy: {args.policy_type} ({args.policy_id})")
print(f"Device: {device}")
print(f"Samples: {args.num_samples} | Warmup: {args.warmup}")
print(f"Model params: {num_params:,}")
print(f"Timeout percentage: {timeout_count / args.num_samples * 100:.1f}%")
print("\nLatency per forward (ms):")
print(f" mean: {mean_ms:.3f} std: {std_ms:.3f}")
print(f" min: {min_ms:.3f} max: {max_ms:.3f}")
print(f" p50: {p50_ms:.3f} p95: {p95_ms:.3f}")
print("\nMemory footprint:")
print(f" CPU RSS before: {bytes_to_human(rss_before)}")
print(f" CPU RSS after : {bytes_to_human(rss_after)}{bytes_to_human(rss_delta)})")
if use_cuda:
print(
f" CUDA peak allocated: {bytes_to_human(cuda_peak)} "
f"(reset by reset_peak_memory_stats before timing)"
)
print(f"\nResults saved to: {log_file}")
print("Benchmark completed successfully!")
if __name__ == "__main__":
main()

View File

@@ -35,13 +35,12 @@ import torch
from skimage.metrics import mean_squared_error, peak_signal_noise_ratio, structural_similarity
from tqdm import tqdm
from benchmarks.video.benchmark import TimeBenchmark
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset
from lerobot.datasets.video_utils import (
decode_video_frames_torchvision,
encode_video_frames,
)
from lerobot.utils.constants import OBS_IMAGE
from lerobot.utils.benchmark import TimeBenchmark
BASE_ENCODING = OrderedDict(
[
@@ -118,7 +117,7 @@ def save_first_episode(imgs_dir: Path, dataset: LeRobotDataset) -> None:
hf_dataset = dataset.hf_dataset.with_format(None)
# We only save images from the first camera
img_keys = [key for key in hf_dataset.features if key.startswith(OBS_IMAGE)]
img_keys = [key for key in hf_dataset.features if key.startswith("observation.image")]
imgs_dataset = hf_dataset.select_columns(img_keys[0])
for i, item in enumerate(

View File

@@ -75,14 +75,6 @@ RUN uv venv --python python${PYTHON_VERSION}
# Install Python dependencies for caching
COPY --chown=user_lerobot:user_lerobot pyproject.toml README.md MANIFEST.in ./
COPY --chown=user_lerobot:user_lerobot src/ src/
ARG UNBOUND_DEPS=false
RUN if [ "$UNBOUND_DEPS" = "true" ]; then \
sed -i 's/,[[:space:]]*<[0-9\.]*//g' pyproject.toml; \
echo "Dependencies unbound:" && cat pyproject.toml; \
fi
RUN uv pip install --no-cache ".[all]"
# Copy the rest of the application source code

View File

@@ -61,14 +61,6 @@ RUN uv venv
# Install Python dependencies for caching
COPY --chown=user_lerobot:user_lerobot pyproject.toml README.md MANIFEST.in ./
COPY --chown=user_lerobot:user_lerobot src/ src/
ARG UNBOUND_DEPS=false
RUN if [ "$UNBOUND_DEPS" = "true" ]; then \
sed -i 's/,[[:space:]]*<[0-9\.]*//g' pyproject.toml; \
echo "Dependencies unbound:" && cat pyproject.toml; \
fi
RUN uv pip install --no-cache ".[all]"
# Copy the rest of the application code

View File

@@ -7,6 +7,8 @@
- sections:
- local: il_robots
title: Imitation Learning for Robots
- local: il_sim
title: Imitation Learning in Sim
- local: cameras
title: Cameras
- local: integrate_hardware
@@ -17,39 +19,20 @@
title: Train RL in Simulation
- local: async
title: Use Async Inference
- local: multi_gpu_training
title: Multi GPU training
title: "Tutorials"
- sections:
- local: lerobot-dataset-v3
title: Using LeRobotDataset
- local: porting_datasets_v3
title: Porting Large Datasets
- local: using_dataset_tools
title: Using the Dataset Tools
title: "Datasets"
- sections:
- local: act
title: ACT
- local: smolvla
title: SmolVLA
- local: pi0
title: π₀ (Pi0)
- local: pi05
title: π₀.₅ (Pi05)
- local: groot
title: NVIDIA GR00T N1.5
title: "Policies"
- sections:
- local: envhub
title: Environments from the Hub
- local: il_sim
title: Imitation Learning in Sim
title: Finetune SmolVLA
- local: libero
title: Using Libero
- local: metaworld
title: Using MetaWorld
title: "Simulation"
title: "Policies"
- sections:
- local: introduction_processors
title: Introduction to Robot Processors
@@ -59,8 +42,6 @@
title: Implement your own processor
- local: processors_robots_teleop
title: Processors for Robots and Teleoperators
- local: env_processor
title: Environment Processors
title: "Robot Processors"
- sections:
- local: so101

View File

@@ -1,92 +0,0 @@
# ACT (Action Chunking with Transformers)
ACT is a **lightweight and efficient policy for imitation learning**, especially well-suited for fine-grained manipulation tasks. It's the **first model we recommend when you're starting out** with LeRobot due to its fast training time, low computational requirements, and strong performance.
<div class="video-container">
<iframe
width="100%"
height="415"
src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/ft73x0LfGpM"
title="LeRobot ACT Tutorial"
frameborder="0"
allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture"
allowfullscreen
></iframe>
</div>
_Watch this tutorial from the LeRobot team to learn how ACT works: [LeRobot ACT Tutorial](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ft73x0LfGpM)_
## Model Overview
Action Chunking with Transformers (ACT) was introduced in the paper [Learning Fine-Grained Bimanual Manipulation with Low-Cost Hardware](https://arxiv.org/abs/2304.13705) by Zhao et al. The policy was designed to enable precise, contact-rich manipulation tasks using affordable hardware and minimal demonstration data.
### Why ACT is Great for Beginners
ACT stands out as an excellent starting point for several reasons:
- **Fast Training**: Trains in a few hours on a single GPU
- **Lightweight**: Only ~80M parameters, making it efficient and easy to work with
- **Data Efficient**: Often achieves high success rates with just 50 demonstrations
### Architecture
ACT uses a transformer-based architecture with three main components:
1. **Vision Backbone**: ResNet-18 processes images from multiple camera viewpoints
2. **Transformer Encoder**: Synthesizes information from camera features, joint positions, and a learned latent variable
3. **Transformer Decoder**: Generates coherent action sequences using cross-attention
The policy takes as input:
- Multiple RGB images (e.g., from wrist cameras, front/top cameras)
- Current robot joint positions
- A latent style variable `z` (learned during training, set to zero during inference)
And outputs a chunk of `k` future action sequences.
## Installation Requirements
1. Install LeRobot by following our [Installation Guide](./installation).
2. ACT is included in the base LeRobot installation, so no additional dependencies are needed!
## Training ACT
ACT works seamlessly with the standard LeRobot training pipeline. Here's a complete example for training ACT on your dataset:
```bash
lerobot-train \
--dataset.repo_id=${HF_USER}/your_dataset \
--policy.type=act \
--output_dir=outputs/train/act_your_dataset \
--job_name=act_your_dataset \
--policy.device=cuda \
--wandb.enable=true \
--policy.repo_id=${HF_USER}/act_policy
```
### Training Tips
1. **Start with defaults**: ACT's default hyperparameters work well for most tasks
2. **Training duration**: Expect a few hours for 100k training steps on a single GPU
3. **Batch size**: Start with batch size 8 and adjust based on your GPU memory
### Train using Google Colab
If your local computer doesn't have a powerful GPU, you can utilize Google Colab to train your model by following the [ACT training notebook](./notebooks#training-act).
## Evaluating ACT
Once training is complete, you can evaluate your ACT policy using the `lerobot-record` command with your trained policy. This will run inference and record evaluation episodes:
```bash
lerobot-record \
--robot.type=so100_follower \
--robot.port=/dev/ttyACM0 \
--robot.id=my_robot \
--robot.cameras="{ front: {type: opencv, index_or_path: 0, width: 640, height: 480, fps: 30}}" \
--display_data=true \
--dataset.repo_id=${HF_USER}/eval_act_your_dataset \
--dataset.num_episodes=10 \
--dataset.single_task="Your task description" \
--policy.path=${HF_USER}/act_policy
```

View File

@@ -31,15 +31,15 @@ Then, spin up a policy server (in one terminal, or in a separate machine) specif
You can spin up a policy server running:
```shell
python -m lerobot.async_inference.policy_server \
--host=127.0.0.1 \
--port=8080
python src/lerobot/scripts/server/policy_server.py \
--host=127.0.0.1 \
--port=8080 \
```
This will start a policy server listening on `127.0.0.1:8080` (`localhost`, port 8080). At this stage, the policy server is empty, as all information related to which policy to run and with which parameters are specified during the first handshake with the client. Spin up a client with:
```shell
python -m lerobot.async_inference.robot_client \
python src/lerobot/scripts/server/robot_client.py \
--server_address=127.0.0.1:8080 \ # SERVER: the host address and port of the policy server
--robot.type=so100_follower \ # ROBOT: your robot type
--robot.port=/dev/tty.usbmodem585A0076841 \ # ROBOT: your robot port
@@ -113,17 +113,17 @@ As such, spinning up a policy server is as easy as specifying the host address a
<hfoptions id="start_policy_server">
<hfoption id="Command">
```bash
python -m lerobot.async_inference.policy_server \
--host=127.0.0.1 \
--port=8080
python -m lerobot.scripts.server.policy_server \
--host="localhost" \
--port=8080
```
</hfoption>
<hfoption id="API example">
<!-- prettier-ignore-start -->
```python
from lerobot.async_inference.configs import PolicyServerConfig
from lerobot.async_inference.policy_server import serve
from lerobot.scripts.server.configs import PolicyServerConfig
from lerobot.scripts.server.policy_server import serve
config = PolicyServerConfig(
host="localhost",
@@ -148,7 +148,7 @@ The `RobotClient` streams observations to the `PolicyServer`, and receives actio
<hfoptions id="start_robot_client">
<hfoption id="Command">
```bash
python -m lerobot.async_inference.robot_client \
python src/lerobot/scripts/server/robot_client.py \
--server_address=127.0.0.1:8080 \ # SERVER: the host address and port of the policy server
--robot.type=so100_follower \ # ROBOT: your robot type
--robot.port=/dev/tty.usbmodem585A0076841 \ # ROBOT: your robot port
@@ -171,9 +171,9 @@ python -m lerobot.async_inference.robot_client \
import threading
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower import SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.cameras.opencv.configuration_opencv import OpenCVCameraConfig
from lerobot.async_inference.configs import RobotClientConfig
from lerobot.async_inference.robot_client import RobotClient
from lerobot.async_inference.helpers import visualize_action_queue_size
from lerobot.scripts.server.configs import RobotClientConfig
from lerobot.scripts.server.robot_client import RobotClient
from lerobot.scripts.server.helpers import visualize_action_queue_size
# 1. Create the robot instance
"""Check out the cameras available in your setup by running `python lerobot/find_cameras.py`"""

View File

@@ -1,418 +0,0 @@
# Environment Processors
Environment processors are a critical layer in LeRobot's data processing architecture that handle **environment-specific** transformations, separate from policy-specific processing. This separation of concerns enables cleaner code, better modularity, and easier experimentation with different environments and policies.
## Why Environment Processors?
When working with different robot environments (LIBERO, MetaWorld, Aloha, etc.), each environment often has unique data formats, coordinate systems, and conventions that need standardization **before** policy processing. Without environment processors, these transformations would be:
1. **Hardcoded in environment code** - Making it difficult to experiment with different state representations
2. **Duplicated across policies** - Each policy would need to handle environment-specific quirks
3. **Mixed with policy logic** - Violating separation of concerns and making debugging harder
Environment processors solve this by providing a **dedicated processing layer** between raw environment observations and policy inputs.
## The Processing Pipeline
Here's how data flows through the complete processing pipeline during evaluation:
```python
# In lerobot_eval.py rollout() function:
# 1. Raw environment observation (numpy arrays, various formats)
raw_observation = env.step(action)
# 2. Convert numpy to torch, normalize images [0,1]
observation = preprocess_observation(raw_observation)
# 3. Add task metadata (for multi-task environments)
observation = add_envs_task(env, observation)
# 4. ENVIRONMENT-SPECIFIC preprocessing (NEW!)
# - Flatten robot states
# - Rotate images to match dataset conventions
# - Handle environment-specific coordinate systems
observation = env_preprocessor(observation)
# 5. POLICY-SPECIFIC preprocessing
# - Normalize with dataset statistics
# - Add batch dimensions
# - Move to GPU
# - Tokenize language instructions
observation = preprocessor(observation)
# 6. Policy inference
action = policy.select_action(observation)
# 7. POLICY-SPECIFIC postprocessing
# - Unnormalize actions
# - Remove batch dimensions
action = postprocessor(action)
# 8. ENVIRONMENT-SPECIFIC postprocessing (NEW!)
# - Convert action formats if needed
# - Apply environment-specific constraints
action_transition = {"action": action}
action_transition = env_postprocessor(action_transition)
action = action_transition["action"]
# 9. Execute in environment
env.step(action)
```
## The Benefits
### 1. **Separation of Concerns**
Environment processors handle transformations specific to the **environment's data format**, while policy processors handle transformations specific to the **model's requirements**.
```python
# ❌ Before: Mixed concerns
class LiberoVLAPolicy:
def preprocess(self, obs):
# Environment-specific: Flatten robot state (shouldn't be in policy!)
state = self._flatten_robot_state(obs["robot_state"])
# Policy-specific: Normalize with dataset stats
state = self.normalizer(state)
return state
# ✅ After: Clear separation
# Environment processor: Handles LIBERO's nested robot state
env_preprocessor = LiberoProcessorStep() # Flattens robot_state
# Policy processor: Handles model requirements
policy_preprocessor = NormalizerProcessorStep(stats=dataset_stats)
```
### 2. **Flexibility and Reusability**
The same policy can work with different environment processors, and the same environment processor can work with different policies:
```python
# Use SmolVLA policy with LIBERO environment
libero_preprocessor, libero_postprocessor = make_env_pre_post_processors(libero_cfg)
smolvla_preprocessor, smolvla_postprocessor = make_pre_post_processors(smolvla_cfg)
# Or use ACT policy with the same LIBERO environment
libero_preprocessor, libero_postprocessor = make_env_pre_post_processors(libero_cfg)
act_preprocessor, act_postprocessor = make_pre_post_processors(act_cfg)
```
### 3. **Easier Experimentation**
Want to try different state representations for LIBERO? Just create a new processor:
```python
# Original: 8D state (pos + quat→axisangle + gripper)
@ProcessorStepRegistry.register("libero_processor")
class LiberoProcessorStep(ObservationProcessorStep):
def _process_observation(self, obs):
eef_pos = robot_state["eef"]["pos"] # 3D
eef_axisangle = quat2axisangle(quat) # 3D
gripper = robot_state["gripper"]["qpos"] # 2D
state = torch.cat([eef_pos, eef_axisangle, gripper], dim=-1) # 8D
return state
# Experiment: Add velocity for better control
@ProcessorStepRegistry.register("libero_velocity_processor")
class LiberoVelocityProcessorStep(ObservationProcessorStep):
def _process_observation(self, obs):
# Include velocities for 14D state
eef_pos = robot_state["eef"]["pos"] # 3D
eef_axisangle = quat2axisangle(quat) # 3D
eef_vel = robot_state["eef"]["vel"] # 3D (NEW)
gripper_pos = robot_state["gripper"]["qpos"] # 2D
gripper_vel = robot_state["gripper"]["qvel"] # 3D (NEW)
state = torch.cat([eef_pos, eef_axisangle, eef_vel,
gripper_pos, gripper_vel], dim=-1) # 14D
return state
```
### 4. **Cleaner Environment Code**
Environments expose **all available data** without needing to know what downstream models will use:
```python
# LIBERO environment exposes full robot state
observation = {
"pixels": {"image": img, "image2": img2},
"robot_state": {
"eef": {"pos": ..., "quat": ..., "vel": ..., "mat": ..., "axisangle": ...},
"gripper": {"qpos": ..., "qvel": ...},
"joints": {"pos": ..., "vel": ...}
}
}
# Environment processor decides what to use
# Policy processor handles model-specific transformations
```
## Using Environment Processors
### Factory Function
The `make_env_pre_post_processors` function follows the same pattern as `make_pre_post_processors` for policies:
```python
from lerobot.envs.factory import make_env_pre_post_processors
from lerobot.envs.configs import LiberoEnv, PushtEnv
# For LIBERO: Returns LiberoProcessorStep in preprocessor
libero_cfg = LiberoEnv(task="libero_spatial", camera_name=["agentview"])
env_preprocessor, env_postprocessor = make_env_pre_post_processors(libero_cfg)
# For other environments: Returns identity processors (no-op)
pusht_cfg = PushtEnv()
env_preprocessor, env_postprocessor = make_env_pre_post_processors(pusht_cfg)
```
### Implementation in `envs/factory.py`
```python
def make_env_pre_post_processors(
env_cfg: EnvConfig,
) -> tuple[
PolicyProcessorPipeline[dict[str, Any], dict[str, Any]],
PolicyProcessorPipeline[dict[str, Any], dict[str, Any]],
]:
"""
Create preprocessor and postprocessor pipelines for environment observations.
Args:
env_cfg: The configuration of the environment.
Returns:
A tuple containing:
- preprocessor: Pipeline that processes environment observations
- postprocessor: Pipeline that processes environment outputs
"""
# For LIBERO environments, add the LiberoProcessorStep to preprocessor
if isinstance(env_cfg, LiberoEnv) or "libero" in env_cfg.type:
preprocessor = PolicyProcessorPipeline(steps=[LiberoProcessorStep()])
else:
# For all other environments, return an identity preprocessor
preprocessor = PolicyProcessorPipeline(steps=[])
# Postprocessor is currently identity for all environments
# Future: Could add environment-specific action transformations
postprocessor = PolicyProcessorPipeline(steps=[])
return preprocessor, postprocessor
```
### Integration in Evaluation
In `lerobot_eval.py`, the environment processors are created once and used throughout:
```python
def eval_main(cfg: EvalPipelineConfig):
# Create environment
envs = make_env(cfg.env, n_envs=cfg.eval.batch_size)
# Create policy
policy = make_policy(cfg=cfg.policy, env_cfg=cfg.env)
# Create policy processors
preprocessor, postprocessor = make_pre_post_processors(
policy_cfg=cfg.policy,
pretrained_path=cfg.policy.pretrained_path,
)
# Create environment processors (NEW!)
env_preprocessor, env_postprocessor = make_env_pre_post_processors(env_cfg=cfg.env)
# Run evaluation with both processor types
eval_policy_all(
envs=envs,
policy=policy,
env_preprocessor=env_preprocessor, # Environment-specific
env_postprocessor=env_postprocessor, # Environment-specific
preprocessor=preprocessor, # Policy-specific
postprocessor=postprocessor, # Policy-specific
n_episodes=cfg.eval.n_episodes,
)
```
## Example: LIBERO Environment Processor
The `LiberoProcessorStep` demonstrates a real-world environment processor:
```python
from lerobot.processor.pipeline import ObservationProcessorStep
@dataclass
@ProcessorStepRegistry.register(name="libero_processor")
class LiberoProcessorStep(ObservationProcessorStep):
"""
Processes LIBERO observations into the LeRobot format.
**State Processing:**
- Extracts end-effector position (3D)
- Converts quaternion to axis-angle representation (3D)
- Extracts gripper joint positions (2D)
- Concatenates into 8D state vector
**Image Processing:**
- Rotates images 180° to match HuggingFaceVLA/libero convention
"""
def _process_observation(self, observation):
processed_obs = observation.copy()
# Process images: Flip 180° for camera convention
for key in list(processed_obs.keys()):
if key.startswith("observation.images."):
img = processed_obs[key]
img = torch.flip(img, dims=[2, 3]) # Flip H and W
processed_obs[key] = img
# Process robot_state: Flatten to 8D vector
if "observation.robot_state" in processed_obs:
robot_state = processed_obs.pop("observation.robot_state")
eef_pos = robot_state["eef"]["pos"] # (B, 3)
eef_quat = robot_state["eef"]["quat"] # (B, 4)
gripper_qpos = robot_state["gripper"]["qpos"] # (B, 2)
# Convert quaternion to axis-angle
eef_axisangle = self._quat2axisangle(eef_quat) # (B, 3)
# Concatenate into single state vector
state = torch.cat((eef_pos, eef_axisangle, gripper_qpos), dim=-1)
state = state.float()
processed_obs["observation.state"] = state
return processed_obs
```
### Why These Transformations?
1. **Image Rotation**: The HuggingFaceVLA/libero dataset has images rotated 180° from the raw LIBERO simulator. The processor handles this convention mismatch so policies trained on the dataset work seamlessly.
2. **State Flattening**: The raw LIBERO environment exposes nested dictionaries with all available state information (position, quaternion, velocity, matrix representation, etc.). The processor:
- Selects the relevant components (pos, quat, gripper)
- Converts quaternion to axis-angle (more suitable for learning)
- Flattens to a single 8D vector that policies expect
3. **Flexibility**: The environment still exposes **all** raw data. If you want to try different state representations (e.g., including velocities, using matrix representation instead of axis-angle), you can create a new processor without modifying the environment code.
## Adding Environment Processors for New Environments
To add environment processors for a new environment:
### 1. Create the Processor Step
```python
# In src/lerobot/processor/env_processor.py
@dataclass
@ProcessorStepRegistry.register(name="myenv_processor")
class MyEnvProcessorStep(ObservationProcessorStep):
"""Process observations from MyEnv."""
def _process_observation(self, observation):
processed = observation.copy()
# Your environment-specific transformations
if "myenv.specific.state" in processed:
state = processed.pop("myenv.specific.state")
# Transform to standard format
processed["observation.state"] = self._transform_state(state)
return processed
```
### 2. Update the Factory
```python
# In src/lerobot/envs/factory.py
def make_env_pre_post_processors(env_cfg: EnvConfig):
if isinstance(env_cfg, LiberoEnv) or "libero" in env_cfg.type:
preprocessor = PolicyProcessorPipeline(steps=[LiberoProcessorStep()])
elif isinstance(env_cfg, MyEnvConfig) or "myenv" in env_cfg.type:
preprocessor = PolicyProcessorPipeline(steps=[MyEnvProcessorStep()])
else:
preprocessor = PolicyProcessorPipeline(steps=[])
postprocessor = PolicyProcessorPipeline(steps=[])
return preprocessor, postprocessor
```
### 3. Use in Evaluation
No changes needed! The evaluation script automatically uses the appropriate processor:
```bash
lerobot-eval \
--policy.path=lerobot/my_policy \
--env.type=myenv \ # Automatically uses MyEnvProcessorStep
--eval.n_episodes=10
```
## Future: Environment Postprocessors
Currently, postprocessors are identity (no-op) for all environments. Future use cases include:
### Action Space Transformations
```python
@dataclass
class MyEnvActionPostprocessor(ProcessorStep):
"""Convert policy actions to environment-specific format."""
def __call__(self, transition: EnvTransition) -> EnvTransition:
action = transition["action"]
# Example: Convert from Cartesian to joint space
if self.action_space == "joint":
action = self.ik_solver(action)
# Example: Apply environment-specific safety limits
action = torch.clamp(action, self.min_action, self.max_action)
transition["action"] = action
return transition
```
### Coordinate System Conversions
```python
@dataclass
class CoordinateTransformPostprocessor(ProcessorStep):
"""Transform actions between coordinate systems."""
def __call__(self, transition: EnvTransition) -> EnvTransition:
action = transition["action"]
# Example: Policy outputs in world frame, env expects base frame
action = self.world_to_base_transform(action)
transition["action"] = action
return transition
```
## Best Practices
1. **Keep environment processors simple**: They should only handle environment-specific data format issues, not complex learning-related transformations.
2. **Use policy processors for model requirements**: Normalization, batching, device placement, and tokenization belong in policy processors.
3. **Expose all data from environments**: Let processors decide what to use rather than hardcoding choices in the environment.
4. **Document conventions**: Clearly document any coordinate system conventions, camera orientations, or data formats that your processor handles.
5. **Test independently**: Environment processors should be testable without loading full policies or environments.
## Summary
Environment processors provide a **clean separation** between environment-specific data transformations and policy-specific model requirements. This architecture:
- ✅ Enables easy experimentation with different state representations
- ✅ Allows policies to work seamlessly across different environments
- ✅ Keeps environment code focused on simulation/hardware interface
- ✅ Makes processor pipelines more maintainable and debuggable
- ✅ Follows the single responsibility principle
The key insight: **Environments define data formats, processors standardize them, policies consume standardized data.** Each layer has a clear, focused responsibility.

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@@ -1,424 +0,0 @@
# Loading Environments from the Hub
The **EnvHub** feature allows you to load simulation environments directly from the Hugging Face Hub with a single line of code. This unlocks a powerful new model for collaboration: instead of environments being locked away inside monolithic libraries, anyone can publish custom environments and share them with the community.
## Overview
With EnvHub, you can:
- Load environments from the Hub instantly
- Share your custom simulation tasks with the community
- Version control your environments using Git
- Distribute complex physics simulations without packaging hassles
## Quick Start
Loading an environment from the Hub is as simple as:
```python
from lerobot.envs.factory import make_env
# Load a hub environment (requires explicit consent to run remote code)
env = make_env("lerobot/cartpole-env", trust_remote_code=True)
```
<Tip warning={true}>
**Security Notice**: Loading environments from the Hub executes Python code
from third-party repositories. Only use `trust_remote_code=True` with
repositories you trust. We strongly recommend pinning to a specific commit
hash for reproducibility and security.
</Tip>
## What is EnvHub?
EnvHub is a framework that allows researchers and developers to:
1. **Publish environments** to the Hugging Face Hub as Git repositories
2. **Load environments** dynamically without installing them as packages
3. **Version and track** environment changes using Git semantics
4. **Discover** new simulation tasks shared by the community
This design means you can go from discovering an interesting environment on the Hub to running experiments in seconds, without worrying about dependency conflicts or complex installation procedures.
## Repository Structure
To make your environment loadable from the Hub, your repository must contain at minimum:
### Required Files
**`env.py`** (or custom Python file)
- Must expose a `make_env(n_envs: int, use_async_envs: bool)` function
- This function should return one of:
- A `gym.vector.VectorEnv` (most common)
- A single `gym.Env` (will be automatically wrapped)
- A dict mapping `{suite_name: {task_id: VectorEnv}}` (for multi-task benchmarks)
### Optional Files
**`requirements.txt`**
- List any additional dependencies your environment needs
- Users will need to install these manually before loading your environment
**`README.md`**
- Document your environment: what task it implements, observation/action spaces, rewards, etc.
- Include usage examples and any special setup instructions
**`.gitignore`**
- Exclude unnecessary files from your repository
### Example Repository Structure
```
my-environment-repo/
├── env.py # Main environment definition (required)
├── requirements.txt # Dependencies (optional)
├── README.md # Documentation (recommended)
├── assets/ # Images, videos, etc. (optional)
│ └── demo.gif
└── configs/ # Config files if needed (optional)
└── task_config.yaml
```
## Creating Your Environment Repository
### Step 1: Define Your Environment
Create an `env.py` file with a `make_env` function:
```python
# env.py
import gymnasium as gym
def make_env(n_envs: int = 1, use_async_envs: bool = False):
"""
Create vectorized environments for your custom task.
Args:
n_envs: Number of parallel environments
use_async_envs: Whether to use AsyncVectorEnv or SyncVectorEnv
Returns:
gym.vector.VectorEnv or dict mapping suite names to vectorized envs
"""
def _make_single_env():
# Create your custom environment
return gym.make("CartPole-v1")
# Choose vector environment type
env_cls = gym.vector.AsyncVectorEnv if use_async_envs else gym.vector.SyncVectorEnv
# Create vectorized environment
vec_env = env_cls([_make_single_env for _ in range(n_envs)])
return vec_env
```
### Step 2: Test Locally
Before uploading, test your environment locally:
```python
from lerobot.envs.utils import _load_module_from_path, _call_make_env, _normalize_hub_result
# Load your module
module = _load_module_from_path("./env.py")
# Test the make_env function
result = _call_make_env(module, n_envs=2, use_async_envs=False)
normalized = _normalize_hub_result(result)
# Verify it works
suite_name = next(iter(normalized))
env = normalized[suite_name][0]
obs, info = env.reset()
print(f"Observation shape: {obs.shape if hasattr(obs, 'shape') else type(obs)}")
env.close()
```
### Step 3: Upload to the Hub
Upload your repository to Hugging Face:
```bash
# Install huggingface_hub if needed
pip install huggingface_hub
# Login to Hugging Face
huggingface-cli login
# Create a new repository
huggingface-cli repo create my-custom-env --type space --org my-org
# Initialize git and push
git init
git add .
git commit -m "Initial environment implementation"
git remote add origin https://huggingface.co/my-org/my-custom-env
git push -u origin main
```
Alternatively, use the `huggingface_hub` Python API:
```python
from huggingface_hub import HfApi
api = HfApi()
# Create repository
api.create_repo("my-custom-env", repo_type="space")
# Upload files
api.upload_folder(
folder_path="./my-env-folder",
repo_id="username/my-custom-env",
repo_type="space",
)
```
## Loading Environments from the Hub
### Basic Usage
```python
from lerobot.envs.factory import make_env
# Load from the hub
envs_dict = make_env(
"username/my-custom-env",
n_envs=4,
trust_remote_code=True
)
# Access the environment
suite_name = next(iter(envs_dict))
env = envs_dict[suite_name][0]
# Use it like any gym environment
obs, info = env.reset()
action = env.action_space.sample()
obs, reward, terminated, truncated, info = env.step(action)
```
### Advanced: Pinning to Specific Versions
For reproducibility and security, pin to a specific Git revision:
```python
# Pin to a specific branch
env = make_env("username/my-env@main", trust_remote_code=True)
# Pin to a specific commit (recommended for papers/experiments)
env = make_env("username/my-env@abc123def456", trust_remote_code=True)
# Pin to a tag
env = make_env("username/my-env@v1.0.0", trust_remote_code=True)
```
### Custom File Paths
If your environment definition is not in `env.py`:
```python
# Load from a custom file
env = make_env("username/my-env:custom_env.py", trust_remote_code=True)
# Combine with version pinning
env = make_env("username/my-env@v1.0:envs/task_a.py", trust_remote_code=True)
```
### Async Environments
For better performance with multiple environments:
```python
envs_dict = make_env(
"username/my-env",
n_envs=8,
use_async_envs=True, # Use AsyncVectorEnv for parallel execution
trust_remote_code=True
)
```
## URL Format Reference
The hub URL format supports several patterns:
| Pattern | Description | Example |
| -------------------- | ------------------------------ | -------------------------------------- |
| `user/repo` | Load `env.py` from main branch | `make_env("lerobot/pusht-env")` |
| `user/repo@revision` | Load from specific revision | `make_env("lerobot/pusht-env@main")` |
| `user/repo:path` | Load custom file | `make_env("lerobot/envs:pusht.py")` |
| `user/repo@rev:path` | Revision + custom file | `make_env("lerobot/envs@v1:pusht.py")` |
## Multi-Task Environments
For benchmarks with multiple tasks (like LIBERO), return a nested dictionary:
```python
def make_env(n_envs: int = 1, use_async_envs: bool = False):
env_cls = gym.vector.AsyncVectorEnv if use_async_envs else gym.vector.SyncVectorEnv
# Return dict: {suite_name: {task_id: VectorEnv}}
return {
"suite_1": {
0: env_cls([lambda: gym.make("Task1-v0") for _ in range(n_envs)]),
1: env_cls([lambda: gym.make("Task2-v0") for _ in range(n_envs)]),
},
"suite_2": {
0: env_cls([lambda: gym.make("Task3-v0") for _ in range(n_envs)]),
}
}
```
## Security Considerations
<Tip warning={true}>
**Important**: The `trust_remote_code=True` flag is required to execute
environment code from the Hub. This is by design for security.
</Tip>
When loading environments from the Hub:
1. **Review the code first**: Visit the repository and inspect `env.py` before loading
2. **Pin to commits**: Use specific commit hashes for reproducibility
3. **Check dependencies**: Review `requirements.txt` for suspicious packages
4. **Use trusted sources**: Prefer official organizations or well-known researchers
5. **Sandbox if needed**: Run untrusted code in isolated environments (containers, VMs)
Example of safe usage:
```python
# ❌ BAD: Loading without inspection
env = make_env("random-user/untrusted-env", trust_remote_code=True)
# ✅ GOOD: Review code, then pin to specific commit
# 1. Visit https://huggingface.co/trusted-org/verified-env
# 2. Review the env.py file
# 3. Copy the commit hash
env = make_env("trusted-org/verified-env@a1b2c3d4", trust_remote_code=True)
```
## Example: CartPole from the Hub
Here's a complete example using the reference CartPole environment:
```python
from lerobot.envs.factory import make_env
import numpy as np
# Load the environment
envs_dict = make_env("lerobot/cartpole-env", n_envs=4, trust_remote_code=True)
# Get the vectorized environment
suite_name = next(iter(envs_dict))
env = envs_dict[suite_name][0]
# Run a simple episode
obs, info = env.reset()
done = np.zeros(env.num_envs, dtype=bool)
total_reward = np.zeros(env.num_envs)
while not done.all():
# Random policy
action = env.action_space.sample()
obs, reward, terminated, truncated, info = env.step(action)
total_reward += reward
done = terminated | truncated
print(f"Average reward: {total_reward.mean():.2f}")
env.close()
```
## Benefits of EnvHub
### For Environment Authors
- **Easy distribution**: No PyPI packaging required
- **Version control**: Use Git for environment versioning
- **Rapid iteration**: Push updates instantly
- **Documentation**: Hub README renders beautifully
- **Community**: Reach LeRobot users directly
### For Researchers
- **Quick experiments**: Load any environment in one line
- **Reproducibility**: Pin to specific commits
- **Discovery**: Browse environments on the Hub
- **No conflicts**: No need to install conflicting packages
### For the Community
- **Growing ecosystem**: More diverse simulation tasks
- **Standardization**: Common `make_env` API
- **Collaboration**: Fork and improve existing environments
- **Accessibility**: Lower barrier to sharing research
## Troubleshooting
### "Refusing to execute remote code"
You must explicitly pass `trust_remote_code=True`:
```python
env = make_env("user/repo", trust_remote_code=True)
```
### "Module X not found"
The hub environment has dependencies you need to install:
```bash
# Check the repo's requirements.txt and install dependencies
pip install gymnasium numpy
```
### "make_env not found in module"
Your `env.py` must expose a `make_env` function:
```python
def make_env(n_envs: int, use_async_envs: bool):
# Your implementation
pass
```
### Environment returns wrong type
The `make_env` function must return:
- A `gym.vector.VectorEnv`, or
- A single `gym.Env`, or
- A dict `{suite_name: {task_id: VectorEnv}}`
## Best Practices
1. **Document your environment**: Include observation/action space descriptions, reward structure, and termination conditions in your README
2. **Add requirements.txt**: List all dependencies with versions
3. **Test thoroughly**: Verify your environment works locally before pushing
4. **Use semantic versioning**: Tag releases with version numbers
5. **Add examples**: Include usage examples in your README
6. **Keep it simple**: Minimize dependencies when possible
7. **License your work**: Add a LICENSE file to clarify usage terms
## Future Directions
The EnvHub ecosystem enables exciting possibilities:
- **GPU-accelerated physics**: Share Isaac Gym or Brax environments
- **Photorealistic rendering**: Distribute environments with advanced graphics
- **Multi-agent scenarios**: Complex interaction tasks
- **Real-world simulators**: Digital twins of physical setups
- **Procedural generation**: Infinite task variations
- **Domain randomization**: Pre-configured DR pipelines
As more researchers and developers contribute, the diversity and quality of available environments will grow, benefiting the entire robotics learning community.
## See Also
- [Hugging Face Hub Documentation](https://huggingface.co/docs/hub/en/index)
- [Gymnasium Documentation](https://gymnasium.farama.org/index.html)
- [Example Hub Environment](https://huggingface.co/lerobot/cartpole-env)

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@@ -1,125 +0,0 @@
# GR00T N1.5 Policy
GR00T N1.5 is an open foundation model from NVIDIA designed for generalized humanoid robot reasoning and skills. It is a cross-embodiment model that accepts multimodal input, including language and images, to perform manipulation tasks in diverse environments.
This document outlines the specifics of its integration and usage within the LeRobot framework.
## Model Overview
NVIDIA Isaac GR00T N1.5 is an upgraded version of the GR00T N1 foundation model. It is built to improve generalization and language-following abilities for humanoid robots.
Developers and researchers can post-train GR00T N1.5 with their own real or synthetic data to adapt it for specific humanoid robots or tasks.
GR00T N1.5 (specifically the GR00T-N1.5-3B model) is built using pre-trained vision and language encoders. It utilizes a flow matching action transformer to model a chunk of actions, conditioned on vision, language, and proprioception.
Its strong performance comes from being trained on an expansive and diverse humanoid dataset, which includes:
- Real captured data from robots.
- Synthetic data generated using NVIDIA Isaac GR00T Blueprint.
- Internet-scale video data.
This approach allows the model to be highly adaptable through post-training for specific embodiments, tasks, and environments.
## Installation Requirements
As of today, GR00T N1.5 requires flash attention for it's internal working.
We are working on making this optional, but in the meantime that means that we require an extra installation step and it can only be used in CUDA enabled devices.
1. Following the Environment Setup of our [Installation Guide](./installation). **Attention** don't install `lerobot` in this step.
2. Install [Flash Attention](https://github.com/Dao-AILab/flash-attention) by running:
```bash
# Check https://pytorch.org/get-started/locally/ for your system
pip install "torch>=2.2.1,<2.8.0" "torchvision>=0.21.0,<0.23.0" # --index-url https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cu1XX
pip install ninja "packaging>=24.2,<26.0" # flash attention dependencies
pip install "flash-attn>=2.5.9,<3.0.0" --no-build-isolation
python -c "import flash_attn; print(f'Flash Attention {flash_attn.__version__} imported successfully')"
```
3. Install LeRobot by running:
```bash
pip install lerobot[groot]
```
## Usage
To use GR00T in your LeRobot configuration, specify the policy type as:
```python
policy.type=groot
```
## Training
### Training Command Example
Here's a complete training command for finetuning the base GR00T model on your own dataset:
```bash
# Using a multi-GPU setup
accelerate launch \
--multi_gpu \
--num_processes=$NUM_GPUS \
$(which lerobot-train) \
--output_dir=$OUTPUT_DIR \
--save_checkpoint=true \
--batch_size=$BATCH_SIZE \
--steps=$NUM_STEPS \
--save_freq=$SAVE_FREQ \
--log_freq=$LOG_FREQ \
--policy.push_to_hub=true \
--policy.type=groot \
--policy.repo_id=$REPO_ID \
--policy.tune_diffusion_model=false \
--dataset.repo_id=$DATASET_ID \
--wandb.enable=true \
--wandb.disable_artifact=true \
--job_name=$JOB_NAME
```
## Performance Results
### Libero Benchmark Results
> [!NOTE]
> Follow our instructions for Libero usage: [Libero](./libero)
GR00T has demonstrated strong performance on the Libero benchmark suite. To compare and test its LeRobot implementation, we finetuned the GR00T N1.5 model for 30k steps on the Libero dataset and compared the results to the GR00T reference results.
| Benchmark | LeRobot Implementation | GR00T Reference |
| ------------------ | ---------------------- | --------------- |
| **Libero Spatial** | 82.0% | 92.0% |
| **Libero Object** | 99.0% | 92.0% |
| **Libero Long** | 82.0% | 76.0% |
| **Average** | 87.0% | 87.0% |
These results demonstrate GR00T's strong generalization capabilities across diverse robotic manipulation tasks. To reproduce these results, you can follow the instructions in the [Libero](https://huggingface.co/docs/lerobot/libero) section.
### Evaluate in your hardware setup
Once you have trained your model using your parameters you can run inference in your downstream task. Follow the instructions in [Imitation Learning for Robots](./il_robots). For example:
```bash
lerobot-record \
--robot.type=bi_so100_follower \
--robot.left_arm_port=/dev/ttyACM1 \
--robot.right_arm_port=/dev/ttyACM0 \
--robot.id=bimanual_follower \
--robot.cameras='{ right: {"type": "opencv", "index_or_path": 0, "width": 640, "height": 480, "fps": 30},
left: {"type": "opencv", "index_or_path": 2, "width": 640, "height": 480, "fps": 30},
top: {"type": "opencv", "index_or_path": 4, "width": 640, "height": 480, "fps": 30},
}' \
--display_data=true \
--dataset.repo_id=<user>/eval_groot-bimanual \
--dataset.num_episodes=10 \
--dataset.single_task="Grab and handover the red cube to the other arm"
--policy.path=<user>/groot-bimanual # your trained model
--dataset.episode_time_s=30
--dataset.reset_time_s=10
```
## License
This model follows the **Apache 2.0 License**, consistent with the original [GR00T repository](https://github.com/NVIDIA/Isaac-GR00T).

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@@ -95,6 +95,7 @@ class HILSerlProcessorConfig:
class ObservationConfig:
add_joint_velocity_to_observation: bool = False # Add joint velocities to state
add_current_to_observation: bool = False # Add motor currents to state
add_ee_pose_to_observation: bool = False # Add end-effector pose to state
display_cameras: bool = False # Display camera feeds during execution
class ImagePreprocessingConfig:
@@ -104,6 +105,7 @@ class ImagePreprocessingConfig:
class GripperConfig:
use_gripper: bool = True # Enable gripper control
gripper_penalty: float = 0.0 # Penalty for inappropriate gripper usage
gripper_penalty_in_reward: bool = False # Include gripper penalty in reward
class ResetConfig:
fixed_reset_joint_positions: Any | None = None # Joint positions for reset
@@ -286,6 +288,7 @@ You can enable multiple observation processing features simultaneously:
"observation": {
"add_joint_velocity_to_observation": true,
"add_current_to_observation": true,
"add_ee_pose_to_observation": false,
"display_cameras": false
}
}
@@ -301,19 +304,19 @@ Before collecting demonstrations, you need to determine the appropriate operatio
This helps simplify the problem of learning on the real robot in two ways: 1) by limiting the robot's operational space to a specific region that solves the task and avoids unnecessary or unsafe exploration, and 2) by allowing training in end-effector space rather than joint space. Empirically, learning in joint space for reinforcement learning in manipulation is often a harder problem - some tasks are nearly impossible to learn in joint space but become learnable when the action space is transformed to end-effector coordinates.
**Using lerobot-find-joint-limits**
**Using find_joint_limits.py**
This script helps you find the safe operational bounds for your robot's end-effector. Given that you have a follower and leader arm, you can use the script to find the bounds for the follower arm that will be applied during training.
Bounding the action space will reduce the redundant exploration of the agent and guarantees safety.
```bash
lerobot-find-joint-limits \
--robot.type=so100_follower \
--robot.port=/dev/tty.usbmodem58760431541 \
--robot.id=black \
--teleop.type=so100_leader \
--teleop.port=/dev/tty.usbmodem58760431551 \
--teleop.id=blue
python -m lerobot.scripts.find_joint_limits \
--robot.type=so100_follower \
--robot.port=/dev/tty.usbmodem58760431541 \
--robot.id=black \
--teleop.type=so100_leader \
--teleop.port=/dev/tty.usbmodem58760431551 \
--teleop.id=blue
```
**Workflow**

View File

@@ -165,7 +165,7 @@ huggingface-cli login --token ${HUGGINGFACE_TOKEN} --add-to-git-credential
Then store your Hugging Face repository name in a variable:
```bash
HF_USER=$(hf auth whoami | head -n 1)
HF_USER=$(huggingface-cli whoami | head -n 1)
echo $HF_USER
```
@@ -200,7 +200,7 @@ from lerobot.teleoperators.so100_leader.config_so100_leader import SO100LeaderCo
from lerobot.teleoperators.so100_leader.so100_leader import SO100Leader
from lerobot.utils.control_utils import init_keyboard_listener
from lerobot.utils.utils import log_say
from lerobot.utils.visualization_utils import init_rerun
from lerobot.utils.visualization_utils import _init_rerun
from lerobot.record import record_loop
NUM_EPISODES = 5
@@ -237,7 +237,7 @@ dataset = LeRobotDataset.create(
# Initialize the keyboard listener and rerun visualization
_, events = init_keyboard_listener()
init_rerun(session_name="recording")
_init_rerun(session_name="recording")
# Connect the robot and teleoperator
robot.connect()
@@ -513,14 +513,13 @@ from lerobot.cameras.opencv.configuration_opencv import OpenCVCameraConfig
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset
from lerobot.datasets.utils import hw_to_dataset_features
from lerobot.policies.act.modeling_act import ACTPolicy
from lerobot.policies.factory import make_pre_post_processors
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.config_so100_follower import SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.so100_follower import SO100Follower
from lerobot.scripts.lerobot_record import record_loop
from lerobot.utils.control_utils import init_keyboard_listener
from lerobot.utils.utils import log_say
from lerobot.utils.visualization_utils import init_rerun
from lerobot.utils.visualization_utils import _init_rerun
from lerobot.record import record_loop
from lerobot.policies.factory import make_processor
NUM_EPISODES = 5
FPS = 30
@@ -558,12 +557,12 @@ dataset = LeRobotDataset.create(
# Initialize the keyboard listener and rerun visualization
_, events = init_keyboard_listener()
init_rerun(session_name="recording")
_init_rerun(session_name="recording")
# Connect the robot
robot.connect()
preprocessor, postprocessor = make_pre_post_processors(
preprocessor, postprocessor = make_processor(
policy_cfg=policy,
pretrained_path=HF_MODEL_ID,
dataset_stats=dataset.meta.stats,

View File

@@ -1,15 +1,8 @@
# Installation
## Install [`miniforge`](https://conda-forge.org/download/)
```bash
wget "https://github.com/conda-forge/miniforge/releases/latest/download/Miniforge3-$(uname)-$(uname -m).sh"
bash Miniforge3-$(uname)-$(uname -m).sh
```
## Environment Setup
Create a virtual environment with Python 3.10, using conda:
Create a virtual environment with Python 3.10, using [`Miniconda`](https://docs.anaconda.com/miniconda/install/#quick-command-line-install)
```bash
conda create -y -n lerobot python=3.10
@@ -21,7 +14,7 @@ Then activate your conda environment, you have to do this each time you open a s
conda activate lerobot
```
When using `conda`, install `ffmpeg` in your environment:
When using `miniconda`, install `ffmpeg` in your environment:
```bash
conda install ffmpeg -c conda-forge
@@ -81,9 +74,6 @@ _Replace `[...]` with your desired features._
For a full list of optional dependencies, see:
https://pypi.org/project/lerobot/
> [!NOTE]
> For lerobot 0.4.0, if you want to install pi, you will have to do: `pip install "lerobot[pi]@git+https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot.git"`
### Troubleshooting
If you encounter build errors, you may need to install additional dependencies: `cmake`, `build-essential`, and `ffmpeg libs`.
@@ -101,7 +91,7 @@ LeRobot provides optional extras for specific functionalities. Multiple extras c
### Simulations
Install environment packages: `aloha` ([gym-aloha](https://github.com/huggingface/gym-aloha)), or `pusht` ([gym-pusht](https://github.com/huggingface/gym-pusht))
Install environment packages: `aloha` ([gym-aloha](https://github.com/huggingface/gym-aloha)), `xarm` ([gym-xarm](https://github.com/huggingface/gym-xarm)), or `pusht` ([gym-pusht](https://github.com/huggingface/gym-pusht))
Example:
```bash

View File

@@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ To that end, we provide the [`Robot`](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blo
- Your own robot which exposes a communication interface (e.g. serial, CAN, TCP)
- A way to read sensor data and send motor commands programmatically, e.g. manufacturer's SDK or API, or your own protocol implementation.
- LeRobot installed in your environment. Follow our [Installation Guide](./installation).
- LeRobot installed in your environment. Follow our [Installation Guide](./installation.mdx).
## Choose your motors
@@ -65,7 +65,7 @@ class MyCoolRobotConfig(RobotConfig):
```
<!-- prettier-ignore-end -->
[Cameras tutorial](./cameras) to understand how to detect and add your camera.
[Cameras tutorial](./cameras.mdx) to understand how to detect and add your camera.
Next, we'll create our actual robot class which inherits from `Robot`. This abstract class defines a contract you must follow for your robot to be usable with the rest of the LeRobot tools.
@@ -208,36 +208,34 @@ LeRobot supports saving and loading calibration data automatically. This is usef
<!-- prettier-ignore-start -->
```python
@property
def is_calibrated(self) -> bool:
return True
def calibrate(self) -> None:
pass
```
<!-- prettier-ignore-end -->
> @property
> def is_calibrated(self) -> bool:
> return True
>
> def calibrate(self) -> None:
> pass
> ```
### `is_calibrated`
This should reflect whether your robot has the required calibration loaded.
<!-- prettier-ignore-start -->
```python
```
<!-- prettier-ignore-end -->python
@property
def is_calibrated(self) -> bool:
return self.bus.is_calibrated
```
<!-- prettier-ignore-end -->
### `calibrate()`
The goal of the calibration is twofold:
- Know the physical range of motion of each motors in order to only send commands within this range.
- Normalize raw motors positions to sensible continuous values (e.g. percentages, degrees) instead of arbitrary discrete value dependant on the specific motor used that will not replicate elsewhere.
- Know the physical range of motion of each motors in order to only send commands within this range.
- Normalize raw motors positions to sensible continuous values (e.g. percentages, degrees) instead of arbitrary discrete value dependant on the specific motor used that will not replicate elsewhere.
It should implement the logic for calibration (if relevant) and update the `self.calibration` dictionary. If you are using Feetech or Dynamixel motors, our bus interfaces already include methods to help with this.
<!-- prettier-ignore-start -->
```python
def calibrate(self) -> None:
@@ -337,134 +335,6 @@ For implementing teleoperation devices, we also provide a [`Teleoperator`](https
The main differences are in the I/O functions: a teleoperator allows you to produce action via `get_action` and can receive feedback actions via `send_feedback`. Feedback could be anything controllable on the teleoperation device that could help the person controlling it understand the consequences of the actions sent. Think motion/force feedback on a leader arm, vibrations on a gamepad controller for example. To implement a teleoperator, you can follow this same tutorial and adapt it for these two methods.
## Using Your Own `LeRobot` Devices 🔌
You can easily extend `lerobot` with your own custom hardware—be it a camera, robot, or teleoperation device—by creating a separate, installable Python package. If you follow a few simple conventions, the `lerobot` command-line tools (like `lerobot-teleop` and `lerobot-record`) will **automatically discover and integrate your creations** without requiring any changes to the `lerobot` source code.
This guide outlines the conventions your plugin must follow.
### The 4 Core Conventions
To ensure your custom device is discoverable, you must adhere to the following four rules.
#### 1\. Create an Installable Package with a Specific Prefix
Your project must be a standard, installable Python package. Crucially, the name of your package (as defined in `pyproject.toml` or `setup.py`) must begin with one of these prefixes:
- `lerobot_robot_` for a robot.
- `lerobot_camera_` for a camera.
- `lerobot_teleoperator_` for a teleoperation device.
This prefix system is how `lerobot` automatically finds your plugin in the Python environment.
#### 2\. Follow the `SomethingConfig`/`Something` Naming Pattern
Your device's implementation class must be named after its configuration class, simply by removing the `Config` suffix.
- **Config Class:** `MyAwesomeTeleopConfig`
- **Device Class:** `MyAwesomeTeleop`
#### 3\. Place Your Files in a Predictable Structure
The device class (`MyAwesomeTeleop`) must be located in a predictable module relative to its configuration class (`MyAwesomeTeleopConfig`). `lerobot` will automatically search in these locations:
- In the **same module** as the config class.
- In a **submodule named after the device** (e.g., `my_awesome_teleop.py`).
The recommended and simplest structure is to place them in separate, clearly named files within the same directory.
#### 4\. Expose Classes in `__init__.py`
Your package's `__init__.py` file should import and expose both the configuration and the device classes, making them easily accessible.
### Putting It All Together: A Complete Example
Let's create a new teleoperator called `my_awesome_teleop`.
#### Directory Structure
Here is what the project folder should look like. The package name, `lerobot_teleoperator_my_awesome_teleop`, follows **Convention \#1**.
```
lerobot_teleoperator_my_awesome_teleop/
├── pyproject.toml # (or setup.py) lists lerobot as a dependency
└── lerobot_teleoperator_my_awesome_teleop/
├── __init__.py
├── config_my_awesome_teleop.py
└── my_awesome_teleop.py
```
#### File Contents
- **`config_my_awesome_teleop.py`**: Defines the configuration class. Note the `Config` suffix (**Convention \#2**).
```python
from dataclasses import dataclass
from lerobot.teleoperators.config import TeleoperatorConfig
@TeleoperatorConfig.register_subclass("my_awesome_teleop")
@dataclass
class MyAwesomeTeleopConfig(TeleoperatorConfig):
# Your configuration fields go here
port: str = "192.168.1.1"
```
- **`my_awesome_teleop.py`**: Implements the device. The class name `MyAwesomeTeleop` matches its config class name (**Convention \#2**). This file structure adheres to **Convention \#3**.
```python
from lerobot.teleoperators.teleoperator import Teleoperator
from .config_my_awesome_teleop import MyAwesomeTeleopConfig
class MyAwesomeTeleop(Teleoperator):
config_class = MyAwesomeTeleopConfig
name = "my_awesome_teleop"
def __init__(self, config: MyAwesomeTeleopConfig):
super().__init__(config)
self.config = config
# Your device logic (e.g., connect) goes here
```
- **`__init__.py`**: Exposes the key classes (**Convention \#4**).
```python
from .config_my_awesome_teleop import MyAwesomeTeleopConfig
from .my_awesome_teleop import MyAwesomeTeleop
```
### Installation and Usage
1. **Install your new plugin in your Python environment.** You can install your local plugin package using `pip`'s editable mode or from PyPi.
```bash
# Locally
# Navigate to your plugin's root directory and install it
cd lerobot_teleoperator_my_awesome_teleop
pip install -e .
# From PyPi
pip install lerobot_teleoperator_my_awesome_teleop
```
2. **Use it directly from the command line.** Now, you can use your custom device by referencing its type.
```bash
lerobot-teleoperate --teleop.type=my_awesome_teleop \
# other arguments
```
And that's it\! Your custom device is now fully integrated.
### Looking for an example ?
Check out these two packages from the community:
- https://github.com/SpesRobotics/lerobot-robot-xarm
- https://github.com/SpesRobotics/lerobot-teleoperator-teleop
## Wrapping Up
Once your robot class is complete, you can leverage the LeRobot ecosystem:

