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199 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
danaaubakirova
61580a8596 Fix multi-GPU training script for local datasets 2025-09-16 16:37:10 +00:00
danaaubakirova
6c8f1f962b Update lerobot Python modules and add test training script
- Enhanced dataset processing and statistics computation
- Updated policy factory and normalization
- Improved SmolVLA2 modeling and expert integration
- Enhanced training and evaluation scripts
- Added utility improvements for training and wandb integration
- Added test training script with 2 datasets for validation
2025-09-16 16:11:26 +00:00
danaaubakirova
7848b15bfb fix: changes to compute stats and modeling 2025-07-11 15:50:22 +02:00
pre-commit-ci[bot]
008b592545 [pre-commit.ci] auto fixes from pre-commit.com hooks
for more information, see https://pre-commit.ci
2025-07-11 03:55:05 +00:00
Jade
55a61259e8 make training work 2025-07-10 23:51:47 -04:00
danaaubakirova
e94d78f8a0 Merge branch 'pr-1451' into danaaubakirova/25_06_2025 2025-07-10 10:26:31 +02:00
danaaubakirova
67c8d27e9c add 2025-07-09 14:22:34 +02:00
danaaubakirova
c8b51ef205 Merge remote-tracking branch 'origin/main' into danaaubakirova/25_06_2025 2025-07-09 14:22:16 +02:00
Jade
9779c58b07 add training support 2025-07-08 23:57:46 -04:00
Jade
5fbe4f9987 remove yamls 2025-07-07 09:23:22 -04:00
Jade
f47fd7aabf add hf hub integration 2025-07-07 09:22:48 -04:00
Jade
a9251e612f cleanup/encapsulation 2025-07-05 13:08:25 -04:00
Ben Zhang
aec1b29d23 Fix indentation (#1436) 2025-07-04 14:56:12 +02:00
Michel Aractingi
63ddfefa08 Remove references to lerobot.common (#1432) 2025-07-02 18:08:20 +02:00
Michel Aractingi
596e9050bd Refactor kinematics and switch to using placo (#1322)
Co-authored-by: Caroline Pascal <caroline8.pascal@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Adil Zouitine <adilzouitinegm@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: leo-berte <leonardo.bertelli96@gmail.com>
2025-07-02 15:20:04 +02:00
Gregor Lenz
6047bbee10 Update pyproject.toml to make package installable with pip (#1430)
Signed-off-by: Gregor Lenz <gregor@paddington-robotics.com>
2025-07-02 12:40:35 +02:00
Pepijn
1522e60f83 feat: Add fixes and refactor lekiwi example (#1396)
* feat: Add fixes and refactor lekiwi example

* fix: replace repo_id with placeholders

* feat: use record_loop for lekiwi, use same control strucutre as record.py

* feat: make rerun log more general for lekiwi

* fix: add comments record_loop and fix params evaluate.py

* fix: add events in evaluate.py

* fix: add events 2

* change record to display data

* Integrate feedback steven

* Add docs merging

* fix: add lekiwi name check

* fix: integrate feedback steven

* fix: list for type

* fix: check type list

* remove second robot connect

* fix: added file when merging

* fix(record): account for edge cases when teleop is a list

---------

Co-authored-by: Steven Palma <steven.palma@huggingface.co>
2025-07-02 11:41:20 +02:00
Simon Alibert
d4ee470b00 Package folder structure (#1417)
* Move files

* Replace imports & paths

* Update relative paths

* Update doc symlinks

* Update instructions paths

* Fix imports

* Update grpc files

* Update more instructions

* Downgrade grpc-tools

* Update manifest

* Update more paths

* Update config paths

* Update CI paths

* Update bandit exclusions

* Remove walkthrough section
2025-07-01 16:34:46 +02:00
danaaubakirova
2b27084d63 Refactor embed prefix in modeling_smolvla2.py
Add old collator functions and constants for dataset handling
2025-07-01 14:35:02 +02:00
Jade
ddb26b7189 add multi 2025-06-30 13:11:16 -04:00
Simon Alibert
483be9aac2 Add smolvla extra nightly (#1408) 2025-06-30 12:52:48 +02:00
Dana
96550e4ad1 nit 2025-06-30 12:01:32 +02:00
Steven Palma
69901b9b6a fix(recording): re-recording episode doesn't increase count of recording episodes (#1395) 2025-06-27 16:02:51 +02:00
danaaubakirova
c0146eed7f updates to lerobot_dataset.py 2025-06-27 14:43:33 +02:00
Pepijn
2f9ba4e2cc Add api examples IL docs (#1391)
* feat: add api examples for record, replay, eval for il

* fix: Add typings utils.py

* fix: Add inference to text eval

* fix: Add placeholders dataset and policy repo_ids

* fix: Improve text

* fix: Add type to 3rd ;)

* chore(docs): update API examples for replay, eval and record

---------

Co-authored-by: Steven Palma <steven.palma@huggingface.co>
2025-06-27 11:57:24 +02:00
Francesco Capuano
f3d931e1b2 Add direct access to action chunks (#1020)
* fix: sharing predicted chunk with user

* [pre-commit.ci] pre-commit autoupdate (#1011)

Co-authored-by: pre-commit-ci[bot] <66853113+pre-commit-ci[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>

* Revert "[pre-commit.ci] pre-commit autoupdate" (#1025)

* fix(ci): Pin draccus (<0.10.0) and torch (<2.7) to fix pipeline (#1022)

Co-authored-by: imstevenpmwork <steven.palma@huggingface.co>
Co-authored-by: Simon Alibert <75076266+aliberts@users.noreply.github.com>

* fix(ci): Pin `torchcodec` (==0.2.1) to fix pipeline temporarly (#1030)

* Update tutorial (#1021)

Co-authored-by: Simon Alibert <75076266+aliberts@users.noreply.github.com>

* Add description motor order SO-101 leader (#1051)

* feat(encoding): switching to PyAV for ffmpeg related tasks (#983)

* feat(docs): Add new docs build process (#1046)

Co-authored-by: Mishig Davaadorj <dmishig@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Steven Palma <steven.palma@huggingface.co>

* Docs: adapt text + fix video code (#1064)

* Fix typos (#1070)

* docs: minor corrections and clean-up (#1089)

* Update 10_use_so100.md; use diff syntax (#944)

Co-authored-by: Pepijn <138571049+pkooij@users.noreply.github.com>

* Update 12_use_so101.md (#1081)

Co-authored-by: Pepijn <138571049+pkooij@users.noreply.github.com>

* bug fix for #1071 When --display_data=true, Failed running control_robot. (#1073)

* Add editable -e for feetech install command (#1133)

* Fix: emptying action queue between resets (#1117)

* fix: typos and grammar (#1148)

* Update README.md (#1160)

* Update README.md (#1163)

* [Fix]  Unpin torch beyond 2.6.0 & torchcodec beyond 0.2.1  (#1127)

* (hotfix): nightly CI by clipping pymunk version below 7.0.0 (#1182)

* [pre-commit.ci] pre-commit autoupdate (#1048)

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* Add SmolVLA (#1175)

Co-authored-by: pre-commit-ci[bot] <66853113+pre-commit-ci[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: fracapuano <francesco.capuano@huggingface.co>
Co-authored-by: Steven Palma <imstevenpmwork@ieee.org>
Co-authored-by: Dana Aubakirova <118912928+danaaubakirova@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Remi <remi.cadene@huggingface.co>

* Fix SmolVLA loss not sent to wandb (#1198)

* Hardware API redesign (#777)

Co-authored-by: Pepijn <138571049+pkooij@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Steven Palma <imstevenpmwork@ieee.org>
Co-authored-by: pre-commit-ci[bot] <66853113+pre-commit-ci[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
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Co-authored-by: Pepijn <pepijn@huggingface.co>

* fix(smolvla): update record.py, fix populate_queues and remove unused dependencies (#1208)

* replaced OBS_ROBOT with OBS_STATE constant (#1211)

* Fix test_teleoperate (#1216)

* Fix LeKiwi example (#1217)

* Fix smolVLA dependencies (#1218)

* fix(pyserial): adding pyserial dependency to global ones (#1219)

* Update SmolVLA README.md (#1228)

* Fix unable to set camera width/height to non-default (#1225)

* Update tutorial link (#1250)

* update KochFollower.get_observation() so it returns same observation structure as SO101 (#1248)

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* [pre-commit.ci] pre-commit autoupdate (#1185)

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* Proposal for fix for enter_pressed on Windows (#1230)

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* fix: update pi0 dependency version constraint (#1247)

Co-authored-by: pre-commit-ci[bot] <66853113+pre-commit-ci[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>

* Match motor names with ids lekiwi (#1261)

* fix issues: checkpoints keys mismatch and 'task' tokenisation in smolvla (#1256)

Co-authored-by: danaaubakirova <d.aubakirova@alumni.edu.kz>
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Co-authored-by: Simon Alibert <simon.alibert@huggingface.co>

* fix(docs): update realsense documentation (#1268)

* Use HF Papers (#1120)

* Skip normalization parameters in load_smolvla (#1274)

* fix(record): no teleop needed when running with policy (#1284)

* Port HIL SERL (#644)

Co-authored-by: Michel Aractingi <michel.aractingi@huggingface.co>
Co-authored-by: Eugene Mironov <helper2424@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: s1lent4gnt <kmeftah.khalil@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Ke Wang <superwk1017@gmail.com>
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Co-authored-by: imstevenpmwork <steven.palma@huggingface.co>
Co-authored-by: Simon Alibert <simon.alibert@huggingface.co>

* fix(docs): SmolVLA fine-tuning getting started (#1201)

Co-authored-by: Pepijn <138571049+pkooij@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: danaaubakirova <d.aubakirova@alumni.edu.kz>
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Co-authored-by: Francesco Capuano <francesco_capuano@aol.com>
Co-authored-by: Steven Palma <steven.palma@huggingface.co>

* chore(teleop): print calibration path saved (#1286)

* chore(dependencies): add gamepad support with pygame and hidapi (#1287)

* Robot integration tutorial (#1285)

* fix(docs): update send_feedback docstrings

* Add sim tutorial, fix lekiwi motor config, add notebook links (#1275)

Co-authored-by: AdilZouitine <adilzouitinegm@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: pre-commit-ci[bot] <66853113+pre-commit-ci[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
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Co-authored-by: Simon Alibert <75076266+aliberts@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Steven Palma <imstevenpmwork@ieee.org>

* Fixes on robot integration tutorial (#1290)

* Add keyboard teleop device to control the end effector robot  (#1289)

* Improve type hints (#1293)

* fix(record): no teleop arg in reset environment (#1294)

* `learner.py` import so101_leader instead of so100 (#1295)

Co-authored-by: Adil Zouitine <adilzouitinegm@gmail.com>

* Fixing `PI0` Policy (#1297)

* `gym_manipulator.py` Remove None value action_intervention of BaseLeaderTeleoperator (#1299)

* (chore): incorrect resume parameter in recording documentation (#1301)

* Update lekiwi.mdx  (#1229)

* bump `pi0` and `hil` transformers version (#1298)

* docs: fix imitation learning robots docs command (#1308)

* fix(benchmarks): remove .numpy() from frame in benchmark script (#1354)

* add smolvla to the supported policies to run tests (:

* add: chunk-level access for the policy

* [pre-commit.ci] auto fixes from pre-commit.com hooks

for more information, see https://pre-commit.ci

* add: smolvla in availables

* remove: smolvla from library supported policies

* fix: change env for training, xarm is broken as of now

* add: predict_action_chunk to all supported policies

* fix: add robot type constants

* add: predict action chunk in base policy class

* restore original Makefile

* fix: minor

* fix: dict keys come from lerobot/constants

* fix: improve act encapsulation, properly supporting temporal ensembling

* fix: smolvla action chunking

* fix: very minor, but very annoying

* fix: minor

* fix minor naming

Co-authored-by: Steven Palma <imstevenpmwork@ieee.org>
Signed-off-by: Francesco Capuano <74058581+fracapuano@users.noreply.github.com>

* fix: refactoring inference for single actions and chunks into different components

* fix: minor

* fix: temporal ensembling

* fix: moving populate queues out of modular component for batch preparation

* fix: minor for CI

* fix: smovla debug

* fix: reward classifier, maybe the last policy lacking?

---------

Signed-off-by: Francesco Capuano <74058581+fracapuano@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: pre-commit-ci[bot] <66853113+pre-commit-ci[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
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2025-06-27 10:19:19 +02:00
Dana
0447604fce some changes 2025-06-26 15:07:38 +02:00
Pepijn
0b2285d1ec Feat: Improve hub integration (#1382)
* feat(policies): Initial setup to push policies to hub with tags and model card

* feat: add dataset that is used to train

* Add model template summary

* fix: Update link model_card template

* fix: remove print

* fix: change import name

* fix: add model summary in template

* fix: minor text

* fix: comments Lucain

* fix: feedback steven

* fix: restructure push to hub

* fix: remove unneeded changes

* fix: import

* fix: import 2

* Add MANIFEST.in

* fix: feedback pr

* Fix tests

* tests: Add smolvla end-to-end test

* Fix: smolvla test

* fix test name

* fix policy tests

* Add push to hub false policy tests

* Do push to hub cleaner

* fix(ci): add push_to_hub false in tests

---------

Co-authored-by: Steven Palma <steven.palma@huggingface.co>
2025-06-26 14:36:16 +02:00
Jean-Baptiste Cayrou
a989c79558 docs: Fix the SO-100 documentation, the motors configuration step should be before the assembly instructions (#1315)
Co-authored-by: Pepijn <138571049+pkooij@users.noreply.github.com>
2025-06-26 13:31:32 +02:00
Krzysztof Skrzypski
06450c6777 update assembly instructions to match outputs from setup motors 'python -m lerobot.setup_motors' script (#1384) 2025-06-26 12:15:35 +02:00
Jim Burtoft
fe88c5942c There can be only one!! (#1343)
pkg-config appears twice in the package list.