View File

@@ -297,9 +297,9 @@ LeRobot provides many registered processor steps. Here are the most commonly use
### Next Steps
- **[Implement Your Own Processor](./implement_your_own_processor)** - Create custom processor steps
- **[Debug Your Pipeline](./debug_processor_pipeline)** - Troubleshoot and optimize pipelines
- **[Processors for Robots and Teleoperators](./processors_robots_teleop)** - Real-world integration patterns
- **[Implement Your Own Processor](implement_your_own_processor.mdx)** - Create custom processor steps
- **[Debug Your Pipeline](debug_processor_pipeline.mdx)** - Troubleshoot and optimize pipelines
- **[Processors for Robots and Teleoperators](processors_robots_teleop.mdx)** - Real-world integration patterns
## Summary

View File

@@ -277,7 +277,7 @@ leader.disconnect()
</hfoption>
</hfoptions>
Congrats 🎉, your robot is all set to learn a task on its own. Start training it by following this tutorial: [Getting started with real-world robots](./il_robots)
Congrats 🎉, your robot is all set to learn a task on its own. Start training it by following this tutorial: [Getting started with real-world robots](./getting_started_real_world_robot)
> [!TIP]
> If you have any questions or need help, please reach out on [Discord](https://discord.com/invite/s3KuuzsPFb).

View File

@@ -323,7 +323,7 @@ To replay an episode run the API example below, make sure to change `remote_ip`,
python examples/lekiwi/replay.py
```
Congrats 🎉, your robot is all set to learn a task on its own. Start training it by the training part of this tutorial: [Getting started with real-world robots](./il_robots)
Congrats 🎉, your robot is all set to learn a task on its own. Start training it by the training part of this tutorial: [Getting started with real-world robots](./getting_started_real_world_robot)
## Evaluate your policy

View File

@@ -279,36 +279,3 @@ python -m lerobot.datasets.v30.convert_dataset_v21_to_v30 --repo-id=<HF_USER/DAT
- Aggregates parquet files: `episode-0000.parquet`, `episode-0001.parquet`, … → **`file-0000.parquet`**, …
- Aggregates mp4 files: `episode-0000.mp4`, `episode-0001.mp4`, … → **`file-0000.mp4`**, …
- Updates `meta/episodes/*` (chunked Parquet) with perepisode lengths, tasks, and byte/frame offsets.
## Common Issues
### Always call `finalize()` before pushing
When creating or recording datasets, you **must** call `dataset.finalize()` to properly close parquet writers. See the [PR #1903](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/pull/1903) for more details.
```python
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset
# Create dataset and record episodes
dataset = LeRobotDataset.create(...)
for episode in range(num_episodes):
# Record frames
for frame in episode_data:
dataset.add_frame(frame)
dataset.save_episode()
# Call finalize() when done recording and before push_to_hub()
dataset.finalize() # Closes parquet writers, writes metadata footers
dataset.push_to_hub()
```
**Why is this necessary?**
Dataset v3.0 uses incremental parquet writing with buffered metadata for efficiency. The `finalize()` method:
- Flushes any buffered episode metadata to disk
- Closes parquet writers to write footer metadata, otherwise the parquet files will be corrupt
- Ensures the dataset is valid for loading
Without calling `finalize()`, your parquet files will be incomplete and the dataset won't load properly.

View File

@@ -33,7 +33,7 @@ To Install LIBERO, after following LeRobot official instructions, just do:
Evaluate a policy on one LIBERO suite:
```bash
lerobot-eval \
python src/lerobot/scripts/eval.py \
--policy.path="your-policy-id" \
--env.type=libero \
--env.task=libero_object \
@@ -52,7 +52,7 @@ lerobot-eval \
Benchmark a policy across multiple suites at once:
```bash
lerobot-eval \
python src/lerobot/scripts/eval.py \
--policy.path="your-policy-id" \
--env.type=libero \
--env.task=libero_object,libero_spatial \
@@ -103,11 +103,10 @@ For reference, here is the **original dataset** published by Physical Intelligen
### Example training command
```bash
lerobot-train \
python src/lerobot/scripts/train.py \
--policy.type=smolvla \
--policy.repo_id=${HF_USER}/libero-test \
--policy.load_vlm_weights=true \
--dataset.repo_id=HuggingFaceVLA/libero \
--dataset.repo_id=jadechoghari/smol-libero3 \
--env.type=libero \
--env.task=libero_10 \
--output_dir=./outputs/ \
@@ -125,42 +124,3 @@ lerobot-train \
LeRobot uses MuJoCo for simulation. You need to set the rendering backend before training or evaluation:
- `export MUJOCO_GL=egl` → for headless servers (e.g. HPC, cloud)
## Reproducing π₀.₅ results
We reproduce the results of π₀.₅ on the LIBERO benchmark using the LeRobot implementation. We take the Physical Intelligence LIBERO base model (`pi05_libero`) and finetune for an additional 6k steps in bfloat16, with batch size of 256 on 8 H100 GPUs using the [HuggingFace LIBERO dataset](https://huggingface.co/datasets/HuggingFaceVLA/libero).
The finetuned model can be found here:
- **π₀.₅ LIBERO**: [lerobot/pi05_libero_finetuned](https://huggingface.co/lerobot/pi05_libero_finetuned)
We then evaluate the finetuned model using the LeRobot LIBERO implementation, by running the following command:
```bash
lerobot-eval \
--output_dir=/logs/ \
--env.type=libero \
--env.task=libero_spatial,libero_object,libero_goal,libero_10 \
--eval.batch_size=1 \
--eval.n_episodes=10 \
--policy.path=pi05_libero_finetuned \
--policy.n_action_steps=10 \
--output_dir=./eval_logs/ \
--env.max_parallel_tasks=1
```
**Note:** We set `n_action_steps=10`, similar to the original OpenPI implementation.
### Results
We obtain the following results on the LIBERO benchmark:
| Model | LIBERO Spatial | LIBERO Object | LIBERO Goal | LIBERO 10 | Average |
| -------- | -------------- | ------------- | ----------- | --------- | -------- |
| **π₀.₅** | 97.0 | 99.0 | 98.0 | 96.0 | **97.5** |
These results are consistent with the original [results](https://github.com/Physical-Intelligence/openpi/tree/main/examples/libero#results) reported by Physical Intelligence:
| Model | LIBERO Spatial | LIBERO Object | LIBERO Goal | LIBERO 10 | Average |
| -------- | -------------- | ------------- | ----------- | --------- | --------- |
| **π₀.₅** | 98.8 | 98.2 | 98.0 | 92.4 | **96.85** |

View File

@@ -1,80 +0,0 @@
# Meta-World
Meta-World is a well-designed, open-source simulation benchmark for multi-task and meta reinforcement learning in continuous-control robotic manipulation. It gives researchers a shared, realistic playground to test whether algorithms can _learn many different tasks_ and _generalize quickly to new ones_ — two central challenges for real-world robotics.
- 📄 [MetaWorld paper](https://arxiv.org/pdf/1910.10897)
- 💻 [Original MetaWorld repo](https://github.com/Farama-Foundation/Metaworld)
![MetaWorld MT10 demo](https://meta-world.github.io/figures/ml45.gif)
## Why Meta-World matters
- **Diverse, realistic tasks.** Meta-World bundles a large suite of simulated manipulation tasks (50 in the MT50 suite) using everyday objects and a common tabletop Sawyer arm. This diversity exposes algorithms to a wide variety of dynamics, contacts and goal specifications while keeping a consistent control and observation structure.
- **Focus on generalization and multi-task learning.** By evaluating across task distributions that share structure but differ in goals and objects, Meta-World reveals whether an agent truly learns transferable skills rather than overfitting to a narrow task.
- **Standardized evaluation protocol.** It provides clear evaluation modes and difficulty splits, so different methods can be compared fairly across easy, medium, hard and very-hard regimes.
- **Empirical insight.** Past evaluations on Meta-World show impressive progress on some fronts, but also highlight that current multi-task and meta-RL methods still struggle with large, diverse task sets. That gap points to important research directions.
## What it enables in LeRobot
In LeRobot, you can evaluate any policy or vision-language-action (VLA) model on Meta-World tasks and get a clear success-rate measure. The integration is designed to be straightforward:
- We provide a LeRobot-ready dataset for Meta-World (MT50) on the HF Hub: `https://huggingface.co/datasets/lerobot/metaworld_mt50`.
- This dataset is formatted for the MT50 evaluation that uses all 50 tasks (the most challenging multi-task setting).
- MT50 gives the policy a one-hot task vector and uses fixed object/goal positions for consistency.
- Task descriptions and the exact keys required for evaluation are available in the repo/dataset — use these to ensure your policy outputs the right success signals.
## Quick start, train a SmolVLA policy on Meta-World
Example command to train a SmolVLA policy on a subset of tasks:
```bash
lerobot-train \
--policy.type=smolvla \
--policy.repo_id=${HF_USER}/metaworld-test \
--policy.load_vlm_weights=true \
--dataset.repo_id=lerobot/metaworld_mt50 \
--env.type=metaworld \
--env.task=assembly-v3,dial-turn-v3,handle-press-side-v3 \
--output_dir=./outputs/ \
--steps=100000 \
--batch_size=4 \
--eval.batch_size=1 \
--eval.n_episodes=1 \
--eval_freq=1000
```
Notes:
- `--env.task` accepts explicit task lists (comma separated) or difficulty groups (e.g., `env.task="hard"`).
- Adjust `batch_size`, `steps`, and `eval_freq` to match your compute budget.
- **Gymnasium Assertion Error**: if you encounter an error like
`AssertionError: ['human', 'rgb_array', 'depth_array']` when running MetaWorld environments, this comes from a mismatch between MetaWorld and your Gymnasium version.
We recommend using:
```bash
pip install "gymnasium==1.1.0"
```
to ensure proper compatibility.
## Quick start — evaluate a trained policy
To evaluate a trained policy on the Meta-World medium difficulty split:
```bash
lerobot-eval \
--policy.path="your-policy-id" \
--env.type=metaworld \
--env.task=medium \
--eval.batch_size=1 \
--eval.n_episodes=2
```
This will run episodes and return per-task success rates using the standard Meta-World evaluation keys.
## Practical tips
- If you care about generalization, run on the full MT50 suite — its intentionally challenging and reveals strengths/weaknesses better than a few narrow tasks.
- Use the one-hot task conditioning for multi-task training (MT10 / MT50 conventions) so policies have explicit task context.
- Inspect the dataset task descriptions and the `info["is_success"]` keys when writing post-processing or logging so your success metrics line up with the benchmark.

View File

@@ -1,125 +0,0 @@
# Multi-GPU Training
This guide shows you how to train policies on multiple GPUs using [Hugging Face Accelerate](https://huggingface.co/docs/accelerate).
## Installation
First, ensure you have accelerate installed:
```bash
pip install accelerate
```
## Training with Multiple GPUs
You can launch training in two ways:
### Option 1: Without config (specify parameters directly)
You can specify all parameters directly in the command without running `accelerate config`:
```bash
accelerate launch \
--multi_gpu \
--num_processes=2 \
$(which lerobot-train) \
--dataset.repo_id=${HF_USER}/my_dataset \
--policy.type=act \
--policy.repo_id=${HF_USER}/my_trained_policy \
--output_dir=outputs/train/act_multi_gpu \
--job_name=act_multi_gpu \
--wandb.enable=true
```
**Key accelerate parameters:**
- `--multi_gpu`: Enable multi-GPU training
- `--num_processes=2`: Number of GPUs to use
- `--mixed_precision=fp16`: Use fp16 mixed precision (or `bf16` if supported)
### Option 2: Using accelerate config
If you prefer to save your configuration, you can optionally configure accelerate for your hardware setup by running:
```bash
accelerate config
```
This interactive setup will ask you questions about your training environment (number of GPUs, mixed precision settings, etc.) and saves the configuration for future use. For a simple multi-GPU setup on a single machine, you can use these recommended settings:
- Compute environment: This machine
- Number of machines: 1
- Number of processes: (number of GPUs you want to use)
- GPU ids to use: (leave empty to use all)
- Mixed precision: fp16 or bf16 (recommended for faster training)
Then launch training with:
```bash
accelerate launch $(which lerobot-train) \
--dataset.repo_id=${HF_USER}/my_dataset \
--policy.type=act \
--policy.repo_id=${HF_USER}/my_trained_policy \
--output_dir=outputs/train/act_multi_gpu \
--job_name=act_multi_gpu \
--wandb.enable=true
```
## How It Works
When you launch training with accelerate:
1. **Automatic detection**: LeRobot automatically detects if it's running under accelerate
2. **Data distribution**: Your batch is automatically split across GPUs
3. **Gradient synchronization**: Gradients are synchronized across GPUs during backpropagation
4. **Single process logging**: Only the main process logs to wandb and saves checkpoints
## Learning Rate and Training Steps Scaling
**Important:** LeRobot does **NOT** automatically scale learning rates or training steps based on the number of GPUs. This gives you full control over your training hyperparameters.
### Why No Automatic Scaling?
Many distributed training frameworks automatically scale the learning rate by the number of GPUs (e.g., `lr = base_lr × num_gpus`).
However, LeRobot keeps the learning rate exactly as you specify it.
### When and How to Scale
If you want to scale your hyperparameters when using multiple GPUs, you should do it manually:
**Learning Rate Scaling:**
```bash
# Example: 2 GPUs with linear LR scaling
# Base LR: 1e-4, with 2 GPUs -> 2e-4
accelerate launch --num_processes=2 $(which lerobot-train) \
--optimizer.lr=2e-4 \
--dataset.repo_id=lerobot/pusht \
--policy=act
```
**Training Steps Scaling:**
Since the effective batch size `bs` increases with multiple GPUs (batch_size × num_gpus), you may want to reduce the number of training steps proportionally:
```bash
# Example: 2 GPUs with effective batch size 2x larger
# Original: batch_size=8, steps=100000
# With 2 GPUs: batch_size=8 (16 in total), steps=50000
accelerate launch --num_processes=2 $(which lerobot-train) \
--batch_size=8 \
--steps=50000 \
--dataset.repo_id=lerobot/pusht \
--policy=act
```
## Notes
- The `--policy.use_amp` flag in `lerobot-train` is only used when **not** running with accelerate. When using accelerate, mixed precision is controlled by accelerate's configuration.
- Training logs, checkpoints, and hub uploads are only done by the main process to avoid conflicts. Non-main processes have console logging disabled to prevent duplicate output.
- The effective batch size is `batch_size × num_gpus`. If you use 4 GPUs with `--batch_size=8`, your effective batch size is 32.
- Learning rate scheduling is handled correctly across multiple processes—LeRobot sets `step_scheduler_with_optimizer=False` to prevent accelerate from adjusting scheduler steps based on the number of processes.
- When saving or pushing models, LeRobot automatically unwraps the model from accelerate's distributed wrapper to ensure compatibility.
- WandB integration automatically initializes only on the main process, preventing multiple runs from being created.
For more advanced configurations and troubleshooting, see the [Accelerate documentation](https://huggingface.co/docs/accelerate). If you want to learn more about how to train on a large number of GPUs, checkout this awesome guide: [Ultrascale Playbook](https://huggingface.co/spaces/nanotron/ultrascale-playbook).