Co-authored-by: Caroline Pascal <caroline8.pascal@gmail.com>
2025-06-25 14:43:14 +02:00
pranavsaroha
a5727e37b4 Fix teleop disconnect during eval (#1364) 2025-06-23 16:49:14 +02:00
Steven Palma
c940676bdd fix(benchmarks): remove .numpy() from frame in benchmark script (#1354) 2025-06-19 17:07:13 +02:00
Steven Palma
2b71789e15 docs: fix imitation learning robots docs command (#1308) 2025-06-15 11:47:48 +02:00
Francesco Capuano
7c8be7fb9b bump pi0 and hil transformers version (#1298) 2025-06-15 08:57:08 +02:00
koenvanwijk
b8637c09ec Update lekiwi.mdx (#1229) 2025-06-14 23:41:45 +02:00
David
1688fa3a88 (chore): incorrect resume parameter in recording documentation (#1301) 2025-06-14 23:38:10 +02:00
Michel Aractingi
b852d15774 gym_manipulator.py Remove None value action_intervention of BaseLeaderTeleoperator (#1299) 2025-06-14 20:53:40 +02:00
Francesco Capuano
ce6a26deeb Fixing PI0 Policy (#1297) 2025-06-14 19:25:50 +02:00
Michel Aractingi
697c76f75e learner.py import so101_leader instead of so100 (#1295)
Co-authored-by: Adil Zouitine <adilzouitinegm@gmail.com>
2025-06-14 15:30:19 +02:00
Steven Palma
8d7969e7cb fix(record): no teleop arg in reset environment (#1294) 2025-06-14 14:23:07 +02:00
tidely
dcc0c234dd Improve type hints (#1293) 2025-06-14 14:06:22 +02:00
Michel Aractingi
6007a221f0 Add keyboard teleop device to control the end effector robot (#1289) 2025-06-14 09:10:09 +02:00
Simon Alibert
35e67585bf Fixes on robot integration tutorial (#1290) 2025-06-14 01:47:22 +02:00
Pepijn
438334d58e Add sim tutorial, fix lekiwi motor config, add notebook links (#1275)
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2025-06-13 18:48:39 +02:00
Steven Palma
69e8946480 fix(docs): update send_feedback docstrings 2025-06-13 18:29:19 +02:00
Simon Alibert
96fa48b5ec Robot integration tutorial (#1285) 2025-06-13 18:23:07 +02:00
Adil Zouitine
8fc18be065 chore(dependencies): add gamepad support with pygame and hidapi (#1287) 2025-06-13 17:07:11 +02:00
Steven Palma
5350a02dc1 chore(teleop): print calibration path saved (#1286) 2025-06-13 15:29:10 +02:00
Dana Aubakirova
58afa2fbb0 fix(docs): SmolVLA fine-tuning getting started (#1201)
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2025-06-13 14:17:59 +02:00
Adil Zouitine
d8079587a2 Port HIL SERL (#644)
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2025-06-13 13:15:47 +02:00
Steven Palma
f976935ba1 fix(record): no teleop needed when running with policy (#1284) 2025-06-13 12:41:30 +02:00
Simon Alibert
5c87365cc1 Skip normalization parameters in load_smolvla (#1274) 2025-06-13 11:06:45 +02:00
Quentin Gallouédec
edfebd522c Use HF Papers (#1120) 2025-06-12 09:58:59 +02:00
Steven Palma
2de93a8000 fix(docs): update realsense documentation (#1268) 2025-06-11 23:16:37 +02:00
Dana Aubakirova
d0521189b1 fix issues: checkpoints keys mismatch and 'task' tokenisation in smolvla (#1256)
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2025-06-11 16:56:55 +02:00
Pepijn
10b7b35325 Match motor names with ids lekiwi (#1261) 2025-06-11 14:21:30 +02:00
Yushun Xiang
459c95197b fix: update pi0 dependency version constraint (#1247)
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2025-06-10 18:46:41 +02:00
koenvanwijk
37748c83ca Proposal for fix for enter_pressed on Windows (#1230)
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2025-06-10 18:36:02 +02:00
pre-commit-ci[bot]
3fb04efec1 [pre-commit.ci] pre-commit autoupdate (#1185)
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2025-06-10 18:04:09 +02:00
Sarunas Kalade
2889f3a06a update KochFollower.get_observation() so it returns same observation structure as SO101 (#1248)
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2025-06-10 12:42:54 +02:00
Daisuke Sato
f5335fe696 Update tutorial link (#1250) 2025-06-10 11:05:08 +02:00
Ben Zhang
f0a903c98f Fix unable to set camera width/height to non-default (#1225) 2025-06-10 10:23:33 +02:00
mshukor
0e7caae714 Update SmolVLA README.md (#1228) 2025-06-08 23:15:26 +02:00
Caroline Pascal
1ee2ca5c26 fix(pyserial): adding pyserial dependency to global ones (#1219) 2025-06-06 14:38:33 +02:00
Simon Alibert
4e4eec92dc Fix smolVLA dependencies (#1218) 2025-06-06 11:28:47 +02:00
Simon Alibert
95df341b4f Fix LeKiwi example (#1217) 2025-06-06 10:08:03 +02:00
Simon Alibert
9e6f49f507 Fix test_teleoperate (#1216) 2025-06-06 09:38:37 +02:00
Dhruva
a28f02ecb3 replaced OBS_ROBOT with OBS_STATE constant (#1211) 2025-06-06 09:25:51 +02:00
Steven Palma
09343acce7 fix(smolvla): update record.py, fix populate_queues and remove unused dependencies (#1208) 2025-06-06 09:17:02 +02:00
Simon Alibert
e23b41e79a Hardware API redesign (#777)
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2025-06-05 17:48:43 +02:00
Ben Zhang
b536f47e3f Fix SmolVLA loss not sent to wandb (#1198) 2025-06-05 11:13:03 +02:00
mshukor
bfd26eef5a Add SmolVLA (#1175)
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2025-06-03 17:11:50 +02:00
pre-commit-ci[bot]
1537d0ab90 [pre-commit.ci] pre-commit autoupdate (#1048)
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2025-06-02 19:30:39 +02:00
Adil Zouitine
2be7f3a3ff (hotfix): nightly CI by clipping pymunk version below 7.0.0 (#1182) 2025-06-02 13:18:02 +02:00
Adil Zouitine
0cf864870c [Fix] Unpin torch beyond 2.6.0 & torchcodec beyond 0.2.1 (#1127) 2025-05-28 16:54:20 +02:00
mshukor
1786916a16 Update README.md (#1163) 2025-05-27 11:50:43 +02:00
mshukor
0507ad4f68 Update README.md (#1160) 2025-05-27 11:45:07 +02:00
Ragnar
bed90e3a41 fix: typos and grammar (#1148) 2025-05-25 17:20:45 +02:00
Francesco Capuano
6163daaaa4 Fix: emptying action queue between resets (#1117) 2025-05-22 21:37:21 +02:00
Pepijn
8e2a394442 Add editable -e for feetech install command (#1133) 2025-05-20 18:51:21 +02:00
masato-ka
a445d9c9da bug fix for #1071 When --display_data=true, Failed running control_robot. (#1073) 2025-05-09 16:53:40 +02:00
CharlesCNorton
f24030d4d8 Update 12_use_so101.md (#1081)
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2025-05-09 11:04:25 +02:00
Mishig
7598aeaad7 Update 10_use_so100.md; use diff syntax (#944)
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2025-05-09 11:01:12 +02:00
Pepijn
4485cc0b5b docs: minor corrections and clean-up (#1089) 2025-05-09 11:00:25 +02:00
omahs
8cfab38824 Fix typos (#1070) 2025-05-05 10:35:32 +02:00
Pepijn
ee5525fea1 Docs: adapt text + fix video code (#1064) 2025-05-02 16:10:13 +02:00
Pepijn
a1daeaf0c4 feat(docs): Add new docs build process (#1046)
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2025-05-02 12:47:23 +02:00
Caroline Pascal
6d723c45a9 feat(encoding): switching to PyAV for ffmpeg related tasks (#983) 2025-04-29 17:39:35 +02:00
Pepijn
674e784aa9 Add description motor order SO-101 leader (#1051) 2025-04-29 11:17:02 +02:00
Pepijn
42bf1e8b9d Update tutorial (#1021)
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2025-04-28 09:00:32 +02:00
Adil Zouitine
a75d00970f fix(ci): Pin torchcodec (==0.2.1) to fix pipeline temporarly (#1030) 2025-04-24 12:16:02 +02:00
Adil Zouitine
4df18de636 fix(ci): Pin draccus (<0.10.0) and torch (<2.7) to fix pipeline (#1022)
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2025-04-24 09:42:03 +02:00
Simon Alibert
8dc69c6126 Revert "[pre-commit.ci] pre-commit autoupdate" (#1025) 2025-04-24 09:26:47 +02:00
pre-commit-ci[bot]
7d481e6048 [pre-commit.ci] pre-commit autoupdate (#1011)
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2025-04-23 21:53:09 +02:00
k1000dai
b43ece8934 Add pythno3-dev in Dockerfile to build and modify Readme.md , python-dev to python3-dev (#987)
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2025-04-17 16:17:07 +02:00
Alex Thiele
c10c5a0e64 Fix --width --height type parsing on opencv and intelrealsense scripts (#556)
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2025-04-17 15:19:23 +02:00
Junshan Huang
a8db91c40e Fix Windows HTML visualization to make videos could be seen (#647)
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2025-04-17 15:07:28 +02:00
HUANG TZU-CHUN
0f5f7ac780 Fix broken links in examples/4_train_policy_with_script.md (#697) 2025-04-17 14:59:43 +02:00
pre-commit-ci[bot]
768e36660d [pre-commit.ci] pre-commit autoupdate (#980)
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2025-04-14 21:55:06 +02:00
Caroline Pascal
790d6740ba fix(installation): adding note on ffmpeg version during installation (#976)
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2025-04-14 15:36:31 +02:00
Steven Palma
5322417c03 fix(examples): removes extra backtick (#948) 2025-04-09 17:44:32 +02:00
Steven Palma
4041f57943 feat(visualization): replace cv2 GUI with Rerun (and solves ffmpeg versioning issues) (#903) 2025-04-09 17:33:01 +02:00
Simon Alibert
2c86fea78a Switch typos pre-commit to mirror (#953) 2025-04-08 12:44:09 +02:00
pre-commit-ci[bot]
437fc29e12 [pre-commit.ci] pre-commit autoupdate (#871)
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2025-04-08 06:58:46 +02:00
Junwu Zhang
aee86b4b18 typo fix: example_1 python script (#631)
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2025-04-07 17:41:10 +02:00
mshukor
1c873df5c0 Support for PI0+FAST (#921)
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2025-04-04 11:51:11 +02:00
Steven Palma
145fe4cd17 fix(deps): avoid torchcodec in macos x86_64 (#925) 2025-04-01 15:51:59 +02:00
Mariusz Dubielecki
e004247ed4 docs: add tip for Mac users regarding Terminal permissions for keyboard (#917)
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2025-03-31 09:44:05 +02:00
Steven Palma
b568de35ad fix(datasets): cast imgs_dir as Path (#915) 2025-03-28 18:08:12 +01:00
Yongjin Cho
ae9c81ac39 fix(docs): correct spelling of 'ffmpeg' in installation instructions (#914) 2025-03-28 17:43:33 +01:00
Steven Palma
78fd1a1e04 chore(docs): update docs (#911) 2025-03-27 09:55:06 +01:00
Steven Palma
90533e6b9f fix(docs): hot-fix updating installation instructions after #883 (#907) 2025-03-26 13:21:40 +01:00
AlexC
2c22f7d76d Add offline mode in the configuration for wandb logging (#897)
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2025-03-25 13:44:49 +01:00
Qizhi Chen
a774af2eab fix pi0 action padding name (#893)
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2025-03-25 11:24:46 +01:00
Steven Palma
725b446ad6 fix(deps): constrain PyAV version to resolve OpenCV-python ffmpeg version conflict (#883)
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2025-03-24 23:40:22 +01:00
Steven Palma
a6015a55f9 chore(scripts): remove deprecated script (#887) 2025-03-23 01:16:50 +01:00
Cole
f39652707c add docs details for resolving firmware update issues (#627)
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2025-03-19 19:17:07 +01:00
Steven Palma
712d5dae4f fix(os): fix default codec for windows (#875) 2025-03-18 22:04:21 +01:00
Pepijn
952e892fe5 Use float32 instead of int (#877) 2025-03-18 16:36:37 +01:00
Pepijn
e8159997c7 User/pepijn/2025 03 17 act different image shapes (#870) 2025-03-18 11:09:05 +01:00
Steven Palma
1c15bab70f fix(codec): hot-fix for default codec in linux arm platforms (#868) 2025-03-17 13:23:11 +01:00
Guillaume LEGENDRE
9f0a8a49d0 Update test-docker-build.yml 2025-03-15 11:34:17 +01:00
Huan Liu
a3cd18eda9 added wandb.run_id to allow resuming without wandb log; updated log m… (#841)
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2025-03-15 09:40:39 +01:00
Huan Liu
7dc9ffe4c9 Update 10_use_so100.md (#840) 2025-03-14 17:07:14 +01:00
Jade Choghari
0e98c6ee96 Add torchcodec cpu (#798)
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2025-03-14 16:53:42 +01:00
Simon Alibert
974028bd28 Organize test folders (#856)
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2025-03-13 14:05:55 +01:00
Simon Alibert
a36ed39487 Improve pre-commit config (#857) 2025-03-13 13:29:55 +01:00
Ermano Arruda
c37b1d45b6 parametrise tolerance_s in visualize_dataset scripts (#716) 2025-03-13 10:28:29 +01:00
pre-commit-ci[bot]
f994febca4 [pre-commit.ci] pre-commit autoupdate (#844)
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2025-03-11 11:28:01 +01:00
Steven Palma
12f52632ed chore(docs): update instructions for change in device and use_amp (#843) 2025-03-10 21:03:33 +01:00
Steven Palma
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Pepijn
84565c7c2e Fix camera rotation error (#839)
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2025-03-10 17:02:19 +01:00
Ben Sprenger
05b54733da feat: add support for external plugin config dataclasses (#807)
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2025-03-10 13:25:47 +01:00
Simon Alibert
513b008bcc fix: deactivate tdmpc backward compatibility test with use_mpc=True (#838) 2025-03-10 10:19:54 +01:00
Joe Clinton
32fffd4bbb Fix delay in teleoperation start time (#676)
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2025-03-08 11:40:07 +01:00
Simon Alibert
03c7cf8a63 Remove pr_style_bot (#832) 2025-03-08 09:39:07 +01:00
Simon Alibert
074f0ac8fe Fix gpu nightly (#829) 2025-03-07 13:21:58 +01:00
Mathias Wulfman
25c63ccf63 🐛 Remove map_location=device that no longer exists when loading DiffusionPolicy from_pretained after commit 5e94738 (#830)
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2025-03-07 13:21:11 +01:00
Steven Palma
5e9473806c refactor(config): Move device & amp args to PreTrainedConfig (#812)
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2025-03-06 17:59:28 +01:00
Harsimrat Sandhawalia
10706ed753 Support for discrete actions (#810) 2025-03-06 10:27:29 +01:00
Steven Palma
0b8205a8a0 chore(doc): add star history graph to the README.md (#815) 2025-03-06 09:44:21 +01:00
Simon Alibert
57ae509823 Revert "docs: update installation instructions to use uv instead of conda" (#827) 2025-03-06 09:43:27 +01:00
Steven Palma
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eDeveloperOZ
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2025-03-05 10:07:35 +01:00
Tim Qian
a00936686f Fix doc (#793)
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2025-03-05 10:02:25 +01:00
yadunund
2feb5edc65 Fix printout in make_cameras_from_configs (#796)
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2025-03-05 10:01:24 +01:00
Yachen Kang
b80e55ca44 change "actions_id_pad" to "actions_is_pad"(🐛 Bug) (#774)
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2025-03-05 01:31:56 +01:00
Pepijn
e8ce388109 Add wired instructions for LeKiwi (#814)
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2025-03-04 19:04:19 +01:00
Pepijn
a4c1da25de Add kiwi to readme (#803) 2025-03-04 18:43:27 +01:00
Pepijn
a003e7c081 change wheel setup in kinematics (#811)
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2025-03-04 18:42:45 +01:00
Mishig
a27411022d [visualization] Ignore 2d or 3d data for now (#809) 2025-03-04 10:53:01 +01:00
Steven Palma
3827974b58 refactor(test): remove duplicated code in conftest.py (#804) 2025-03-04 10:49:44 +01:00
Pepijn
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Steven Palma
bf6f89a5b5 fix(examples): Add Tensor type check (#799) 2025-03-03 17:01:04 +01:00
Simon Alibert
8861546ad8 [Security] Add Bandit (#795) 2025-03-01 19:19:26 +01:00
Simon Alibert
9c1a893ee3 [CI] Update Stylebot Permissions (#792) 2025-03-01 12:12:19 +01:00
Simon Alibert
e81c36cf74 Fix dataset version tags (#790) 2025-02-28 14:36:20 +01:00
Simon Alibert
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Simon Alibert
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Quentin Gallouédec
6e85aa13ec Break style to test style bot (#785) 2025-02-27 16:46:06 +01:00
Simon Alibert
af05a1725c Fix pr_style_bot (#786) 2025-02-27 16:43:12 +01:00
Mishig
800c4a847f [Vizualisation] independent column names (#783) 2025-02-27 14:47:18 +01:00
Simon Alibert
bba8c4c0d4 Fix pr_style bot (#782) 2025-02-27 13:09:12 +01:00
Simon Alibert
68b369e321 Fix pr_style_bot (#781) 2025-02-27 12:13:36 +01:00
Mishig
8d60ac3ffc [vizualisation] Add pagination for many episodes (#776) 2025-02-26 19:23:37 +01:00
Simon Alibert
659ec4434d Fix nightly (#775) 2025-02-26 16:36:03 +01:00
Simon Alibert
da265ca920 Add pr style bot (#772) 2025-02-25 23:52:25 +01:00
Simon Alibert
a1809ad3de Add typos checks (#770) 2025-02-25 23:51:15 +01:00
Jannik Grothusen
8699a28be0 [QOL] Enable teleoperation during environment reset (#725) 2025-02-25 19:28:26 +01:00
Raul Garreta
65db5afe1c fixes in 7_get_started_with_real_robot.md (#677) 2025-02-25 19:03:29 +01:00
Youssef Bayouli
75d5fa4604 Optimizing Dockerfile (#751) 2025-02-25 18:42:35 +01:00
Yongjin Cho
e64fad2224 Fix the URL to setup hardware Aloha Stationary in the example document (#766) 2025-02-25 18:33:32 +01:00
Haskely
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2025-02-25 17:27:36 +01:00
Simon Alibert
3354d919fc LeRobotDataset v2.1 (#711)
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2025-02-25 15:27:29 +01:00
Pepijn
aca464ca72 Add mobile so100 (#724) 2025-02-25 09:06:50 +01:00
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fe483b1d0d Remove poetry.lock (#737)
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2025-02-17 12:03:16 +01:00
Simon Alibert
ddeade077e Conform pyproject to PEP 621 (#621) 2025-02-16 14:28:03 +01:00
Simon Alibert
c4c2ce04e7 Update pre-commits (#733) 2025-02-15 15:51:17 +01:00
Simon Alibert
2cb0bf5d41 Add zizmor pre-commit (#732) 2025-02-15 15:50:10 +01:00
Simon Alibert
b86a2c0b47 Fix wandb logging (#730) 2025-02-14 18:00:12 +01:00
Ilia Larchenko
c574eb4984 Fixed eval.py on MPS (#702) 2025-02-14 00:03:55 +01:00
Simon Alibert
1e49cc4d60 Prevent resuming from hub (#726) 2025-02-13 17:15:55 +01:00
Simon Alibert
e71095960f Fixes following #670 (#719) 2025-02-12 12:53:55 +01:00
Simon Alibert
90e099b39f Remove offline training, refactor train.py and logging/checkpointing (#670)
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2025-02-11 10:36:06 +01:00
Simon Alibert
334deb985d Update CI trigger rules (#712) 2025-02-10 17:22:15 +01:00
Simon Alibert
8548a87bd4 Remove dataset tests artifacts (#701) 2025-02-09 14:24:01 +01:00
Remi
638d411cd3 Add Pi0 (#681)
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2025-02-04 18:01:04 +01:00
Pepijn
dd974529cf User/pepijn/2025 01 31 improved tutorial so100 (#666) 2025-02-03 18:27:55 +01:00
Simon Alibert
43e079f73e Fix nightly tests docker images (#675) 2025-02-02 13:59:33 +01:00
Simon Alibert
6674e36824 Fix Docker cpu/gpu builds (#667) 2025-02-01 12:06:11 +01:00
Pepijn
ae9605f03c fix setting motor id with new dataclass config (#668) 2025-01-31 20:48:46 +01:00
Simon Alibert
3c0a209f9f Simplify configs (#550)
Co-authored-by: Remi <remi.cadene@huggingface.co>
Co-authored-by: HUANG TZU-CHUN <137322177+tc-huang@users.noreply.github.com>
2025-01-31 13:57:37 +01:00
Simon Alibert
1ee1acf8ad Comply with torchvision 0.21 custom transforms (#665) 2025-01-30 22:06:11 +01:00
Thomas Lips
c4d912a241 Check for "/" in feature names (#660) 2025-01-29 21:54:49 +01:00
Morgan Redfield
4323bdce22 updating config instructions for koch 1v1 motors (#658) 2025-01-28 13:20:33 +01:00
HUANG TZU-CHUN
5daa45436d Fix typos in lerobot/scripts/visualize_dataset.py (#656) 2025-01-28 13:07:10 +01:00
Simon Alibert
4def6d6ac2 Fix cluster image (#653) 2025-01-24 11:25:22 +01:00
Jochen Görtler
d8560b8d5f Bumprerun-sdk dependency to 0.21.0 (#618)
Co-authored-by: Simon Alibert <75076266+aliberts@users.noreply.github.com>
2025-01-20 09:50:11 +01:00
889 changed files with 53239 additions and 34180 deletions