View File

@@ -79,7 +79,7 @@ After running the example:
- Android: after starting the script, open the printed local URL on your phone, tap Start, then press and hold Move.
- iOS: open HEBI Mobile I/O first; B1 enables motion. A3 controls the gripper.
Additionally you can customize mapping or safety limits by editing the processor steps shown in the examples. You can also remap inputs (e.g., use a different analog input) or adapt the pipeline to other robots (e.g., LeKiwi) by modifying the input and kinematics steps. More about this in the [Processors for Robots and Teleoperators](./processors_robots_teleop) guide.
Additionally you can customize mapping or safety limits by editing the processor steps shown in the examples. You can also remap inputs (e.g., use a different analog input) or adapt the pipeline to other robots (e.g., LeKiwi) by modifying the input and kinematics steps. More about this in the [Processors for Robots and Teleoperators](./processors_robots_teleop.mdx) guide.
- Run this example to record a dataset, which saves absolute end effector observations and actions:
@@ -136,12 +136,13 @@ Additionally you can customize mapping or safety limits by editing the processor
),
```
- The `EEBoundsAndSafety` step clamps EE motion to a workspace and checks for large ee step jumps to ensure safety. The `end_effector_bounds` are the bounds for the EE pose and can be modified to change the workspace. The `max_ee_step_m` are the step limits for the EE pose and can be modified to change the safety limits.
- The `EEBoundsAndSafety` step clamps EE motion to a workspace and checks for large ee step jumps to ensure safety. The `end_effector_bounds` are the bounds for the EE pose and can be modified to change the workspace. The `max_ee_step_m` and `max_ee_twist_step_rad` are the step limits for the EE pose and can be modified to change the safety limits.
```examples/phone_to_so100/teleoperate.py
EEBoundsAndSafety(
end_effector_bounds={"min": [-1.0, -1.0, -1.0], "max": [1.0, 1.0, 1.0]},
max_ee_step_m=0.10,
max_ee_twist_step_rad=0.50,
)
```

View File

@@ -1,84 +0,0 @@
# π₀ (Pi0)
π₀ is a **Vision-Language-Action model for general robot control**, from Physical Intelligence. The LeRobot implementation is adapted from their open source [OpenPI](https://github.com/Physical-Intelligence/openpi) repository.
## Model Overview
π₀ represents a breakthrough in robotics as the first general-purpose robot foundation model developed by [Physical Intelligence](https://www.physicalintelligence.company/blog/pi0). Unlike traditional robot programs that are narrow specialists programmed for repetitive motions, π₀ is designed to be a generalist policy that can understand visual inputs, interpret natural language instructions, and control a variety of different robots across diverse tasks.
### The Vision for Physical Intelligence
As described by Physical Intelligence, while AI has achieved remarkable success in digital domains, from chess-playing to drug discovery, human intelligence still dramatically outpaces AI in the physical world. To paraphrase Moravec's paradox, winning a game of chess represents an "easy" problem for AI, but folding a shirt or cleaning up a table requires solving some of the most difficult engineering problems ever conceived. π₀ represents a first step toward developing artificial physical intelligence that enables users to simply ask robots to perform any task they want, just like they can with large language models.
### Architecture and Approach
π₀ combines several key innovations:
- **Flow Matching**: Uses a novel method to augment pre-trained VLMs with continuous action outputs via flow matching (a variant of diffusion models)
- **Cross-Embodiment Training**: Trained on data from 8 distinct robot platforms including UR5e, Bimanual UR5e, Franka, Bimanual Trossen, Bimanual ARX, Mobile Trossen, and Mobile Fibocom
- **Internet-Scale Pre-training**: Inherits semantic knowledge from a pre-trained 3B parameter Vision-Language Model
- **High-Frequency Control**: Outputs motor commands at up to 50 Hz for real-time dexterous manipulation
## Installation Requirements
1. Install LeRobot by following our [Installation Guide](./installation).
2. Install Pi0 dependencies by running:
```bash
pip install -e ".[pi]"
```
> [!NOTE]
> For lerobot 0.4.0, if you want to install pi tag, you will have to do: `pip install "lerobot[pi]@git+https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot.git"`.
>
> This will be solved in the next patch release
## Training Data and Capabilities
π₀ is trained on the largest robot interaction dataset to date, combining three key data sources:
1. **Internet-Scale Pre-training**: Vision-language data from the web for semantic understanding
2. **Open X-Embodiment Dataset**: Open-source robot manipulation datasets
3. **Physical Intelligence Dataset**: Large and diverse dataset of dexterous tasks across 8 distinct robots
## Usage
To use π₀ in LeRobot, specify the policy type as:
```python
policy.type=pi0
```
## Training
For training π₀, you can use the standard LeRobot training script with the appropriate configuration:
```bash
python src/lerobot/scripts/lerobot_train.py \
--dataset.repo_id=your_dataset \
--policy.type=pi0 \
--output_dir=./outputs/pi0_training \
--job_name=pi0_training \
--policy.pretrained_path=lerobot/pi0_base \
--policy.repo_id=your_repo_id \
--policy.compile_model=true \
--policy.gradient_checkpointing=true \
--policy.dtype=bfloat16 \
--steps=3000 \
--policy.device=cuda \
--batch_size=32
```
### Key Training Parameters
- **`--policy.compile_model=true`**: Enables model compilation for faster training
- **`--policy.gradient_checkpointing=true`**: Reduces memory usage significantly during training
- **`--policy.dtype=bfloat16`**: Use mixed precision training for efficiency
- **`--batch_size=32`**: Batch size for training, adapt this based on your GPU memory
- **`--policy.pretrained_path=lerobot/pi0_base`**: The base π₀ model you want to finetune, options are:
- [lerobot/pi0_base](https://huggingface.co/lerobot/pi0_base)
- [lerobot/pi0_libero](https://huggingface.co/lerobot/pi0_libero) (specifically trained on the Libero dataset)
## License
This model follows the **Apache 2.0 License**, consistent with the original [OpenPI repository](https://github.com/Physical-Intelligence/openpi).

View File

@@ -1,112 +0,0 @@
# π₀.₅ (Pi05) Policy
π₀.₅ is a **Vision-Language-Action model with open-world generalization**, from Physical Intelligence. The LeRobot implementation is adapted from their open source [OpenPI](https://github.com/Physical-Intelligence/openpi) repository.
## Model Overview
π₀.₅ represents a significant evolution from π₀, developed by [Physical Intelligence](https://www.physicalintelligence.company/blog/pi05) to address a big challenge in robotics: **open-world generalization**. While robots can perform impressive tasks in controlled environments, π₀.₅ is designed to generalize to entirely new environments and situations that were never seen during training.
### The Generalization Challenge
As Physical Intelligence explains, the fundamental challenge isn't performing tasks of agility or dexterity, but generalization, the ability to correctly perform tasks in new settings with new objects. Consider a robot cleaning different homes: each home has different objects in different places. Generalization must occur at multiple levels:
- **Physical Level**: Understanding how to pick up a spoon (by the handle) or plate (by the edge), even with unseen objects in cluttered environments
- **Semantic Level**: Understanding task semantics, where to put clothes and shoes (laundry hamper, not on the bed), and what tools are appropriate for cleaning spills
- **Environmental Level**: Adapting to "messy" real-world environments like homes, grocery stores, offices, and hospitals
### Co-Training on Heterogeneous Data
The breakthrough innovation in π₀.₅ is **co-training on heterogeneous data sources**. The model learns from:
1. **Multimodal Web Data**: Image captioning, visual question answering, object detection
2. **Verbal Instructions**: Humans coaching robots through complex tasks step-by-step
3. **Subtask Commands**: High-level semantic behavior labels (e.g., "pick up the pillow" for an unmade bed)
4. **Cross-Embodiment Robot Data**: Data from various robot platforms with different capabilities
5. **Multi-Environment Data**: Static robots deployed across many different homes
6. **Mobile Manipulation Data**: ~400 hours of mobile robot demonstrations
This diverse training mixture creates a "curriculum" that enables generalization across physical, visual, and semantic levels simultaneously.
## Installation Requirements
1. Install LeRobot by following our [Installation Guide](./installation).
2. Install Pi0.5 dependencies by running:
```bash
pip install -e ".[pi]"
```
> [!NOTE]
> For lerobot 0.4.0, if you want to install pi tag, you will have to do: `pip install "lerobot[pi]@git+https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot.git"`.
>
> This will be solved in the next patch release
## Usage
To use π₀.₅ in your LeRobot configuration, specify the policy type as:
```python
policy.type=pi05
```
## Training
### Training Command Example
Here's a complete training command for finetuning the base π₀.₅ model on your own dataset:
```bash
python src/lerobot/scripts/lerobot_train.py\
--dataset.repo_id=your_dataset \
--policy.type=pi05 \
--output_dir=./outputs/pi05_training \
--job_name=pi05_training \
--policy.repo_id=your_repo_id \
--policy.pretrained_path=lerobot/pi05_base \
--policy.compile_model=true \
--policy.gradient_checkpointing=true \
--wandb.enable=true \
--policy.dtype=bfloat16 \
--steps=3000 \
--policy.device=cuda \
--batch_size=32
```
### Key Training Parameters
- **`--policy.compile_model=true`**: Enables model compilation for faster training
- **`--policy.gradient_checkpointing=true`**: Reduces memory usage significantly during training
- **`--policy.dtype=bfloat16`**: Use mixed precision training for efficiency
- **`--batch_size=32`**: Batch size for training, adapt this based on your GPU memory
- **`--policy.pretrained_path=lerobot/pi05_base`**: The base π₀.₅ model you want to finetune, options are:
- [lerobot/pi05_base](https://huggingface.co/lerobot/pi05_base)
- [lerobot/pi05_libero](https://huggingface.co/lerobot/pi05_libero) (specifically trained on the Libero dataset)
If your dataset is not converted with `quantiles`, you can convert it with the following command:
```bash
python src/lerobot/datasets/v30/augment_dataset_quantile_stats.py \
--repo-id=your_dataset \
```
Or train pi05 with this normalization mapping: `--policy.normalization_mapping='{"ACTION": "MEAN_STD", "STATE": "MEAN_STD", "VISUAL": "IDENTITY"}'`
## Performance Results
### Libero Benchmark Results
π₀.₅ has demonstrated strong performance on the Libero benchmark suite. To compare and test its LeRobot implementation, we finetuned the libero base model for an additional 6k steps on the Libero dataset and compared the results to the OpenPI reference results.
| Benchmark | LeRobot Implementation | OpenPI Reference |
| ------------------ | ---------------------- | ---------------- |
| **Libero Spatial** | 97.0% | 98.8% |
| **Libero Object** | 99.0% | 98.2% |
| **Libero Goal** | 98.0% | 98.0% |
| **Libero 10** | 96.0% | 92.4% |
| **Average** | 97.5% | 96.85% |
These results demonstrate π₀.₅'s strong generalization capabilities across diverse robotic manipulation tasks. To reproduce these results, you can follow the instructions in the [Libero](https://huggingface.co/docs/lerobot/libero) section.
## License
This model follows the **Apache 2.0 License**, consistent with the original [OpenPI repository](https://github.com/Physical-Intelligence/openpi).

View File

@@ -1,27 +0,0 @@
## Research Paper
Paper: https://research.nvidia.com/labs/gear/gr00t-n1_5/
## Repository
Code: https://github.com/NVIDIA/Isaac-GR00T
## Citation
```bibtex
@inproceedings{gr00tn1_2025,
archivePrefix = {arxiv},
eprint = {2503.14734},
title = {{GR00T} {N1}: An Open Foundation Model for Generalist Humanoid Robots},
author = {NVIDIA and Johan Bjorck andFernando Castañeda, Nikita Cherniadev and Xingye Da and Runyu Ding and Linxi "Jim" Fan and Yu Fang and Dieter Fox and Fengyuan Hu and Spencer Huang and Joel Jang and Zhenyu Jiang and Jan Kautz and Kaushil Kundalia and Lawrence Lao and Zhiqi Li and Zongyu Lin and Kevin Lin and Guilin Liu and Edith Llontop and Loic Magne and Ajay Mandlekar and Avnish Narayan and Soroush Nasiriany and Scott Reed and You Liang Tan and Guanzhi Wang and Zu Wang and Jing Wang and Qi Wang and Jiannan Xiang and Yuqi Xie and Yinzhen Xu and Zhenjia Xu and Seonghyeon Ye and Zhiding Yu and Ao Zhang and Hao Zhang and Yizhou Zhao and Ruijie Zheng and Yuke Zhu},
month = {March},
year = {2025},
booktitle = {ArXiv Preprint},
}
```
## Additional Resources
Blog: https://developer.nvidia.com/isaac/gr00t
Hugging Face Model: https://huggingface.co/nvidia/GR00T-N1.5-3B

View File

@@ -38,7 +38,7 @@ phone_to_robot_ee_pose_processor = RobotProcessorPipeline[RobotAction, RobotActi
kinematics=kinematics_solver, end_effector_step_sizes={"x": 0.5, "y": 0.5, "z": 0.5}, motor_names=list(robot.bus.motors.keys()),
),
EEBoundsAndSafety(
end_effector_bounds={"min": [-1.0, -1.0, -1.0], "max": [1.0, 1.0, 1.0]}, max_ee_step_m=0.20,
end_effector_bounds={"min": [-1.0, -1.0, -1.0], "max": [1.0, 1.0, 1.0]}, max_ee_step_m=0.20, max_ee_twist_step_rad=0.50,
),
GripperVelocityToJoint(),
],

View File

@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
# SmolVLA
# Finetune SmolVLA
SmolVLA is Hugging Faces lightweight foundation model for robotics. Designed for easy fine-tuning on LeRobot datasets, it helps accelerate your development!
@@ -29,7 +29,7 @@ SmolVLA is Hugging Faces lightweight foundation model for robotics. Designed
## Collect a dataset
SmolVLA is a base model, so fine-tuning on your own data is required for optimal performance in your setup.
We recommend recording ~50 episodes of your task as a starting point. Follow our guide to get started: [Recording a Dataset](./il_robots)
We recommend recording ~50 episodes of your task as a starting point. Follow our guide to get started: [Recording a Dataset](https://huggingface.co/docs/lerobot/getting_started_real_world_robot#record-a-dataset)
<Tip>
@@ -93,7 +93,7 @@ lerobot-train --help
## Evaluate the finetuned model and run it in real-time
Similarly for when recording an episode, it is recommended that you are logged in to the HuggingFace Hub. You can follow the corresponding steps: [Record a dataset](./il_robots).
Similarly for when recording an episode, it is recommended that you are logged in to the HuggingFace Hub. You can follow the corresponding steps: [Record a dataset](./getting_started_real_world_robot#record-a-dataset).
Once you are logged in, you can run inference in your setup by doing:
```bash

View File

@@ -634,7 +634,7 @@ leader.disconnect()
</hfoption>
</hfoptions>
Congrats 🎉, your robot is all set to learn a task on its own. Start training it by following this tutorial: [Getting started with real-world robots](./il_robots)
Congrats 🎉, your robot is all set to learn a task on its own. Start training it by following this tutorial: [Getting started with real-world robots](./getting_started_real_world_robot)
> [!TIP]
> If you have any questions or need help, please reach out on [Discord](https://discord.com/invite/s3KuuzsPFb).

View File

@@ -430,7 +430,7 @@ leader.disconnect()
</hfoption>
</hfoptions>
Congrats 🎉, your robot is all set to learn a task on its own. Start training it by following this tutorial: [Getting started with real-world robots](./il_robots)
Congrats 🎉, your robot is all set to learn a task on its own. Start training it by following this tutorial: [Getting started with real-world robots](./getting_started_real_world_robot)
> [!TIP]
> If you have any questions or need help, please reach out on [Discord](https://discord.com/invite/s3KuuzsPFb).

View File

@@ -1,102 +0,0 @@
# Using Dataset Tools
This guide covers the dataset tools utilities available in LeRobot for modifying and editing existing datasets.
## Overview
LeRobot provides several utilities for manipulating datasets:
1. **Delete Episodes** - Remove specific episodes from a dataset
2. **Split Dataset** - Divide a dataset into multiple smaller datasets
3. **Merge Datasets** - Combine multiple datasets into one. The datasets must have identical features, and episodes are concatenated in the order specified in `repo_ids`
4. **Add Features** - Add new features to a dataset
5. **Remove Features** - Remove features from a dataset
The core implementation is in `lerobot.datasets.dataset_tools`.
An example script detailing how to use the tools API is available in `examples/dataset/use_dataset_tools.py`.
## Command-Line Tool: lerobot-edit-dataset
`lerobot-edit-dataset` is a command-line script for editing datasets. It can be used to delete episodes, split datasets, merge datasets, add features, and remove features.
Run `lerobot-edit-dataset --help` for more information on the configuration of each operation.
### Usage Examples
#### Delete Episodes
Remove specific episodes from a dataset. This is useful for filtering out undesired data.
```bash
# Delete episodes 0, 2, and 5 (modifies original dataset)
lerobot-edit-dataset \
--repo_id lerobot/pusht \
--operation.type delete_episodes \
--operation.episode_indices "[0, 2, 5]"
# Delete episodes and save to a new dataset (preserves original dataset)
lerobot-edit-dataset \
--repo_id lerobot/pusht \
--new_repo_id lerobot/pusht_after_deletion \
--operation.type delete_episodes \
--operation.episode_indices "[0, 2, 5]"
```
#### Split Dataset
Divide a dataset into multiple subsets.
```bash
# Split by fractions (e.g. 80% train, 20% test, 20% val)
lerobot-edit-dataset \
--repo_id lerobot/pusht \
--operation.type split \
--operation.splits '{"train": 0.8, "test": 0.2, "val": 0.2}'
# Split by specific episode indices
lerobot-edit-dataset \
--repo_id lerobot/pusht \
--operation.type split \
--operation.splits '{"task1": [0, 1, 2, 3], "task2": [4, 5]}'
```
There are no constraints on the split names, they can be determined by the user. Resulting datasets are saved under the repo id with the split name appended, e.g. `lerobot/pusht_train`, `lerobot/pusht_task1`, `lerobot/pusht_task2`.
#### Merge Datasets
Combine multiple datasets into a single dataset.
```bash
# Merge train and validation splits back into one dataset
lerobot-edit-dataset \
--repo_id lerobot/pusht_merged \
--operation.type merge \
--operation.repo_ids "['lerobot/pusht_train', 'lerobot/pusht_val']"
```
#### Remove Features
Remove features from a dataset.
```bash
# Remove a camera feature
lerobot-edit-dataset \
--repo_id lerobot/pusht \
--operation.type remove_feature \
--operation.feature_names "['observation.images.top']"
```
### Push to Hub
Add the `--push_to_hub` flag to any command to automatically upload the resulting dataset to the Hugging Face Hub:
```bash
lerobot-edit-dataset \
--repo_id lerobot/pusht \
--new_repo_id lerobot/pusht_after_deletion \
--operation.type delete_episodes \
--operation.episode_indices "[0, 2, 5]" \
--push_to_hub
```
There is also a tool for adding features to a dataset that is not yet covered in `lerobot-edit-dataset`.

View File

@@ -44,7 +44,6 @@ from lerobot.robots import ( # noqa: F401
so100_follower,
so101_follower,
)
from lerobot.utils.constants import ACTION
from lerobot.utils.robot_utils import busy_wait
from lerobot.utils.utils import (
init_logging,
@@ -79,16 +78,16 @@ def replay(cfg: ReplayConfig):
robot = make_robot_from_config(cfg.robot)
dataset = LeRobotDataset(cfg.dataset.repo_id, root=cfg.dataset.root, episodes=[cfg.dataset.episode])
actions = dataset.hf_dataset.select_columns(ACTION)
actions = dataset.hf_dataset.select_columns("action")
robot.connect()
log_say("Replaying episode", cfg.play_sounds, blocking=True)
for idx in range(dataset.num_frames):
start_episode_t = time.perf_counter()
action_array = actions[idx][ACTION]
action_array = actions[idx]["action"]
action = {}
for i, name in enumerate(dataset.features[ACTION]["names"]):
for i, name in enumerate(dataset.features["action"]["names"]):
key = f"{name.removeprefix('main_')}.pos"
action[key] = action_array[i].item()

View File

@@ -1,6 +0,0 @@
python ./examples/dataset/convert_hdf5_lerobot.py \
--src-paths /fsx/jade_choghari/XVLA-Soft-Fold/0808_12am_stage_1_stage2new_new_cam_very_slow_no_sleeve \
--output-path /fsx/jade_choghari/new-data \
--executor local \
--tasks-per-job 3 \
--workers 10

View File

@@ -1,437 +0,0 @@
import argparse
import os
import re
import shutil
from pathlib import Path
import pandas as pd
# import ray
# from datatrove.executor import LocalPipelineExecutor, RayPipelineExecutor
from datatrove.executor import LocalPipelineExecutor
from datatrove.pipeline.base import PipelineStep
from lerobot.datasets.aggregate import (
aggregate_data,
aggregate_metadata,
aggregate_stats,
aggregate_videos,
validate_all_metadata,
)
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset, LeRobotDatasetMetadata
from lerobot.datasets.utils import (
DEFAULT_CHUNK_SIZE,
DEFAULT_DATA_FILE_SIZE_IN_MB,
DEFAULT_VIDEO_FILE_SIZE_IN_MB,
write_info,
write_stats,
write_tasks,
)
XVLA_SOFT_FOLD_FEATURES = {
"observation.images.cam_high": {
"dtype": "video",
"names": ["height", "width", "channels"],
"shape": (480, 640, 3),
"names": ["height", "width", "rgb"],
},
"observation.images.cam_left_wrist": {
"dtype": "video",
"names": ["height", "width", "channels"],
"shape": (480, 640, 3),
"names": ["height", "width", "rgb"],
},
"observation.images.cam_right_wrist": {
"dtype": "video",
"names": ["height", "width", "channels"],
"shape": (480, 640, 3),
"names": ["height", "width", "rgb"],
},
"observation.states.eef_euler": {
"dtype": "float32",
"shape": (14,), # 14 = 7 joints per arm × 2 arms OR 14-d state representation
"names": {"values": [f"eef_euler_{i}" for i in range(14)]},
},
"observation.states.eef_quaternion": {
"dtype": "float32",
"shape": (16,), # 16 = 8 quaternion floats per arm × 2 arms
"names": {"values": [f"eef_quat_{i}" for i in range(16)]},
},
"observation.states.eef_6d": {
"dtype": "float32",
"shape": (20,), # 20 = pos(3) + rot6d(6) + extra dims
"names": {"values": [f"eef6d_{i}" for i in range(20)]},
},
"observation.states.eef_left_time": {
"dtype": "float32",
"shape": (1,),
"names": {"values": ["eef_left_time"]},
},
"observation.states.eef_right_time": {
"dtype": "float32",
"shape": (1,),
"names": {"values": ["eef_right_time"]},
},
"observation.states.qpos": {
"dtype": "float32",
"shape": (14,), # 7 per arm × 2 arms
"names": {"motors": [f"qpos_{i}" for i in range(14)]},
},
"observation.states.qvel": {
"dtype": "float32",
"shape": (14,),
"names": {"motors": [f"qvel_{i}" for i in range(14)]},
},
"observation.states.effort": {
"dtype": "float32",
"shape": (14,),
"names": {"motors": [f"effort_{i}" for i in range(14)]},
},
"observation.states.qpos_left_time": {
"dtype": "float32",
"shape": (1,),
"names": {"values": ["qpos_left_time"]},
},
"observation.states.qpos_right_time": {
"dtype": "float32",
"shape": (1,),
"names": {"values": ["qpos_right_time"]},
},
"action": {
"dtype": "float32",
"shape": (14,),
"names": {"motors": [f"joint_action_{i}" for i in range(14)]},
},
"time_stamp": {
"dtype": "float32",
"shape": (1,),
"names": {"values": ["global_timestamp"]},
},
}
import cv2
import numpy as np
def decode_image(encoded_array):
# HDF5 gives you an array of uint8 → convert to raw bytes
data = np.asarray(encoded_array, dtype=np.uint8)
img = cv2.imdecode(data, cv2.IMREAD_COLOR) # returns HWC BGR
img = cv2.cvtColor(img, cv2.COLOR_BGR2RGB) # convert to RGB
return img
from pathlib import Path
import numpy as np
from h5py import File
def load_local_episodes(input_h5: Path):
"""
Load one XVLA Soft-Fold episode from a single .hdf5 file.
This dataset stores ONE episode per file, NOT a /data/ group.
"""
import h5py
import numpy as np
with h5py.File(input_h5, "r") as f:
# Determine episode length from any observation vector
episode_len = f["observations/eef_6d"].shape[0]
episode = []
for i in range(episode_len):
frame = {
# ----------------------
# ROOT-LEVEL
# ----------------------
"task": "fold the cloth",
"time_stamp": np.array([f["time_stamp"][i]], dtype=np.float32),
# ----------------------
# OBSERVATIONS
# ----------------------
"observation": {
"images": {
"cam_high": f["observations/images/cam_high"][i],
"cam_left_wrist": f["observations/images/cam_left_wrist"][i],
"cam_right_wrist": f["observations/images/cam_right_wrist"][i],
},
"states": {
"eef_euler": f["observations/eef"][i],
"eef_quaternion": f["observations/eef_quaternion"][i],
"eef_6d": f["observations/eef_6d"][i],
"eef_left_time": np.array([f["observations/eef_left_time"][i]], dtype=np.float32),
"eef_right_time": np.array([f["observations/eef_right_time"][i]], dtype=np.float32),
"qpos": f["observations/qpos"][i],
"qvel": f["observations/qvel"][i],
"effort": f["observations/effort"][i],
"qpos_left_time": np.array([f["observations/qpos_left_time"][i]], dtype=np.float32),
"qpos_right_time": np.array([f["observations/qpos_right_time"][i]], dtype=np.float32),
},
},
# ----------------------
# ACTION (your joint 14-D)
# ----------------------
"action": f["action"][i].astype(np.float32),
}
episode.append(frame)
yield episode
# from ray.runtime_env import RuntimeEnv
from tqdm import tqdm
def setup_logger():
import sys
from datatrove.utils.logging import logger
logger.remove()
logger.add(sys.stdout, level="INFO", colorize=True)
return logger
class SaveLerobotDataset(PipelineStep):
name = "Save Temp LerobotDataset"
type = "libero2lerobot"
def __init__(self, tasks: list[tuple[Path, Path, str]]):
super().__init__()
self.tasks = tasks
def run(self, data=None, rank: int = 0, world_size: int = 1):
logger = setup_logger()
input_h5, output_path, task_instruction = self.tasks[rank]
if output_path.exists():
shutil.rmtree(output_path)
dataset = LeRobotDataset.create(
repo_id=f"{input_h5.parent.name}/{input_h5.name}",
root=output_path,
fps=20,
robot_type="franka",
features=XVLA_SOFT_FOLD_FEATURES,
)
logger.info(f"start processing for {input_h5}, saving to {output_path}")
raw_dataset = load_local_episodes(input_h5)
for episode_index, episode_data in enumerate(raw_dataset):
with self.track_time("saving episode"):
for raw_frame in episode_data:
frame_data = {
"task": task_instruction,
# ---------------------- IMAGES ----------------------
"observation.images.cam_high": decode_image(raw_frame["observation"]["images"]["cam_high"]),
"observation.images.cam_left_wrist": decode_image(raw_frame["observation"]["images"]["cam_left_wrist"]),
"observation.images.cam_right_wrist": decode_image(raw_frame["observation"]["images"]["cam_right_wrist"]),
# ---------------------- EEF STATES ----------------------
"observation.states.eef_euler": raw_frame["observation"]["states"]["eef_euler"],
"observation.states.eef_quaternion": raw_frame["observation"]["states"]["eef_quaternion"],
"observation.states.eef_6d": raw_frame["observation"]["states"]["eef_6d"],
"observation.states.eef_left_time": raw_frame["observation"]["states"]["eef_left_time"],
"observation.states.eef_right_time": raw_frame["observation"]["states"]["eef_right_time"],
# ---------------------- JOINT STATES ----------------------
"observation.states.qpos": raw_frame["observation"]["states"]["qpos"],
"observation.states.qvel": raw_frame["observation"]["states"]["qvel"],
"observation.states.effort": raw_frame["observation"]["states"]["effort"],
"observation.states.qpos_left_time": raw_frame["observation"]["states"]["qpos_left_time"],
"observation.states.qpos_right_time": raw_frame["observation"]["states"]["qpos_right_time"],
# ---------------------- ACTION ----------------------
"action": raw_frame["action"],
# ---------------------- TIME ----------------------
"time_stamp": raw_frame["time_stamp"],
}
dataset.add_frame(frame_data)
dataset.save_episode()
logger.info(f"Processed {dataset.repo_id}, episode {episode_index}, len={len(episode_data)}")
def create_aggr_dataset(raw_dirs: list[Path], aggregated_dir: Path):
logger = setup_logger()
all_metadata = [LeRobotDatasetMetadata("", root=raw_dir) for raw_dir in raw_dirs]
fps, robot_type, features = validate_all_metadata(all_metadata)
if aggregated_dir.exists():
shutil.rmtree(aggregated_dir)
aggr_meta = LeRobotDatasetMetadata.create(
repo_id=f"{aggregated_dir.parent.name}/{aggregated_dir.name}",
root=aggregated_dir,
fps=fps,
robot_type=robot_type,
features=features,
)
video_keys = [key for key in features if features[key]["dtype"] == "video"]
unique_tasks = pd.concat([m.tasks for m in all_metadata]).index.unique()
aggr_meta.tasks = pd.DataFrame({"task_index": range(len(unique_tasks))}, index=unique_tasks)
meta_idx = {"chunk": 0, "file": 0}
data_idx = {"chunk": 0, "file": 0}
videos_idx = {key: {"chunk": 0, "file": 0, "latest_duration": 0, "episode_duration": 0} for key in video_keys}
aggr_meta.episodes = {}
for src_meta in tqdm(all_metadata, desc="Copy data and videos"):
videos_idx = aggregate_videos(
src_meta, aggr_meta, videos_idx, DEFAULT_VIDEO_FILE_SIZE_IN_MB, DEFAULT_CHUNK_SIZE
)
data_idx = aggregate_data(src_meta, aggr_meta, data_idx, DEFAULT_DATA_FILE_SIZE_IN_MB, DEFAULT_CHUNK_SIZE)
meta_idx = aggregate_metadata(src_meta, aggr_meta, meta_idx, data_idx, videos_idx)
aggr_meta.info["total_episodes"] += src_meta.total_episodes
aggr_meta.info["total_frames"] += src_meta.total_frames
logger.info("write tasks")
write_tasks(aggr_meta.tasks, aggr_meta.root)
logger.info("write info")
aggr_meta.info.update(
{
"total_tasks": len(aggr_meta.tasks),
"total_episodes": sum(m.total_episodes for m in all_metadata),
"total_frames": sum(m.total_frames for m in all_metadata),
"splits": {"train": f"0:{sum(m.total_episodes for m in all_metadata)}"},
}
)
write_info(aggr_meta.info, aggr_meta.root)
logger.info("write stats")
aggr_meta.stats = aggregate_stats([m.stats for m in all_metadata])
write_stats(aggr_meta.stats, aggr_meta.root)
def delete_temp_data(temp_dirs: list[Path]):
logger = setup_logger()
logger.info("Delete temp data_dir")
for temp_dir in temp_dirs:
shutil.rmtree(temp_dir)
def main(
src_paths: list[Path],
output_path: Path,
executor: str,
cpus_per_task: int,
tasks_per_job: int,
workers: int,
resume_dir: Path = None,
debug: bool = False,
repo_id: str = None,
push_to_hub: bool = False,
):
tasks = []
for src_path in src_paths:
for input_h5 in src_path.glob("*.hdf5"):
tasks.append(
(
input_h5,
(output_path / (src_path.name + "_temp") / input_h5.stem).resolve(),
"fold the cloth", # fixed single task
)
)
if len(src_paths) > 1:
aggregate_output_path = output_path / ("_".join([src_path.name for src_path in src_paths]) + "_aggregated_lerobot")
else:
aggregate_output_path = output_path / f"{src_paths[0].name}_lerobot"
aggregate_output_path = aggregate_output_path.resolve()
if debug:
executor = "local"
workers = 1
tasks = tasks[:2]
push_to_hub = False
match executor:
case "local":
workers = os.cpu_count() // cpus_per_task if workers == -1 else workers
executor = LocalPipelineExecutor
# case "ray":
# runtime_env = RuntimeEnv(
# env_vars={
# "HDF5_USE_FILE_LOCKING": "FALSE",
# "HF_DATASETS_DISABLE_PROGRESS_BARS": "TRUE",
# "SVT_LOG": "1",
# },
# )
# ray.init(runtime_env=runtime_env)
# executor = RayPipelineExecutor
case _:
raise ValueError(f"Executor {executor} not supported")
executor_config = {
"tasks": len(tasks),
"workers": workers,
**({"cpus_per_task": cpus_per_task, "tasks_per_job": tasks_per_job} if False else {}),
}
executor(pipeline=[SaveLerobotDataset(tasks)], **executor_config, logging_dir=resume_dir).run()
create_aggr_dataset([task[1] for task in tasks], aggregate_output_path)
delete_temp_data([task[1] for task in tasks])
for task in tasks:
shutil.rmtree(task[1].parent, ignore_errors=True)
if push_to_hub:
assert repo_id is not None
tags = ["LeRobot", "libero", "franka"]
tags.extend([src_path.name for src_path in src_paths])
LeRobotDataset(
repo_id=repo_id,
root=aggregate_output_path,
).push_to_hub(
tags=tags,
private=False,
push_videos=True,
license="apache-2.0",
upload_large_folder=False,
)
if __name__ == "__main__":
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
parser.add_argument("--src-paths", type=Path, nargs="+", required=True)
parser.add_argument("--output-path", type=Path, required=True)
parser.add_argument("--executor", type=str, choices=["local", "ray"], default="local")
parser.add_argument("--cpus-per-task", type=int, default=1)
parser.add_argument("--tasks-per-job", type=int, default=1, help="number of concurrent tasks per job, only used for ray")
parser.add_argument("--workers", type=int, default=-1, help="number of concurrent jobs to run")
parser.add_argument("--resume-dir", type=Path, help="logs directory to resume")
parser.add_argument("--debug", action="store_true")
parser.add_argument("--repo-id", type=str, help="required when push-to-hub is True")
parser.add_argument("--push-to-hub", action="store_true", help="upload to hub")
args = parser.parse_args()
main(**vars(args))

View File

@@ -132,15 +132,17 @@ print(f"\n{dataset[0][camera_key].shape=}") # (4, c, h, w)
print(f"{dataset[0]['observation.state'].shape=}") # (6, c)
print(f"{dataset[0]['action'].shape=}\n") # (64, c)
if __name__ == "__main__":
dataloader = torch.utils.data.DataLoader(
dataset,
num_workers=4,
batch_size=32,
shuffle=True,
)
for batch in dataloader:
print(f"{batch[camera_key].shape=}") # (32, 4, c, h, w)
print(f"{batch['observation.state'].shape=}") # (32, 6, c)
print(f"{batch['action'].shape=}") # (32, 64, c)
break
# Finally, our datasets are fully compatible with PyTorch dataloaders and samplers because they are just
# PyTorch datasets.
dataloader = torch.utils.data.DataLoader(
dataset,
num_workers=4,
batch_size=32,
shuffle=True,
)
for batch in dataloader:
print(f"{batch[camera_key].shape=}") # (32, 4, c, h, w)
print(f"{batch['observation.state'].shape=}") # (32, 6, c)
print(f"{batch['action'].shape=}") # (32, 64, c)
break

View File

@@ -1,124 +0,0 @@
#!/usr/bin/env python
# Copyright 2025 The HuggingFace Inc. team. All rights reserved.
#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
# You may obtain a copy of the License at
#
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
# limitations under the License.
"""
Example script demonstrating dataset tools utilities.
This script shows how to:
1. Delete episodes from a dataset
2. Split a dataset into train/val sets
3. Add/remove features
4. Merge datasets
Usage:
python examples/dataset/use_dataset_tools.py
"""
import numpy as np
from lerobot.datasets.dataset_tools import (
add_features,
delete_episodes,
merge_datasets,
modify_features,
remove_feature,
split_dataset,
)
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset
def main():
dataset = LeRobotDataset("lerobot/pusht")
print(f"Original dataset: {dataset.meta.total_episodes} episodes, {dataset.meta.total_frames} frames")
print(f"Features: {list(dataset.meta.features.keys())}")
print("\n1. Deleting episodes 0 and 2...")
filtered_dataset = delete_episodes(dataset, episode_indices=[0, 2], repo_id="lerobot/pusht_filtered")
print(f"Filtered dataset: {filtered_dataset.meta.total_episodes} episodes")
print("\n2. Splitting dataset into train/val...")
splits = split_dataset(
dataset,
splits={"train": 0.8, "val": 0.2},
)
print(f"Train split: {splits['train'].meta.total_episodes} episodes")
print(f"Val split: {splits['val'].meta.total_episodes} episodes")
print("\n3. Adding features...")
reward_values = np.random.randn(dataset.meta.total_frames).astype(np.float32)
def compute_success(row_dict, episode_index, frame_index):
episode_length = 10
return float(frame_index >= episode_length - 10)
dataset_with_features = add_features(
dataset,
features={
"reward": (
reward_values,
{"dtype": "float32", "shape": (1,), "names": None},
),
"success": (
compute_success,
{"dtype": "float32", "shape": (1,), "names": None},
),
},
repo_id="lerobot/pusht_with_features",
)
print(f"New features: {list(dataset_with_features.meta.features.keys())}")
print("\n4. Removing the success feature...")
dataset_cleaned = remove_feature(
dataset_with_features, feature_names="success", repo_id="lerobot/pusht_cleaned"
)
print(f"Features after removal: {list(dataset_cleaned.meta.features.keys())}")
print("\n5. Using modify_features to add and remove features simultaneously...")
dataset_modified = modify_features(
dataset_with_features,
add_features={
"discount": (
np.ones(dataset.meta.total_frames, dtype=np.float32) * 0.99,
{"dtype": "float32", "shape": (1,), "names": None},
),
},
remove_features="reward",
repo_id="lerobot/pusht_modified",
)
print(f"Modified features: {list(dataset_modified.meta.features.keys())}")
print("\n6. Merging train and val splits back together...")
merged = merge_datasets([splits["train"], splits["val"]], output_repo_id="lerobot/pusht_merged")
print(f"Merged dataset: {merged.meta.total_episodes} episodes")
print("\n7. Complex workflow example...")
if len(dataset.meta.camera_keys) > 1:
camera_to_remove = dataset.meta.camera_keys[0]
print(f"Removing camera: {camera_to_remove}")
dataset_no_cam = remove_feature(
dataset, feature_names=camera_to_remove, repo_id="pusht_no_first_camera"
)
print(f"Remaining cameras: {dataset_no_cam.meta.camera_keys}")
print("\nDone! Check ~/.cache/huggingface/lerobot/ for the created datasets.")
if __name__ == "__main__":
main()

View File

@@ -1,36 +0,0 @@
from pathlib import Path
import numpy as np
from h5py import File
def load_local_episodes(input_h5: Path):
with File(input_h5, "r") as f:
for demo in f["data"].values():
demo_len = len(demo["obs/agentview_rgb"])
# (-1: open, 1: close) -> (0: close, 1: open)
action = np.array(demo["actions"])
action = np.concatenate(
[
action[:, :6],
(1 - np.clip(action[:, -1], 0, 1))[:, None],
],
axis=1,
)
state = np.concatenate(
[
np.array(demo["obs/ee_states"]),
np.array(demo["obs/gripper_states"]),
],
axis=1,
)
episode = {
"observation.images.image": np.array(demo["obs/agentview_rgb"]),
"observation.images.wrist_image": np.array(demo["obs/eye_in_hand_rgb"]),
"observation.state": np.array(state, dtype=np.float32),
"observation.states.ee_state": np.array(demo["obs/ee_states"], dtype=np.float32),
"observation.states.joint_state": np.array(demo["obs/joint_states"], dtype=np.float32),
"observation.states.gripper_state": np.array(demo["obs/gripper_states"], dtype=np.float32),
"action": np.array(action, dtype=np.float32),
}
yield [{**{k: v[i] for k, v in episode.items()}} for i in range(demo_len)]

View File

@@ -19,12 +19,11 @@ from lerobot.datasets.utils import hw_to_dataset_features
from lerobot.policies.act.modeling_act import ACTPolicy
from lerobot.policies.factory import make_pre_post_processors
from lerobot.processor import make_default_processors
from lerobot.record import record_loop
from lerobot.robots.lekiwi import LeKiwiClient, LeKiwiClientConfig
from lerobot.scripts.lerobot_record import record_loop
from lerobot.utils.constants import ACTION, OBS_STR
from lerobot.utils.control_utils import init_keyboard_listener
from lerobot.utils.utils import log_say
from lerobot.utils.visualization_utils import init_rerun
from lerobot.utils.visualization_utils import _init_rerun
NUM_EPISODES = 2
FPS = 30
@@ -42,8 +41,8 @@ robot = LeKiwiClient(robot_config)
policy = ACTPolicy.from_pretrained(HF_MODEL_ID)
# Configure the dataset features
action_features = hw_to_dataset_features(robot.action_features, ACTION)
obs_features = hw_to_dataset_features(robot.observation_features, OBS_STR)
action_features = hw_to_dataset_features(robot.action_features, "action")
obs_features = hw_to_dataset_features(robot.observation_features, "observation")
dataset_features = {**action_features, **obs_features}
# Create the dataset
@@ -74,7 +73,7 @@ teleop_action_processor, robot_action_processor, robot_observation_processor = m
# Initialize the keyboard listener and rerun visualization
listener, events = init_keyboard_listener()
init_rerun(session_name="lekiwi_evaluate")
_init_rerun(session_name="lekiwi_evaluate")
if not robot.is_connected:
raise ValueError("Robot is not connected!")
@@ -133,6 +132,4 @@ while recorded_episodes < NUM_EPISODES and not events["stop_recording"]:
log_say("Stop recording")
robot.disconnect()
listener.stop()
dataset.finalize()
dataset.push_to_hub()

View File

@@ -17,15 +17,14 @@
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset
from lerobot.datasets.utils import hw_to_dataset_features
from lerobot.processor import make_default_processors
from lerobot.record import record_loop
from lerobot.robots.lekiwi.config_lekiwi import LeKiwiClientConfig
from lerobot.robots.lekiwi.lekiwi_client import LeKiwiClient
from lerobot.scripts.lerobot_record import record_loop
from lerobot.teleoperators.keyboard import KeyboardTeleop, KeyboardTeleopConfig
from lerobot.teleoperators.so100_leader import SO100Leader, SO100LeaderConfig
from lerobot.utils.constants import ACTION, OBS_STR
from lerobot.utils.control_utils import init_keyboard_listener
from lerobot.utils.utils import log_say
from lerobot.utils.visualization_utils import init_rerun
from lerobot.utils.visualization_utils import _init_rerun
NUM_EPISODES = 2
FPS = 30
@@ -48,8 +47,8 @@ keyboard = KeyboardTeleop(keyboard_config)
teleop_action_processor, robot_action_processor, robot_observation_processor = make_default_processors()
# Configure the dataset features
action_features = hw_to_dataset_features(robot.action_features, ACTION)
obs_features = hw_to_dataset_features(robot.observation_features, OBS_STR)
action_features = hw_to_dataset_features(robot.action_features, "action")
obs_features = hw_to_dataset_features(robot.observation_features, "observation")
dataset_features = {**action_features, **obs_features}
# Create the dataset
@@ -70,7 +69,7 @@ keyboard.connect()
# Initialize the keyboard listener and rerun visualization
listener, events = init_keyboard_listener()
init_rerun(session_name="lekiwi_record")
_init_rerun(session_name="lekiwi_record")
if not robot.is_connected or not leader_arm.is_connected or not keyboard.is_connected:
raise ValueError("Robot or teleop is not connected!")
@@ -130,6 +129,4 @@ robot.disconnect()
leader_arm.disconnect()
keyboard.disconnect()
listener.stop()
dataset.finalize()
dataset.push_to_hub()

View File

@@ -19,7 +19,6 @@ import time
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset
from lerobot.robots.lekiwi.config_lekiwi import LeKiwiClientConfig
from lerobot.robots.lekiwi.lekiwi_client import LeKiwiClient
from lerobot.utils.constants import ACTION
from lerobot.utils.robot_utils import busy_wait
from lerobot.utils.utils import log_say
@@ -35,7 +34,7 @@ robot = LeKiwiClient(robot_config)
dataset = LeRobotDataset("<hf_username>/<dataset_repo_id>", episodes=[EPISODE_IDX])
# Filter dataset to only include frames from the specified episode since episodes are chunked in dataset V3.0
episode_frames = dataset.hf_dataset.filter(lambda x: x["episode_index"] == EPISODE_IDX)
actions = episode_frames.select_columns(ACTION)
actions = episode_frames.select_columns("action")
# Connect to the robot
robot.connect()
@@ -50,7 +49,7 @@ for idx in range(len(episode_frames)):
# Get recorded action from dataset
action = {
name: float(actions[idx][ACTION][i]) for i, name in enumerate(dataset.features[ACTION]["names"])
name: float(actions[idx]["action"][i]) for i, name in enumerate(dataset.features["action"]["names"])
}
# Send action to robot

View File

@@ -20,7 +20,7 @@ from lerobot.robots.lekiwi import LeKiwiClient, LeKiwiClientConfig
from lerobot.teleoperators.keyboard.teleop_keyboard import KeyboardTeleop, KeyboardTeleopConfig
from lerobot.teleoperators.so100_leader import SO100Leader, SO100LeaderConfig
from lerobot.utils.robot_utils import busy_wait
from lerobot.utils.visualization_utils import init_rerun, log_rerun_data
from lerobot.utils.visualization_utils import _init_rerun, log_rerun_data
FPS = 30
@@ -41,7 +41,7 @@ leader_arm.connect()
keyboard.connect()
# Init rerun viewer
init_rerun(session_name="lekiwi_teleop")
_init_rerun(session_name="lekiwi_teleop")
if not robot.is_connected or not leader_arm.is_connected or not keyboard.is_connected:
raise ValueError("Robot or teleop is not connected!")

View File

@@ -34,16 +34,16 @@ from lerobot.processor.converters import (
transition_to_observation,
transition_to_robot_action,
)
from lerobot.record import record_loop
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.config_so100_follower import SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.robot_kinematic_processor import (
ForwardKinematicsJointsToEE,
InverseKinematicsEEToJoints,
)
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.so100_follower import SO100Follower
from lerobot.scripts.lerobot_record import record_loop
from lerobot.utils.control_utils import init_keyboard_listener
from lerobot.utils.utils import log_say
from lerobot.utils.visualization_utils import init_rerun
from lerobot.utils.visualization_utils import _init_rerun
NUM_EPISODES = 5
FPS = 30
@@ -137,7 +137,7 @@ robot.connect()
# Initialize the keyboard listener and rerun visualization
listener, events = init_keyboard_listener()
init_rerun(session_name="phone_so100_evaluate")
_init_rerun(session_name="phone_so100_evaluate")
if not robot.is_connected:
raise ValueError("Robot is not connected!")
@@ -194,6 +194,4 @@ for episode_idx in range(NUM_EPISODES):
log_say("Stop recording")
robot.disconnect()
listener.stop()
dataset.finalize()
dataset.push_to_hub()

View File

@@ -26,6 +26,7 @@ from lerobot.processor.converters import (
transition_to_observation,
transition_to_robot_action,
)
from lerobot.record import record_loop
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.config_so100_follower import SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.robot_kinematic_processor import (
EEBoundsAndSafety,
@@ -35,13 +36,12 @@ from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.robot_kinematic_processor import (
InverseKinematicsEEToJoints,
)
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.so100_follower import SO100Follower
from lerobot.scripts.lerobot_record import record_loop
from lerobot.teleoperators.phone.config_phone import PhoneConfig, PhoneOS
from lerobot.teleoperators.phone.phone_processor import MapPhoneActionToRobotAction
from lerobot.teleoperators.phone.teleop_phone import Phone
from lerobot.utils.control_utils import init_keyboard_listener
from lerobot.utils.utils import log_say
from lerobot.utils.visualization_utils import init_rerun
from lerobot.utils.visualization_utils import _init_rerun
NUM_EPISODES = 2
FPS = 30
@@ -84,6 +84,7 @@ phone_to_robot_ee_pose_processor = RobotProcessorPipeline[tuple[RobotAction, Rob
EEBoundsAndSafety(
end_effector_bounds={"min": [-1.0, -1.0, -1.0], "max": [1.0, 1.0, 1.0]},
max_ee_step_m=0.20,
max_ee_twist_step_rad=0.50,
),
GripperVelocityToJoint(speed_factor=20.0),
],
@@ -142,7 +143,7 @@ phone.connect()
# Initialize the keyboard listener and rerun visualization
listener, events = init_keyboard_listener()
init_rerun(session_name="phone_so100_record")
_init_rerun(session_name="phone_so100_record")
if not robot.is_connected or not phone.is_connected:
raise ValueError("Robot or teleop is not connected!")
@@ -200,6 +201,4 @@ log_say("Stop recording")
robot.disconnect()
phone.disconnect()
listener.stop()
dataset.finalize()
dataset.push_to_hub()

View File

@@ -28,7 +28,6 @@ from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.robot_kinematic_processor import (
InverseKinematicsEEToJoints,
)
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.so100_follower import SO100Follower
from lerobot.utils.constants import ACTION
from lerobot.utils.robot_utils import busy_wait
from lerobot.utils.utils import log_say
@@ -67,7 +66,7 @@ robot_ee_to_joints_processor = RobotProcessorPipeline[tuple[RobotAction, RobotOb
dataset = LeRobotDataset(HF_REPO_ID, episodes=[EPISODE_IDX])
# Filter dataset to only include frames from the specified episode since episodes are chunked in dataset V3.0
episode_frames = dataset.hf_dataset.filter(lambda x: x["episode_index"] == EPISODE_IDX)
actions = episode_frames.select_columns(ACTION)
actions = episode_frames.select_columns("action")
# Connect to the robot
robot.connect()
@@ -82,7 +81,7 @@ for idx in range(len(episode_frames)):
# Get recorded action from dataset
ee_action = {
name: float(actions[idx][ACTION][i]) for i, name in enumerate(dataset.features[ACTION]["names"])
name: float(actions[idx]["action"][i]) for i, name in enumerate(dataset.features["action"]["names"])
}
# Get robot observation

View File

@@ -33,7 +33,7 @@ from lerobot.teleoperators.phone.config_phone import PhoneConfig, PhoneOS
from lerobot.teleoperators.phone.phone_processor import MapPhoneActionToRobotAction
from lerobot.teleoperators.phone.teleop_phone import Phone
from lerobot.utils.robot_utils import busy_wait
from lerobot.utils.visualization_utils import init_rerun, log_rerun_data
from lerobot.utils.visualization_utils import _init_rerun, log_rerun_data
FPS = 30
@@ -67,6 +67,7 @@ phone_to_robot_joints_processor = RobotProcessorPipeline[tuple[RobotAction, Robo
EEBoundsAndSafety(
end_effector_bounds={"min": [-1.0, -1.0, -1.0], "max": [1.0, 1.0, 1.0]},
max_ee_step_m=0.10,
max_ee_twist_step_rad=0.50,
),
GripperVelocityToJoint(
speed_factor=20.0,
@@ -86,7 +87,7 @@ robot.connect()
teleop_device.connect()
# Init rerun viewer
init_rerun(session_name="phone_so100_teleop")
_init_rerun(session_name="phone_so100_teleop")
if not robot.is_connected or not teleop_device.is_connected:
raise ValueError("Robot or teleop is not connected!")

View File

@@ -362,8 +362,6 @@ def port_droid(
lerobot_dataset.save_episode()
logging.info("Save_episode")
lerobot_dataset.finalize()
if push_to_hub:
lerobot_dataset.push_to_hub(
# Add openx tag, since it belongs to the openx collection of datasets

View File

@@ -15,12 +15,16 @@
# limitations under the License.
import argparse
import logging
from pathlib import Path
from datatrove.executor import LocalPipelineExecutor
from datatrove.executor.slurm import SlurmPipelineExecutor
from datatrove.pipeline.base import PipelineStep
from port_droid import DROID_SHARDS
from port_datasets.droid_rlds.port_droid import DROID_SHARDS
from lerobot.datasets.aggregate import aggregate_datasets
from lerobot.utils.utils import init_logging
class AggregateDatasets(PipelineStep):
@@ -34,11 +38,6 @@ class AggregateDatasets(PipelineStep):
self.aggr_repo_id = aggregated_repo_id
def run(self, data=None, rank: int = 0, world_size: int = 1):
import logging
from lerobot.datasets.aggregate import aggregate_datasets
from lerobot.utils.utils import init_logging
init_logging()
# Since aggregate_datasets already handles parallel processing internally,

View File

@@ -20,7 +20,7 @@ from pathlib import Path
from datatrove.executor import LocalPipelineExecutor
from datatrove.executor.slurm import SlurmPipelineExecutor
from datatrove.pipeline.base import PipelineStep
from port_droid import DROID_SHARDS
from port_datasets.droid_rlds.port_droid import DROID_SHARDS
class PortDroidShards(PipelineStep):
@@ -35,7 +35,7 @@ class PortDroidShards(PipelineStep):
def run(self, data=None, rank: int = 0, world_size: int = 1):
from datasets.utils.tqdm import disable_progress_bars
from port_droid import port_droid, validate_dataset
from port_datasets.droid_rlds.port_droid import port_droid, validate_dataset
from lerobot.utils.utils import init_logging

View File

@@ -24,7 +24,7 @@ from datatrove.executor.slurm import SlurmPipelineExecutor
from datatrove.pipeline.base import PipelineStep
from huggingface_hub import HfApi
from huggingface_hub.constants import REPOCARD_NAME
from port_droid import DROID_SHARDS
from port_datasets.droid_rlds.port_droid import DROID_SHARDS
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import CODEBASE_VERSION, LeRobotDatasetMetadata
from lerobot.datasets.utils import create_lerobot_dataset_card
@@ -185,11 +185,11 @@ class UploadDataset(PipelineStep):
def make_upload_executor(
repo_id, job_name, logs_dir, workers, partition, cpus_per_task, mem_per_cpu, private=False, slurm=True
repo_id, job_name, logs_dir, workers, partition, cpus_per_task, mem_per_cpu, slurm=True
):
kwargs = {
"pipeline": [
UploadDataset(repo_id, private=private),
UploadDataset(repo_id),
],
"logging_dir": str(logs_dir / job_name),
}
@@ -267,12 +267,6 @@ def main():
default="1950M",
help="Memory per cpu that each worker will use.",
)
parser.add_argument(
"--private",
action="store_true",
default=False,
help="Whether to create a private repository.",
)
init_logging()

View File

@@ -34,16 +34,16 @@ from lerobot.processor.converters import (
transition_to_observation,
transition_to_robot_action,
)
from lerobot.record import record_loop
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.config_so100_follower import SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.robot_kinematic_processor import (
ForwardKinematicsJointsToEE,
InverseKinematicsEEToJoints,
)
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.so100_follower import SO100Follower
from lerobot.scripts.lerobot_record import record_loop
from lerobot.utils.control_utils import init_keyboard_listener
from lerobot.utils.utils import log_say
from lerobot.utils.visualization_utils import init_rerun
from lerobot.utils.visualization_utils import _init_rerun
NUM_EPISODES = 5
FPS = 30
@@ -138,7 +138,7 @@ robot.connect()
# Initialize the keyboard listener and rerun visualization
listener, events = init_keyboard_listener()
init_rerun(session_name="so100_so100_evaluate")
_init_rerun(session_name="so100_so100_evaluate")
if not robot.is_connected:
raise ValueError("Robot is not connected!")
@@ -195,6 +195,4 @@ for episode_idx in range(NUM_EPISODES):
log_say("Stop recording")
robot.disconnect()
listener.stop()
dataset.finalize()
dataset.push_to_hub()

View File

@@ -27,6 +27,7 @@ from lerobot.processor.converters import (
transition_to_observation,
transition_to_robot_action,
)
from lerobot.record import record_loop
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.config_so100_follower import SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.robot_kinematic_processor import (
EEBoundsAndSafety,
@@ -34,12 +35,11 @@ from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.robot_kinematic_processor import (
InverseKinematicsEEToJoints,
)
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.so100_follower import SO100Follower
from lerobot.scripts.lerobot_record import record_loop
from lerobot.teleoperators.so100_leader.config_so100_leader import SO100LeaderConfig
from lerobot.teleoperators.so100_leader.so100_leader import SO100Leader
from lerobot.utils.control_utils import init_keyboard_listener
from lerobot.utils.utils import log_say
from lerobot.utils.visualization_utils import init_rerun
from lerobot.utils.visualization_utils import _init_rerun
NUM_EPISODES = 2
FPS = 30
@@ -101,6 +101,7 @@ ee_to_follower_joints = RobotProcessorPipeline[tuple[RobotAction, RobotObservati
EEBoundsAndSafety(
end_effector_bounds={"min": [-1.0, -1.0, -1.0], "max": [1.0, 1.0, 1.0]},
max_ee_step_m=0.10,
max_ee_twist_step_rad=0.50,
),
InverseKinematicsEEToJoints(
kinematics=follower_kinematics_solver,
@@ -142,7 +143,7 @@ follower.connect()
# Initialize the keyboard listener and rerun visualization
listener, events = init_keyboard_listener()
init_rerun(session_name="recording_phone")
_init_rerun(session_name="recording_phone")
if not leader.is_connected or not follower.is_connected:
raise ValueError("Robot or teleop is not connected!")
@@ -199,6 +200,4 @@ log_say("Stop recording")
leader.disconnect()
follower.disconnect()
listener.stop()
dataset.finalize()
dataset.push_to_hub()

View File

@@ -29,7 +29,6 @@ from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.robot_kinematic_processor import (
InverseKinematicsEEToJoints,
)
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.so100_follower import SO100Follower
from lerobot.utils.constants import ACTION
from lerobot.utils.robot_utils import busy_wait
from lerobot.utils.utils import log_say
@@ -68,7 +67,7 @@ robot_ee_to_joints_processor = RobotProcessorPipeline[tuple[RobotAction, RobotOb
dataset = LeRobotDataset(HF_REPO_ID, episodes=[EPISODE_IDX])
# Filter dataset to only include frames from the specified episode since episodes are chunked in dataset V3.0
episode_frames = dataset.hf_dataset.filter(lambda x: x["episode_index"] == EPISODE_IDX)
actions = episode_frames.select_columns(ACTION)
actions = episode_frames.select_columns("action")
# Connect to the robot
robot.connect()
@@ -83,7 +82,7 @@ for idx in range(len(episode_frames)):
# Get recorded action from dataset
ee_action = {
name: float(actions[idx][ACTION][i]) for i, name in enumerate(dataset.features[ACTION]["names"])
name: float(actions[idx]["action"][i]) for i, name in enumerate(dataset.features["action"]["names"])
}
# Get robot observation

View File

@@ -33,7 +33,7 @@ from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.so100_follower import SO100Follower
from lerobot.teleoperators.so100_leader.config_so100_leader import SO100LeaderConfig
from lerobot.teleoperators.so100_leader.so100_leader import SO100Leader
from lerobot.utils.robot_utils import busy_wait
from lerobot.utils.visualization_utils import init_rerun, log_rerun_data
from lerobot.utils.visualization_utils import _init_rerun, log_rerun_data
FPS = 30
@@ -78,6 +78,7 @@ ee_to_follower_joints = RobotProcessorPipeline[tuple[RobotAction, RobotObservati
EEBoundsAndSafety(
end_effector_bounds={"min": [-1.0, -1.0, -1.0], "max": [1.0, 1.0, 1.0]},
max_ee_step_m=0.10,
max_ee_twist_step_rad=0.50,
),
InverseKinematicsEEToJoints(
kinematics=follower_kinematics_solver,
@@ -94,7 +95,7 @@ follower.connect()
leader.connect()
# Init rerun viewer
init_rerun(session_name="so100_so100_EE_teleop")
_init_rerun(session_name="so100_so100_EE_teleop")
print("Starting teleop loop...")
while True:

View File

@@ -20,13 +20,13 @@ from pathlib import Path
import torch
from lerobot.configs.types import FeatureType
from lerobot.constants import ACTION
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDatasetMetadata
from lerobot.datasets.streaming_dataset import StreamingLeRobotDataset
from lerobot.datasets.utils import dataset_to_policy_features
from lerobot.policies.act.configuration_act import ACTConfig
from lerobot.policies.act.modeling_act import ACTPolicy
from lerobot.policies.factory import make_pre_post_processors
from lerobot.utils.constants import ACTION
def main():

View File

@@ -1,98 +0,0 @@
"""This script demonstrates how to train ACT Policy on a real-world dataset."""
from pathlib import Path
import torch
from lerobot.configs.types import FeatureType
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset, LeRobotDatasetMetadata
from lerobot.datasets.utils import dataset_to_policy_features
from lerobot.policies.act.configuration_act import ACTConfig
from lerobot.policies.act.modeling_act import ACTPolicy
from lerobot.policies.factory import make_pre_post_processors
def make_delta_timestamps(delta_indices: list[int] | None, fps: int) -> list[float]:
if delta_indices is None:
return [0]
return [i / fps for i in delta_indices]
output_directory = Path("outputs/robot_learning_tutorial/act")
output_directory.mkdir(parents=True, exist_ok=True)
# Select your device
device = torch.device("mps") # or "cuda" or "cpu"
dataset_id = "lerobot/svla_so101_pickplace"
# This specifies the inputs the model will be expecting and the outputs it will produce
dataset_metadata = LeRobotDatasetMetadata(dataset_id)
features = dataset_to_policy_features(dataset_metadata.features)
output_features = {key: ft for key, ft in features.items() if ft.type is FeatureType.ACTION}
input_features = {key: ft for key, ft in features.items() if key not in output_features}
cfg = ACTConfig(input_features=input_features, output_features=output_features)
policy = ACTPolicy(cfg)
preprocessor, postprocessor = make_pre_post_processors(cfg, dataset_stats=dataset_metadata.stats)
policy.train()
policy.to(device)
# To perform action chunking, ACT expects a given number of actions as targets
delta_timestamps = {
"action": make_delta_timestamps(cfg.action_delta_indices, dataset_metadata.fps),
}
# add image features if they are present
delta_timestamps |= {
k: make_delta_timestamps(cfg.observation_delta_indices, dataset_metadata.fps) for k in cfg.image_features
}
# Instantiate the dataset
dataset = LeRobotDataset(dataset_id, delta_timestamps=delta_timestamps)
# Create the optimizer and dataloader for offline training
optimizer = cfg.get_optimizer_preset().build(policy.parameters())
batch_size = 32
dataloader = torch.utils.data.DataLoader(
dataset,
batch_size=batch_size,
shuffle=True,
pin_memory=device.type != "cpu",
drop_last=True,
)
# Number of training steps and logging frequency
training_steps = 1
log_freq = 1
# Run training loop
step = 0
done = False
while not done:
for batch in dataloader:
batch = preprocessor(batch)
loss, _ = policy.forward(batch)
loss.backward()
optimizer.step()
optimizer.zero_grad()
if step % log_freq == 0:
print(f"step: {step} loss: {loss.item():.3f}")
step += 1
if step >= training_steps:
done = True
break
# Save the policy checkpoint, alongside the pre/post processors
policy.save_pretrained(output_directory)
preprocessor.save_pretrained(output_directory)
postprocessor.save_pretrained(output_directory)
# Save all assets to the Hub
policy.push_to_hub("fracapuano/robot_learning_tutorial_act")
preprocessor.push_to_hub("fracapuano/robot_learning_tutorial_act")
postprocessor.push_to_hub("fracapuano/robot_learning_tutorial_act")

View File

@@ -1,57 +0,0 @@
import torch
from lerobot.cameras.opencv.configuration_opencv import OpenCVCameraConfig
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDatasetMetadata
from lerobot.policies.act.modeling_act import ACTPolicy
from lerobot.policies.factory import make_pre_post_processors
from lerobot.policies.utils import build_inference_frame, make_robot_action
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.config_so100_follower import SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.so100_follower import SO100Follower
device = torch.device("mps") # or "cuda" or "cpu"
model_id = "fracapuano/robot_learning_tutorial_act"
model = ACTPolicy.from_pretrained(model_id)
dataset_id = "lerobot/svla_so101_pickplace"
# This only downloads the metadata for the dataset, ~10s of MB even for large-scale datasets
dataset_metadata = LeRobotDatasetMetadata(dataset_id)
preprocess, postprocess = make_pre_post_processors(model.config, dataset_stats=dataset_metadata.stats)
# # find ports using lerobot-find-port
follower_port = ... # something like "/dev/tty.usbmodem58760431631"
# # the robot ids are used the load the right calibration files
follower_id = ... # something like "follower_so100"
MAX_EPISODES = 5
MAX_STEPS_PER_EPISODE = 20
# Robot and environment configuration
# Camera keys must match the name and resolutions of the ones used for training!
# You can check the camera keys expected by a model in the info.json card on the model card on the Hub
camera_config = {
"side": OpenCVCameraConfig(index_or_path=0, width=640, height=480, fps=30),
"up": OpenCVCameraConfig(index_or_path=1, width=640, height=480, fps=30),
}
robot_cfg = SO100FollowerConfig(port=follower_port, id=follower_id, cameras=camera_config)
robot = SO100Follower(robot_cfg)
robot.connect()
for _ in range(MAX_EPISODES):
for _ in range(MAX_STEPS_PER_EPISODE):
obs = robot.get_observation()
obs_frame = build_inference_frame(
observation=obs, ds_features=dataset_metadata.features, device=device
)
obs = preprocess(obs_frame)
action = model.select_action(obs)
action = postprocess(action)
action = make_robot_action(action, dataset_metadata.features)
robot.send_action(action)
print("Episode finished! Starting new episode...")

View File

@@ -1,11 +0,0 @@
from lerobot.async_inference.configs import PolicyServerConfig
from lerobot.async_inference.policy_server import serve
host = ... # something like "127.0.0.1" if you're exposing to localhost
port = ... # something like 8080
config = PolicyServerConfig(
host=host,
port=port,
)
serve(config)

View File

@@ -1,55 +0,0 @@
import threading
from lerobot.async_inference.configs import RobotClientConfig
from lerobot.async_inference.helpers import visualize_action_queue_size
from lerobot.async_inference.robot_client import RobotClient
from lerobot.cameras.opencv.configuration_opencv import OpenCVCameraConfig
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower import SO100FollowerConfig
# these cameras must match the ones expected by the policy - find your cameras with lerobot-find-cameras
# check the config.json on the Hub for the policy you are using to see the expected camera specs
camera_cfg = {
"up": OpenCVCameraConfig(index_or_path=0, width=640, height=480, fps=30),
"side": OpenCVCameraConfig(index_or_path=1, width=640, height=480, fps=30),
}
# # find ports using lerobot-find-port
follower_port = ... # something like "/dev/tty.usbmodem58760431631"
# # the robot ids are used the load the right calibration files
follower_id = ... # something like "follower_so100"
robot_cfg = SO100FollowerConfig(port=follower_port, id=follower_id, cameras=camera_cfg)
server_address = ... # something like "127.0.0.1:8080" if using localhost
# 3. Create client configuration
client_cfg = RobotClientConfig(
robot=robot_cfg,
server_address=server_address,
policy_device="mps",
policy_type="act",
pretrained_name_or_path="fracapuano/robot_learning_tutorial_act",
chunk_size_threshold=0.5, # g
actions_per_chunk=50, # make sure this is less than the max actions of the policy
)
# 4. Create and start client
client = RobotClient(client_cfg)
# 5. Provide a textual description of the task
task = ...
if client.start():
# Start action receiver thread
action_receiver_thread = threading.Thread(target=client.receive_actions, daemon=True)
action_receiver_thread.start()
try:
# Run the control loop
client.control_loop(task)
except KeyboardInterrupt:
client.stop()
action_receiver_thread.join()
# (Optionally) plot the action queue size
visualize_action_queue_size(client.action_queue_size)

View File

@@ -1,99 +0,0 @@
"""This script demonstrates how to train Diffusion Policy on a real-world dataset."""
from pathlib import Path
import torch
from lerobot.configs.types import FeatureType
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset, LeRobotDatasetMetadata
from lerobot.datasets.utils import dataset_to_policy_features
from lerobot.policies.diffusion.configuration_diffusion import DiffusionConfig
from lerobot.policies.diffusion.modeling_diffusion import DiffusionPolicy
from lerobot.policies.factory import make_pre_post_processors
def make_delta_timestamps(delta_indices: list[int] | None, fps: int) -> list[float]:
if delta_indices is None:
return [0]
return [i / fps for i in delta_indices]
output_directory = Path("outputs/robot_learning_tutorial/diffusion")
output_directory.mkdir(parents=True, exist_ok=True)
# Select your device
device = torch.device("mps") # or "cuda" or "cpu"
dataset_id = "lerobot/svla_so101_pickplace"
# This specifies the inputs the model will be expecting and the outputs it will produce
dataset_metadata = LeRobotDatasetMetadata(dataset_id)
features = dataset_to_policy_features(dataset_metadata.features)
output_features = {key: ft for key, ft in features.items() if ft.type is FeatureType.ACTION}
input_features = {key: ft for key, ft in features.items() if key not in output_features}
cfg = DiffusionConfig(input_features=input_features, output_features=output_features)
policy = DiffusionPolicy(cfg)
preprocessor, postprocessor = make_pre_post_processors(cfg, dataset_stats=dataset_metadata.stats)
policy.train()
policy.to(device)
# To perform action chunking, ACT expects a given number of actions as targets
delta_timestamps = {
"observation.state": make_delta_timestamps(cfg.observation_delta_indices, dataset_metadata.fps),
"action": make_delta_timestamps(cfg.action_delta_indices, dataset_metadata.fps),
}
# add image features if they are present
delta_timestamps |= {
k: make_delta_timestamps(cfg.observation_delta_indices, dataset_metadata.fps) for k in cfg.image_features
}
# Instantiate the dataset
dataset = LeRobotDataset(dataset_id, delta_timestamps=delta_timestamps)
# Create the optimizer and dataloader for offline training
optimizer = cfg.get_optimizer_preset().build(policy.parameters())
batch_size = 32
dataloader = torch.utils.data.DataLoader(
dataset,
batch_size=batch_size,
shuffle=True,
pin_memory=device.type != "cpu",
drop_last=True,
)
# Number of training steps and logging frequency
training_steps = 1
log_freq = 1
# Run training loop
step = 0
done = False
while not done:
for batch in dataloader:
batch = preprocessor(batch)
loss, _ = policy.forward(batch)
loss.backward()
optimizer.step()
optimizer.zero_grad()
if step % log_freq == 0:
print(f"step: {step} loss: {loss.item():.3f}")
step += 1
if step >= training_steps:
done = True
break
# Save the policy checkpoint, alongside the pre/post processors
policy.save_pretrained(output_directory)
preprocessor.save_pretrained(output_directory)
postprocessor.save_pretrained(output_directory)
# Save all assets to the Hub
policy.push_to_hub("fracapuano/robot_learning_tutorial_diffusion")
preprocessor.push_to_hub("fracapuano/robot_learning_tutorial_diffusion")
postprocessor.push_to_hub("fracapuano/robot_learning_tutorial_diffusion")

View File

@@ -1,60 +0,0 @@
import torch
from lerobot.cameras.opencv.configuration_opencv import OpenCVCameraConfig
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDatasetMetadata
from lerobot.policies.diffusion.modeling_diffusion import DiffusionPolicy
from lerobot.policies.factory import make_pre_post_processors
from lerobot.policies.utils import build_inference_frame, make_robot_action
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.config_so100_follower import SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.so100_follower import SO100Follower
device = torch.device("mps") # or "cuda" or "cpu"
model_id = "fracapuano/robot_learning_tutorial_diffusion"
model = DiffusionPolicy.from_pretrained(model_id)
dataset_id = "lerobot/svla_so101_pickplace"
# This only downloads the metadata for the dataset, ~10s of MB even for large-scale datasets
dataset_metadata = LeRobotDatasetMetadata(dataset_id)
preprocess, postprocess = make_pre_post_processors(
model.config, model_id, dataset_stats=dataset_metadata.stats
)
MAX_EPISODES = 5
MAX_STEPS_PER_EPISODE = 20
# # find ports using lerobot-find-port
follower_port = ... # something like "/dev/tty.usbmodem58760431631"
# # the robot ids are used the load the right calibration files
follower_id = ... # something like "follower_so100"
# Robot and environment configuration
# Camera keys must match the name and resolutions of the ones used for training!
# You can check the camera keys expected by a model in the info.json card on the model card on the Hub
camera_config = {
"side": OpenCVCameraConfig(index_or_path=0, width=640, height=480, fps=30),
"up": OpenCVCameraConfig(index_or_path=1, width=640, height=480, fps=30),
}
robot_cfg = SO100FollowerConfig(port=follower_port, id=follower_id, cameras=camera_config)
robot = SO100Follower(robot_cfg)
robot.connect()
for _ in range(MAX_EPISODES):
for _ in range(MAX_STEPS_PER_EPISODE):
obs = robot.get_observation()
obs_frame = build_inference_frame(
observation=obs, ds_features=dataset_metadata.features, device=device
)
obs = preprocess(obs_frame)
action = model.select_action(obs)
action = postprocess(action)
action = make_robot_action(action, dataset_metadata.features)
robot.send_action(action)
print("Episode finished! Starting new episode...")