View File

@@ -1,68 +0,0 @@
{
"homing_offset": [
2048,
3072,
3072,
-1024,
-1024,
2048,
-2048,
2048,
-2048
],
"drive_mode": [
1,
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"end_pos": [
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"calib_mode": [
"DEGREE",
"DEGREE",
"DEGREE",
"DEGREE",
"DEGREE",
"DEGREE",
"DEGREE",
"DEGREE",
"LINEAR"
],
"motor_names": [
"waist",
"shoulder",
"shoulder_shadow",
"elbow",
"elbow_shadow",
"forearm_roll",
"wrist_angle",
"wrist_rotate",
"gripper"
]
}

View File

@@ -1,68 +0,0 @@
{
"homing_offset": [
2048,
3072,
3072,
-1024,
-1024,
2048,
-2048,
2048,
-1024
],
"drive_mode": [
1,
1,
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1,
0
],
"start_pos": [
2035,
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2166,
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1968
],
"end_pos": [
-990,
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-1030,
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],
"calib_mode": [
"DEGREE",
"DEGREE",
"DEGREE",
"DEGREE",
"DEGREE",
"DEGREE",
"DEGREE",
"DEGREE",
"LINEAR"
],
"motor_names": [
"waist",
"shoulder",
"shoulder_shadow",
"elbow",
"elbow_shadow",
"forearm_roll",
"wrist_angle",
"wrist_rotate",
"gripper"
]
}

View File

@@ -1,68 +0,0 @@
{
"homing_offset": [
2048,
3072,
3072,
-1024,
-1024,
2048,
-2048,
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-2048
],
"drive_mode": [
1,
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],
"start_pos": [
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"end_pos": [
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],
"calib_mode": [
"DEGREE",
"DEGREE",
"DEGREE",
"DEGREE",
"DEGREE",
"DEGREE",
"DEGREE",
"DEGREE",
"LINEAR"
],
"motor_names": [
"waist",
"shoulder",
"shoulder_shadow",
"elbow",
"elbow_shadow",
"forearm_roll",
"wrist_angle",
"wrist_rotate",
"gripper"
]
}

View File

@@ -1,68 +0,0 @@
{
"homing_offset": [
2048,
3072,
3072,
-1024,
-1024,
2048,
-2048,
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-2048
],
"drive_mode": [
1,
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],
"start_pos": [
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"end_pos": [
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"calib_mode": [
"DEGREE",
"DEGREE",
"DEGREE",
"DEGREE",
"DEGREE",
"DEGREE",
"DEGREE",
"DEGREE",
"LINEAR"
],
"motor_names": [
"waist",
"shoulder",
"shoulder_shadow",
"elbow",
"elbow_shadow",
"forearm_roll",
"wrist_angle",
"wrist_rotate",
"gripper"
]
}

View File

@@ -1,3 +1,17 @@
# Copyright 2024 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.
# Misc
.git
tmp
@@ -59,7 +73,7 @@ pip-log.txt
pip-delete-this-directory.txt
# Unit test / coverage reports
!tests/data
!tests/artifacts
htmlcov/
.tox/
.nox/

15
.gitattributes vendored
View File

@@ -1,6 +1,21 @@
# Copyright 2024 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.
*.memmap filter=lfs diff=lfs merge=lfs -text
*.stl filter=lfs diff=lfs merge=lfs -text
*.safetensors filter=lfs diff=lfs merge=lfs -text
*.mp4 filter=lfs diff=lfs merge=lfs -text
*.arrow filter=lfs diff=lfs merge=lfs -text
*.json !text !filter !merge !diff
tests/artifacts/cameras/*.png filter=lfs diff=lfs merge=lfs -text
*.bag filter=lfs diff=lfs merge=lfs -text

View File

@@ -1,3 +1,17 @@
# Copyright 2024 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.
name: "\U0001F41B Bug Report"
description: Submit a bug report to help us improve LeRobot
body:

View File

@@ -24,7 +24,7 @@ Examples:
pytest -sx tests/test_stuff.py::test_something
```
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/train.py --some.option=true
python -m lerobot.scripts.train --some.option=true
```
## SECTION TO REMOVE BEFORE SUBMITTING YOUR PR

View File

@@ -1,3 +1,17 @@
# Copyright 2024 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.
# Inspired by
# https://github.com/huggingface/peft/blob/main/.github/workflows/build_docker_images.yml
name: Builds
@@ -8,6 +22,8 @@ on:
schedule:
- cron: "0 1 * * *"
permissions: {}
env:
PYTHON_VERSION: "3.10"
@@ -24,21 +40,24 @@ jobs:
git lfs install
- name: Set up Docker Buildx
uses: docker/setup-buildx-action@v3
uses: docker/setup-buildx-action@b5ca514318bd6ebac0fb2aedd5d36ec1b5c232a2 # v3.10.0
with:
cache-binary: false
- name: Check out code
uses: actions/checkout@v4
uses: actions/checkout@11bd71901bbe5b1630ceea73d27597364c9af683 # v4.2.2
with:
lfs: true
persist-credentials: false
- name: Login to DockerHub
uses: docker/login-action@v3
uses: docker/login-action@74a5d142397b4f367a81961eba4e8cd7edddf772 # v3.4.0
with:
username: ${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_USERNAME }}
password: ${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_PASSWORD }}
- name: Build and Push CPU
uses: docker/build-push-action@v5
uses: docker/build-push-action@ca052bb54ab0790a636c9b5f226502c73d547a25 # v5.4.0
with:
context: .
file: ./docker/lerobot-cpu/Dockerfile
@@ -59,21 +78,24 @@ jobs:
git lfs install
- name: Set up Docker Buildx
uses: docker/setup-buildx-action@v3
uses: docker/setup-buildx-action@b5ca514318bd6ebac0fb2aedd5d36ec1b5c232a2 # v3.10.0
with:
cache-binary: false
- name: Check out code
uses: actions/checkout@v4
uses: actions/checkout@11bd71901bbe5b1630ceea73d27597364c9af683 # v4.2.2
with:
lfs: true
persist-credentials: false
- name: Login to DockerHub
uses: docker/login-action@v3
uses: docker/login-action@74a5d142397b4f367a81961eba4e8cd7edddf772 # v3.4.0
with:
username: ${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_USERNAME }}
password: ${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_PASSWORD }}
- name: Build and Push GPU
uses: docker/build-push-action@v5
uses: docker/build-push-action@ca052bb54ab0790a636c9b5f226502c73d547a25 # v5.4.0
with:
context: .
file: ./docker/lerobot-gpu/Dockerfile
@@ -88,19 +110,23 @@ jobs:
group: aws-general-8-plus
steps:
- name: Set up Docker Buildx
uses: docker/setup-buildx-action@v3
uses: docker/setup-buildx-action@b5ca514318bd6ebac0fb2aedd5d36ec1b5c232a2 # v3.10.0
with:
cache-binary: false
- name: Check out code
uses: actions/checkout@v4
uses: actions/checkout@11bd71901bbe5b1630ceea73d27597364c9af683 # v4.2.2
with:
persist-credentials: false
- name: Login to DockerHub
uses: docker/login-action@v3
uses: docker/login-action@74a5d142397b4f367a81961eba4e8cd7edddf772 # v3.4.0
with:
username: ${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_USERNAME }}
password: ${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_PASSWORD }}
- name: Build and Push GPU dev
uses: docker/build-push-action@v5
uses: docker/build-push-action@ca052bb54ab0790a636c9b5f226502c73d547a25 # v5.4.0
with:
context: .
file: ./docker/lerobot-gpu-dev/Dockerfile

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,23 @@
name: Build documentation
on:
workflow_dispatch:
push:
paths:
- "docs/**"
branches:
- main
- doc-builder*
- v*-release
jobs:
build: # zizmor: ignore[excessive-permissions] We follow the same pattern as in Transformers
uses: huggingface/doc-builder/.github/workflows/build_main_documentation.yml@main
with:
commit_sha: ${{ github.sha }}
package: lerobot
additional_args: --not_python_module
secrets:
token: ${{ secrets.HUGGINGFACE_PUSH }}
hf_token: ${{ secrets.HF_DOC_BUILD_PUSH }}

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,19 @@
name: Build PR Documentation
on:
pull_request:
paths:
- "docs/**"
concurrency:
group: ${{ github.workflow }}-${{ github.head_ref || github.run_id }}
cancel-in-progress: true
jobs:
build: # zizmor: ignore[excessive-permissions] We follow the same pattern as in Transformers
uses: huggingface/doc-builder/.github/workflows/build_pr_documentation.yml@main
with:
commit_sha: ${{ github.event.pull_request.head.sha }}
pr_number: ${{ github.event.number }}
package: lerobot
additional_args: --not_python_module

View File

@@ -1,3 +1,17 @@
# Copyright 2024 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.
# Inspired by
# https://github.com/huggingface/peft/blob/main/.github/workflows/nightly.yml
name: Nightly
@@ -7,6 +21,8 @@ on:
schedule:
- cron: "0 2 * * *"
permissions: {}
# env:
# SLACK_API_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.SLACK_API_TOKEN }}
jobs:
@@ -17,7 +33,7 @@ jobs:
runs-on:
group: aws-general-8-plus
container:
image: huggingface/lerobot-cpu:latest
image: huggingface/lerobot-cpu:latest # zizmor: ignore[unpinned-images]
options: --shm-size "16gb"
credentials:
username: ${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_USERNAME }}
@@ -28,7 +44,7 @@ jobs:
working-directory: /lerobot
steps:
- name: Tests
run: pytest -v --cov=./lerobot --disable-warnings tests
run: pytest -v --cov=./src/lerobot --disable-warnings tests
- name: Tests end-to-end
run: make test-end-to-end
@@ -44,7 +60,7 @@ jobs:
CUDA_VISIBLE_DEVICES: "0"
TEST_TYPE: "single_gpu"
container:
image: huggingface/lerobot-gpu:latest
image: huggingface/lerobot-gpu:latest # zizmor: ignore[unpinned-images]
options: --gpus all --shm-size "16gb"
credentials:
username: ${{ secrets.DOCKERHUB_USERNAME }}
@@ -58,7 +74,7 @@ jobs:
run: nvidia-smi
- name: Test
run: pytest -v --cov=./lerobot --cov-report=xml --disable-warnings tests
run: pytest -v --cov=./src/lerobot --cov-report=xml --disable-warnings tests
# TODO(aliberts): Link with HF Codecov account
# - name: Upload coverage reports to Codecov with GitHub Action
# uses: codecov/codecov-action@v4

View File

@@ -1,15 +1,29 @@
# Copyright 2024 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.
name: Quality
on:
workflow_dispatch:
workflow_call:
pull_request:
branches:
- main
push:
branches:
- main
permissions: {}
env:
PYTHON_VERSION: "3.10"
@@ -19,10 +33,12 @@ jobs:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Checkout Repository
uses: actions/checkout@v3
uses: actions/checkout@11bd71901bbe5b1630ceea73d27597364c9af683 # v4.2.2
with:
persist-credentials: false
- name: Set up Python
uses: actions/setup-python@v4
uses: actions/setup-python@7f4fc3e22c37d6ff65e88745f38bd3157c663f7c # v4.9.1
with:
python-version: ${{ env.PYTHON_VERSION }}
@@ -30,55 +46,27 @@ jobs:
id: get-ruff-version
run: |
RUFF_VERSION=$(awk '/repo: https:\/\/github.com\/astral-sh\/ruff-pre-commit/{flag=1;next}/rev:/{if(flag){print $2;exit}}' .pre-commit-config.yaml)
echo "RUFF_VERSION=${RUFF_VERSION}" >> $GITHUB_ENV
echo "ruff_version=${RUFF_VERSION}" >> $GITHUB_OUTPUT
- name: Install Ruff
run: python -m pip install "ruff==${{ env.RUFF_VERSION }}"
env:
RUFF_VERSION: ${{ steps.get-ruff-version.outputs.ruff_version }}
run: python -m pip install "ruff==${RUFF_VERSION}"
- name: Ruff check
run: ruff check
run: ruff check --output-format=github
- name: Ruff format
run: ruff format --diff
poetry_check:
name: Poetry check
typos:
name: Typos
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Checkout Repository
uses: actions/checkout@v3
uses: actions/checkout@11bd71901bbe5b1630ceea73d27597364c9af683 # v4.2.2
with:
persist-credentials: false
- name: Install poetry
run: pipx install "poetry<2.0.0"
- name: Poetry check
run: poetry check
poetry_relax:
name: Poetry relax
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Checkout Repository
uses: actions/checkout@v3
- name: Install poetry
run: pipx install "poetry<2.0.0"
- name: Install poetry-relax
run: poetry self add poetry-relax
- name: Poetry relax
id: poetry_relax
run: |
output=$(poetry relax --check 2>&1)
if echo "$output" | grep -q "Proposing updates"; then
echo "$output"
echo ""
echo "Some dependencies have caret '^' version requirement added by poetry by default."
echo "Please replace them with '>='. You can do this by hand or use poetry-relax to do this."
exit 1
else
echo "$output"
fi
- name: typos-action
uses: crate-ci/typos@db35ee91e80fbb447f33b0e5fbddb24d2a1a884f # v1.29.10

View File

@@ -1,15 +1,29 @@
# Copyright 2024 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.
# Inspired by
# https://github.com/huggingface/peft/blob/main/.github/workflows/test-docker-build.yml
name: Test Dockerfiles
on:
pull_request:
branches:
- main
paths:
# Run only when DockerFile files are modified
- "docker/**"
permissions: {}
env:
PYTHON_VERSION: "3.10"
@@ -21,43 +35,46 @@ jobs:
matrix: ${{ steps.set-matrix.outputs.matrix }}
steps:
- name: Check out code
uses: actions/checkout@v4
uses: actions/checkout@11bd71901bbe5b1630ceea73d27597364c9af683 # v4.2.2
with:
persist-credentials: false
- name: Get changed files
id: changed-files
uses: tj-actions/changed-files@v44
uses: tj-actions/changed-files@3f54ebb830831fc121d3263c1857cfbdc310cdb9 #v42
with:
files: docker/**
json: "true"
- name: Run step if only the files listed above change
- name: Run step if only the files listed above change # zizmor: ignore[template-injection]
if: steps.changed-files.outputs.any_changed == 'true'
id: set-matrix
env:
ALL_CHANGED_FILES: ${{ steps.changed-files.outputs.all_changed_files }}
run: |
echo "matrix=${{ steps.changed-files.outputs.all_changed_files}}" >> $GITHUB_OUTPUT
build_modified_dockerfiles:
name: Build modified Docker images
needs: get_changed_files
runs-on:
group: aws-general-8-plus
if: ${{ needs.get_changed_files.outputs.matrix }} != ''
if: needs.get_changed_files.outputs.matrix != ''
strategy:
fail-fast: false
matrix:
docker-file: ${{ fromJson(needs.get_changed_files.outputs.matrix) }}
steps:
- name: Set up Docker Buildx
uses: docker/setup-buildx-action@v3
uses: docker/setup-buildx-action@b5ca514318bd6ebac0fb2aedd5d36ec1b5c232a2 # v3.10.0
with:
cache-binary: false
- name: Check out code
uses: actions/checkout@v4
uses: actions/checkout@11bd71901bbe5b1630ceea73d27597364c9af683 # v4.2.2
with:
persist-credentials: false
- name: Build Docker image
uses: docker/build-push-action@v5
uses: docker/build-push-action@ca052bb54ab0790a636c9b5f226502c73d547a25 # v5.4.0
with:
file: ${{ matrix.docker-file }}
context: .

View File

@@ -1,29 +1,48 @@
# Copyright 2024 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.
name: Tests
on:
pull_request:
branches:
- main
paths:
- "lerobot/**"
- "src/**"
- "tests/**"
- "examples/**"
- ".github/**"
- "poetry.lock"
- "pyproject.toml"
- ".pre-commit-config.yaml"
- "Makefile"
- ".cache/**"
push:
branches:
- main
paths:
- "lerobot/**"
- "src/**"
- "tests/**"
- "examples/**"
- ".github/**"
- "poetry.lock"
- "pyproject.toml"
- ".pre-commit-config.yaml"
- "Makefile"
- ".cache/**"
permissions: {}
env:
UV_VERSION: "0.6.0"
jobs:
pytest:
name: Pytest
@@ -31,9 +50,10 @@ jobs:
env:
MUJOCO_GL: egl
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
- uses: actions/checkout@11bd71901bbe5b1630ceea73d27597364c9af683 # v4.2.2
with:
lfs: true # Ensure LFS files are pulled
persist-credentials: false
- name: Install apt dependencies
# portaudio19-dev is needed to install pyaudio
@@ -41,25 +61,19 @@ jobs:
sudo apt-get update && \
sudo apt-get install -y libegl1-mesa-dev ffmpeg portaudio19-dev
- name: Install poetry
run: |
pipx install poetry && poetry config virtualenvs.in-project true
echo "${{ github.workspace }}/.venv/bin" >> $GITHUB_PATH
# TODO(rcadene, aliberts): python 3.12 seems to be used in the tests, not python 3.10
- name: Set up Python 3.10
uses: actions/setup-python@v5
- name: Install uv and python
uses: astral-sh/setup-uv@d4b2f3b6ecc6e67c4457f6d3e41ec42d3d0fcb86 # v5.4.2
with:
enable-cache: true
version: ${{ env.UV_VERSION }}
python-version: "3.10"
cache: "poetry"
- name: Install poetry dependencies
run: |
poetry install --all-extras
- name: Install lerobot (all extras)
run: uv sync --all-extras
- name: Test with pytest
run: |
pytest tests -v --cov=./lerobot --durations=0 \
uv run pytest tests -v --cov=./src/lerobot --durations=0 \
-W ignore::DeprecationWarning:imageio_ffmpeg._utils:7 \
-W ignore::UserWarning:torch.utils.data.dataloader:558 \
-W ignore::UserWarning:gymnasium.utils.env_checker:247 \
@@ -71,69 +85,66 @@ jobs:
env:
MUJOCO_GL: egl
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
- uses: actions/checkout@11bd71901bbe5b1630ceea73d27597364c9af683 # v4.2.2
with:
lfs: true # Ensure LFS files are pulled
persist-credentials: false
- name: Install apt dependencies
run: sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install -y ffmpeg
- name: Install poetry
run: |
pipx install poetry && poetry config virtualenvs.in-project true
echo "${{ github.workspace }}/.venv/bin" >> $GITHUB_PATH
# TODO(rcadene, aliberts): python 3.12 seems to be used in the tests, not python 3.10
- name: Set up Python 3.10
uses: actions/setup-python@v5
- name: Install uv and python
uses: astral-sh/setup-uv@d4b2f3b6ecc6e67c4457f6d3e41ec42d3d0fcb86 # v5.4.2
with:
enable-cache: true
version: ${{ env.UV_VERSION }}
python-version: "3.10"
- name: Install poetry dependencies
run: |
poetry install --extras "test"
- name: Install lerobot
run: uv sync --extra "test"
- name: Test with pytest
run: |
pytest tests -v --cov=./lerobot --durations=0 \
uv run pytest tests -v --cov=./src/lerobot --durations=0 \
-W ignore::DeprecationWarning:imageio_ffmpeg._utils:7 \
-W ignore::UserWarning:torch.utils.data.dataloader:558 \
-W ignore::UserWarning:gymnasium.utils.env_checker:247 \
&& rm -rf tests/outputs outputs
# TODO(aliberts, rcadene): redesign after v2 migration / removing hydra
# end-to-end:
# name: End-to-end
# runs-on: ubuntu-latest
# env:
# MUJOCO_GL: egl
# steps:
# - uses: actions/checkout@v4
# with:
# lfs: true # Ensure LFS files are pulled
end-to-end:
name: End-to-end
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
env:
MUJOCO_GL: egl
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@11bd71901bbe5b1630ceea73d27597364c9af683 # v4.2.2
with:
lfs: true # Ensure LFS files are pulled
persist-credentials: false
# - name: Install apt dependencies
# # portaudio19-dev is needed to install pyaudio
# run: |
# sudo apt-get update && \
# sudo apt-get install -y libegl1-mesa-dev portaudio19-dev
- name: Install apt dependencies
# portaudio19-dev is needed to install pyaudio
run: |
sudo apt-get update && \
sudo apt-get install -y libegl1-mesa-dev ffmpeg portaudio19-dev
# - name: Install poetry
# run: |
# pipx install poetry && poetry config virtualenvs.in-project true
# echo "${{ github.workspace }}/.venv/bin" >> $GITHUB_PATH
- name: Install uv and python
uses: astral-sh/setup-uv@d4b2f3b6ecc6e67c4457f6d3e41ec42d3d0fcb86 # v5.4.2
with:
enable-cache: true
version: ${{ env.UV_VERSION }}
python-version: "3.10"
# - name: Set up Python 3.10
# uses: actions/setup-python@v5
# with:
# python-version: "3.10"
# cache: "poetry"
- name: Install lerobot (all extras)
run: |
uv venv
uv sync --all-extras
# - name: Install poetry dependencies
# run: |
# poetry install --all-extras
- name: venv
run: |
echo "PYTHON_PATH=${{ github.workspace }}/.venv/bin/python" >> $GITHUB_ENV
# - name: Test end-to-end
# run: |
# make test-end-to-end \
# && rm -rf outputs
- name: Test end-to-end
run: |
make test-end-to-end \
&& rm -rf outputs

View File

@@ -1,20 +1,35 @@
# Copyright 2024 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.
on:
push:
name: Secret Leaks
permissions:
contents: read
permissions: {}
jobs:
trufflehog:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Checkout code
uses: actions/checkout@v4
uses: actions/checkout@11bd71901bbe5b1630ceea73d27597364c9af683 # v4.2.2
with:
fetch-depth: 0
persist-credentials: false
- name: Secret Scanning
uses: trufflesecurity/trufflehog@main
uses: trufflesecurity/trufflehog@90694bf9af66e7536abc5824e7a87246dbf933cb # v3.88.35
with:
extra_args: --only-verified

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,16 @@
name: Upload PR Documentation
on: # zizmor: ignore[dangerous-triggers] We follow the same pattern as in Transformers
workflow_run:
workflows: [ "Build PR Documentation" ]
types:
- completed
jobs:
build: # zizmor: ignore[excessive-permissions] We follow the same pattern as in Transformers
uses: huggingface/doc-builder/.github/workflows/upload_pr_documentation.yml@main
with:
package_name: lerobot
secrets:
hf_token: ${{ secrets.HF_DOC_BUILD_PUSH }}
comment_bot_token: ${{ secrets.COMMENT_BOT_TOKEN }}

28
.gitignore vendored
View File

@@ -1,3 +1,20 @@
# Copyright 2024 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.
# Dev scripts
.dev
# Logging
logs
tmp
@@ -12,6 +29,7 @@ outputs
# VS Code
.vscode
.devcontainer
# HPC
nautilus/*.yaml
@@ -49,6 +67,10 @@ share/python-wheels/
*.egg
MANIFEST
# uv/poetry lock files
poetry.lock
uv.lock
# PyInstaller
# Usually these files are written by a python script from a template
# before PyInstaller builds the exe, so as to inject date/other infos into it.
@@ -60,7 +82,7 @@ pip-log.txt
pip-delete-this-directory.txt
# Unit test / coverage reports
!tests/data
!tests/artifacts
htmlcov/
.tox/
.nox/
@@ -73,10 +95,8 @@ coverage.xml
.hypothesis/
.pytest_cache/
# Ignore .cache except calibration
# Ignore .cache
.cache/*
!.cache/calibration/
!.cache/calibration/**
# Translations
*.mo