View File

@@ -1,67 +0,0 @@
import torch
from lerobot.cameras.opencv.configuration_opencv import OpenCVCameraConfig
from lerobot.datasets.utils import hw_to_dataset_features
from lerobot.policies.factory import make_pre_post_processors
from lerobot.policies.pi0.modeling_pi0 import PI0Policy
from lerobot.policies.utils import build_inference_frame, make_robot_action
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.config_so100_follower import SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.so100_follower import SO100Follower
MAX_EPISODES = 5
MAX_STEPS_PER_EPISODE = 20
device = torch.device("mps") # or "cuda" or "cpu"
model_id = "lerobot/pi0_base"
model = PI0Policy.from_pretrained(model_id)
preprocess, postprocess = make_pre_post_processors(
model.config,
model_id,
# This overrides allows to run on MPS, otherwise defaults to CUDA (if available)
preprocessor_overrides={"device_processor": {"device": str(device)}},
)
# find ports using lerobot-find-port
follower_port = ... # something like "/dev/tty.usbmodem58760431631"
# the robot ids are used the load the right calibration files
follower_id = ... # something like "follower_so100"
# Robot and environment configuration
# Camera keys must match the name and resolutions of the ones used for training!
# You can check the camera keys expected by a model in the info.json card on the model card on the Hub
camera_config = {
"base_0_rgb": OpenCVCameraConfig(index_or_path=0, width=640, height=480, fps=30),
"left_wrist_0_rgb": OpenCVCameraConfig(index_or_path=1, width=640, height=480, fps=30),
"right_wrist_0_rgb": OpenCVCameraConfig(index_or_path=2, width=640, height=480, fps=30),
}
robot_cfg = SO100FollowerConfig(port=follower_port, id=follower_id, cameras=camera_config)
robot = SO100Follower(robot_cfg)
robot.connect()
task = "" # something like "pick the red block"
robot_type = "" # something like "so100_follower" for multi-embodiment datasets
# This is used to match the raw observation keys to the keys expected by the policy
action_features = hw_to_dataset_features(robot.action_features, "action")
obs_features = hw_to_dataset_features(robot.observation_features, "observation")
dataset_features = {**action_features, **obs_features}
for _ in range(MAX_EPISODES):
for _ in range(MAX_STEPS_PER_EPISODE):
obs = robot.get_observation()
obs_frame = build_inference_frame(
observation=obs, ds_features=dataset_features, device=device, task=task, robot_type=robot_type
)
obs = preprocess(obs_frame)
action = model.select_action(obs)
action = postprocess(action)
action = make_robot_action(action, dataset_features)
robot.send_action(action)
print("Episode finished! Starting new episode...")

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@@ -1,345 +0,0 @@
import multiprocessing as mp
import signal
from pathlib import Path
from queue import Empty, Full
import torch
import torch.optim as optim
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset
from lerobot.datasets.utils import hw_to_dataset_features
from lerobot.envs.configs import HILSerlProcessorConfig, HILSerlRobotEnvConfig
from lerobot.policies.sac.configuration_sac import SACConfig
from lerobot.policies.sac.modeling_sac import SACPolicy
from lerobot.policies.sac.reward_model.modeling_classifier import Classifier
from lerobot.rl.buffer import ReplayBuffer
from lerobot.rl.gym_manipulator import make_robot_env
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower import SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.teleoperators.so100_leader import SO100LeaderConfig
from lerobot.teleoperators.utils import TeleopEvents
LOG_EVERY = 10
SEND_EVERY = 10
def run_learner(
transitions_queue: mp.Queue,
parameters_queue: mp.Queue,
shutdown_event: mp.Event,
policy_learner: SACPolicy,
online_buffer: ReplayBuffer,
offline_buffer: ReplayBuffer,
lr: float = 3e-4,
batch_size: int = 32,
device: torch.device = "mps",
):
"""The learner process - trains SAC policy on transitions streamed from the actor, updating parameters
for the actor to adopt."""
policy_learner.train()
policy_learner.to(device)
# Create Adam optimizer from scratch - simple and clean
optimizer = optim.Adam(policy_learner.parameters(), lr=lr)
print(f"[LEARNER] Online buffer capacity: {online_buffer.capacity}")
print(f"[LEARNER] Offline buffer capacity: {offline_buffer.capacity}")
training_step = 0
while not shutdown_event.is_set():
# retrieve incoming transitions from the actor process
try:
transitions = transitions_queue.get(timeout=0.1)
for transition in transitions:
# HIL-SERL: Add ALL transitions to online buffer
online_buffer.add(**transition)
# HIL-SERL: Add ONLY human intervention transitions to offline buffer
is_intervention = transition.get("complementary_info", {}).get("is_intervention", False)
if is_intervention:
offline_buffer.add(**transition)
print(
f"[LEARNER] Human intervention detected! Added to offline buffer (now {len(offline_buffer)} transitions)"
)
except Empty:
pass # No transitions available, continue
# Train if we have enough data
if len(online_buffer) >= policy_learner.config.online_step_before_learning:
# Sample from online buffer (autonomous + human data)
online_batch = online_buffer.sample(batch_size // 2)
# Sample from offline buffer (human demonstrations only, either precollected or at runtime)
offline_batch = offline_buffer.sample(batch_size // 2)
# Combine batches - this is the key HIL-SERL mechanism!
batch = {}
for key in online_batch:
if key in offline_batch:
batch[key] = torch.cat([online_batch[key], offline_batch[key]], dim=0)
else:
batch[key] = online_batch[key]
loss, _ = policy_learner.forward(batch)
optimizer.zero_grad()
loss.backward()
optimizer.step()
training_step += 1
if training_step % LOG_EVERY == 0:
print(
f"[LEARNER] Training step {training_step}, Loss: {loss.item():.4f}, "
f"Buffers: Online={len(online_buffer)}, Offline={len(offline_buffer)}"
)
# Send updated parameters to actor every 10 training steps
if training_step % SEND_EVERY == 0:
try:
state_dict = {k: v.cpu() for k, v in policy_learner.state_dict().items()}
parameters_queue.put_nowait(state_dict)
print("[LEARNER] Sent updated parameters to actor")
except Full:
# Missing write due to queue not being consumed (should happen rarely)
pass
print("[LEARNER] Learner process finished")
def run_actor(
transitions_queue: mp.Queue,
parameters_queue: mp.Queue,
shutdown_event: mp.Event,
policy_actor: SACPolicy,
reward_classifier: Classifier,
env_cfg: HILSerlRobotEnvConfig,
device: torch.device = "mps",
output_directory: Path | None = None,
):
"""The actor process - interacts with environment and collects data.
The policy is frozen and only the parameters are updated, popping the most recent ones from a queue."""
policy_actor.eval()
policy_actor.to(device)
reward_classifier.eval()
reward_classifier.to(device)
# Create robot environment inside the actor process
env, teleop_device = make_robot_env(env_cfg)
try:
for episode in range(MAX_EPISODES):
if shutdown_event.is_set():
break
obs, _info = env.reset()
episode_reward = 0.0
step = 0
episode_transitions = []
print(f"[ACTOR] Starting episode {episode + 1}")
while step < MAX_STEPS_PER_EPISODE and not shutdown_event.is_set():
try:
new_params = parameters_queue.get_nowait()
policy_actor.load_state_dict(new_params)
print("[ACTOR] Updated policy parameters from learner")
except Empty: # No new updated parameters available from learner, waiting
pass
# Get action from policy
policy_obs = make_policy_obs(obs, device=device)
action_tensor = policy_actor.select_action(policy_obs) # predicts a single action
action = action_tensor.squeeze(0).cpu().numpy()
# Step environment
next_obs, _env_reward, terminated, truncated, _info = env.step(action)
done = terminated or truncated
# Predict reward
policy_next_obs = make_policy_obs(next_obs, device=device)
reward = reward_classifier.predict_reward(policy_next_obs)
if reward >= 1.0 and not done: # success detected! halt episode
terminated = True
done = True
# In HIL-SERL, human interventions come from the teleop device
is_intervention = False
if hasattr(teleop_device, "get_teleop_events"):
# Real intervention detection from teleop device
teleop_events = teleop_device.get_teleop_events()
is_intervention = teleop_events.get(TeleopEvents.IS_INTERVENTION, False)
# Store transition with intervention metadata
transition = {
"state": policy_obs,
"action": action,
"reward": float(reward) if hasattr(reward, "item") else reward,
"next_state": policy_next_obs,
"done": done,
"truncated": truncated,
"complementary_info": {
"is_intervention": is_intervention,
},
}
episode_transitions.append(transition)
episode_reward += reward
step += 1
obs = next_obs
if done:
break
# Send episode transitions to learner
transitions_queue.put_nowait(episode_transitions)
except KeyboardInterrupt:
print("[ACTOR] Interrupted by user")
finally:
# Clean up
if hasattr(env, "robot") and env.robot.is_connected:
env.robot.disconnect()
if teleop_device and hasattr(teleop_device, "disconnect"):
teleop_device.disconnect()
if output_directory is not None:
policy_actor.save_pretrained(output_directory)
print(f"[ACTOR] Latest actor policy saved at: {output_directory}")
print("[ACTOR] Actor process finished")
def make_policy_obs(obs, device: torch.device = "cpu"):
return {
"observation.state": torch.from_numpy(obs["agent_pos"]).float().unsqueeze(0).to(device),
**{
f"observation.image.{k}": torch.from_numpy(obs["pixels"][k]).float().unsqueeze(0).to(device)
for k in obs["pixels"]
},
}
"""Main function - coordinates actor and learner processes."""
device = "mps" # or "cuda" or "cpu"
output_directory = Path("outputs/robot_learning_tutorial/hil_serl")
output_directory.mkdir(parents=True, exist_ok=True)
# find ports using lerobot-find-port
follower_port = ...
leader_port = ...
# the robot ids are used the load the right calibration files
follower_id = ...
leader_id = ...
# A pretrained model (to be used in-distribution!)
reward_classifier_id = "fracapuano/reward_classifier_hil_serl_example"
reward_classifier = Classifier.from_pretrained(reward_classifier_id)
reward_classifier.to(device)
reward_classifier.eval()
MAX_EPISODES = 5
MAX_STEPS_PER_EPISODE = 20
# Robot and environment configuration
robot_cfg = SO100FollowerConfig(port=follower_port, id=follower_id)
teleop_cfg = SO100LeaderConfig(port=leader_port, id=leader_id)
processor_cfg = HILSerlProcessorConfig(control_mode="leader")
env_cfg = HILSerlRobotEnvConfig(robot=robot_cfg, teleop=teleop_cfg, processor=processor_cfg)
# Create robot environment
env, teleop_device = make_robot_env(env_cfg)
obs_features = hw_to_dataset_features(env.robot.observation_features, "observation")
action_features = hw_to_dataset_features(env.robot.action_features, "action")
# Create SAC policy for action selection
policy_cfg = SACConfig(
device=device,
input_features=obs_features,
output_features=action_features,
)
policy_actor = SACPolicy(policy_cfg)
policy_learner = SACPolicy(policy_cfg)
demonstrations_repo_id = "lerobot/example_hil_serl_dataset"
offline_dataset = LeRobotDataset(repo_id=demonstrations_repo_id)
# Online buffer: initialized from scratch
online_replay_buffer = ReplayBuffer(device=device, state_keys=list(obs_features.keys()))
# Offline buffer: Created from dataset (pre-populated it with demonstrations)
offline_replay_buffer = ReplayBuffer.from_lerobot_dataset(
lerobot_dataset=offline_dataset, device=device, state_keys=list(obs_features.keys())
)
# Create communication channels between learner and actor processes
transitions_queue = mp.Queue(maxsize=10)
parameters_queue = mp.Queue(maxsize=2)
shutdown_event = mp.Event()
# Signal handler for graceful shutdown
def signal_handler(sig):
print(f"\nSignal {sig} received, shutting down...")
shutdown_event.set()
signal.signal(signal.SIGINT, signal_handler)
signal.signal(signal.SIGTERM, signal_handler)
# Create processes
learner_process = mp.Process(
target=run_learner,
args=(
transitions_queue,
parameters_queue,
shutdown_event,
policy_learner,
online_replay_buffer,
offline_replay_buffer,
),
kwargs={"device": device}, # can run on accelerated hardware for training
)
actor_process = mp.Process(
target=run_actor,
args=(
transitions_queue,
parameters_queue,
shutdown_event,
policy_actor,
reward_classifier,
env_cfg,
output_directory,
),
kwargs={"device": "cpu"}, # actor is frozen, can run on CPU or accelerate for inference
)
learner_process.start()
actor_process.start()
try:
# Wait for actor to finish (it controls the episode loop)
actor_process.join()
shutdown_event.set()
learner_process.join(timeout=10)
except KeyboardInterrupt:
print("Main process interrupted")
shutdown_event.set()
actor_process.join(timeout=5)
learner_process.join(timeout=10)
finally:
if learner_process.is_alive():
learner_process.terminate()
if actor_process.is_alive():
actor_process.terminate()

View File

@@ -1,62 +0,0 @@
import torch
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset
from lerobot.policies.factory import make_policy, make_pre_post_processors
from lerobot.policies.sac.reward_model.configuration_classifier import RewardClassifierConfig
# Device to use for training
device = "mps" # or "cuda", or "cpu"
# Load the dataset used for training
repo_id = "lerobot/example_hil_serl_dataset"
dataset = LeRobotDataset(repo_id)
# Configure the policy to extract features from the image frames
camera_keys = dataset.meta.camera_keys
config = RewardClassifierConfig(
num_cameras=len(camera_keys),
device=device,
# backbone model to extract features from the image frames
model_name="microsoft/resnet-18",
)
# Make policy, preprocessor, and optimizer
policy = make_policy(config, ds_meta=dataset.meta)
optimizer = config.get_optimizer_preset().build(policy.parameters())
preprocessor, _ = make_pre_post_processors(policy_cfg=config, dataset_stats=dataset.meta.stats)
classifier_id = "fracapuano/reward_classifier_hil_serl_example"
# Instantiate a dataloader
dataloader = torch.utils.data.DataLoader(dataset, batch_size=16, shuffle=True)
# Training loop
num_epochs = 5
for epoch in range(num_epochs):
total_loss = 0
total_accuracy = 0
for batch in dataloader:
# Preprocess the batch and move it to the correct device.
batch = preprocessor(batch)
# Forward pass
loss, output_dict = policy.forward(batch)
# Backward pass and optimization
optimizer.zero_grad()
loss.backward()
optimizer.step()
total_loss += loss.item()
total_accuracy += output_dict["accuracy"]
avg_loss = total_loss / len(dataloader)
avg_accuracy = total_accuracy / len(dataloader)
print(f"Epoch {epoch + 1}/{num_epochs}, Loss: {avg_loss:.4f}, Accuracy: {avg_accuracy:.2f}%")
print("Training finished!")
# You can now save the trained policy.
policy.push_to_hub(classifier_id)

View File

@@ -1,66 +0,0 @@
import torch
from lerobot.cameras.opencv.configuration_opencv import OpenCVCameraConfig
from lerobot.datasets.utils import hw_to_dataset_features
from lerobot.policies.factory import make_pre_post_processors
from lerobot.policies.smolvla.modeling_smolvla import SmolVLAPolicy
from lerobot.policies.utils import build_inference_frame, make_robot_action
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.config_so100_follower import SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.so100_follower import SO100Follower
MAX_EPISODES = 5
MAX_STEPS_PER_EPISODE = 20
device = torch.device("mps") # or "cuda" or "cpu"
model_id = "lerobot/smolvla_base"
model = SmolVLAPolicy.from_pretrained(model_id)
preprocess, postprocess = make_pre_post_processors(
model.config,
model_id,
# This overrides allows to run on MPS, otherwise defaults to CUDA (if available)
preprocessor_overrides={"device_processor": {"device": str(device)}},
)
# find ports using lerobot-find-port
follower_port = ... # something like "/dev/tty.usbmodem58760431631"
# the robot ids are used the load the right calibration files
follower_id = ... # something like "follower_so100"
# Robot and environment configuration
# Camera keys must match the name and resolutions of the ones used for training!
# You can check the camera keys expected by a model in the info.json card on the model card on the Hub
camera_config = {
"camera1": OpenCVCameraConfig(index_or_path=0, width=640, height=480, fps=30),
"camera2": OpenCVCameraConfig(index_or_path=1, width=640, height=480, fps=30),
}
robot_cfg = SO100FollowerConfig(port=follower_port, id=follower_id, cameras=camera_config)
robot = SO100Follower(robot_cfg)
robot.connect()
task = "" # something like "pick the red block"
robot_type = "" # something like "so100_follower" for multi-embodiment datasets
# This is used to match the raw observation keys to the keys expected by the policy
action_features = hw_to_dataset_features(robot.action_features, "action")
obs_features = hw_to_dataset_features(robot.observation_features, "observation")
dataset_features = {**action_features, **obs_features}
for _ in range(MAX_EPISODES):
for _ in range(MAX_STEPS_PER_EPISODE):
obs = robot.get_observation()
obs_frame = build_inference_frame(
observation=obs, ds_features=dataset_features, device=device, task=task, robot_type=robot_type
)
obs = preprocess(obs_frame)
action = model.select_action(obs)
action = postprocess(action)
action = make_robot_action(action, dataset_features)
robot.send_action(action)
print("Episode finished! Starting new episode...")

View File

@@ -25,7 +25,7 @@ discord = "https://discord.gg/s3KuuzsPFb"
[project]
name = "lerobot"
version = "0.4.2"
version = "0.3.4"
description = "🤗 LeRobot: State-of-the-art Machine Learning for Real-World Robotics in Pytorch"
readme = "README.md"
license = { text = "Apache-2.0" }
@@ -59,30 +59,28 @@ keywords = ["lerobot", "huggingface", "robotics", "machine learning", "artifici
dependencies = [
# Hugging Face dependencies
"datasets>=4.0.0,<4.2.0",
"diffusers>=0.27.2,<0.36.0",
"huggingface-hub[hf-transfer,cli]>=0.34.2,<0.36.0",
"accelerate>=1.10.0,<2.0.0",
"datasets>=4.0.0",
"diffusers>=0.27.2",
"huggingface-hub[hf-transfer,cli]>=0.34.2",
# Core dependencies
"setuptools>=71.0.0,<81.0.0",
"cmake>=3.29.0.1,<4.2.0",
"einops>=0.8.0,<0.9.0",
"opencv-python-headless>=4.9.0,<4.13.0",
"av>=15.0.0,<16.0.0",
"jsonlines>=4.0.0,<5.0.0",
"packaging>=24.2,<26.0",
"pynput>=1.7.7,<1.9.0",
"pyserial>=3.5,<4.0",
"wandb>=0.20.0,<0.22.0", # TODO: Bumb dependency (compatible with protobuf)
"cmake>=3.29.0.1",
"einops>=0.8.0",
"opencv-python-headless>=4.9.0",
"av>=14.2.0",
"jsonlines>=4.0.0",
"packaging>=24.2",
"pynput>=1.7.7",
"pyserial>=3.5",
"wandb>=0.20.0",
"torch>=2.2.1,<2.8.0", # TODO: Bumb dependency
"torchcodec>=0.2.1,<0.6.0; sys_platform != 'win32' and (sys_platform != 'linux' or (platform_machine != 'aarch64' and platform_machine != 'arm64' and platform_machine != 'armv7l')) and (sys_platform != 'darwin' or platform_machine != 'x86_64')", # TODO: Bumb dependency
"torchvision>=0.21.0,<0.23.0", # TODO: Bumb dependency
"draccus==0.10.0", # TODO: Remove ==
"gymnasium>=1.1.1,<2.0.0",
"rerun-sdk>=0.24.0,<0.27.0",
"gymnasium>=0.29.1,<1.0.0", # TODO: Bumb dependency
"rerun-sdk>=0.21.0,<0.23.0", # TODO: Bumb dependency
# Support dependencies
"deepdiff>=7.0.1,<9.0.0",
@@ -94,56 +92,51 @@ dependencies = [
[project.optional-dependencies]
# Common
pygame-dep = ["pygame>=2.5.1,<2.7.0"]
placo-dep = ["placo>=0.9.6,<0.10.0"]
transformers-dep = ["transformers>=4.53.0,<5.0.0"]
grpcio-dep = ["grpcio==1.73.1", "protobuf==6.31.0"] # TODO: Bumb dependency (compatible with wandb)
pygame-dep = ["pygame>=2.5.1"]
placo-dep = ["placo>=0.9.6"]
transformers-dep = ["transformers>=4.52.0"]
grpcio-dep = ["grpcio==1.73.1", "protobuf==6.31.0"]
# Motors
feetech = ["feetech-servo-sdk>=1.0.0,<2.0.0"]
dynamixel = ["dynamixel-sdk>=3.7.31,<3.9.0"]
feetech = ["feetech-servo-sdk>=1.0.0"]
dynamixel = ["dynamixel-sdk>=3.7.31"]
# Robots
gamepad = ["lerobot[pygame-dep]", "hidapi>=0.14.0,<0.15.0"]
gamepad = ["lerobot[pygame-dep]", "hidapi>=0.14.0"]
hopejr = ["lerobot[feetech]", "lerobot[pygame-dep]"]
lekiwi = ["lerobot[feetech]", "pyzmq>=26.2.1,<28.0.0"]
reachy2 = ["reachy2_sdk>=1.0.14,<1.1.0"]
lekiwi = ["lerobot[feetech]", "pyzmq>=26.2.1"]
reachy2 = ["reachy2_sdk>=1.0.14"]
kinematics = ["lerobot[placo-dep]"]
intelrealsense = [
"pyrealsense2>=2.55.1.6486,<2.57.0 ; sys_platform != 'darwin'",
"pyrealsense2-macosx>=2.54,<2.55.0 ; sys_platform == 'darwin'",
"pyrealsense2>=2.55.1.6486 ; sys_platform != 'darwin'",
"pyrealsense2-macosx>=2.54 ; sys_platform == 'darwin'",
]
phone = ["hebi-py>=2.8.0,<2.12.0", "teleop>=0.1.0,<0.2.0", "fastapi<1.0"]
phone = ["hebi-py>=2.8.0", "teleop>=0.1.0"]
# stretch = [
# "hello-robot-stretch-body>=0.7.27 ; sys_platform == 'linux'",
# "pyrender @ git+https://github.com/mmatl/pyrender.git ; sys_platform == 'linux'",
# "pyrealsense2>=2.55.1.6486 ; sys_platform != 'darwin'"
# ] # TODO: Currently not supported
# Policies
pi = ["transformers @ git+https://github.com/huggingface/transformers.git@fix/lerobot_openpi"]
smolvla = ["lerobot[transformers-dep]", "num2words>=0.5.14,<0.6.0", "accelerate>=1.7.0,<2.0.0", "safetensors>=0.4.3,<1.0.0"]
groot = [
"lerobot[transformers-dep]",
"peft>=0.13.0,<1.0.0",
"dm-tree>=0.1.8,<1.0.0",
"timm>=1.0.0,<1.1.0",
"safetensors>=0.4.3,<1.0.0",
"Pillow>=10.0.0,<13.0.0",
"decord>=0.6.0,<1.0.0; (platform_machine == 'AMD64' or platform_machine == 'x86_64')",
"ninja>=1.11.1,<2.0.0",
"flash-attn>=2.5.9,<3.0.0 ; sys_platform != 'darwin'"
]
hilserl = ["lerobot[transformers-dep]", "gym-hil>=0.1.13,<0.2.0", "lerobot[grpcio-dep]", "lerobot[placo-dep]"]
pi0 = ["lerobot[transformers-dep]"]
smolvla = ["lerobot[transformers-dep]", "num2words>=0.5.14", "accelerate>=1.7.0", "safetensors>=0.4.3"]
hilserl = ["lerobot[transformers-dep]", "gym-hil>=0.1.11", "lerobot[grpcio-dep]", "lerobot[placo-dep]"]
# Features
async = ["lerobot[grpcio-dep]", "matplotlib>=3.10.3,<4.0.0"]
async = ["lerobot[grpcio-dep]", "matplotlib>=3.10.3"]
# Development
dev = ["pre-commit>=3.7.0,<5.0.0", "debugpy>=1.8.1,<1.9.0", "lerobot[grpcio-dep]", "grpcio-tools==1.73.1"]
test = ["pytest>=8.1.0,<9.0.0", "pytest-timeout>=2.4.0,<3.0.0", "pytest-cov>=5.0.0,<8.0.0", "mock-serial>=0.0.1,<0.1.0 ; sys_platform != 'win32'"]
video_benchmark = ["scikit-image>=0.23.2,<0.26.0", "pandas>=2.2.2,<2.4.0"]
dev = ["pre-commit>=3.7.0", "debugpy>=1.8.1", "lerobot[grpcio-dep]", "grpcio-tools==1.73.1"]
test = ["pytest>=8.1.0", "pytest-timeout>=2.4.0", "pytest-cov>=5.0.0", "mock-serial>=0.0.1 ; sys_platform != 'win32'"]
video_benchmark = ["scikit-image>=0.23.2", "pandas>=2.2.2"]
# Simulation
aloha = ["gym-aloha>=0.1.2,<0.2.0"]
pusht = ["gym-pusht>=0.1.5,<0.2.0", "pymunk>=6.6.0,<7.0.0"] # TODO: Fix pymunk version in gym-pusht instead
libero = ["lerobot[transformers-dep]", "hf-libero>=0.1.3,<0.2.0"]
metaworld = ["metaworld==3.0.0"]
aloha = ["gym-aloha>=0.1.1"]
pusht = ["gym-pusht>=0.1.5", "pymunk>=6.6.0,<7.0.0"] # TODO: Fix pymunk version in gym-pusht instead
xarm = ["gym-xarm>=0.1.1"]
libero = ["lerobot[transformers-dep]", "libero @ git+https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot-libero.git@main#egg=libero"]
# All
all = [
@@ -154,9 +147,8 @@ all = [
"lerobot[reachy2]",
"lerobot[kinematics]",
"lerobot[intelrealsense]",
"lerobot[pi]",
"lerobot[pi0]",
"lerobot[smolvla]",
# "lerobot[groot]", TODO(Steven): Gr00t requires specific installation instructions for flash-attn
"lerobot[hilserl]",
"lerobot[async]",
"lerobot[dev]",
@@ -164,26 +156,24 @@ all = [
"lerobot[video_benchmark]",
"lerobot[aloha]",
"lerobot[pusht]",
"lerobot[xarm]",
"lerobot[phone]",
"lerobot[libero]",
"lerobot[metaworld]",
]
[project.scripts]
lerobot-calibrate="lerobot.scripts.lerobot_calibrate:main"
lerobot-find-cameras="lerobot.scripts.lerobot_find_cameras:main"
lerobot-find-port="lerobot.scripts.lerobot_find_port:main"
lerobot-record="lerobot.scripts.lerobot_record:main"
lerobot-replay="lerobot.scripts.lerobot_replay:main"
lerobot-setup-motors="lerobot.scripts.lerobot_setup_motors:main"
lerobot-teleoperate="lerobot.scripts.lerobot_teleoperate:main"
lerobot-eval="lerobot.scripts.lerobot_eval:main"
lerobot-train="lerobot.scripts.lerobot_train:main"
lerobot-calibrate="lerobot.calibrate:main"
lerobot-find-cameras="lerobot.find_cameras:main"
lerobot-find-port="lerobot.find_port:main"
lerobot-record="lerobot.record:main"
lerobot-replay="lerobot.replay:main"
lerobot-setup-motors="lerobot.setup_motors:main"
lerobot-teleoperate="lerobot.teleoperate:main"
lerobot-eval="lerobot.scripts.eval:main"
lerobot-train="lerobot.scripts.train:main"
lerobot-dataset-viz="lerobot.scripts.lerobot_dataset_viz:main"
lerobot-info="lerobot.scripts.lerobot_info:main"
lerobot-find-joint-limits="lerobot.scripts.lerobot_find_joint_limits:main"
lerobot-imgtransform-viz="lerobot.scripts.lerobot_imgtransform_viz:main"
lerobot-edit-dataset="lerobot.scripts.lerobot_edit_dataset:main"
# ---------------- Tool Configurations ----------------
[tool.setuptools.packages.find]
@@ -210,7 +200,7 @@ exclude = ["tests/artifacts/**/*.safetensors", "*_pb2.py", "*_pb2_grpc.py"]
# N: pep8-naming
# TODO: Uncomment rules when ready to use
select = [
"E", "W", "F", "I", "B", "C4", "T20", "N", "UP", "SIM" #, "A", "S", "D", "RUF"
"E", "W", "F", "I", "B", "C4", "T20", "N" # "SIM", "A", "S", "D", "RUF", "UP"
]
ignore = [
"E501", # Line too long
@@ -241,6 +231,9 @@ exclude_dirs = [
"tests",
"benchmarks",
"src/lerobot/datasets/push_dataset_to_hub",
"src/lerobot/datasets/v2/convert_dataset_v1_to_v2",
"src/lerobot/policies/pi0/conversion_scripts",
"src/lerobot/scripts/push_dataset_to_hub.py",
]
skips = ["B101", "B311", "B404", "B603", "B615"]
@@ -255,8 +248,6 @@ default.extend-ignore-identifiers-re = [
"pn",
"ser",
"ein",
"thw",
"inpt",
]
# TODO: Uncomment when ready to use
@@ -275,91 +266,8 @@ default.extend-ignore-identifiers-re = [
# color = true
# paths = ["src/lerobot"]
# TODO: Enable mypy gradually module by module across multiple PRs
# Uncomment [tool.mypy] first, then uncomment individual module overrides as they get proper type annotations
[tool.mypy]
python_version = "3.10"
ignore_missing_imports = true
follow_imports = "skip"
# [tool.mypy]
# python_version = "3.10"
# warn_return_any = true
# warn_unused_configs = true
# strict = true
# disallow_untyped_defs = true
# disallow_incomplete_defs = true
# check_untyped_defs = true
[[tool.mypy.overrides]]
module = "lerobot.*"
ignore_errors = true
[[tool.mypy.overrides]]
module = "lerobot.envs.*"
ignore_errors = false
# [[tool.mypy.overrides]]
# module = "lerobot.utils.*"
# ignore_errors = false
[[tool.mypy.overrides]]
module = "lerobot.configs.*"
ignore_errors = false
# extra strictness for configs
disallow_untyped_defs = true
disallow_incomplete_defs = true
check_untyped_defs = true
# [[tool.mypy.overrides]]
# module = "lerobot.optim.*"
# ignore_errors = false
[[tool.mypy.overrides]]
module = "lerobot.model.*"
ignore_errors = false
# [[tool.mypy.overrides]]
# module = "lerobot.processor.*"
# ignore_errors = false
# [[tool.mypy.overrides]]
# module = "lerobot.datasets.*"
# ignore_errors = false
[[tool.mypy.overrides]]
module = "lerobot.cameras.*"
ignore_errors = false
# [[tool.mypy.overrides]]
# module = "lerobot.motors.*"
# ignore_errors = false
# [[tool.mypy.overrides]]
# module = "lerobot.robots.*"
# ignore_errors = false
# [[tool.mypy.overrides]]
# module = "lerobot.teleoperators.*"
# ignore_errors = false
# [[tool.mypy.overrides]]
# module = "lerobot.policies.*"
# ignore_errors = false
# [[tool.mypy.overrides]]
# module = "lerobot.rl.*"
# ignore_errors = false
# [[tool.mypy.overrides]]
# module = "lerobot.async_inference.*"
# ignore_errors = false
# [[tool.mypy.overrides]]
# module = "lerobot.transport.*"
# ignore_errors = false
# [[tool.mypy.overrides]]
# module = "lerobot.scripts.*"
# ignore_errors = false
# ignore_missing_imports = false

View File

@@ -1,4 +1,3 @@
#
# This file is autogenerated by pip-compile with Python 3.10
# by the following command:
#
@@ -13,62 +12,47 @@ absl-py==2.3.1
# dm-tree
# labmaze
# mujoco
# tensorboard
accelerate==1.11.0
# via
# lerobot
# peft
accelerate==1.9.0
# via lerobot
aiohappyeyeballs==2.6.1
# via aiohttp
aiohttp==3.13.1
aiohttp==3.12.15
# via fsspec
aiosignal==1.4.0
# via aiohttp
annotated-types==0.7.0
# via pydantic
antlr4-python3-runtime==4.9.3
# via
# hydra-core
# omegaconf
anyio==4.11.0
# via
# starlette
# watchfiles
asttokens==3.0.0
# via stack-data
async-timeout==5.0.1
# via aiohttp
attrs==25.4.0
attrs==25.3.0
# via
# aiohttp
# dm-tree
# jsonlines
# jsonschema
# referencing
# rerun-sdk
av==15.1.0
av==15.0.0
# via lerobot
bddl==1.0.1
# via libero
certifi==2025.10.5
blinker==1.9.0
# via flask
certifi==2025.7.14
# via
# requests
# sentry-sdk
cffi==2.0.0
cffi==1.17.1
# via pymunk
cfgv==3.4.0
# via pre-commit
charset-normalizer==3.4.4
charset-normalizer==3.4.2
# via requests
click==8.3.0
click==8.2.1
# via
# uvicorn
# flask
# wandb
cloudpickle==3.1.1
# via
# gymnasium
# libero
cmake==4.1.0
# via gymnasium
cmake==4.0.3
# via lerobot
cmeel==0.57.3
# via
@@ -110,27 +94,27 @@ coal-library==3.0.1
# via pin
contourpy==1.3.2
# via matplotlib
coverage[toml]==7.11.0
coverage[toml]==7.10.1
# via pytest-cov
cycler==0.12.1
# via matplotlib
datasets==4.1.1
datasets==3.6.0
# via lerobot
debugpy==1.8.17
debugpy==1.8.15
# via lerobot
decorator==5.2.1
# via ipython
deepdiff==8.6.1
deepdiff==8.5.0
# via lerobot
diffusers==0.35.2
diffusers==0.34.0
# via lerobot
dill==0.4.0
dill==0.3.8
# via
# datasets
# multiprocess
distlib==0.4.0
# via virtualenv
dm-control==1.0.34
dm-control==1.0.14
# via gym-aloha
dm-env==1.6
# via dm-control
@@ -138,45 +122,29 @@ dm-tree==0.1.9
# via
# dm-control
# dm-env
# lerobot
docopt==0.6.2
# via num2words
draccus==0.10.0
# via lerobot
dynamixel-sdk==3.8.4
dynamixel-sdk==3.7.31
# via lerobot
easydict==1.13
# via libero
egl-probe @ git+https://github.com/huggingface/egl_probe.git
# via
# libero
# robomimic
eigenpy==3.10.3
# via coal-library
einops==0.8.1
# via
# lerobot
# libero
# via lerobot
eiquadprog==1.2.9
# via placo
etils[epath,epy]==1.13.0
# via mujoco
exceptiongroup==1.3.0
# via
# anyio
# ipython
# pytest
executing==2.2.1
executing==2.2.0
# via stack-data
farama-notifications==0.0.4
# via gymnasium
fastapi==0.119.1
# via teleop
fastjsonschema==2.21.2
# via nbformat
feetech-servo-sdk==1.0.0
# via lerobot
filelock==3.20.0
filelock==3.18.0
# via
# datasets
# diffusers
@@ -184,25 +152,24 @@ filelock==3.20.0
# torch
# transformers
# virtualenv
fonttools==4.60.1
flask==3.1.1
# via lerobot
fonttools==4.59.0
# via matplotlib
frozenlist==1.8.0
frozenlist==1.7.0
# via
# aiohttp
# aiosignal
fsspec[http]==2025.9.0
fsspec[http]==2025.3.0
# via
# datasets
# etils
# huggingface-hub
# torch
future==1.0.0
# via libero
gitdb==4.0.12
# via gitpython
gitpython==3.1.45
# via wandb
glfw==2.10.0
glfw==2.9.0
# via
# dm-control
# mujoco
@@ -210,79 +177,61 @@ grpcio==1.73.1
# via
# grpcio-tools
# lerobot
# reachy2-sdk
# reachy2-sdk-api
# tensorboard
grpcio-tools==1.73.1
# via
# lerobot
# reachy2-sdk-api
gym-aloha==0.1.3
# via lerobot
gym-hil==0.1.13
gym-aloha==0.1.1
# via lerobot
gym-pusht==0.1.6
gym-hil==0.1.10
# via lerobot
gymnasium==1.2.1
gym-pusht==0.1.5
# via lerobot
gym-xarm==0.1.1
# via lerobot
gymnasium==0.29.1
# via
# gym-aloha
# gym-hil
# gym-pusht
# gym-xarm
# gymnasium-robotics
# lerobot
# libero
# metaworld
h11==0.16.0
# via uvicorn
h5py==3.15.1
# via robomimic
hebi-py==2.11.0
# via lerobot
# pettingzoo
gymnasium-robotics==1.2.4
# via gym-xarm
hf-transfer==0.1.9
# via huggingface-hub
hf-xet==1.1.10
hf-xet==1.1.5
# via huggingface-hub
hidapi==0.14.0.post4
# via
# gym-hil
# lerobot
httptools==0.7.1
# via uvicorn
huggingface-hub[cli,hf-transfer]==0.35.3
huggingface-hub[cli,hf-transfer]==0.34.3
# via
# accelerate
# datasets
# diffusers
# lerobot
# peft
# timm
# tokenizers
# transformers
hydra-core==1.3.2
# via libero
identify==2.6.15
identify==2.6.12
# via pre-commit
idna==3.11
idna==3.10
# via
# anyio
# requests
# yarl
imageio[ffmpeg]==2.37.0
# via
# gym-aloha
# gym-hil
# gymnasium-robotics
# lerobot
# metaworld
# robomimic
# scikit-image
imageio-ffmpeg==0.6.0
# via
# imageio
# robomimic
# via imageio
importlib-metadata==8.7.0
# via diffusers
importlib-resources==6.5.2
# via etils
iniconfig==2.3.0
iniconfig==2.1.0
# via pytest
inquirerpy==0.3.4
# via huggingface-hub
@@ -290,71 +239,50 @@ ipython==8.37.0
# via meshcat
ischedule==1.2.7
# via placo
itsdangerous==2.2.0
# via flask
jedi==0.19.2
# via ipython
jinja2==3.1.6
# via torch
# via
# flask
# gymnasium-robotics
# torch
jsonlines==4.0.0
# via lerobot
jsonschema==4.25.1
# via nbformat
jsonschema-specifications==2025.9.1
# via jsonschema
jupyter-core==5.9.1
# via nbformat
jupytext==1.18.1
# via bddl
kiwisolver==1.4.9
kiwisolver==1.4.8
# via matplotlib
labmaze==1.0.6
# via dm-control
lazy-loader==0.4
# via scikit-image
libero @ git+https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot-libero.git@main
# via lerobot
llvmlite==0.45.1
# via numba
lxml==6.0.2
lxml==6.0.0
# via dm-control
markdown==3.9
# via tensorboard
markdown-it-py==4.0.0
# via
# jupytext
# mdit-py-plugins
markupsafe==3.0.3
markupsafe==3.0.2
# via
# flask
# jinja2
# werkzeug
matplotlib==3.10.7
# via
# lerobot
# libero
matplotlib-inline==0.2.1
matplotlib==3.10.5
# via lerobot
matplotlib-inline==0.1.7
# via ipython
mdit-py-plugins==0.5.0
# via jupytext
mdurl==0.1.2
# via markdown-it-py
mergedeep==1.3.4
# via draccus
meshcat==0.3.2
# via placo
metaworld==3.0.0
# via lerobot
mock-serial==0.0.1
# via lerobot
mpmath==1.3.0
# via sympy
mujoco==3.3.7
mujoco==2.3.7
# via
# dm-control
# gym-aloha
# gym-hil
# libero
# metaworld
# robosuite
multidict==6.7.0
# gym-xarm
# gymnasium-robotics
multidict==6.6.3
# via
# aiohttp
# yarl
@@ -362,25 +290,17 @@ multiprocess==0.70.16
# via datasets
mypy-extensions==1.1.0
# via typing-inspect
nbformat==5.10.4
# via jupytext
networkx==3.4.2
# via
# bddl
# scikit-image
# torch
ninja==1.13.0
# via lerobot
nodeenv==1.9.1
# via pre-commit
num2words==0.5.14
# via lerobot
numba==0.62.1
# via robosuite
numpy==2.2.6
# via
# accelerate
# bddl
# cmeel-boost
# contourpy
# datasets
@@ -389,43 +309,25 @@ numpy==2.2.6
# dm-env
# dm-tree
# gymnasium
# h5py
# hebi-py
# gymnasium-robotics
# imageio
# labmaze
# libero
# matplotlib
# meshcat
# metaworld
# mujoco
# numba
# opencv-python
# opencv-python-headless
# pandas
# peft
# pyquaternion
# reachy2-sdk
# pettingzoo
# rerun-sdk
# robomimic
# robosuite
# scikit-image
# scipy
# shapely
# teleop
# tensorboard
# tensorboardx
# tifffile
# torchvision
# transformers
# transforms3d
omegaconf==2.3.0
# via hydra-core
opencv-python==4.12.0.88
# via
# gym-pusht
# libero
# reachy2-sdk
# robosuite
# via gym-pusht
opencv-python-headless==4.12.0.88
# via lerobot
orderly-set==5.5.0
@@ -435,63 +337,53 @@ packaging==25.0
# accelerate
# datasets
# huggingface-hub
# hydra-core
# jupytext
# lazy-loader
# lerobot
# matplotlib
# peft
# pytest
# reachy2-sdk
# scikit-image
# tensorboard
# tensorboardx
# transformers
# wandb
pandas==2.3.3
pandas==2.3.1
# via
# datasets
# lerobot
parso==0.8.5
parso==0.8.4
# via jedi
peft==0.17.1
# via lerobot
pettingzoo==1.24.3
# via gymnasium-robotics
pexpect==4.9.0
# via ipython
pfzy==0.3.4
# via inquirerpy
pillow==12.0.0
pillow==11.3.0
# via
# diffusers
# imageio
# lerobot
# matplotlib
# meshcat
# rerun-sdk
# robosuite
# scikit-image
# tensorboard
# torchvision
pin==3.4.0
# via placo
placo==0.9.14
# via lerobot
platformdirs==4.5.0
platformdirs==4.3.8
# via
# jupyter-core
# virtualenv
# wandb
pluggy==1.6.0
# via
# pytest
# pytest-cov
pre-commit==4.3.0
pre-commit==4.2.0
# via lerobot
prompt-toolkit==3.0.52
prompt-toolkit==3.0.51
# via
# inquirerpy
# ipython
propcache==0.4.1
propcache==0.3.2
# via
# aiohttp
# yarl
@@ -500,17 +392,11 @@ protobuf==6.31.0
# dm-control
# grpcio-tools
# lerobot
# reachy2-sdk
# reachy2-sdk-api
# tensorboard
# tensorboardx
# wandb
psutil==7.1.1
psutil==7.0.0
# via
# accelerate
# imageio
# peft
# robomimic
ptyprocess==0.7.0
# via pexpect
pure-eval==0.2.3
@@ -519,13 +405,11 @@ pyarrow==21.0.0
# via
# datasets
# rerun-sdk
pycparser==2.23
pycparser==2.22
# via cffi
pydantic==2.12.3
# via
# fastapi
# wandb
pydantic-core==2.41.4
pydantic==2.11.7
# via wandb
pydantic-core==2.33.2
# via pydantic
pygame==2.6.1
# via
@@ -540,42 +424,40 @@ pymunk==6.11.1
# via
# gym-pusht
# lerobot
pyngrok==7.4.1
pyngrok==7.2.12
# via meshcat
pynput==1.8.1
# via
# gym-hil
# lerobot
pyobjc-core==12.0
pyobjc-core==11.1
# via
# pyobjc-framework-applicationservices
# pyobjc-framework-cocoa
# pyobjc-framework-coretext
# pyobjc-framework-quartz
pyobjc-framework-applicationservices==12.0
pyobjc-framework-applicationservices==11.1
# via pynput
pyobjc-framework-cocoa==12.0
pyobjc-framework-cocoa==11.1
# via
# pyobjc-framework-applicationservices
# pyobjc-framework-coretext
# pyobjc-framework-quartz
pyobjc-framework-coretext==12.0
pyobjc-framework-coretext==11.1
# via pyobjc-framework-applicationservices
pyobjc-framework-quartz==12.0
pyobjc-framework-quartz==11.1
# via
# pynput
# pyobjc-framework-applicationservices
# pyobjc-framework-coretext
pyopengl==3.1.10
pyopengl==3.1.9
# via
# dm-control
# mujoco
pyparsing==3.2.5
pyparsing==3.2.3
# via
# dm-control
# matplotlib
pyquaternion==0.9.9
# via reachy2-sdk
pyrealsense2-macosx==2.54.2
# via lerobot
pyserial==3.5
@@ -583,14 +465,12 @@ pyserial==3.5
# dynamixel-sdk
# feetech-servo-sdk
# lerobot
pytest==8.4.2
pytest==8.4.1
# via
# bddl
# lerobot
# pytest-cov
# pytest-timeout
# teleop
pytest-cov==7.0.0
pytest-cov==6.2.1
# via lerobot
pytest-timeout==2.4.0
# via lerobot
@@ -598,73 +478,46 @@ python-dateutil==2.9.0.post0
# via
# matplotlib
# pandas
python-dotenv==1.1.1
# via uvicorn
pytz==2025.2
# via pandas
pyyaml==6.0.3
pyyaml==6.0.2
# via
# accelerate
# datasets
# draccus
# hebi-py
# huggingface-hub
# jupytext
# omegaconf
# peft
# pre-commit
# pyngrok
# pyyaml-include
# timm
# transformers
# uvicorn
# wandb
pyyaml-include==1.4.1
# via draccus
pyzmq==27.1.0
pyzmq==27.0.0
# via
# lerobot
# meshcat
reachy2-sdk==1.0.14
# via lerobot
reachy2-sdk-api==1.0.21
# via reachy2-sdk
referencing==0.37.0
# via
# jsonschema
# jsonschema-specifications
regex==2025.10.23
regex==2025.7.34
# via
# diffusers
# transformers
requests==2.32.5
requests==2.32.4
# via
# datasets
# diffusers
# dm-control
# huggingface-hub
# teleop
# transformers
# wandb
rerun-sdk==0.26.1
rerun-sdk==0.22.1
# via lerobot
rhoban-cmeel-jsoncpp==1.9.4.9
# via placo
robomimic==0.2.0
# via libero
robosuite==1.4.0
# via libero
rpds-py==0.28.0
# via
# jsonschema
# referencing
safetensors==0.6.2
safetensors==0.5.3
# via
# accelerate
# diffusers
# lerobot
# peft
# timm
# transformers
scikit-image==0.25.2
# via
@@ -673,12 +526,10 @@ scikit-image==0.25.2
scipy==1.15.3
# via
# dm-control
# metaworld
# robosuite
# scikit-image
sentry-sdk==2.42.1
sentry-sdk==2.34.1
# via wandb
shapely==2.1.2
shapely==2.1.1
# via gym-pusht
six==1.17.0
# via
@@ -686,106 +537,64 @@ six==1.17.0
# python-dateutil
smmap==5.0.2
# via gitdb
sniffio==1.3.1
# via anyio
stack-data==0.6.3
# via ipython
starlette==0.48.0
# via fastapi
sympy==1.14.0
# via torch
teleop==0.1.2
# via lerobot
tensorboard==2.20.0
# via robomimic
tensorboard-data-server==0.7.2
# via tensorboard
tensorboardx==2.6.4
# via robomimic
termcolor==3.1.0
# via
# lerobot
# robomimic
thop==0.1.1.post2209072238
# via libero
# via lerobot
tifffile==2025.5.10
# via scikit-image
timm==1.0.20
# via lerobot
tokenizers==0.22.1
tokenizers==0.21.4
# via transformers
toml==0.10.2
# via draccus
tomli==2.3.0
tomli==2.2.1
# via
# cmeel
# coverage
# jupytext
# pytest
torch==2.7.1
# via
# accelerate
# lerobot
# peft
# robomimic
# thop
# timm
# torchvision
torchcodec==0.5
# via lerobot
torchvision==0.22.1
# via
# lerobot
# robomimic
# timm
tornado==6.5.2
# via lerobot
tornado==6.5.1
# via meshcat
tqdm==4.67.1
# via
# datasets
# dm-control
# huggingface-hub
# peft
# robomimic
# transformers
traitlets==5.14.3
# via
# ipython
# jupyter-core
# matplotlib-inline
# nbformat
transformers==4.57.1
# via
# lerobot
# libero
# peft
transforms3d==0.4.2
# via teleop
typing-extensions==4.15.0
transformers==4.51.3
# via lerobot
typing-extensions==4.14.1
# via
# aiosignal
# anyio
# etils
# exceptiongroup
# fastapi
# gymnasium
# huggingface-hub
# ipython
# multidict
# pydantic
# pydantic-core
# referencing
# rerun-sdk
# starlette
# torch
# typing-inspect
# typing-inspection
# uvicorn
# virtualenv
# wandb
typing-inspect==0.9.0
# via draccus
typing-inspection==0.4.2
typing-inspection==0.4.1
# via pydantic
tzdata==2025.2
# via pandas
@@ -795,36 +604,22 @@ urllib3==2.5.0
# via
# requests
# sentry-sdk
uvicorn[standard]==0.38.0
# via teleop
uvloop==0.22.1
# via uvicorn
virtualenv==20.35.3
virtualenv==20.32.0
# via pre-commit
wandb==0.21.4
# via
# lerobot
# libero
watchfiles==1.1.1
# via uvicorn
wcwidth==0.2.14
wandb==0.21.0
# via lerobot
wcwidth==0.2.13
# via prompt-toolkit
websocket-client==1.9.0
# via teleop
websockets==15.0.1
# via uvicorn
werkzeug==3.1.3
# via tensorboard
wrapt==2.0.0
# via flask
wrapt==1.17.2
# via dm-tree
xxhash==3.6.0
xxhash==3.5.0
# via datasets
yarl==1.22.0
yarl==1.20.1
# via aiohttp
zipp==3.23.0
# via
# etils
# importlib-metadata
# via importlib-metadata
# The following packages are considered to be unsafe in a requirements file:
# setuptools

View File

@@ -13,62 +13,47 @@ absl-py==2.3.1
# dm-tree
# labmaze
# mujoco
# tensorboard
accelerate==1.11.0
# via
# lerobot
# peft
accelerate==1.9.0
# via lerobot
aiohappyeyeballs==2.6.1
# via aiohttp
aiohttp==3.13.1
aiohttp==3.12.15
# via fsspec
aiosignal==1.4.0
# via aiohttp
annotated-types==0.7.0
# via pydantic
antlr4-python3-runtime==4.9.3
# via
# hydra-core
# omegaconf
anyio==4.11.0
# via
# starlette
# watchfiles
asttokens==3.0.0
# via stack-data
async-timeout==5.0.1
# via aiohttp
attrs==25.4.0
attrs==25.3.0
# via
# aiohttp
# dm-tree
# jsonlines
# jsonschema
# referencing
# rerun-sdk
av==15.1.0
av==15.0.0
# via lerobot
bddl==1.0.1
# via libero
certifi==2025.10.5
blinker==1.9.0
# via flask
certifi==2025.7.14
# via
# requests
# sentry-sdk
cffi==2.0.0
cffi==1.17.1
# via pymunk
cfgv==3.4.0
# via pre-commit
charset-normalizer==3.4.4
charset-normalizer==3.4.2
# via requests
click==8.3.0
click==8.2.1
# via
# uvicorn
# flask
# wandb
cloudpickle==3.1.1
# via
# gymnasium
# libero
cmake==4.1.0
# via gymnasium
cmake==4.0.3
# via lerobot
cmeel==0.57.3
# via
@@ -110,29 +95,27 @@ coal-library==3.0.1
# via pin
contourpy==1.3.2
# via matplotlib
coverage[toml]==7.11.0
coverage[toml]==7.10.1
# via pytest-cov
cycler==0.12.1
# via matplotlib
datasets==4.1.1
datasets==3.6.0
# via lerobot
debugpy==1.8.17
debugpy==1.8.15
# via lerobot
decorator==5.2.1
# via ipython
decord==0.6.0
deepdiff==8.5.0
# via lerobot
deepdiff==8.6.1
diffusers==0.34.0
# via lerobot
diffusers==0.35.2
# via lerobot
dill==0.4.0
dill==0.3.8
# via
# datasets
# multiprocess
distlib==0.4.0
# via virtualenv
dm-control==1.0.34
dm-control==1.0.14
# via gym-aloha
dm-env==1.6
# via dm-control
@@ -140,48 +123,31 @@ dm-tree==0.1.9
# via
# dm-control
# dm-env
# lerobot
docopt==0.6.2
# via num2words
draccus==0.10.0
# via lerobot
dynamixel-sdk==3.8.4
dynamixel-sdk==3.7.31
# via lerobot
easydict==1.13
# via libero
egl-probe @ git+https://github.com/huggingface/egl_probe.git
# via
# libero
# robomimic
eigenpy==3.10.3
# via coal-library
einops==0.8.1
# via
# flash-attn
# lerobot
# libero
# via lerobot
eiquadprog==1.2.9
# via placo
etils[epath,epy]==1.13.0
# via mujoco
evdev==1.9.2
# via pynput
exceptiongroup==1.3.0
# via
# anyio
# ipython
# pytest
executing==2.2.1
executing==2.2.0
# via stack-data
farama-notifications==0.0.4
# via gymnasium
fastapi==0.119.1
# via teleop
fastjsonschema==2.21.2
# via nbformat
feetech-servo-sdk==1.0.0
# via lerobot
filelock==3.20.0
filelock==3.18.0
# via
# datasets
# diffusers
@@ -189,27 +155,24 @@ filelock==3.20.0
# torch
# transformers
# virtualenv
flash-attn==2.8.3
flask==3.1.1
# via lerobot
fonttools==4.60.1
fonttools==4.59.0
# via matplotlib
frozenlist==1.8.0
frozenlist==1.7.0
# via
# aiohttp
# aiosignal
fsspec[http]==2025.9.0
fsspec[http]==2025.3.0
# via
# datasets
# etils
# huggingface-hub
# torch
future==1.0.0
# via libero
gitdb==4.0.12
# via gitpython
gitpython==3.1.45
# via wandb
glfw==2.10.0
glfw==2.9.0
# via
# dm-control
# mujoco
@@ -217,79 +180,61 @@ grpcio==1.73.1
# via
# grpcio-tools
# lerobot
# reachy2-sdk
# reachy2-sdk-api
# tensorboard
grpcio-tools==1.73.1
# via
# lerobot
# reachy2-sdk-api
gym-aloha==0.1.3
# via lerobot
gym-hil==0.1.13
gym-aloha==0.1.1
# via lerobot
gym-pusht==0.1.6
gym-hil==0.1.10
# via lerobot
gymnasium==1.2.1
gym-pusht==0.1.5
# via lerobot
gym-xarm==0.1.1
# via lerobot
gymnasium==0.29.1
# via
# gym-aloha
# gym-hil
# gym-pusht
# gym-xarm
# gymnasium-robotics
# lerobot
# libero
# metaworld
h11==0.16.0
# via uvicorn
h5py==3.15.1
# via robomimic
hebi-py==2.11.0
# via lerobot
# pettingzoo
gymnasium-robotics==1.2.4
# via gym-xarm
hf-transfer==0.1.9
# via huggingface-hub
hf-xet==1.1.10
hf-xet==1.1.5
# via huggingface-hub
hidapi==0.14.0.post4
# via
# gym-hil
# lerobot
httptools==0.7.1
# via uvicorn
huggingface-hub[cli,hf-transfer]==0.35.3
huggingface-hub[cli,hf-transfer]==0.34.3
# via
# accelerate
# datasets
# diffusers
# lerobot
# peft
# timm
# tokenizers
# transformers
hydra-core==1.3.2
# via libero
identify==2.6.15
identify==2.6.12
# via pre-commit
idna==3.11
idna==3.10
# via
# anyio
# requests
# yarl
imageio[ffmpeg]==2.37.0
# via
# gym-aloha
# gym-hil
# gymnasium-robotics
# lerobot
# metaworld
# robomimic
# scikit-image
imageio-ffmpeg==0.6.0
# via
# imageio
# robomimic
# via imageio
importlib-metadata==8.7.0
# via diffusers
importlib-resources==6.5.2
# via etils
iniconfig==2.3.0
iniconfig==2.1.0
# via pytest
inquirerpy==0.3.4
# via huggingface-hub
@@ -297,71 +242,50 @@ ipython==8.37.0
# via meshcat
ischedule==1.2.7
# via placo
itsdangerous==2.2.0
# via flask
jedi==0.19.2
# via ipython
jinja2==3.1.6
# via torch
# via
# flask
# gymnasium-robotics
# torch
jsonlines==4.0.0
# via lerobot
jsonschema==4.25.1
# via nbformat
jsonschema-specifications==2025.9.1
# via jsonschema
jupyter-core==5.9.1
# via nbformat
jupytext==1.18.1
# via bddl
kiwisolver==1.4.9
kiwisolver==1.4.8
# via matplotlib
labmaze==1.0.6
# via dm-control
lazy-loader==0.4
# via scikit-image
libero @ git+https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot-libero.git@main
# via lerobot
llvmlite==0.45.1
# via numba
lxml==6.0.2
lxml==6.0.0
# via dm-control
markdown==3.9
# via tensorboard
markdown-it-py==4.0.0
# via
# jupytext
# mdit-py-plugins
markupsafe==3.0.3
markupsafe==3.0.2
# via
# flask
# jinja2
# werkzeug
matplotlib==3.10.7
# via
# lerobot
# libero
matplotlib-inline==0.2.1
matplotlib==3.10.5
# via lerobot
matplotlib-inline==0.1.7
# via ipython
mdit-py-plugins==0.5.0
# via jupytext
mdurl==0.1.2
# via markdown-it-py
mergedeep==1.3.4
# via draccus
meshcat==0.3.2
# via placo
metaworld==3.0.0
# via lerobot
mock-serial==0.0.1
# via lerobot
mpmath==1.3.0
# via sympy
mujoco==3.3.7
mujoco==2.3.7
# via
# dm-control
# gym-aloha
# gym-hil
# libero
# metaworld
# robosuite
multidict==6.7.0
# gym-xarm
# gymnasium-robotics
multidict==6.6.3
# via
# aiohttp
# yarl
@@ -369,63 +293,42 @@ multiprocess==0.70.16
# via datasets
mypy-extensions==1.1.0
# via typing-inspect
nbformat==5.10.4
# via jupytext
networkx==3.4.2
# via
# bddl
# scikit-image
# torch
ninja==1.13.0
# via lerobot
nodeenv==1.9.1
# via pre-commit
num2words==0.5.14
# via lerobot
numba==0.62.1
# via robosuite
numpy==2.2.6
# via
# accelerate
# bddl
# cmeel-boost
# contourpy
# datasets
# decord
# diffusers
# dm-control
# dm-env
# dm-tree
# gymnasium
# h5py
# hebi-py
# gymnasium-robotics
# imageio
# labmaze
# libero
# matplotlib
# meshcat
# metaworld
# mujoco
# numba
# opencv-python
# opencv-python-headless
# pandas
# peft
# pyquaternion
# reachy2-sdk
# pettingzoo
# rerun-sdk
# robomimic
# robosuite
# scikit-image
# scipy
# shapely
# teleop
# tensorboard
# tensorboardx
# tifffile
# torchvision
# transformers
# transforms3d
nvidia-cublas-cu12==12.6.4.1
# via
# nvidia-cudnn-cu12
@@ -463,14 +366,8 @@ nvidia-nvjitlink-cu12==12.6.85
# torch
nvidia-nvtx-cu12==12.6.77
# via torch
omegaconf==2.3.0
# via hydra-core
opencv-python==4.12.0.88
# via
# gym-pusht
# libero
# reachy2-sdk
# robosuite
# via gym-pusht
opencv-python-headless==4.12.0.88
# via lerobot
orderly-set==5.5.0
@@ -480,63 +377,53 @@ packaging==25.0
# accelerate
# datasets
# huggingface-hub
# hydra-core
# jupytext
# lazy-loader
# lerobot
# matplotlib
# peft
# pytest
# reachy2-sdk
# scikit-image
# tensorboard
# tensorboardx
# transformers
# wandb
pandas==2.3.3
pandas==2.3.1
# via
# datasets
# lerobot
parso==0.8.5
parso==0.8.4
# via jedi
peft==0.17.1
# via lerobot
pettingzoo==1.24.3
# via gymnasium-robotics
pexpect==4.9.0
# via ipython
pfzy==0.3.4
# via inquirerpy
pillow==12.0.0
pillow==11.3.0
# via
# diffusers
# imageio
# lerobot
# matplotlib
# meshcat
# rerun-sdk
# robosuite
# scikit-image
# tensorboard
# torchvision
pin==3.4.0
# via placo
placo==0.9.14
# via lerobot
platformdirs==4.5.0
platformdirs==4.3.8
# via
# jupyter-core
# virtualenv
# wandb
pluggy==1.6.0
# via
# pytest
# pytest-cov
pre-commit==4.3.0
pre-commit==4.2.0
# via lerobot
prompt-toolkit==3.0.52
prompt-toolkit==3.0.51
# via
# inquirerpy
# ipython
propcache==0.4.1
propcache==0.3.2
# via
# aiohttp
# yarl
@@ -545,17 +432,11 @@ protobuf==6.31.0
# dm-control
# grpcio-tools
# lerobot
# reachy2-sdk
# reachy2-sdk-api
# tensorboard
# tensorboardx
# wandb
psutil==7.1.1
psutil==7.0.0
# via
# accelerate
# imageio
# peft
# robomimic
ptyprocess==0.7.0
# via pexpect
pure-eval==0.2.3
@@ -564,13 +445,11 @@ pyarrow==21.0.0
# via
# datasets
# rerun-sdk
pycparser==2.23
pycparser==2.22
# via cffi
pydantic==2.12.3
# via
# fastapi
# wandb
pydantic-core==2.41.4
pydantic==2.11.7
# via wandb
pydantic-core==2.33.2
# via pydantic
pygame==2.6.1
# via
@@ -585,22 +464,20 @@ pymunk==6.11.1
# via
# gym-pusht
# lerobot
pyngrok==7.4.1
pyngrok==7.2.12
# via meshcat
pynput==1.8.1
# via
# gym-hil
# lerobot
pyopengl==3.1.10
pyopengl==3.1.9
# via
# dm-control
# mujoco
pyparsing==3.2.5
pyparsing==3.2.3
# via
# dm-control
# matplotlib
pyquaternion==0.9.9
# via reachy2-sdk
pyrealsense2==2.56.5.9235
# via lerobot
pyserial==3.5
@@ -608,14 +485,12 @@ pyserial==3.5
# dynamixel-sdk
# feetech-servo-sdk
# lerobot
pytest==8.4.2
pytest==8.4.1
# via
# bddl
# lerobot
# pytest-cov
# pytest-timeout
# teleop
pytest-cov==7.0.0
pytest-cov==6.2.1
# via lerobot
pytest-timeout==2.4.0
# via lerobot
@@ -623,75 +498,48 @@ python-dateutil==2.9.0.post0
# via
# matplotlib
# pandas
python-dotenv==1.1.1
# via uvicorn
python-xlib==0.33
# via pynput
pytz==2025.2
# via pandas
pyyaml==6.0.3
pyyaml==6.0.2
# via
# accelerate
# datasets
# draccus
# hebi-py
# huggingface-hub
# jupytext
# omegaconf
# peft
# pre-commit
# pyngrok
# pyyaml-include
# timm
# transformers
# uvicorn
# wandb
pyyaml-include==1.4.1
# via draccus
pyzmq==27.1.0
pyzmq==27.0.0
# via
# lerobot
# meshcat
reachy2-sdk==1.0.14
# via lerobot
reachy2-sdk-api==1.0.21
# via reachy2-sdk
referencing==0.37.0
# via
# jsonschema
# jsonschema-specifications
regex==2025.10.23
regex==2025.7.34
# via
# diffusers
# transformers
requests==2.32.5
requests==2.32.4
# via
# datasets
# diffusers
# dm-control
# huggingface-hub
# teleop
# transformers
# wandb
rerun-sdk==0.26.1
rerun-sdk==0.22.1
# via lerobot
rhoban-cmeel-jsoncpp==1.9.4.9
# via placo
robomimic==0.2.0
# via libero
robosuite==1.4.0
# via libero
rpds-py==0.28.0
# via
# jsonschema
# referencing
safetensors==0.6.2
safetensors==0.5.3
# via
# accelerate
# diffusers
# lerobot
# peft
# timm
# transformers
scikit-image==0.25.2
# via
@@ -700,12 +548,10 @@ scikit-image==0.25.2
scipy==1.15.3
# via
# dm-control
# metaworld
# robosuite
# scikit-image
sentry-sdk==2.42.1
sentry-sdk==2.34.1
# via wandb
shapely==2.1.2
shapely==2.1.1
# via gym-pusht
six==1.17.0
# via
@@ -714,109 +560,66 @@ six==1.17.0
# python-xlib
smmap==5.0.2
# via gitdb
sniffio==1.3.1
# via anyio
stack-data==0.6.3
# via ipython
starlette==0.48.0
# via fastapi
sympy==1.14.0
# via torch
teleop==0.1.2
# via lerobot
tensorboard==2.20.0
# via robomimic
tensorboard-data-server==0.7.2
# via tensorboard
tensorboardx==2.6.4
# via robomimic
termcolor==3.1.0
# via
# lerobot
# robomimic
thop==0.1.1.post2209072238
# via libero
# via lerobot
tifffile==2025.5.10
# via scikit-image
timm==1.0.20
# via lerobot
tokenizers==0.22.1
tokenizers==0.21.4
# via transformers
toml==0.10.2
# via draccus
tomli==2.3.0
tomli==2.2.1
# via
# cmeel
# coverage
# jupytext
# pytest
torch==2.7.1
# via
# accelerate
# flash-attn
# lerobot
# peft
# robomimic
# thop
# timm
# torchvision
torchcodec==0.5
# via lerobot
torchvision==0.22.1
# via
# lerobot
# robomimic
# timm
tornado==6.5.2
# via lerobot
tornado==6.5.1
# via meshcat
tqdm==4.67.1
# via
# datasets
# dm-control
# huggingface-hub
# peft
# robomimic
# transformers
traitlets==5.14.3
# via
# ipython
# jupyter-core
# matplotlib-inline
# nbformat
transformers==4.57.1
# via
# lerobot
# libero
# peft
transforms3d==0.4.2
# via teleop
transformers==4.51.3
# via lerobot
triton==3.3.1
# via torch
typing-extensions==4.15.0
typing-extensions==4.14.1
# via
# aiosignal
# anyio
# etils
# exceptiongroup
# fastapi
# gymnasium
# huggingface-hub
# ipython
# multidict
# pydantic
# pydantic-core
# referencing
# rerun-sdk
# starlette
# torch
# typing-inspect
# typing-inspection
# uvicorn
# virtualenv
# wandb
typing-inspect==0.9.0
# via draccus
typing-inspection==0.4.2
typing-inspection==0.4.1
# via pydantic
tzdata==2025.2
# via pandas
@@ -826,36 +629,22 @@ urllib3==2.5.0
# via
# requests
# sentry-sdk
uvicorn[standard]==0.38.0
# via teleop
uvloop==0.22.1
# via uvicorn
virtualenv==20.35.3
virtualenv==20.32.0
# via pre-commit
wandb==0.21.4
# via
# lerobot
# libero
watchfiles==1.1.1
# via uvicorn
wcwidth==0.2.14
wandb==0.21.0
# via lerobot
wcwidth==0.2.13
# via prompt-toolkit
websocket-client==1.9.0
# via teleop
websockets==15.0.1
# via uvicorn
werkzeug==3.1.3
# via tensorboard
wrapt==2.0.0
# via flask
wrapt==1.17.2
# via dm-tree
xxhash==3.6.0
xxhash==3.5.0
# via datasets
yarl==1.22.0
yarl==1.20.1
# via aiohttp
zipp==3.23.0
# via
# etils
# importlib-metadata
# via importlib-metadata
# The following packages are considered to be unsafe in a requirements file:
# setuptools

View File

@@ -1,9 +1,9 @@
# requirements.in
# requirements-macos.txt was generated on macOS and is platform-specific (macOS 26.0.1 25A362 arm64).
# Darwin MacBook-Pro.local 25.0.0 Darwin Kernel Version 25.0.0: Wed Sep 17 21:42:08 PDT 2025; root:xnu-12377.1.9~141/RELEASE_ARM64_T8132 arm64
# requirements-macos.txt was generated on macOS and is platform-specific (macOS 15.5 24F74 arm64).
# Darwin MacBook-Pro.local 24.5.0 Darwin Kernel Version 24.5.0: Tue Apr 22 19:54:43 PDT 2025; root:xnu-11417.121.6~2/RELEASE_ARM64_T8132 arm64
# requirements-ubuntu.txt was generated on Linux and is platform-specific (Ubuntu 24.04.3 LTS x86_64).
# Linux mlerobot-linux 6.14.0-33-generic #33~24.04.1-Ubuntu SMP PREEMPT_DYNAMIC Fri Sep 19 17:02:30 UTC 2 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux
# requirements-ubuntu.txt was generated on Linux and is platform-specific (Ubuntu 24.04.2 LTS x86_64).
# Linux mlerobot-linux 6.14.0-27-generic #27~24.04.1-Ubuntu SMP PREEMPT_DYNAMIC Tue Jul 22 17:38:49 UTC 2 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux
-e .[all]

View File

@@ -57,6 +57,7 @@ available_tasks_per_env = {
"AlohaTransferCube-v0",
],
"pusht": ["PushT-v0"],
"xarm": ["XarmLift-v0"],
}
available_envs = list(available_tasks_per_env.keys())
@@ -74,6 +75,16 @@ available_datasets_per_env = {
# TODO(alexander-soare): Add "lerobot/pusht_keypoints". Right now we can't because this is too tightly
# coupled with tests.
"pusht": ["lerobot/pusht", "lerobot/pusht_image"],
"xarm": [
"lerobot/xarm_lift_medium",
"lerobot/xarm_lift_medium_replay",
"lerobot/xarm_push_medium",
"lerobot/xarm_push_medium_replay",
"lerobot/xarm_lift_medium_image",
"lerobot/xarm_lift_medium_replay_image",
"lerobot/xarm_push_medium_image",
"lerobot/xarm_push_medium_replay_image",
],
}
available_real_world_datasets = [
@@ -184,6 +195,7 @@ available_motors = [
available_policies_per_env = {
"aloha": ["act"],
"pusht": ["diffusion", "vqbet"],
"xarm": ["tdmpc"],
"koch_real": ["act_koch_real"],
"aloha_real": ["act_aloha_real"],
}

View File

@@ -52,7 +52,6 @@ from lerobot.teleoperators import ( # noqa: F401
so100_leader,
so101_leader,
)
from lerobot.utils.import_utils import register_third_party_devices
from lerobot.utils.utils import init_logging
@@ -84,7 +83,6 @@ def calibrate(cfg: CalibrateConfig):
def main():
register_third_party_devices()
calibrate()

View File

@@ -17,7 +17,7 @@
import abc
from typing import Any
from numpy.typing import NDArray # type: ignore # TODO: add type stubs for numpy.typing
import numpy as np
from .configs import CameraConfig, ColorMode
@@ -89,7 +89,7 @@ class Camera(abc.ABC):
pass
@abc.abstractmethod
def read(self, color_mode: ColorMode | None = None) -> NDArray[Any]:
def read(self, color_mode: ColorMode | None = None) -> np.ndarray:
"""Capture and return a single frame from the camera.
Args:
@@ -102,7 +102,7 @@ class Camera(abc.ABC):
pass
@abc.abstractmethod
def async_read(self, timeout_ms: float = ...) -> NDArray[Any]:
def async_read(self, timeout_ms: float = ...) -> np.ndarray:
"""Asynchronously capture and return a single frame from the camera.
Args:

View File

@@ -18,7 +18,7 @@ import abc
from dataclasses import dataclass
from enum import Enum
import draccus # type: ignore # TODO: add type stubs for draccus
import draccus
class ColorMode(str, Enum):
@@ -34,11 +34,11 @@ class Cv2Rotation(int, Enum):
@dataclass(kw_only=True)
class CameraConfig(draccus.ChoiceRegistry, abc.ABC): # type: ignore # TODO: add type stubs for draccus
class CameraConfig(draccus.ChoiceRegistry, abc.ABC):
fps: int | None = None
width: int | None = None
height: int | None = None
@property
def type(self) -> str:
return str(self.get_choice_name(self.__class__))
return self.get_choice_name(self.__class__)