View File

@@ -1,7 +1,29 @@
exclude: ^(tests/data)
# Copyright 2024 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.
exclude: "tests/artifacts/.*\\.safetensors$"
default_language_version:
python: python3.10
repos:
##### Meta #####
- repo: meta
hooks:
- id: check-useless-excludes
- id: check-hooks-apply
##### Style / Misc. #####
- repo: https://github.com/pre-commit/pre-commit-hooks
rev: v5.0.0
hooks:
@@ -13,25 +35,40 @@ repos:
- id: check-toml
- id: end-of-file-fixer
- id: trailing-whitespace
- repo: https://github.com/adhtruong/mirrors-typos
rev: v1.33.1
hooks:
- id: typos
args: [--force-exclude]
- repo: https://github.com/asottile/pyupgrade
rev: v3.19.0
rev: v3.20.0
hooks:
- id: pyupgrade
- repo: https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff-pre-commit
rev: v0.8.2
rev: v0.11.13
hooks:
- id: ruff
args: [--fix]
- id: ruff-format
- repo: https://github.com/python-poetry/poetry
rev: 1.8.0
hooks:
- id: poetry-check
- id: poetry-lock
args:
- "--check"
- "--no-update"
##### Security #####
- repo: https://github.com/gitleaks/gitleaks
rev: v8.21.2
rev: v8.27.2
hooks:
- id: gitleaks
- repo: https://github.com/woodruffw/zizmor-pre-commit
rev: v1.9.0
hooks:
- id: zizmor
- repo: https://github.com/PyCQA/bandit
rev: 1.8.3
hooks:
- id: bandit
args: ["-c", "pyproject.toml"]
additional_dependencies: ["bandit[toml]"]

View File

@@ -67,7 +67,7 @@ post it.
## Adding new policies, datasets or environments
Look at our implementations for [datasets](./lerobot/common/datasets/), [policies](./lerobot/common/policies/),
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))
@@ -129,38 +129,71 @@ Follow these steps to start contributing:
🚨 **Do not** work on the `main` branch.
4. for development, we use `poetry` instead of just `pip` to easily track our dependencies.
If you don't have it already, follow the [instructions](https://python-poetry.org/docs/#installation) to install it.
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 or miniconda:
```bash
conda create -y -n lerobot-dev python=3.10 && conda activate lerobot-dev
```
To develop on 🤗 LeRobot, you will at least need to install the `dev` and `test` extras dependencies along with the core library:
If you're using `uv`, it can manage python versions so you can instead do:
```bash
poetry install --sync --extras "dev test"
uv venv --python 3.10 && source .venv/bin/activate
```
To develop on 🤗 LeRobot, you will at least need to install the `dev` and `test` extras dependencies along with the core library:
using `poetry`
```bash
poetry sync --extras "dev test"
```
using `uv`
```bash
uv sync --extra dev --extra test
```
You can also install the project with all its dependencies (including environments):
using `poetry`
```bash
poetry install --sync --all-extras
poetry sync --all-extras
```
using `uv`
```bash
uv sync --all-extras
```
> **Note:** If you don't install simulation environments with `--all-extras`, the tests that require them will be skipped when running the pytest suite locally. However, they *will* be tested in the CI. In general, we advise you to install everything and test locally before pushing.
Whichever command you chose to install the project (e.g. `poetry install --sync --all-extras`), you should run it again when pulling code with an updated version of `pyproject.toml` and `poetry.lock` in order to synchronize your virtual environment with the new dependencies.
Whichever command you chose to install the project (e.g. `poetry sync --all-extras`), you should run it again when pulling code with an updated version of `pyproject.toml` and `poetry.lock` in order to synchronize your virtual environment with the new dependencies.
The equivalent of `pip install some-package`, would just be:
using `poetry`
```bash
poetry add some-package
```
When making changes to the poetry sections of the `pyproject.toml`, you should run the following command to lock dependencies.
using `uv`
```bash
poetry lock --no-update
uv add some-package
```
When making changes to the poetry sections of the `pyproject.toml`, you should run the following command to lock dependencies.
using `poetry`
```bash
poetry lock
```
using `uv`
```bash
uv lock
```
5. Develop the features on your branch.
As you work on the features, you should make sure that the test suite
@@ -195,7 +228,7 @@ Follow these steps to start contributing:
git commit
```
Note, if you already commited some changes that have a wrong formatting, you can use:
Note, if you already committed some changes that have a wrong formatting, you can use:
```bash
pre-commit run --all-files
```
@@ -236,9 +269,6 @@ Follow these steps to start contributing:
the PR as a draft PR. These are useful to avoid duplicated work, and to differentiate
it from PRs ready to be merged;
4. Make sure existing tests pass;
<!-- 5. Add high-coverage tests. No quality testing = no merge.
See an example of a good PR here: https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/pull/ -->
### Tests
@@ -258,7 +288,7 @@ sudo apt-get install git-lfs
git lfs install
```
Pull artifacts if they're not in [tests/data](tests/data)
Pull artifacts if they're not in [tests/artifacts](tests/artifacts)
```bash
git lfs pull
```

2
MANIFEST.in Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
include src/lerobot/templates/lerobot_modelcard_template.md
include src/lerobot/datasets/card_template.md

296
Makefile
View File

@@ -1,11 +1,25 @@
# Copyright 2024 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.
.PHONY: tests
PYTHON_PATH := $(shell which python)
# If Poetry is installed, redefine PYTHON_PATH to use the Poetry-managed Python
POETRY_CHECK := $(shell command -v poetry)
ifneq ($(POETRY_CHECK),)
PYTHON_PATH := $(shell poetry run which python)
# If uv is installed and a virtual environment exists, use it
UV_CHECK := $(shell command -v uv)
ifneq ($(UV_CHECK),)
PYTHON_PATH := $(shell .venv/bin/python)
endif
export PATH := $(dir $(PYTHON_PATH)):$(PATH)
@@ -20,171 +34,147 @@ build-gpu:
test-end-to-end:
${MAKE} DEVICE=$(DEVICE) test-act-ete-train
${MAKE} DEVICE=$(DEVICE) test-act-ete-train-resume
${MAKE} DEVICE=$(DEVICE) test-act-ete-eval
${MAKE} DEVICE=$(DEVICE) test-act-ete-train-amp
${MAKE} DEVICE=$(DEVICE) test-act-ete-eval-amp
${MAKE} DEVICE=$(DEVICE) test-diffusion-ete-train
${MAKE} DEVICE=$(DEVICE) test-diffusion-ete-eval
${MAKE} DEVICE=$(DEVICE) test-tdmpc-ete-train
${MAKE} DEVICE=$(DEVICE) test-tdmpc-ete-train-with-online
${MAKE} DEVICE=$(DEVICE) test-tdmpc-ete-eval
${MAKE} DEVICE=$(DEVICE) test-default-ete-eval
${MAKE} DEVICE=$(DEVICE) test-act-pusht-tutorial
${MAKE} DEVICE=$(DEVICE) test-smolvla-ete-train
${MAKE} DEVICE=$(DEVICE) test-smolvla-ete-eval
test-act-ete-train:
python lerobot/scripts/train.py \
policy=act \
policy.dim_model=64 \
env=aloha \
wandb.enable=False \
training.offline_steps=2 \
training.online_steps=0 \
eval.n_episodes=1 \
eval.batch_size=1 \
device=$(DEVICE) \
training.save_checkpoint=true \
training.save_freq=2 \
policy.n_action_steps=20 \
policy.chunk_size=20 \
training.batch_size=2 \
training.image_transforms.enable=true \
hydra.run.dir=tests/outputs/act/
python -m lerobot.scripts.train \
--policy.type=act \
--policy.dim_model=64 \
--policy.n_action_steps=20 \
--policy.chunk_size=20 \
--policy.device=$(DEVICE) \
--policy.push_to_hub=false \
--env.type=aloha \
--env.episode_length=5 \
--dataset.repo_id=lerobot/aloha_sim_transfer_cube_human \
--dataset.image_transforms.enable=true \
--dataset.episodes="[0]" \
--batch_size=2 \
--steps=4 \
--eval_freq=2 \
--eval.n_episodes=1 \
--eval.batch_size=1 \
--save_freq=2 \
--save_checkpoint=true \
--log_freq=1 \
--wandb.enable=false \
--output_dir=tests/outputs/act/
test-act-ete-train-resume:
python -m lerobot.scripts.train \
--config_path=tests/outputs/act/checkpoints/000002/pretrained_model/train_config.json \
--resume=true
test-act-ete-eval:
python lerobot/scripts/eval.py \
-p tests/outputs/act/checkpoints/000002/pretrained_model \
eval.n_episodes=1 \
eval.batch_size=1 \
env.episode_length=8 \
device=$(DEVICE) \
test-act-ete-train-amp:
python lerobot/scripts/train.py \
policy=act \
policy.dim_model=64 \
env=aloha \
wandb.enable=False \
training.offline_steps=2 \
training.online_steps=0 \
eval.n_episodes=1 \
eval.batch_size=1 \
device=$(DEVICE) \
training.save_checkpoint=true \
training.save_freq=2 \
policy.n_action_steps=20 \
policy.chunk_size=20 \
training.batch_size=2 \
hydra.run.dir=tests/outputs/act_amp/ \
training.image_transforms.enable=true \
use_amp=true
test-act-ete-eval-amp:
python lerobot/scripts/eval.py \
-p tests/outputs/act_amp/checkpoints/000002/pretrained_model \
eval.n_episodes=1 \
eval.batch_size=1 \
env.episode_length=8 \
device=$(DEVICE) \
use_amp=true
python -m lerobot.scripts.eval \
--policy.path=tests/outputs/act/checkpoints/000004/pretrained_model \
--policy.device=$(DEVICE) \
--env.type=aloha \
--env.episode_length=5 \
--eval.n_episodes=1 \
--eval.batch_size=1
test-diffusion-ete-train:
python lerobot/scripts/train.py \
policy=diffusion \
policy.down_dims=\[64,128,256\] \
policy.diffusion_step_embed_dim=32 \
policy.num_inference_steps=10 \
env=pusht \
wandb.enable=False \
training.offline_steps=2 \
training.online_steps=0 \
eval.n_episodes=1 \
eval.batch_size=1 \
device=$(DEVICE) \
training.save_checkpoint=true \
training.save_freq=2 \
training.batch_size=2 \
training.image_transforms.enable=true \
hydra.run.dir=tests/outputs/diffusion/
python -m lerobot.scripts.train \
--policy.type=diffusion \
--policy.down_dims='[64,128,256]' \
--policy.diffusion_step_embed_dim=32 \
--policy.num_inference_steps=10 \
--policy.device=$(DEVICE) \
--policy.push_to_hub=false \
--env.type=pusht \
--env.episode_length=5 \
--dataset.repo_id=lerobot/pusht \
--dataset.image_transforms.enable=true \
--dataset.episodes="[0]" \
--batch_size=2 \
--steps=2 \
--eval_freq=2 \
--eval.n_episodes=1 \
--eval.batch_size=1 \
--save_checkpoint=true \
--save_freq=2 \
--log_freq=1 \
--wandb.enable=false \
--output_dir=tests/outputs/diffusion/
test-diffusion-ete-eval:
python lerobot/scripts/eval.py \
-p tests/outputs/diffusion/checkpoints/000002/pretrained_model \
eval.n_episodes=1 \
eval.batch_size=1 \
env.episode_length=8 \
device=$(DEVICE) \
python -m lerobot.scripts.eval \
--policy.path=tests/outputs/diffusion/checkpoints/000002/pretrained_model \
--policy.device=$(DEVICE) \
--env.type=pusht \
--env.episode_length=5 \
--eval.n_episodes=1 \
--eval.batch_size=1
test-tdmpc-ete-train:
python lerobot/scripts/train.py \
policy=tdmpc \
env=xarm \
env.task=XarmLift-v0 \
dataset_repo_id=lerobot/xarm_lift_medium \
wandb.enable=False \
training.offline_steps=2 \
training.online_steps=0 \
eval.n_episodes=1 \
eval.batch_size=1 \
env.episode_length=2 \
device=$(DEVICE) \
training.save_checkpoint=true \
training.save_freq=2 \
training.batch_size=2 \
training.image_transforms.enable=true \
hydra.run.dir=tests/outputs/tdmpc/
test-tdmpc-ete-train-with-online:
python lerobot/scripts/train.py \
env=pusht \
env.gym.obs_type=environment_state_agent_pos \
policy=tdmpc_pusht_keypoints \
eval.n_episodes=1 \
eval.batch_size=1 \
env.episode_length=10 \
device=$(DEVICE) \
training.offline_steps=2 \
training.online_steps=20 \
training.save_checkpoint=false \
training.save_freq=10 \
training.batch_size=2 \
training.online_rollout_n_episodes=2 \
training.online_rollout_batch_size=2 \
training.online_steps_between_rollouts=10 \
training.online_buffer_capacity=15 \
eval.use_async_envs=true \
hydra.run.dir=tests/outputs/tdmpc_online/
python -m lerobot.scripts.train \
--policy.type=tdmpc \
--policy.device=$(DEVICE) \
--policy.push_to_hub=false \
--env.type=xarm \
--env.task=XarmLift-v0 \
--env.episode_length=5 \
--dataset.repo_id=lerobot/xarm_lift_medium \
--dataset.image_transforms.enable=true \
--dataset.episodes="[0]" \
--batch_size=2 \
--steps=2 \
--eval_freq=2 \
--eval.n_episodes=1 \
--eval.batch_size=1 \
--save_checkpoint=true \
--save_freq=2 \
--log_freq=1 \
--wandb.enable=false \
--output_dir=tests/outputs/tdmpc/
test-tdmpc-ete-eval:
python lerobot/scripts/eval.py \
-p tests/outputs/tdmpc/checkpoints/000002/pretrained_model \
eval.n_episodes=1 \
eval.batch_size=1 \
env.episode_length=8 \
device=$(DEVICE) \
python -m lerobot.scripts.eval \
--policy.path=tests/outputs/tdmpc/checkpoints/000002/pretrained_model \
--policy.device=$(DEVICE) \
--env.type=xarm \
--env.episode_length=5 \
--env.task=XarmLift-v0 \
--eval.n_episodes=1 \
--eval.batch_size=1
test-default-ete-eval:
python lerobot/scripts/eval.py \
--config lerobot/configs/default.yaml \
eval.n_episodes=1 \
eval.batch_size=1 \
env.episode_length=8 \
device=$(DEVICE) \
test-act-pusht-tutorial:
cp examples/advanced/1_train_act_pusht/act_pusht.yaml lerobot/configs/policy/created_by_Makefile.yaml
python lerobot/scripts/train.py \
policy=created_by_Makefile.yaml \
env=pusht \
wandb.enable=False \
training.offline_steps=2 \
eval.n_episodes=1 \
eval.batch_size=1 \
env.episode_length=2 \
device=$(DEVICE) \
training.save_model=true \
training.save_freq=2 \
training.batch_size=2 \
training.image_transforms.enable=true \
hydra.run.dir=tests/outputs/act_pusht/
rm lerobot/configs/policy/created_by_Makefile.yaml
test-smolvla-ete-train:
python -m lerobot.scripts.train \
--policy.type=smolvla \
--policy.n_action_steps=20 \
--policy.chunk_size=20 \
--policy.device=$(DEVICE) \
--policy.push_to_hub=false \
--env.type=aloha \
--env.episode_length=5 \
--dataset.repo_id=lerobot/aloha_sim_transfer_cube_human \
--dataset.image_transforms.enable=true \
--dataset.episodes="[0]" \
--batch_size=2 \
--steps=4 \
--eval_freq=2 \
--eval.n_episodes=1 \
--eval.batch_size=1 \
--save_freq=2 \
--save_checkpoint=true \
--log_freq=1 \
--wandb.enable=false \
--output_dir=tests/outputs/smolvla/
test-smolvla-ete-eval:
python -m lerobot.scripts.eval \
--policy.path=tests/outputs/smolvla/checkpoints/000004/pretrained_model \
--policy.device=$(DEVICE) \
--env.type=aloha \
--env.episode_length=5 \
--eval.n_episodes=1 \
--eval.batch_size=1