View File

@@ -14,5 +14,3 @@
from .camera_opencv import OpenCVCamera
from .configuration_opencv import OpenCVCameraConfig
__all__ = ["OpenCVCamera", "OpenCVCameraConfig"]

View File

@@ -25,14 +25,13 @@ from pathlib import Path
from threading import Event, Lock, Thread
from typing import Any
from numpy.typing import NDArray # type: ignore # TODO: add type stubs for numpy.typing
# Fix MSMF hardware transform compatibility for Windows before importing cv2
if platform.system() == "Windows" and "OPENCV_VIDEOIO_MSMF_ENABLE_HW_TRANSFORMS" not in os.environ:
os.environ["OPENCV_VIDEOIO_MSMF_ENABLE_HW_TRANSFORMS"] = "0"
import cv2 # type: ignore # TODO: add type stubs for OpenCV
import cv2
import numpy as np
from lerobot.utils.errors import DeviceAlreadyConnectedError, DeviceNotConnectedError
from lerobot.errors import DeviceAlreadyConnectedError, DeviceNotConnectedError
from ..camera import Camera
from ..utils import get_cv2_backend, get_cv2_rotation
@@ -122,7 +121,7 @@ class OpenCVCamera(Camera):
self.thread: Thread | None = None
self.stop_event: Event | None = None
self.frame_lock: Lock = Lock()
self.latest_frame: NDArray[Any] | None = None
self.latest_frame: np.ndarray | None = None
self.new_frame_event: Event = Event()
self.rotation: int | None = get_cv2_rotation(config.rotation)
@@ -141,7 +140,7 @@ class OpenCVCamera(Camera):
"""Checks if the camera is currently connected and opened."""
return isinstance(self.videocapture, cv2.VideoCapture) and self.videocapture.isOpened()
def connect(self, warmup: bool = True) -> None:
def connect(self, warmup: bool = True):
"""
Connects to the OpenCV camera specified in the configuration.
@@ -181,14 +180,12 @@ class OpenCVCamera(Camera):
def _configure_capture_settings(self) -> None:
"""
Applies the specified FOURCC, FPS, width, and height settings to the connected camera.
Applies the specified FPS, width, and height settings to the connected camera.
This method attempts to set the camera properties via OpenCV. It checks if
the camera successfully applied the settings and raises an error if not.
FOURCC is set first (if specified) as it can affect the available FPS and resolution options.
Args:
fourcc: The desired FOURCC code (e.g., "MJPG", "YUYV"). If None, auto-detect.
fps: The desired frames per second. If None, the setting is skipped.
width: The desired capture width. If None, the setting is skipped.
height: The desired capture height. If None, the setting is skipped.
@@ -202,11 +199,10 @@ class OpenCVCamera(Camera):
if not self.is_connected:
raise DeviceNotConnectedError(f"Cannot configure settings for {self} as it is not connected.")
# Set FOURCC first (if specified) as it can affect available FPS/resolution options
if self.config.fourcc is not None:
self._validate_fourcc()
if self.videocapture is None:
raise DeviceNotConnectedError(f"{self} videocapture is not initialized")
if self.fps is None:
self.fps = self.videocapture.get(cv2.CAP_PROP_FPS)
else:
self._validate_fps()
default_width = int(round(self.videocapture.get(cv2.CAP_PROP_FRAME_WIDTH)))
default_height = int(round(self.videocapture.get(cv2.CAP_PROP_FRAME_HEIGHT)))
@@ -220,56 +216,18 @@ class OpenCVCamera(Camera):
else:
self._validate_width_and_height()
if self.fps is None:
self.fps = self.videocapture.get(cv2.CAP_PROP_FPS)
else:
self._validate_fps()
def _validate_fps(self) -> None:
"""Validates and sets the camera's frames per second (FPS)."""
if self.videocapture is None:
raise DeviceNotConnectedError(f"{self} videocapture is not initialized")
if self.fps is None:
raise ValueError(f"{self} FPS is not set")
success = self.videocapture.set(cv2.CAP_PROP_FPS, float(self.fps))
actual_fps = self.videocapture.get(cv2.CAP_PROP_FPS)
# Use math.isclose for robust float comparison
if not success or not math.isclose(self.fps, actual_fps, rel_tol=1e-3):
raise RuntimeError(f"{self} failed to set fps={self.fps} ({actual_fps=}).")
def _validate_fourcc(self) -> None:
"""Validates and sets the camera's FOURCC code."""
fourcc_code = cv2.VideoWriter_fourcc(*self.config.fourcc)
if self.videocapture is None:
raise DeviceNotConnectedError(f"{self} videocapture is not initialized")
success = self.videocapture.set(cv2.CAP_PROP_FOURCC, fourcc_code)
actual_fourcc_code = self.videocapture.get(cv2.CAP_PROP_FOURCC)
# Convert actual FOURCC code back to string for comparison
actual_fourcc_code_int = int(actual_fourcc_code)
actual_fourcc = "".join([chr((actual_fourcc_code_int >> 8 * i) & 0xFF) for i in range(4)])
if not success or actual_fourcc != self.config.fourcc:
logger.warning(
f"{self} failed to set fourcc={self.config.fourcc} (actual={actual_fourcc}, success={success}). "
f"Continuing with default format."
)
def _validate_width_and_height(self) -> None:
"""Validates and sets the camera's frame capture width and height."""
if self.videocapture is None:
raise DeviceNotConnectedError(f"{self} videocapture is not initialized")
if self.capture_width is None or self.capture_height is None:
raise ValueError(f"{self} capture_width or capture_height is not set")
width_success = self.videocapture.set(cv2.CAP_PROP_FRAME_WIDTH, float(self.capture_width))
height_success = self.videocapture.set(cv2.CAP_PROP_FRAME_HEIGHT, float(self.capture_height))
@@ -300,12 +258,11 @@ class OpenCVCamera(Camera):
"""
found_cameras_info = []
targets_to_scan: list[str | int]
if platform.system() == "Linux":
possible_paths = sorted(Path("/dev").glob("video*"), key=lambda p: p.name)
targets_to_scan = [str(p) for p in possible_paths]
else:
targets_to_scan = [int(i) for i in range(MAX_OPENCV_INDEX)]
targets_to_scan = list(range(MAX_OPENCV_INDEX))
for target in targets_to_scan:
camera = cv2.VideoCapture(target)
@@ -314,12 +271,6 @@ class OpenCVCamera(Camera):
default_height = int(camera.get(cv2.CAP_PROP_FRAME_HEIGHT))
default_fps = camera.get(cv2.CAP_PROP_FPS)
default_format = camera.get(cv2.CAP_PROP_FORMAT)
# Get FOURCC code and convert to string
default_fourcc_code = camera.get(cv2.CAP_PROP_FOURCC)
default_fourcc_code_int = int(default_fourcc_code)
default_fourcc = "".join([chr((default_fourcc_code_int >> 8 * i) & 0xFF) for i in range(4)])
camera_info = {
"name": f"OpenCV Camera @ {target}",
"type": "OpenCV",
@@ -327,7 +278,6 @@ class OpenCVCamera(Camera):
"backend_api": camera.getBackendName(),
"default_stream_profile": {
"format": default_format,
"fourcc": default_fourcc,
"width": default_width,
"height": default_height,
"fps": default_fps,
@@ -339,7 +289,7 @@ class OpenCVCamera(Camera):
return found_cameras_info
def read(self, color_mode: ColorMode | None = None) -> NDArray[Any]:
def read(self, color_mode: ColorMode | None = None) -> np.ndarray:
"""
Reads a single frame synchronously from the camera.
@@ -367,9 +317,6 @@ class OpenCVCamera(Camera):
start_time = time.perf_counter()
if self.videocapture is None:
raise DeviceNotConnectedError(f"{self} videocapture is not initialized")
ret, frame = self.videocapture.read()
if not ret or frame is None:
@@ -382,7 +329,7 @@ class OpenCVCamera(Camera):
return processed_frame
def _postprocess_image(self, image: NDArray[Any], color_mode: ColorMode | None = None) -> NDArray[Any]:
def _postprocess_image(self, image: np.ndarray, color_mode: ColorMode | None = None) -> np.ndarray:
"""
Applies color conversion, dimension validation, and rotation to a raw frame.
@@ -425,7 +372,7 @@ class OpenCVCamera(Camera):
return processed_image
def _read_loop(self) -> None:
def _read_loop(self):
"""
Internal loop run by the background thread for asynchronous reading.
@@ -436,9 +383,6 @@ class OpenCVCamera(Camera):
Stops on DeviceNotConnectedError, logs other errors and continues.
"""
if self.stop_event is None:
raise RuntimeError(f"{self}: stop_event is not initialized before starting read loop.")
while not self.stop_event.is_set():
try:
color_image = self.read()
@@ -475,7 +419,7 @@ class OpenCVCamera(Camera):
self.thread = None
self.stop_event = None
def async_read(self, timeout_ms: float = 200) -> NDArray[Any]:
def async_read(self, timeout_ms: float = 200) -> np.ndarray:
"""
Reads the latest available frame asynchronously.
@@ -518,7 +462,7 @@ class OpenCVCamera(Camera):
return frame
def disconnect(self) -> None:
def disconnect(self):
"""
Disconnects from the camera and cleans up resources.

View File

@@ -17,8 +17,6 @@ from pathlib import Path
from ..configs import CameraConfig, ColorMode, Cv2Rotation
__all__ = ["OpenCVCameraConfig", "ColorMode", "Cv2Rotation"]
@CameraConfig.register_subclass("opencv")
@dataclass
@@ -35,9 +33,8 @@ class OpenCVCameraConfig(CameraConfig):
OpenCVCameraConfig(0, 30, 1280, 720) # 1280x720 @ 30FPS
OpenCVCameraConfig(/dev/video4, 60, 640, 480) # 640x480 @ 60FPS
# Advanced configurations with FOURCC format
OpenCVCameraConfig(128422271347, 30, 640, 480, rotation=Cv2Rotation.ROTATE_90, fourcc="MJPG") # With 90° rotation and MJPG format
OpenCVCameraConfig(0, 30, 1280, 720, fourcc="YUYV") # With YUYV format
# Advanced configurations
OpenCVCameraConfig(128422271347, 30, 640, 480, rotation=Cv2Rotation.ROTATE_90) # With 90° rotation
```
Attributes:
@@ -49,21 +46,17 @@ class OpenCVCameraConfig(CameraConfig):
color_mode: Color mode for image output (RGB or BGR). Defaults to RGB.
rotation: Image rotation setting (0°, 90°, 180°, or 270°). Defaults to no rotation.
warmup_s: Time reading frames before returning from connect (in seconds)
fourcc: FOURCC code for video format (e.g., "MJPG", "YUYV", "I420"). Defaults to None (auto-detect).
Note:
- Only 3-channel color output (RGB/BGR) is currently supported.
- FOURCC codes must be 4-character strings (e.g., "MJPG", "YUYV"). Some common FOUCC codes: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/medfound/video-fourccs#fourcc-constants
- Setting FOURCC can help achieve higher frame rates on some cameras.
"""
index_or_path: int | Path
color_mode: ColorMode = ColorMode.RGB
rotation: Cv2Rotation = Cv2Rotation.NO_ROTATION
warmup_s: int = 1
fourcc: str | None = None
def __post_init__(self) -> None:
def __post_init__(self):
if self.color_mode not in (ColorMode.RGB, ColorMode.BGR):
raise ValueError(
f"`color_mode` is expected to be {ColorMode.RGB.value} or {ColorMode.BGR.value}, but {self.color_mode} is provided."
@@ -78,8 +71,3 @@ class OpenCVCameraConfig(CameraConfig):
raise ValueError(
f"`rotation` is expected to be in {(Cv2Rotation.NO_ROTATION, Cv2Rotation.ROTATE_90, Cv2Rotation.ROTATE_180, Cv2Rotation.ROTATE_270)}, but {self.rotation} is provided."
)
if self.fourcc is not None and (not isinstance(self.fourcc, str) or len(self.fourcc) != 4):
raise ValueError(
f"`fourcc` must be a 4-character string (e.g., 'MJPG', 'YUYV'), but '{self.fourcc}' is provided."
)

View File

@@ -16,8 +16,6 @@ from dataclasses import dataclass
from ..configs import CameraConfig, ColorMode
__all__ = ["CameraConfig", "ColorMode", "Reachy2CameraConfig"]
@CameraConfig.register_subclass("reachy2_camera")
@dataclass
@@ -64,7 +62,7 @@ class Reachy2CameraConfig(CameraConfig):
port: int = 50065
# use_depth: bool = False
def __post_init__(self) -> None:
def __post_init__(self):
if self.name not in ["teleop", "depth"]:
raise ValueError(f"`name` is expected to be 'teleop' or 'depth', but {self.name} is provided.")
if (self.name == "teleop" and self.image_type not in ["left", "right"]) or (

View File

@@ -23,19 +23,15 @@ import time
from threading import Event, Lock, Thread
from typing import Any
from numpy.typing import NDArray # type: ignore # TODO: add type stubs for numpy.typing
# Fix MSMF hardware transform compatibility for Windows before importing cv2
if platform.system() == "Windows" and "OPENCV_VIDEOIO_MSMF_ENABLE_HW_TRANSFORMS" not in os.environ:
os.environ["OPENCV_VIDEOIO_MSMF_ENABLE_HW_TRANSFORMS"] = "0"
import cv2 # type: ignore # TODO: add type stubs for OpenCV
import numpy as np # type: ignore # TODO: add type stubs for numpy
from reachy2_sdk.media.camera import CameraView # type: ignore # TODO: add type stubs for reachy2_sdk
from reachy2_sdk.media.camera_manager import ( # type: ignore # TODO: add type stubs for reachy2_sdk
CameraManager,
)
import cv2
import numpy as np
from reachy2_sdk.media.camera import CameraView
from reachy2_sdk.media.camera_manager import CameraManager
from lerobot.utils.errors import DeviceNotConnectedError
from lerobot.errors import DeviceNotConnectedError
from ..camera import Camera
from .configuration_reachy2_camera import ColorMode, Reachy2CameraConfig
@@ -77,7 +73,7 @@ class Reachy2Camera(Camera):
self.thread: Thread | None = None
self.stop_event: Event | None = None
self.frame_lock: Lock = Lock()
self.latest_frame: NDArray[Any] | None = None
self.latest_frame: np.ndarray | None = None
self.new_frame_event: Event = Event()
def __str__(self) -> str:
@@ -87,17 +83,13 @@ class Reachy2Camera(Camera):
def is_connected(self) -> bool:
"""Checks if the camera is currently connected and opened."""
if self.config.name == "teleop":
return bool(
self.cam_manager._grpc_connected and self.cam_manager.teleop if self.cam_manager else False
)
return self.cam_manager._grpc_connected and self.cam_manager.teleop if self.cam_manager else False
elif self.config.name == "depth":
return bool(
self.cam_manager._grpc_connected and self.cam_manager.depth if self.cam_manager else False
)
return self.cam_manager._grpc_connected and self.cam_manager.depth if self.cam_manager else False
else:
raise ValueError(f"Invalid camera name '{self.config.name}'. Expected 'teleop' or 'depth'.")
def connect(self, warmup: bool = True) -> None:
def connect(self, warmup: bool = True):
"""
Connects to the Reachy2 CameraManager as specified in the configuration.
"""
@@ -139,7 +131,7 @@ class Reachy2Camera(Camera):
camera_manager.disconnect()
return initialized_cameras
def read(self, color_mode: ColorMode | None = None) -> NDArray[Any]:
def read(self, color_mode: ColorMode | None = None) -> np.ndarray:
"""
Reads a single frame synchronously from the camera.
@@ -160,7 +152,7 @@ class Reachy2Camera(Camera):
start_time = time.perf_counter()
frame: NDArray[Any] = np.empty((0, 0, 3), dtype=np.uint8)
frame = None
if self.cam_manager is None:
raise DeviceNotConnectedError(f"{self} is not connected.")
@@ -187,7 +179,7 @@ class Reachy2Camera(Camera):
return frame
def _read_loop(self) -> None:
def _read_loop(self):
"""
Internal loop run by the background thread for asynchronous reading.
@@ -198,9 +190,6 @@ class Reachy2Camera(Camera):
Stops on DeviceNotConnectedError, logs other errors and continues.
"""
if self.stop_event is None:
raise RuntimeError(f"{self}: stop_event is not initialized before starting read loop.")
while not self.stop_event.is_set():
try:
color_image = self.read()
@@ -237,7 +226,7 @@ class Reachy2Camera(Camera):
self.thread = None
self.stop_event = None
def async_read(self, timeout_ms: float = 200) -> NDArray[Any]:
def async_read(self, timeout_ms: float = 200) -> np.ndarray:
"""
Reads the latest available frame asynchronously.
@@ -280,7 +269,7 @@ class Reachy2Camera(Camera):
return frame
def disconnect(self) -> None:
def disconnect(self):
"""
Stops the background read thread (if running).

View File

@@ -21,16 +21,15 @@ import time
from threading import Event, Lock, Thread
from typing import Any
import cv2 # type: ignore # TODO: add type stubs for OpenCV
import numpy as np # type: ignore # TODO: add type stubs for numpy
from numpy.typing import NDArray # type: ignore # TODO: add type stubs for numpy.typing
import cv2
import numpy as np
try:
import pyrealsense2 as rs # type: ignore # TODO: add type stubs for pyrealsense2
import pyrealsense2 as rs
except Exception as e:
logging.info(f"Could not import realsense: {e}")
from lerobot.utils.errors import DeviceAlreadyConnectedError, DeviceNotConnectedError
from lerobot.errors import DeviceAlreadyConnectedError, DeviceNotConnectedError
from ..camera import Camera
from ..configs import ColorMode
@@ -133,7 +132,7 @@ class RealSenseCamera(Camera):
self.thread: Thread | None = None
self.stop_event: Event | None = None
self.frame_lock: Lock = Lock()
self.latest_frame: NDArray[Any] | None = None
self.latest_frame: np.ndarray | None = None
self.new_frame_event: Event = Event()
self.rotation: int | None = get_cv2_rotation(config.rotation)
@@ -151,7 +150,7 @@ class RealSenseCamera(Camera):
"""Checks if the camera pipeline is started and streams are active."""
return self.rs_pipeline is not None and self.rs_profile is not None
def connect(self, warmup: bool = True) -> None:
def connect(self, warmup: bool = True):
"""
Connects to the RealSense camera specified in the configuration.
@@ -265,7 +264,7 @@ class RealSenseCamera(Camera):
serial_number = str(found_devices[0]["serial_number"])
return serial_number
def _configure_rs_pipeline_config(self, rs_config: Any) -> None:
def _configure_rs_pipeline_config(self, rs_config):
"""Creates and configures the RealSense pipeline configuration object."""
rs.config.enable_device(rs_config, self.serial_number)
@@ -294,9 +293,6 @@ class RealSenseCamera(Camera):
if not self.is_connected:
raise DeviceNotConnectedError(f"Cannot validate settings for {self} as it is not connected.")
if self.rs_profile is None:
raise RuntimeError(f"{self}: rs_profile must be initialized before use.")
stream = self.rs_profile.get_stream(rs.stream.color).as_video_stream_profile()
if self.fps is None:
@@ -312,7 +308,7 @@ class RealSenseCamera(Camera):
self.width, self.height = actual_width, actual_height
self.capture_width, self.capture_height = actual_width, actual_height
def read_depth(self, timeout_ms: int = 200) -> NDArray[Any]:
def read_depth(self, timeout_ms: int = 200) -> np.ndarray:
"""
Reads a single frame (depth) synchronously from the camera.
@@ -340,9 +336,6 @@ class RealSenseCamera(Camera):
start_time = time.perf_counter()
if self.rs_pipeline is None:
raise RuntimeError(f"{self}: rs_pipeline must be initialized before use.")
ret, frame = self.rs_pipeline.try_wait_for_frames(timeout_ms=timeout_ms)
if not ret or frame is None:
@@ -358,7 +351,7 @@ class RealSenseCamera(Camera):
return depth_map_processed
def read(self, color_mode: ColorMode | None = None, timeout_ms: int = 200) -> NDArray[Any]:
def read(self, color_mode: ColorMode | None = None, timeout_ms: int = 200) -> np.ndarray:
"""
Reads a single frame (color) synchronously from the camera.
@@ -383,9 +376,6 @@ class RealSenseCamera(Camera):
start_time = time.perf_counter()
if self.rs_pipeline is None:
raise RuntimeError(f"{self}: rs_pipeline must be initialized before use.")
ret, frame = self.rs_pipeline.try_wait_for_frames(timeout_ms=timeout_ms)
if not ret or frame is None:
@@ -402,8 +392,8 @@ class RealSenseCamera(Camera):
return color_image_processed
def _postprocess_image(
self, image: NDArray[Any], color_mode: ColorMode | None = None, depth_frame: bool = False
) -> NDArray[Any]:
self, image: np.ndarray, color_mode: ColorMode | None = None, depth_frame: bool = False
) -> np.ndarray:
"""
Applies color conversion, dimension validation, and rotation to a raw color frame.
@@ -448,7 +438,7 @@ class RealSenseCamera(Camera):
return processed_image
def _read_loop(self) -> None:
def _read_loop(self):
"""
Internal loop run by the background thread for asynchronous reading.
@@ -459,9 +449,6 @@ class RealSenseCamera(Camera):
Stops on DeviceNotConnectedError, logs other errors and continues.
"""
if self.stop_event is None:
raise RuntimeError(f"{self}: stop_event is not initialized before starting read loop.")
while not self.stop_event.is_set():
try:
color_image = self.read(timeout_ms=500)
@@ -487,7 +474,7 @@ class RealSenseCamera(Camera):
self.thread.daemon = True
self.thread.start()
def _stop_read_thread(self) -> None:
def _stop_read_thread(self):
"""Signals the background read thread to stop and waits for it to join."""
if self.stop_event is not None:
self.stop_event.set()
@@ -499,7 +486,7 @@ class RealSenseCamera(Camera):
self.stop_event = None
# NOTE(Steven): Missing implementation for depth for now
def async_read(self, timeout_ms: float = 200) -> NDArray[Any]:
def async_read(self, timeout_ms: float = 200) -> np.ndarray:
"""
Reads the latest available frame data (color) asynchronously.
@@ -542,7 +529,7 @@ class RealSenseCamera(Camera):
return frame
def disconnect(self) -> None:
def disconnect(self):
"""
Disconnects from the camera, stops the pipeline, and cleans up resources.

View File

@@ -59,7 +59,7 @@ class RealSenseCameraConfig(CameraConfig):
rotation: Cv2Rotation = Cv2Rotation.NO_ROTATION
warmup_s: int = 1
def __post_init__(self) -> None:
def __post_init__(self):
if self.color_mode not in (ColorMode.RGB, ColorMode.BGR):
raise ValueError(
f"`color_mode` is expected to be {ColorMode.RGB.value} or {ColorMode.BGR.value}, but {self.color_mode} is provided."

View File

@@ -15,19 +15,19 @@
# limitations under the License.
import platform
from typing import cast
from lerobot.utils.import_utils import make_device_from_device_class
from pathlib import Path
from typing import TypeAlias
from .camera import Camera
from .configs import CameraConfig, Cv2Rotation
IndexOrPath: TypeAlias = int | Path
def make_cameras_from_configs(camera_configs: dict[str, CameraConfig]) -> dict[str, Camera]:
cameras: dict[str, Camera] = {}
cameras = {}
for key, cfg in camera_configs.items():
# TODO(Steven): Consider just using the make_device_from_device_class for all types
if cfg.type == "opencv":
from .opencv import OpenCVCamera
@@ -44,23 +44,20 @@ def make_cameras_from_configs(camera_configs: dict[str, CameraConfig]) -> dict[s
cameras[key] = Reachy2Camera(cfg)
else:
try:
cameras[key] = cast(Camera, make_device_from_device_class(cfg))
except Exception as e:
raise ValueError(f"Error creating camera {key} with config {cfg}: {e}") from e
raise ValueError(f"The camera type '{cfg.type}' is not valid.")
return cameras
def get_cv2_rotation(rotation: Cv2Rotation) -> int | None:
import cv2 # type: ignore # TODO: add type stubs for OpenCV
import cv2
if rotation == Cv2Rotation.ROTATE_90:
return int(cv2.ROTATE_90_CLOCKWISE)
return cv2.ROTATE_90_CLOCKWISE
elif rotation == Cv2Rotation.ROTATE_180:
return int(cv2.ROTATE_180)
return cv2.ROTATE_180
elif rotation == Cv2Rotation.ROTATE_270:
return int(cv2.ROTATE_90_COUNTERCLOCKWISE)
return cv2.ROTATE_90_COUNTERCLOCKWISE
else:
return None
@@ -69,8 +66,8 @@ def get_cv2_backend() -> int:
import cv2
if platform.system() == "Windows":
return int(cv2.CAP_MSMF) # Use MSMF for Windows instead of AVFOUNDATION
return cv2.CAP_MSMF # Use MSMF for Windows instead of AVFOUNDATION
# elif platform.system() == "Darwin": # macOS
# return cv2.CAP_AVFOUNDATION
else: # Linux and others
return int(cv2.CAP_ANY)
return cv2.CAP_ANY

View File

@@ -16,6 +16,9 @@
from dataclasses import dataclass, field
from lerobot import (
policies, # noqa: F401
)
from lerobot.datasets.transforms import ImageTransformsConfig
from lerobot.datasets.video_utils import get_safe_default_codec
@@ -57,7 +60,7 @@ class EvalConfig:
# `use_async_envs` specifies whether to use asynchronous environments (multiprocessing).
use_async_envs: bool = False
def __post_init__(self) -> None:
def __post_init__(self):
if self.batch_size > self.n_episodes:
raise ValueError(
"The eval batch size is greater than the number of eval episodes "

View File

@@ -13,8 +13,8 @@
# limitations under the License.
import datetime as dt
import logging
from dataclasses import dataclass, field
from logging import getLogger
from pathlib import Path
from lerobot import envs, policies # noqa: F401
@@ -22,8 +22,6 @@ from lerobot.configs import parser
from lerobot.configs.default import EvalConfig
from lerobot.configs.policies import PreTrainedConfig
logger = getLogger(__name__)
@dataclass
class EvalPipelineConfig:
@@ -36,31 +34,25 @@ class EvalPipelineConfig:
output_dir: Path | None = None
job_name: str | None = None
seed: int | None = 1000
# Rename map for the observation to override the image and state keys
rename_map: dict[str, str] = field(default_factory=dict)
def __post_init__(self) -> None:
def __post_init__(self):
# HACK: We parse again the cli args here to get the pretrained path if there was one.
policy_path = parser.get_path_arg("policy")
if policy_path:
cli_overrides = parser.get_cli_overrides("policy")
self.policy = PreTrainedConfig.from_pretrained(policy_path, cli_overrides=cli_overrides)
self.policy.pretrained_path = Path(policy_path)
self.policy.pretrained_path = policy_path
else:
logger.warning(
logging.warning(
"No pretrained path was provided, evaluated policy will be built from scratch (random weights)."
)
if not self.job_name:
if self.env is None:
self.job_name = f"{self.policy.type if self.policy is not None else 'scratch'}"
self.job_name = f"{self.policy.type}"
else:
self.job_name = (
f"{self.env.type}_{self.policy.type if self.policy is not None else 'scratch'}"
)
logger.warning(f"No job name provided, using '{self.job_name}' as job name.")
self.job_name = f"{self.env.type}_{self.policy.type}"
if not self.output_dir:
now = dt.datetime.now()

View File

@@ -16,19 +16,14 @@ import inspect
import pkgutil
import sys
from argparse import ArgumentError
from collections.abc import Callable, Iterable, Sequence
from collections.abc import Sequence
from functools import wraps
from pathlib import Path
from pkgutil import ModuleInfo
from types import ModuleType
from typing import Any, TypeVar, cast
import draccus
from lerobot.utils.utils import has_method
F = TypeVar("F", bound=Callable[..., object])
PATH_KEY = "path"
PLUGIN_DISCOVERY_SUFFIX = "discover_packages_path"
@@ -65,7 +60,7 @@ def parse_arg(arg_name: str, args: Sequence[str] | None = None) -> str | None:
return None
def parse_plugin_args(plugin_arg_suffix: str, args: Sequence[str]) -> dict[str, str]:
def parse_plugin_args(plugin_arg_suffix: str, args: Sequence[str]) -> dict:
"""Parse plugin-related arguments from command-line arguments.
This function extracts arguments from command-line arguments that match a specified suffix pattern.
@@ -132,7 +127,7 @@ def load_plugin(plugin_path: str) -> None:
f"Failed to load plugin '{plugin_path}'. Verify the path and installation: {str(e)}"
) from e
def iter_namespace(ns_pkg: ModuleType) -> Iterable[ModuleInfo]:
def iter_namespace(ns_pkg):
return pkgutil.iter_modules(ns_pkg.__path__, ns_pkg.__name__ + ".")
try:
@@ -153,8 +148,6 @@ def get_type_arg(field_name: str, args: Sequence[str] | None = None) -> str | No
def filter_arg(field_to_filter: str, args: Sequence[str] | None = None) -> list[str]:
if args is None:
return []
return [arg for arg in args if not arg.startswith(f"--{field_to_filter}=")]
@@ -178,8 +171,7 @@ def filter_path_args(fields_to_filter: str | list[str], args: Sequence[str] | No
if isinstance(fields_to_filter, str):
fields_to_filter = [fields_to_filter]
filtered_args = [] if args is None else list(args)
filtered_args = args
for field in fields_to_filter:
if get_path_arg(field, args):
if get_type_arg(field, args):
@@ -192,7 +184,7 @@ def filter_path_args(fields_to_filter: str | list[str], args: Sequence[str] | No
return filtered_args
def wrap(config_path: Path | None = None) -> Callable[[F], F]:
def wrap(config_path: Path | None = None):
"""
HACK: Similar to draccus.wrap but does three additional things:
- Will remove '.path' arguments from CLI in order to process them later on.
@@ -203,9 +195,9 @@ def wrap(config_path: Path | None = None) -> Callable[[F], F]:
from the CLI '.type' arguments
"""
def wrapper_outer(fn: F) -> F:
def wrapper_outer(fn):
@wraps(fn)
def wrapper_inner(*args: Any, **kwargs: Any) -> Any:
def wrapper_inner(*args, **kwargs):
argspec = inspect.getfullargspec(fn)
argtype = argspec.annotations[argspec.args[0]]
if len(args) > 0 and type(args[0]) is argtype:
@@ -233,6 +225,6 @@ def wrap(config_path: Path | None = None) -> Callable[[F], F]:
response = fn(cfg, *args, **kwargs)
return response
return cast(F, wrapper_inner)
return wrapper_inner
return cast(Callable[[F], F], wrapper_outer)
return wrapper_outer

View File

@@ -14,12 +14,12 @@
import abc
import builtins
import json
import logging
import os
import tempfile
from dataclasses import dataclass, field
from logging import getLogger
from pathlib import Path
from typing import Any, TypeVar
from typing import TypeVar
import draccus
from huggingface_hub import hf_hub_download
@@ -27,18 +27,17 @@ from huggingface_hub.constants import CONFIG_NAME
from huggingface_hub.errors import HfHubHTTPError
from lerobot.configs.types import FeatureType, PolicyFeature
from lerobot.constants import ACTION, OBS_STATE
from lerobot.optim.optimizers import OptimizerConfig
from lerobot.optim.schedulers import LRSchedulerConfig
from lerobot.utils.constants import ACTION, OBS_STATE
from lerobot.utils.hub import HubMixin
from lerobot.utils.utils import auto_select_torch_device, is_amp_available, is_torch_device_available
T = TypeVar("T", bound="PreTrainedConfig")
logger = getLogger(__name__)
@dataclass
class PreTrainedConfig(draccus.ChoiceRegistry, HubMixin, abc.ABC): # type: ignore[misc,name-defined] #TODO: draccus issue
class PreTrainedConfig(draccus.ChoiceRegistry, HubMixin, abc.ABC):
"""
Base configuration class for policy models.
@@ -58,12 +57,12 @@ class PreTrainedConfig(draccus.ChoiceRegistry, HubMixin, abc.ABC): # type: igno
input_features: dict[str, PolicyFeature] = field(default_factory=dict)
output_features: dict[str, PolicyFeature] = field(default_factory=dict)
device: str | None = None # e.g. "cuda", "cuda:0", "cpu", or "mps"
device: str | None = None # cuda | cpu | mp
# `use_amp` determines whether to use Automatic Mixed Precision (AMP) for training and evaluation. With AMP,
# automatic gradient scaling is used.
use_amp: bool = False
push_to_hub: bool = True # type: ignore[assignment] # TODO: use a different name to avoid override
push_to_hub: bool = True
repo_id: str | None = None
# Upload on private repository on the Hugging Face hub.
@@ -72,43 +71,38 @@ class PreTrainedConfig(draccus.ChoiceRegistry, HubMixin, abc.ABC): # type: igno
tags: list[str] | None = None
# Add tags to your policy on the hub.
license: str | None = None
# Either the repo ID of a model hosted on the Hub or a path to a directory containing weights
# saved using `Policy.save_pretrained`. If not provided, the policy is initialized from scratch.
pretrained_path: Path | None = None
def __post_init__(self) -> None:
def __post_init__(self):
self.pretrained_path = None
if not self.device or not is_torch_device_available(self.device):
auto_device = auto_select_torch_device()
logger.warning(f"Device '{self.device}' is not available. Switching to '{auto_device}'.")
logging.warning(f"Device '{self.device}' is not available. Switching to '{auto_device}'.")
self.device = auto_device.type
# Automatically deactivate AMP if necessary
if self.use_amp and not is_amp_available(self.device):
logger.warning(
logging.warning(
f"Automatic Mixed Precision (amp) is not available on device '{self.device}'. Deactivating AMP."
)
self.use_amp = False
@property
def type(self) -> str:
choice_name = self.get_choice_name(self.__class__)
if not isinstance(choice_name, str):
raise TypeError(f"Expected string from get_choice_name, got {type(choice_name)}")
return choice_name
return self.get_choice_name(self.__class__)
@property
@abc.abstractmethod
def observation_delta_indices(self) -> list | None: # type: ignore[type-arg] #TODO: No implementation
def observation_delta_indices(self) -> list | None:
raise NotImplementedError
@property
@abc.abstractmethod
def action_delta_indices(self) -> list | None: # type: ignore[type-arg] #TODO: No implementation
def action_delta_indices(self) -> list | None:
raise NotImplementedError
@property
@abc.abstractmethod
def reward_delta_indices(self) -> list | None: # type: ignore[type-arg] #TODO: No implementation
def reward_delta_indices(self) -> list | None:
raise NotImplementedError
@abc.abstractmethod
@@ -158,13 +152,13 @@ class PreTrainedConfig(draccus.ChoiceRegistry, HubMixin, abc.ABC): # type: igno
pretrained_name_or_path: str | Path,
*,
force_download: bool = False,
resume_download: bool | None = None,
proxies: dict[Any, Any] | None = None,
resume_download: bool = None,
proxies: dict | None = None,
token: str | bool | None = None,
cache_dir: str | Path | None = None,
local_files_only: bool = False,
revision: str | None = None,
**policy_kwargs: Any,
**policy_kwargs,
) -> T:
model_id = str(pretrained_name_or_path)
config_file: str | None = None
@@ -172,7 +166,7 @@ class PreTrainedConfig(draccus.ChoiceRegistry, HubMixin, abc.ABC): # type: igno
if CONFIG_NAME in os.listdir(model_id):
config_file = os.path.join(model_id, CONFIG_NAME)
else:
logger.error(f"{CONFIG_NAME} not found in {Path(model_id).resolve()}")
print(f"{CONFIG_NAME} not found in {Path(model_id).resolve()}")
else:
try:
config_file = hf_hub_download(
@@ -198,9 +192,6 @@ class PreTrainedConfig(draccus.ChoiceRegistry, HubMixin, abc.ABC): # type: igno
with draccus.config_type("json"):
orig_config = draccus.parse(cls, config_file, args=[])
if config_file is None:
raise FileNotFoundError(f"{CONFIG_NAME} not found in {model_id}")
with open(config_file) as f:
config = json.load(f)

View File

@@ -16,7 +16,6 @@ import datetime as dt
import os
from dataclasses import dataclass, field
from pathlib import Path
from typing import Any
import draccus
from huggingface_hub import hf_hub_download
@@ -64,18 +63,18 @@ class TrainPipelineConfig(HubMixin):
scheduler: LRSchedulerConfig | None = None
eval: EvalConfig = field(default_factory=EvalConfig)
wandb: WandBConfig = field(default_factory=WandBConfig)
checkpoint_path: Path | None = field(init=False, default=None)
# Rename map for the observation to override the image and state keys
rename_map: dict[str, str] = field(default_factory=dict)
def validate(self) -> None:
def __post_init__(self):
self.checkpoint_path = None
def validate(self):
# HACK: We parse again the cli args here to get the pretrained paths if there was some.
policy_path = parser.get_path_arg("policy")
if policy_path:
# Only load the policy config
cli_overrides = parser.get_cli_overrides("policy")
self.policy = PreTrainedConfig.from_pretrained(policy_path, cli_overrides=cli_overrides)
self.policy.pretrained_path = Path(policy_path)
self.policy.pretrained_path = policy_path
elif self.resume:
# The entire train config is already loaded, we just need to get the checkpoint dir
config_path = parser.parse_arg("config_path")
@@ -83,22 +82,14 @@ class TrainPipelineConfig(HubMixin):
raise ValueError(
f"A config_path is expected when resuming a run. Please specify path to {TRAIN_CONFIG_NAME}"
)
if not Path(config_path).resolve().exists():
raise NotADirectoryError(
f"{config_path=} is expected to be a local path. "
"Resuming from the hub is not supported for now."
)
policy_dir = Path(config_path).parent
if self.policy is not None:
self.policy.pretrained_path = policy_dir
self.checkpoint_path = policy_dir.parent
if self.policy is None:
raise ValueError(
"Policy is not configured. Please specify a pretrained policy with `--policy.path`."
)
policy_path = Path(config_path).parent
self.policy.pretrained_path = policy_path
self.checkpoint_path = policy_path.parent
if not self.job_name:
if self.env is None:
@@ -135,8 +126,8 @@ class TrainPipelineConfig(HubMixin):
"""This enables the parser to load config from the policy using `--policy.path=local/dir`"""
return ["policy"]
def to_dict(self) -> dict[str, Any]:
return draccus.encode(self) # type: ignore[no-any-return] # because of the third-party library draccus uses Any as the return type
def to_dict(self) -> dict:
return draccus.encode(self)
def _save_pretrained(self, save_directory: Path) -> None:
with open(save_directory / TRAIN_CONFIG_NAME, "w") as f, draccus.config_type("json"):
@@ -148,13 +139,13 @@ class TrainPipelineConfig(HubMixin):
pretrained_name_or_path: str | Path,
*,
force_download: bool = False,
resume_download: bool | None = None,
proxies: dict[Any, Any] | None = None,
resume_download: bool = None,
proxies: dict | None = None,
token: str | bool | None = None,
cache_dir: str | Path | None = None,
local_files_only: bool = False,
revision: str | None = None,
**kwargs: Any,
**kwargs,
) -> "TrainPipelineConfig":
model_id = str(pretrained_name_or_path)
config_file: str | None = None
@@ -190,6 +181,4 @@ class TrainPipelineConfig(HubMixin):
@dataclass(kw_only=True)
class TrainRLServerPipelineConfig(TrainPipelineConfig):
# NOTE: In RL, we don't need an offline dataset
# TODO: Make `TrainPipelineConfig.dataset` optional
dataset: DatasetConfig | None = None # type: ignore[assignment] # because the parent class has made it's type non-optional
dataset: DatasetConfig | None = None # NOTE: In RL, we don't need an offline dataset

View File

@@ -15,6 +15,7 @@
# https://stackoverflow.com/questions/24481852/serialising-an-enum-member-to-json
from dataclasses import dataclass
from enum import Enum
from typing import Any, Protocol
class FeatureType(str, Enum):
@@ -35,11 +36,13 @@ class NormalizationMode(str, Enum):
MIN_MAX = "MIN_MAX"
MEAN_STD = "MEAN_STD"
IDENTITY = "IDENTITY"
QUANTILES = "QUANTILES"
QUANTILE10 = "QUANTILE10"
class DictLike(Protocol):
def __getitem__(self, key: Any) -> Any: ...
@dataclass
class PolicyFeature:
type: FeatureType
shape: tuple[int, ...]
shape: tuple

View File

@@ -17,22 +17,21 @@ from pathlib import Path
from huggingface_hub.constants import HF_HOME
OBS_STR = "observation"
OBS_PREFIX = OBS_STR + "."
OBS_ENV_STATE = OBS_STR + ".environment_state"
OBS_STATE = OBS_STR + ".state"
OBS_IMAGE = OBS_STR + ".image"
OBS_IMAGES = OBS_IMAGE + "s"
OBS_LANGUAGE = OBS_STR + ".language"
OBS_LANGUAGE_TOKENS = OBS_LANGUAGE + ".tokens"
OBS_LANGUAGE_ATTENTION_MASK = OBS_LANGUAGE + ".attention_mask"
OBS_ENV_STATE = "observation.environment_state"
OBS_STATE = "observation.state"
OBS_IMAGE = "observation.image"
OBS_IMAGES = "observation.images"
OBS_LANGUAGE = "observation.language"
ACTION = "action"
REWARD = "next.reward"
TRUNCATED = "next.truncated"
DONE = "next.done"
OBS_LANGUAGE_TOKENS = OBS_LANGUAGE + ".tokens"
OBS_LANGUAGE_ATTENTION_MASK = OBS_LANGUAGE + ".attention_mask"
ROBOTS = "robots"
ROBOT_TYPE = "robot_type"
TELEOPERATORS = "teleoperators"
# files & directories
@@ -67,6 +66,3 @@ HF_LEROBOT_CALIBRATION = Path(os.getenv("HF_LEROBOT_CALIBRATION", default_calibr
# streaming datasets
LOOKBACK_BACKTRACKTABLE = 100
LOOKAHEAD_BACKTRACKTABLE = 100
# openpi
OPENPI_ATTENTION_MASK_VALUE = -2.3819763e38 # TODO(pepijn): Modify this when extending support to fp8 models

View File

@@ -31,15 +31,15 @@ from lerobot.datasets.utils import (
DEFAULT_EPISODES_PATH,
DEFAULT_VIDEO_FILE_SIZE_IN_MB,
DEFAULT_VIDEO_PATH,
get_file_size_in_mb,
get_parquet_file_size_in_mb,
get_video_size_in_mb,
to_parquet_with_hf_images,
update_chunk_file_indices,
write_info,
write_stats,
write_tasks,
)
from lerobot.datasets.video_utils import concatenate_video_files, get_video_duration_in_s
from lerobot.datasets.video_utils import concatenate_video_files
def validate_all_metadata(all_metadata: list[LeRobotDatasetMetadata]):
@@ -93,13 +93,14 @@ def update_data_df(df, src_meta, dst_meta):
pd.DataFrame: Updated DataFrame with adjusted indices.
"""
df["episode_index"] = df["episode_index"] + dst_meta.info["total_episodes"]
df["index"] = df["index"] + dst_meta.info["total_frames"]
def _update(row):
row["episode_index"] = row["episode_index"] + dst_meta.info["total_episodes"]
row["index"] = row["index"] + dst_meta.info["total_frames"]
task = src_meta.tasks.iloc[row["task_index"]].name
row["task_index"] = dst_meta.tasks.loc[task].task_index.item()
return row
src_task_names = src_meta.tasks.index.take(df["task_index"].to_numpy())
df["task_index"] = dst_meta.tasks.loc[src_task_names, "task_index"].to_numpy()
return df
return df.apply(_update, axis=1)
def update_meta_data(
@@ -125,45 +126,27 @@ def update_meta_data(
pd.DataFrame: Updated DataFrame with adjusted indices and timestamps.
"""
df["meta/episodes/chunk_index"] = df["meta/episodes/chunk_index"] + meta_idx["chunk"]
df["meta/episodes/file_index"] = df["meta/episodes/file_index"] + meta_idx["file"]
df["data/chunk_index"] = df["data/chunk_index"] + data_idx["chunk"]
df["data/file_index"] = df["data/file_index"] + data_idx["file"]
for key, video_idx in videos_idx.items():
# Store original video file indices before updating
orig_chunk_col = f"videos/{key}/chunk_index"
orig_file_col = f"videos/{key}/file_index"
df["_orig_chunk"] = df[orig_chunk_col].copy()
df["_orig_file"] = df[orig_file_col].copy()
# Update chunk and file indices to point to destination
df[orig_chunk_col] = video_idx["chunk"]
df[orig_file_col] = video_idx["file"]
# Apply per-source-file timestamp offsets
src_to_offset = video_idx.get("src_to_offset", {})
if src_to_offset:
# Apply offset based on original source file
for idx in df.index:
src_key = (df.at[idx, "_orig_chunk"], df.at[idx, "_orig_file"])
offset = src_to_offset.get(src_key, 0)
df.at[idx, f"videos/{key}/from_timestamp"] += offset
df.at[idx, f"videos/{key}/to_timestamp"] += offset
else:
# Fallback to simple offset (for backward compatibility)
df[f"videos/{key}/from_timestamp"] = (
df[f"videos/{key}/from_timestamp"] + video_idx["latest_duration"]
def _update(row):
row["meta/episodes/chunk_index"] = row["meta/episodes/chunk_index"] + meta_idx["chunk"]
row["meta/episodes/file_index"] = row["meta/episodes/file_index"] + meta_idx["file"]
row["data/chunk_index"] = row["data/chunk_index"] + data_idx["chunk"]
row["data/file_index"] = row["data/file_index"] + data_idx["file"]
for key, video_idx in videos_idx.items():
row[f"videos/{key}/chunk_index"] = row[f"videos/{key}/chunk_index"] + video_idx["chunk"]
row[f"videos/{key}/file_index"] = row[f"videos/{key}/file_index"] + video_idx["file"]
row[f"videos/{key}/from_timestamp"] = (
row[f"videos/{key}/from_timestamp"] + video_idx["latest_duration"]
)
row[f"videos/{key}/to_timestamp"] = (
row[f"videos/{key}/to_timestamp"] + video_idx["latest_duration"]
)
df[f"videos/{key}/to_timestamp"] = df[f"videos/{key}/to_timestamp"] + video_idx["latest_duration"]
# Clean up temporary columns
df = df.drop(columns=["_orig_chunk", "_orig_file"])
row["dataset_from_index"] = row["dataset_from_index"] + dst_meta.info["total_frames"]
row["dataset_to_index"] = row["dataset_to_index"] + dst_meta.info["total_frames"]
row["episode_index"] = row["episode_index"] + dst_meta.info["total_episodes"]
return row
df["dataset_from_index"] = df["dataset_from_index"] + dst_meta.info["total_frames"]
df["dataset_to_index"] = df["dataset_to_index"] + dst_meta.info["total_frames"]
df["episode_index"] = df["episode_index"] + dst_meta.info["total_episodes"]
return df
return df.apply(_update, axis=1)
def aggregate_datasets(
@@ -217,10 +200,6 @@ def aggregate_datasets(
robot_type=robot_type,
features=features,
root=aggr_root,
use_videos=len(video_keys) > 0,
chunks_size=chunk_size,
data_files_size_in_mb=data_files_size_in_mb,
video_files_size_in_mb=video_files_size_in_mb,
)
logging.info("Find all tasks")
@@ -264,11 +243,6 @@ def aggregate_videos(src_meta, dst_meta, videos_idx, video_files_size_in_mb, chu
Returns:
dict: Updated videos_idx with current chunk and file indices.
"""
for key in videos_idx:
videos_idx[key]["episode_duration"] = 0
# Track offset for each source (chunk, file) pair
videos_idx[key]["src_to_offset"] = {}
for key, video_idx in videos_idx.items():
unique_chunk_file_pairs = {
(chunk, file)
@@ -282,7 +256,6 @@ def aggregate_videos(src_meta, dst_meta, videos_idx, video_files_size_in_mb, chu
chunk_idx = video_idx["chunk"]
file_idx = video_idx["file"]
current_offset = video_idx["latest_duration"]
for src_chunk_idx, src_file_idx in unique_chunk_file_pairs:
src_path = src_meta.root / DEFAULT_VIDEO_PATH.format(
@@ -297,25 +270,21 @@ def aggregate_videos(src_meta, dst_meta, videos_idx, video_files_size_in_mb, chu
file_index=file_idx,
)
src_duration = get_video_duration_in_s(src_path)
# If a new file is created, we don't want to increment the latest_duration
update_latest_duration = False
if not dst_path.exists():
# Store offset before incrementing
videos_idx[key]["src_to_offset"][(src_chunk_idx, src_file_idx)] = current_offset
# First write to this destination file
dst_path.parent.mkdir(parents=True, exist_ok=True)
shutil.copy(str(src_path), str(dst_path))
videos_idx[key]["episode_duration"] += src_duration
current_offset += src_duration
continue
continue # not accumulating further, already copied the file in place
# Check file sizes before appending
src_size = get_file_size_in_mb(src_path)
dst_size = get_file_size_in_mb(dst_path)
src_size = get_video_size_in_mb(src_path)
dst_size = get_video_size_in_mb(dst_path)
if dst_size + src_size >= video_files_size_in_mb:
# Rotate to a new file, this source becomes start of new destination
# So its offset should be 0
videos_idx[key]["src_to_offset"][(src_chunk_idx, src_file_idx)] = 0
# Rotate to a new chunk/file
chunk_idx, file_idx = update_chunk_file_indices(chunk_idx, file_idx, chunk_size)
dst_path = dst_meta.root / DEFAULT_VIDEO_PATH.format(
video_key=key,
@@ -324,22 +293,25 @@ def aggregate_videos(src_meta, dst_meta, videos_idx, video_files_size_in_mb, chu
)
dst_path.parent.mkdir(parents=True, exist_ok=True)
shutil.copy(str(src_path), str(dst_path))
# Reset offset for next file
current_offset = src_duration
else:
# Append to existing video file - use current accumulated offset
videos_idx[key]["src_to_offset"][(src_chunk_idx, src_file_idx)] = current_offset
# Get the timestamps shift for this video
timestamps_shift_s = dst_meta.info["total_frames"] / dst_meta.info["fps"]
# Append to existing video file
concatenate_video_files(
[dst_path, src_path],
dst_path,
)
current_offset += src_duration
videos_idx[key]["episode_duration"] += src_duration
# Update the latest_duration when appending (shifts timestamps!)
update_latest_duration = not update_latest_duration
# Update the videos_idx with the final chunk and file indices for this key
videos_idx[key]["chunk"] = chunk_idx
videos_idx[key]["file"] = file_idx
if update_latest_duration:
videos_idx[key]["latest_duration"] += timestamps_shift_s
return videos_idx
@@ -424,6 +396,9 @@ def aggregate_metadata(src_meta, dst_meta, meta_idx, data_idx, videos_idx):
videos_idx,
)
for k in videos_idx:
videos_idx[k]["latest_duration"] += videos_idx[k]["episode_duration"]
meta_idx = append_or_create_parquet_file(
df,
src_path,
@@ -435,10 +410,6 @@ def aggregate_metadata(src_meta, dst_meta, meta_idx, data_idx, videos_idx):
aggr_root=dst_meta.root,
)
# Increment latest_duration by the total duration added from this source dataset
for k in videos_idx:
videos_idx[k]["latest_duration"] += videos_idx[k]["episode_duration"]
return meta_idx

View File

@@ -23,9 +23,6 @@ Please, update your dataset to the new format using this command:
python -m lerobot.datasets.v30.convert_dataset_v21_to_v30 --repo-id={repo_id}
```
If you already have a converted version uploaded to the hub, then this error might be because of
an older version in your local cache. Consider deleting the cached version and retrying.
If you encounter a problem, contact LeRobot maintainers on [Discord](https://discord.com/invite/s3KuuzsPFb)
or open an [issue on GitHub](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/issues/new/choose).
"""

View File

@@ -17,179 +17,6 @@ import numpy as np
from lerobot.datasets.utils import load_image_as_numpy
DEFAULT_QUANTILES = [0.01, 0.10, 0.50, 0.90, 0.99]
class RunningQuantileStats:
"""
Maintains running statistics for batches of vectors, including mean,
standard deviation, min, max, and approximate quantiles.
Statistics are computed per feature dimension and updated incrementally
as new batches are observed. Quantiles are estimated using histograms,
which adapt dynamically if the observed data range expands.
"""
def __init__(self, quantile_list: list[float] | None = None, num_quantile_bins: int = 5000):
self._count = 0
self._mean = None
self._mean_of_squares = None
self._min = None
self._max = None
self._histograms = None
self._bin_edges = None
self._num_quantile_bins = num_quantile_bins
self._quantile_list = quantile_list
if self._quantile_list is None:
self._quantile_list = DEFAULT_QUANTILES
self._quantile_keys = [f"q{int(q * 100):02d}" for q in self._quantile_list]
def update(self, batch: np.ndarray) -> None:
"""Update the running statistics with a batch of vectors.
Args:
batch: An array where all dimensions except the last are batch dimensions.
"""
batch = batch.reshape(-1, batch.shape[-1])
num_elements, vector_length = batch.shape
if self._count == 0:
self._mean = np.mean(batch, axis=0)
self._mean_of_squares = np.mean(batch**2, axis=0)
self._min = np.min(batch, axis=0)
self._max = np.max(batch, axis=0)
self._histograms = [np.zeros(self._num_quantile_bins) for _ in range(vector_length)]
self._bin_edges = [
np.linspace(self._min[i] - 1e-10, self._max[i] + 1e-10, self._num_quantile_bins + 1)
for i in range(vector_length)
]
else:
if vector_length != self._mean.size:
raise ValueError("The length of new vectors does not match the initialized vector length.")
new_max = np.max(batch, axis=0)
new_min = np.min(batch, axis=0)
max_changed = np.any(new_max > self._max)
min_changed = np.any(new_min < self._min)
self._max = np.maximum(self._max, new_max)
self._min = np.minimum(self._min, new_min)
if max_changed or min_changed:
self._adjust_histograms()
self._count += num_elements
batch_mean = np.mean(batch, axis=0)
batch_mean_of_squares = np.mean(batch**2, axis=0)
# Update running mean and mean of squares
self._mean += (batch_mean - self._mean) * (num_elements / self._count)
self._mean_of_squares += (batch_mean_of_squares - self._mean_of_squares) * (
num_elements / self._count
)
self._update_histograms(batch)
def get_statistics(self) -> dict[str, np.ndarray]:
"""Compute and return the statistics of the vectors processed so far.
Args:
quantiles: List of quantiles to compute (e.g., [0.01, 0.10, 0.50, 0.90, 0.99]). If None, no quantiles computed.
Returns:
Dictionary containing the computed statistics.
"""
if self._count < 2:
raise ValueError("Cannot compute statistics for less than 2 vectors.")
variance = self._mean_of_squares - self._mean**2
stddev = np.sqrt(np.maximum(0, variance))
stats = {
"min": self._min.copy(),
"max": self._max.copy(),
"mean": self._mean.copy(),
"std": stddev,
"count": np.array([self._count]),
}
quantile_results = self._compute_quantiles()
for i, q in enumerate(self._quantile_keys):
stats[q] = quantile_results[i]
return stats
def _adjust_histograms(self):
"""Adjust histograms when min or max changes."""
for i in range(len(self._histograms)):
old_edges = self._bin_edges[i]
old_hist = self._histograms[i]
# Create new edges with small padding to ensure range coverage
padding = (self._max[i] - self._min[i]) * 1e-10
new_edges = np.linspace(
self._min[i] - padding, self._max[i] + padding, self._num_quantile_bins + 1
)
# Redistribute existing histogram counts to new bins
# We need to map each old bin center to the new bins
old_centers = (old_edges[:-1] + old_edges[1:]) / 2
new_hist = np.zeros(self._num_quantile_bins)
for old_center, count in zip(old_centers, old_hist, strict=False):
if count > 0:
# Find which new bin this old center belongs to
bin_idx = np.searchsorted(new_edges, old_center) - 1
bin_idx = max(0, min(bin_idx, self._num_quantile_bins - 1))
new_hist[bin_idx] += count
self._histograms[i] = new_hist
self._bin_edges[i] = new_edges
def _update_histograms(self, batch: np.ndarray) -> None:
"""Update histograms with new vectors."""
for i in range(batch.shape[1]):
hist, _ = np.histogram(batch[:, i], bins=self._bin_edges[i])
self._histograms[i] += hist
def _compute_quantiles(self) -> list[np.ndarray]:
"""Compute quantiles based on histograms."""
results = []
for q in self._quantile_list:
target_count = q * self._count
q_values = []
for hist, edges in zip(self._histograms, self._bin_edges, strict=True):
q_value = self._compute_single_quantile(hist, edges, target_count)
q_values.append(q_value)
results.append(np.array(q_values))
return results
def _compute_single_quantile(self, hist: np.ndarray, edges: np.ndarray, target_count: float) -> float:
"""Compute a single quantile value from histogram and bin edges."""
cumsum = np.cumsum(hist)
idx = np.searchsorted(cumsum, target_count)
if idx == 0:
return edges[0]
if idx >= len(cumsum):
return edges[-1]
# If not edge case, interpolate within the bin
count_before = cumsum[idx - 1]
count_in_bin = cumsum[idx] - count_before
# If no samples in this bin, use the bin edge
if count_in_bin == 0:
return edges[idx]
# Linear interpolation within the bin
fraction = (target_count - count_before) / count_in_bin
return edges[idx] + fraction * (edges[idx + 1] - edges[idx])
def estimate_num_samples(
dataset_len: int, min_num_samples: int = 100, max_num_samples: int = 10_000, power: float = 0.75
@@ -245,282 +72,33 @@ def sample_images(image_paths: list[str]) -> np.ndarray:
return images
def _reshape_stats_by_axis(
stats: dict[str, np.ndarray],
axis: int | tuple[int, ...] | None,
keepdims: bool,
original_shape: tuple[int, ...],
) -> dict[str, np.ndarray]:
"""Reshape all statistics to match NumPy's output conventions.
Applies consistent reshaping to all statistics (except 'count') based on the
axis and keepdims parameters. This ensures statistics have the correct shape
for broadcasting with the original data.
Args:
stats: Dictionary of computed statistics
axis: Axis or axes along which statistics were computed
keepdims: Whether to keep reduced dimensions as size-1 dimensions
original_shape: Shape of the original array
Returns:
Dictionary with reshaped statistics
Note:
The 'count' statistic is never reshaped as it represents metadata
rather than per-feature statistics.
"""
if axis == (1,) and not keepdims:
return stats
result = {}
for key, value in stats.items():
if key == "count":
result[key] = value
else:
result[key] = _reshape_single_stat(value, axis, keepdims, original_shape)
return result
def _reshape_for_image_stats(value: np.ndarray, keepdims: bool) -> np.ndarray:
"""Reshape statistics for image data (axis=(0,2,3))."""
if keepdims and value.ndim == 1:
return value.reshape(1, -1, 1, 1)
return value
def _reshape_for_vector_stats(
value: np.ndarray, keepdims: bool, original_shape: tuple[int, ...]
) -> np.ndarray:
"""Reshape statistics for vector data (axis=0 or axis=(0,))."""
if not keepdims:
return value
if len(original_shape) == 1 and value.ndim > 0:
return value.reshape(1)
elif len(original_shape) >= 2 and value.ndim == 1:
return value.reshape(1, -1)
return value
def _reshape_for_feature_stats(value: np.ndarray, keepdims: bool) -> np.ndarray:
"""Reshape statistics for feature-wise computation (axis=(1,))."""
if not keepdims:
return value
if value.ndim == 0:
return value.reshape(1, 1)
elif value.ndim == 1:
return value.reshape(-1, 1)
return value
def _reshape_for_global_stats(
value: np.ndarray, keepdims: bool, original_shape: tuple[int, ...]
) -> np.ndarray | float:
"""Reshape statistics for global reduction (axis=None)."""
if keepdims:
target_shape = tuple(1 for _ in original_shape)
return value.reshape(target_shape)
# Keep at least 1-D arrays to satisfy validator
return np.atleast_1d(value)
def _reshape_single_stat(
value: np.ndarray, axis: int | tuple[int, ...] | None, keepdims: bool, original_shape: tuple[int, ...]
) -> np.ndarray | float:
"""Apply appropriate reshaping to a single statistic array.
This function transforms statistic arrays to match expected output shapes
based on the axis configuration and keepdims parameter.
Args:
value: The statistic array to reshape
axis: Axis or axes that were reduced during computation
keepdims: Whether to maintain reduced dimensions as size-1 dimensions
original_shape: Shape of the original data before reduction
Returns:
Reshaped array following NumPy broadcasting conventions
"""
if axis == (0, 2, 3):
return _reshape_for_image_stats(value, keepdims)
if axis in [0, (0,)]:
return _reshape_for_vector_stats(value, keepdims, original_shape)
if axis == (1,):
return _reshape_for_feature_stats(value, keepdims)
if axis is None:
return _reshape_for_global_stats(value, keepdims, original_shape)
return value
def _prepare_array_for_stats(array: np.ndarray, axis: int | tuple[int, ...] | None) -> tuple[np.ndarray, int]:
"""Prepare array for statistics computation by reshaping according to axis.
Args:
array: Input data array
axis: Axis or axes along which to compute statistics
Returns:
Tuple of (reshaped_array, sample_count)
"""
if axis == (0, 2, 3): # Image data
batch_size, channels, height, width = array.shape
reshaped = array.transpose(0, 2, 3, 1).reshape(-1, channels)
return reshaped, batch_size
if axis == 0 or axis == (0,): # Vector data
reshaped = array
if array.ndim == 1:
reshaped = array.reshape(-1, 1)
return reshaped, array.shape[0]
if axis == (1,): # Feature-wise statistics
return array.T, array.shape[1]
if axis is None: # Global statistics
reshaped = array.reshape(-1, 1)
# For backward compatibility, count represents the first dimension size
return reshaped, array.shape[0] if array.ndim > 0 else 1
raise ValueError(f"Unsupported axis configuration: {axis}")
def _compute_basic_stats(
array: np.ndarray, sample_count: int, quantile_list: list[float] | None = None
) -> dict[str, np.ndarray]:
"""Compute basic statistics for arrays with insufficient samples for quantiles.
Args:
array: Reshaped array ready for statistics computation
sample_count: Number of samples represented in the data
Returns:
Dictionary with basic statistics and quantiles set to mean values
"""
if quantile_list is None:
quantile_list = DEFAULT_QUANTILES
quantile_list_keys = [f"q{int(q * 100):02d}" for q in quantile_list]
stats = {
"min": np.min(array, axis=0),
"max": np.max(array, axis=0),
"mean": np.mean(array, axis=0),
"std": np.std(array, axis=0),
"count": np.array([sample_count]),
def get_feature_stats(array: np.ndarray, axis: tuple, keepdims: bool) -> dict[str, np.ndarray]:
return {
"min": np.min(array, axis=axis, keepdims=keepdims),
"max": np.max(array, axis=axis, keepdims=keepdims),
"mean": np.mean(array, axis=axis, keepdims=keepdims),
"std": np.std(array, axis=axis, keepdims=keepdims),
"count": np.array([len(array)]),
}
for q in quantile_list_keys:
stats[q] = stats["mean"].copy()
return stats
def get_feature_stats(
array: np.ndarray,
axis: int | tuple[int, ...] | None,
keepdims: bool,
quantile_list: list[float] | None = None,
) -> dict[str, np.ndarray]:
"""Compute comprehensive statistics for array features along specified axes.
This function calculates min, max, mean, std, and quantiles (1%, 10%, 50%, 90%, 99%)
for the input array along the specified axes. It handles different data layouts:
- Image data: axis=(0,2,3) computes per-channel statistics
- Vector data: axis=0 computes per-feature statistics
- Feature-wise: axis=1 computes statistics across features
- Global: axis=None computes statistics over entire array
Args:
array: Input data array with shape appropriate for the specified axis
axis: Axis or axes along which to compute statistics
- (0, 2, 3): For image data (batch, channels, height, width)
- 0 or (0,): For vector/tabular data (samples, features)
- (1,): For computing across features
- None: For global statistics over entire array
keepdims: If True, reduced axes are kept as dimensions with size 1
Returns:
Dictionary containing:
- 'min': Minimum values
- 'max': Maximum values
- 'mean': Mean values
- 'std': Standard deviation
- 'count': Number of samples (always shape (1,))
- 'q01', 'q10', 'q50', 'q90', 'q99': Quantile values
"""
if quantile_list is None:
quantile_list = DEFAULT_QUANTILES
original_shape = array.shape
reshaped, sample_count = _prepare_array_for_stats(array, axis)
if reshaped.shape[0] < 2:
stats = _compute_basic_stats(reshaped, sample_count, quantile_list)
else:
running_stats = RunningQuantileStats()
running_stats.update(reshaped)
stats = running_stats.get_statistics()
stats["count"] = np.array([sample_count])
stats = _reshape_stats_by_axis(stats, axis, keepdims, original_shape)
return stats
def compute_episode_stats(
episode_data: dict[str, list[str] | np.ndarray],
features: dict,
quantile_list: list[float] | None = None,
) -> dict:
"""Compute comprehensive statistics for all features in an episode.
Processes different data types appropriately:
- Images/videos: Samples from paths, computes per-channel stats, normalizes to [0,1]
- Numerical arrays: Computes per-feature statistics
- Strings: Skipped (no statistics computed)
Args:
episode_data: Dictionary mapping feature names to data
- For images/videos: list of file paths
- For numerical data: numpy arrays
features: Dictionary describing each feature's dtype and shape
Returns:
Dictionary mapping feature names to their statistics dictionaries.
Each statistics dictionary contains min, max, mean, std, count, and quantiles.
Note:
Image statistics are normalized to [0,1] range and have shape (3,1,1) for
per-channel values when dtype is 'image' or 'video'.
"""
if quantile_list is None:
quantile_list = DEFAULT_QUANTILES
def compute_episode_stats(episode_data: dict[str, list[str] | np.ndarray], features: dict) -> dict:
ep_stats = {}
for key, data in episode_data.items():
if features[key]["dtype"] == "string":
continue
if features[key]["dtype"] in ["image", "video"]:
ep_ft_array = sample_images(data)
axes_to_reduce = (0, 2, 3)
continue # HACK: we should receive np.arrays of strings
elif features[key]["dtype"] in ["image", "video"]:
ep_ft_array = sample_images(data) # data is a list of image paths
axes_to_reduce = (0, 2, 3) # keep channel dim
keepdims = True
else:
ep_ft_array = data
axes_to_reduce = 0
keepdims = data.ndim == 1
ep_ft_array = data # data is already a np.ndarray
axes_to_reduce = 0 # compute stats over the first axis
keepdims = data.ndim == 1 # keep as np.array
ep_stats[key] = get_feature_stats(
ep_ft_array, axis=axes_to_reduce, keepdims=keepdims, quantile_list=quantile_list
)
ep_stats[key] = get_feature_stats(ep_ft_array, axis=axes_to_reduce, keepdims=keepdims)
# finally, we normalize and remove batch dim for images
if features[key]["dtype"] in ["image", "video"]:
ep_stats[key] = {
k: v if k == "count" else np.squeeze(v / 255.0, axis=0) for k, v in ep_stats[key].items()
@@ -529,37 +107,20 @@ def compute_episode_stats(
return ep_stats
def _validate_stat_value(value: np.ndarray, key: str, feature_key: str) -> None:
"""Validate a single statistic value."""
if not isinstance(value, np.ndarray):
raise ValueError(
f"Stats must be composed of numpy array, but key '{key}' of feature '{feature_key}' "
f"is of type '{type(value)}' instead."
)
if value.ndim == 0:
raise ValueError("Number of dimensions must be at least 1, and is 0 instead.")
if key == "count" and value.shape != (1,):
raise ValueError(f"Shape of 'count' must be (1), but is {value.shape} instead.")
if "image" in feature_key and key != "count" and value.shape != (3, 1, 1):
raise ValueError(f"Shape of quantile '{key}' must be (3,1,1), but is {value.shape} instead.")
def _assert_type_and_shape(stats_list: list[dict[str, dict]]):
"""Validate that all statistics have correct types and shapes.
Args:
stats_list: List of statistics dictionaries to validate
Raises:
ValueError: If any statistic has incorrect type or shape
"""
for stats in stats_list:
for feature_key, feature_stats in stats.items():
for stat_key, stat_value in feature_stats.items():
_validate_stat_value(stat_value, stat_key, feature_key)
for i in range(len(stats_list)):
for fkey in stats_list[i]:
for k, v in stats_list[i][fkey].items():
if not isinstance(v, np.ndarray):
raise ValueError(
f"Stats must be composed of numpy array, but key '{k}' of feature '{fkey}' is of type '{type(v)}' instead."
)
if v.ndim == 0:
raise ValueError("Number of dimensions must be at least 1, and is 0 instead.")
if k == "count" and v.shape != (1,):
raise ValueError(f"Shape of 'count' must be (1), but is {v.shape} instead.")
if "image" in fkey and k != "count" and v.shape != (3, 1, 1):
raise ValueError(f"Shape of '{k}' must be (3,1,1), but is {v.shape} instead.")
def aggregate_feature_stats(stats_ft_list: list[dict[str, dict]]) -> dict[str, dict[str, np.ndarray]]:
@@ -582,7 +143,7 @@ def aggregate_feature_stats(stats_ft_list: list[dict[str, dict]]) -> dict[str, d
weighted_variances = (variances + delta_means**2) * counts
total_variance = weighted_variances.sum(axis=0) / total_count
aggregated = {
return {
"min": np.min(np.stack([s["min"] for s in stats_ft_list]), axis=0),
"max": np.max(np.stack([s["max"] for s in stats_ft_list]), axis=0),
"mean": total_mean,
@@ -590,17 +151,6 @@ def aggregate_feature_stats(stats_ft_list: list[dict[str, dict]]) -> dict[str, d
"count": total_count,
}
if stats_ft_list:
quantile_keys = [k for k in stats_ft_list[0] if k.startswith("q") and k[1:].isdigit()]
for q_key in quantile_keys:
if all(q_key in s for s in stats_ft_list):
quantile_values = np.stack([s[q_key] for s in stats_ft_list])
weighted_quantiles = quantile_values * counts
aggregated[q_key] = weighted_quantiles.sum(axis=0) / total_count
return aggregated
def aggregate_stats(stats_list: list[dict[str, dict]]) -> dict[str, dict[str, np.ndarray]]:
"""Aggregate stats from multiple compute_stats outputs into a single set of stats.

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@@ -27,7 +27,6 @@ from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import (
)
from lerobot.datasets.streaming_dataset import StreamingLeRobotDataset
from lerobot.datasets.transforms import ImageTransforms
from lerobot.utils.constants import ACTION, OBS_PREFIX, REWARD
IMAGENET_STATS = {
"mean": [[[0.485]], [[0.456]], [[0.406]]], # (c,1,1)
@@ -55,11 +54,11 @@ def resolve_delta_timestamps(
"""
delta_timestamps = {}
for key in ds_meta.features:
if key == REWARD and cfg.reward_delta_indices is not None:
if key == "next.reward" and cfg.reward_delta_indices is not None:
delta_timestamps[key] = [i / ds_meta.fps for i in cfg.reward_delta_indices]
if key == ACTION and cfg.action_delta_indices is not None:
if key == "action" and cfg.action_delta_indices is not None:
delta_timestamps[key] = [i / ds_meta.fps for i in cfg.action_delta_indices]
if key.startswith(OBS_PREFIX) and cfg.observation_delta_indices is not None:
if key.startswith("observation.") and cfg.observation_delta_indices is not None:
delta_timestamps[key] = [i / ds_meta.fps for i in cfg.observation_delta_indices]
if len(delta_timestamps) == 0:

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