193
README.md
View File

@@ -23,15 +23,38 @@
</div>
<h2 align="center">
<p><a href="https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/examples/10_use_so100.md">New robot in town: SO-100</a></p>
<p><a href="https://huggingface.co/docs/lerobot/so101">
Build Your Own SO-101 Robot!</a></p>
</h2>
<div align="center">
<img src="media/so100/leader_follower.webp?raw=true" alt="SO-100 leader and follower arms" title="SO-100 leader and follower arms" width="50%">
<p>We just added a new tutorial on how to build a more affordable robot, at the price of $110 per arm!</p>
<p>Teach it new skills by showing it a few moves with just a laptop.</p>
<p>Then watch your homemade robot act autonomously 🤯</p>
<p>Follow the link to the <a href="https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/examples/10_use_so100.md">full tutorial for SO-100</a>.</p>
<div style="display: flex; gap: 1rem; justify-content: center; align-items: center;" >
<img
src="media/so101/so101.webp?raw=true"
alt="SO-101 follower arm"
title="SO-101 follower arm"
style="width: 40%;"
/>
<img
src="media/so101/so101-leader.webp?raw=true"
alt="SO-101 leader arm"
title="SO-101 leader arm"
style="width: 40%;"
/>
</div>
<p><strong>Meet the updated SO100, the SO-101 Just €114 per arm!</strong></p>
<p>Train it in minutes with a few simple moves on your laptop.</p>
<p>Then sit back and watch your creation act autonomously! 🤯</p>
<p><a href="https://huggingface.co/docs/lerobot/so101">
See the full SO-101 tutorial here.</a></p>
<p>Want to take it to the next level? Make your SO-101 mobile by building LeKiwi!</p>
<p>Check out the <a href="https://huggingface.co/docs/lerobot/lekiwi">LeKiwi tutorial</a> and bring your robot to life on wheels.</p>
<img src="media/lekiwi/kiwi.webp?raw=true" alt="LeKiwi mobile robot" title="LeKiwi mobile robot" width="50%">
</div>
<br/>
@@ -42,7 +65,6 @@
---
🤗 LeRobot aims to provide models, datasets, and tools for real-world robotics in PyTorch. The goal is to lower the barrier to entry to robotics so that everyone can contribute and benefit from sharing datasets and pretrained models.
🤗 LeRobot contains state-of-the-art approaches that have been shown to transfer to the real-world with a focus on imitation learning and reinforcement learning.
@@ -68,6 +90,7 @@
### Acknowledgment
- The LeRobot team 🤗 for building SmolVLA [Paper](https://arxiv.org/abs/2506.01844), [Blog](https://huggingface.co/blog/smolvla).
- Thanks to Tony Zhao, Zipeng Fu and colleagues for open sourcing ACT policy, ALOHA environments and datasets. Ours are adapted from [ALOHA](https://tonyzhaozh.github.io/aloha) and [Mobile ALOHA](https://mobile-aloha.github.io).
- Thanks to Cheng Chi, Zhenjia Xu and colleagues for open sourcing Diffusion policy, Pusht environment and datasets, as well as UMI datasets. Ours are adapted from [Diffusion Policy](https://diffusion-policy.cs.columbia.edu) and [UMI Gripper](https://umi-gripper.github.io).
- Thanks to Nicklas Hansen, Yunhai Feng and colleagues for open sourcing TDMPC policy, Simxarm environments and datasets. Ours are adapted from [TDMPC](https://github.com/nicklashansen/tdmpc) and [FOWM](https://www.yunhaifeng.com/FOWM).
@@ -89,14 +112,25 @@ conda create -y -n lerobot python=3.10
conda activate lerobot
```
When using `miniconda`, install `ffmpeg` in your environment:
```bash
conda install ffmpeg -c conda-forge
```
> **NOTE:** This usually installs `ffmpeg 7.X` for your platform compiled with the `libsvtav1` encoder. If `libsvtav1` is not supported (check supported encoders with `ffmpeg -encoders`), you can:
> - _[On any platform]_ Explicitly install `ffmpeg 7.X` using:
> ```bash
> conda install ffmpeg=7.1.1 -c conda-forge
> ```
> - _[On Linux only]_ Install [ffmpeg build dependencies](https://trac.ffmpeg.org/wiki/CompilationGuide/Ubuntu#GettheDependencies) and [compile ffmpeg from source with libsvtav1](https://trac.ffmpeg.org/wiki/CompilationGuide/Ubuntu#libsvtav1), and make sure you use the corresponding ffmpeg binary to your install with `which ffmpeg`.
Install 🤗 LeRobot:
```bash
pip install -e .
```
> **NOTE:** Depending on your platform, If you encounter any build errors during this step
you may need to install `cmake` and `build-essential` for building some of our dependencies.
On linux: `sudo apt-get install cmake build-essential`
> **NOTE:** If you encounter build errors, you may need to install additional dependencies (`cmake`, `build-essential`, and `ffmpeg libs`). On Linux, run:
`sudo apt-get install cmake build-essential python3-dev pkg-config libavformat-dev libavcodec-dev libavdevice-dev libavutil-dev libswscale-dev libswresample-dev libavfilter-dev`. For other systems, see: [Compiling PyAV](https://pyav.org/docs/develop/overview/installation.html#bring-your-own-ffmpeg)
For simulations, 🤗 LeRobot comes with gymnasium environments that can be installed as extras:
- [aloha](https://github.com/huggingface/gym-aloha)
@@ -115,47 +149,20 @@ wandb login
(note: you will also need to enable WandB in the configuration. See below.)
## Walkthrough
```
.
├── examples # contains demonstration examples, start here to learn about LeRobot
| └── advanced # contains even more examples for those who have mastered the basics
├── lerobot
| ├── configs # contains hydra yaml files with all options that you can override in the command line
| | ├── default.yaml # selected by default, it loads pusht environment and diffusion policy
| | ├── env # various sim environments and their datasets: aloha.yaml, pusht.yaml, xarm.yaml
| | └── policy # various policies: act.yaml, diffusion.yaml, tdmpc.yaml
| ├── common # contains classes and utilities
| | ├── datasets # various datasets of human demonstrations: aloha, pusht, xarm
| | ├── envs # various sim environments: aloha, pusht, xarm
| | ├── policies # various policies: act, diffusion, tdmpc
| | ├── robot_devices # various real devices: dynamixel motors, opencv cameras, koch robots
| | └── utils # various utilities
| └── scripts # contains functions to execute via command line
| ├── eval.py # load policy and evaluate it on an environment
| ├── train.py # train a policy via imitation learning and/or reinforcement learning
| ├── control_robot.py # teleoperate a real robot, record data, run a policy
| ├── push_dataset_to_hub.py # convert your dataset into LeRobot dataset format and upload it to the Hugging Face hub
| └── visualize_dataset.py # load a dataset and render its demonstrations
├── outputs # contains results of scripts execution: logs, videos, model checkpoints
└── tests # contains pytest utilities for continuous integration
```
### Visualize datasets
Check out [example 1](./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:
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/visualize_dataset.py \
python -m lerobot.scripts.visualize_dataset \
--repo-id lerobot/pusht \
--episode-index 0
```
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
python lerobot/scripts/visualize_dataset.py \
python -m lerobot.scripts.visualize_dataset \
--repo-id lerobot/pusht \
--root ./my_local_data_dir \
--local-files-only 1 \
@@ -168,7 +175,7 @@ It will open `rerun.io` and display the camera streams, robot states and actions
https://github-production-user-asset-6210df.s3.amazonaws.com/4681518/328035972-fd46b787-b532-47e2-bb6f-fd536a55a7ed.mov?X-Amz-Algorithm=AWS4-HMAC-SHA256&X-Amz-Credential=AKIAVCODYLSA53PQK4ZA%2F20240505%2Fus-east-1%2Fs3%2Faws4_request&X-Amz-Date=20240505T172924Z&X-Amz-Expires=300&X-Amz-Signature=d680b26c532eeaf80740f08af3320d22ad0b8a4e4da1bcc4f33142c15b509eda&X-Amz-SignedHeaders=host&actor_id=24889239&key_id=0&repo_id=748713144
Our script can also visualize datasets stored on a distant server. See `python lerobot/scripts/visualize_dataset.py --help` for more instructions.
Our script can also visualize datasets stored on a distant server. See `python -m lerobot.scripts.visualize_dataset --help` for more instructions.
### The `LeRobotDataset` format
@@ -191,7 +198,7 @@ dataset attributes:
│ ├ episode_index (int64): index of the episode for this sample
│ ├ frame_index (int64): index of the frame for this sample in the episode ; starts at 0 for each episode
│ ├ timestamp (float32): timestamp in the episode
│ ├ next.done (bool): indicates the end of en episode ; True for the last frame in each episode
│ ├ next.done (bool): indicates the end of an episode ; True for the last frame in each episode
│ └ index (int64): general index in the whole dataset
├ episode_data_index: contains 2 tensors with the start and end indices of each episode
│ ├ from (1D int64 tensor): first frame index for each episode — shape (num episodes,) starts with 0
@@ -213,7 +220,7 @@ A `LeRobotDataset` is serialised using several widespread file formats for each
- videos are stored in mp4 format to save space
- metadata are stored in plain json/jsonl files
Dataset can be uploaded/downloaded from the HuggingFace hub seamlessly. To work on a local dataset, you can use the `local_files_only` argument and specify its location with the `root` argument if it's not in the default `~/.cache/huggingface/lerobot` location.
Dataset can be uploaded/downloaded from the HuggingFace hub seamlessly. To work on a local dataset, you can specify its location with the `root` argument if it's not in the default `~/.cache/huggingface/lerobot` location.
### Evaluate a pretrained policy
@@ -221,88 +228,49 @@ Check out [example 2](./examples/2_evaluate_pretrained_policy.py) that illustrat
We also provide a more capable script to parallelize the evaluation over multiple environments during the same rollout. Here is an example with a pretrained model hosted on [lerobot/diffusion_pusht](https://huggingface.co/lerobot/diffusion_pusht):
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/eval.py \
-p lerobot/diffusion_pusht \
eval.n_episodes=10 \
eval.batch_size=10
python -m lerobot.scripts.eval \
--policy.path=lerobot/diffusion_pusht \
--env.type=pusht \
--eval.batch_size=10 \
--eval.n_episodes=10 \
--policy.use_amp=false \
--policy.device=cuda
```
Note: After training your own policy, you can re-evaluate the checkpoints with:
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/eval.py -p {OUTPUT_DIR}/checkpoints/last/pretrained_model
python -m lerobot.scripts.eval --policy.path={OUTPUT_DIR}/checkpoints/last/pretrained_model
```
See `python lerobot/scripts/eval.py --help` for more instructions.
See `python -m lerobot.scripts.eval --help` for more instructions.
### Train your own policy
Check out [example 3](./examples/3_train_policy.py) that illustrates how to train a model using our core library in python, and [example 4](./examples/4_train_policy_with_script.md) that shows how to use our training script from command line.
In general, you can use our training script to easily train any policy. Here is an example of training the ACT policy on trajectories collected by humans on the Aloha simulation environment for the insertion task:
To use wandb for logging training and evaluation curves, make sure you've run `wandb login` as a one-time setup step. Then, when running the training command above, enable WandB in the configuration by adding `--wandb.enable=true`.
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/train.py \
policy=act \
env=aloha \
env.task=AlohaInsertion-v0 \
dataset_repo_id=lerobot/aloha_sim_insertion_human \
```
The experiment directory is automatically generated and will show up in yellow in your terminal. It looks like `outputs/train/2024-05-05/20-21-12_aloha_act_default`. You can manually specify an experiment directory by adding this argument to the `train.py` python command:
```bash
hydra.run.dir=your/new/experiment/dir
```
In the experiment directory there will be a folder called `checkpoints` which will have the following structure:
```bash
checkpoints
├── 000250 # checkpoint_dir for training step 250
│ ├── pretrained_model # Hugging Face pretrained model dir
│ │ ├── config.json # Hugging Face pretrained model config
│ │ ├── config.yaml # consolidated Hydra config
│ │ ├── model.safetensors # model weights
│ │ └── README.md # Hugging Face model card
│ └── training_state.pth # optimizer/scheduler/rng state and training step
```
To resume training from a checkpoint, you can add these to the `train.py` python command:
```bash
hydra.run.dir=your/original/experiment/dir resume=true
```
It will load the pretrained model, optimizer and scheduler states for training. For more information please see our tutorial on training resumption [here](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/examples/5_resume_training.md).
To use wandb for logging training and evaluation curves, make sure you've run `wandb login` as a one-time setup step. Then, when running the training command above, enable WandB in the configuration by adding:
```bash
wandb.enable=true
```
A link to the wandb logs for the run will also show up in yellow in your terminal. Here is an example of what they look like in your browser. Please also check [here](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/examples/4_train_policy_with_script.md#typical-logs-and-metrics) for the explanation of some commonly used metrics in logs.
A link to the wandb logs for the run will also show up in yellow in your terminal. Here is an example of what they look like in your browser. Please also check [here](./examples/4_train_policy_with_script.md#typical-logs-and-metrics) for the explanation of some commonly used metrics in logs.
![](media/wandb.png)
Note: For efficiency, during training every checkpoint is evaluated on a low number of episodes. You may use `eval.n_episodes=500` to evaluate on more episodes than the default. Or, after training, you may want to re-evaluate your best checkpoints on more episodes or change the evaluation settings. See `python lerobot/scripts/eval.py --help` for more instructions.
Note: For efficiency, during training every checkpoint is evaluated on a low number of episodes. You may use `--eval.n_episodes=500` to evaluate on more episodes than the default. Or, after training, you may want to re-evaluate your best checkpoints on more episodes or change the evaluation settings. See `python -m lerobot.scripts.eval --help` for more instructions.
#### Reproduce state-of-the-art (SOTA)
We have organized our configuration files (found under [`lerobot/configs`](./lerobot/configs)) such that they reproduce SOTA results from a given model variant in their respective original works. Simply running:
We provide some pretrained policies on our [hub page](https://huggingface.co/lerobot) that can achieve state-of-the-art performances.
You can reproduce their training by loading the config from their run. Simply running:
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/train.py policy=diffusion env=pusht
python -m lerobot.scripts.train --config_path=lerobot/diffusion_pusht
```
reproduces SOTA results for Diffusion Policy on the PushT task.
Pretrained policies, along with reproduction details, can be found under the "Models" section of https://huggingface.co/lerobot.
## Contribute
If you would like to contribute to 🤗 LeRobot, please check out our [contribution guide](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/CONTRIBUTING.md).
### Add a new dataset
<!-- ### Add a new dataset
To add a dataset to the hub, you need to login using a write-access token, which can be generated from the [Hugging Face settings](https://huggingface.co/settings/tokens):
```bash
@@ -320,7 +288,7 @@ python lerobot/scripts/push_dataset_to_hub.py \
See `python lerobot/scripts/push_dataset_to_hub.py --help` for more instructions.
If your dataset format is not supported, implement your own in `lerobot/common/datasets/push_dataset_to_hub/${raw_format}_format.py` by copying examples like [pusht_zarr](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/lerobot/common/datasets/push_dataset_to_hub/pusht_zarr_format.py), [umi_zarr](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/lerobot/common/datasets/push_dataset_to_hub/umi_zarr_format.py), [aloha_hdf5](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/lerobot/common/datasets/push_dataset_to_hub/aloha_hdf5_format.py), or [xarm_pkl](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/lerobot/common/datasets/push_dataset_to_hub/xarm_pkl_format.py).
If your dataset format is not supported, implement your own in `lerobot/datasets/push_dataset_to_hub/${raw_format}_format.py` by copying examples like [pusht_zarr](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/lerobot/datasets/push_dataset_to_hub/pusht_zarr_format.py), [umi_zarr](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/lerobot/datasets/push_dataset_to_hub/umi_zarr_format.py), [aloha_hdf5](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/lerobot/datasets/push_dataset_to_hub/aloha_hdf5_format.py), or [xarm_pkl](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/lerobot/datasets/push_dataset_to_hub/xarm_pkl_format.py). -->
### Add a pretrained policy
@@ -330,7 +298,7 @@ Once you have trained a policy you may upload it to the Hugging Face hub using a
You first need to find the checkpoint folder located inside your experiment directory (e.g. `outputs/train/2024-05-05/20-21-12_aloha_act_default/checkpoints/002500`). Within that there is a `pretrained_model` directory which should contain:
- `config.json`: A serialized version of the policy configuration (following the policy's dataclass config).
- `model.safetensors`: A set of `torch.nn.Module` parameters, saved in [Hugging Face Safetensors](https://huggingface.co/docs/safetensors/index) format.
- `config.yaml`: A consolidated Hydra training configuration containing the policy, environment, and dataset configs. The policy configuration should match `config.json` exactly. The environment config is useful for anyone who wants to evaluate your policy. The dataset config just serves as a paper trail for reproducibility.
- `train_config.json`: A consolidated configuration containing all parameters used for training. The policy configuration should match `config.json` exactly. This is useful for anyone who wants to evaluate your policy or for reproducibility.
To upload these to the hub, run the following:
```bash
@@ -369,7 +337,7 @@ with profile(
If you want, you can cite this work with:
```bibtex
@misc{cadene2024lerobot,
author = {Cadene, Remi and Alibert, Simon and Soare, Alexander and Gallouedec, Quentin and Zouitine, Adil and Wolf, Thomas},
author = {Cadene, Remi and Alibert, Simon and Soare, Alexander and Gallouedec, Quentin and Zouitine, Adil and Palma, Steven and Kooijmans, Pepijn and Aractingi, Michel and Shukor, Mustafa and Aubakirova, Dana and Russi, Martino and Capuano, Francesco and Pascale, Caroline and Choghari, Jade and Moss, Jess and Wolf, Thomas},
title = {LeRobot: State-of-the-art Machine Learning for Real-World Robotics in Pytorch},
howpublished = "\url{https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot}",
year = {2024}
@@ -377,6 +345,15 @@ If you want, you can cite this work with:
```
Additionally, if you are using any of the particular policy architecture, pretrained models, or datasets, it is recommended to cite the original authors of the work as they appear below:
- [SmolVLA](https://arxiv.org/abs/2506.01844)
```bibtex
@article{shukor2025smolvla,
title={SmolVLA: A Vision-Language-Action Model for Affordable and Efficient Robotics},
author={Shukor, Mustafa and Aubakirova, Dana and Capuano, Francesco and Kooijmans, Pepijn and Palma, Steven and Zouitine, Adil and Aractingi, Michel and Pascal, Caroline and Russi, Martino and Marafioti, Andres and Alibert, Simon and Cord, Matthieu and Wolf, Thomas and Cadene, Remi},
journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2506.01844},
year={2025}
}
```
- [Diffusion Policy](https://diffusion-policy.cs.columbia.edu)
```bibtex
@@ -417,3 +394,19 @@ Additionally, if you are using any of the particular policy architecture, pretra
year={2024}
}
```
- [HIL-SERL](https://hil-serl.github.io/)
```bibtex
@Article{luo2024hilserl,
title={Precise and Dexterous Robotic Manipulation via Human-in-the-Loop Reinforcement Learning},
author={Jianlan Luo and Charles Xu and Jeffrey Wu and Sergey Levine},
year={2024},
eprint={2410.21845},
archivePrefix={arXiv},
primaryClass={cs.RO}
}
```
## 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

@@ -51,7 +51,7 @@ For a comprehensive list and documentation of these parameters, see the ffmpeg d
### Decoding parameters
**Decoder**
We tested two video decoding backends from torchvision:
- `pyav` (default)
- `pyav`
- `video_reader` (requires to build torchvision from source)
**Requested timestamps**
@@ -114,7 +114,7 @@ We tried to measure the most impactful parameters for both encoding and decoding
Additional encoding parameters exist that are not included in this benchmark. In particular:
- `-preset` which allows for selecting encoding presets. This represents a collection of options that will provide a certain encoding speed to compression ratio. By leaving this parameter unspecified, it is considered to be `medium` for libx264 and libx265 and `8` for libsvtav1.
- `-tune` which allows to optimize the encoding for certains aspects (e.g. film quality, fast decoding, etc.).
- `-tune` which allows to optimize the encoding for certain aspects (e.g. film quality, fast decoding, etc.).
See the documentation mentioned above for more detailed info on these settings and for a more comprehensive list of other parameters.

32
benchmarks/video/capture_camera_feed.py Normal file → Executable file
View File

@@ -17,12 +17,21 @@
import argparse
import datetime as dt
import os
import time
from pathlib import Path
import cv2
import rerun as rr
# see https://rerun.io/docs/howto/visualization/limit-ram
RERUN_MEMORY_LIMIT = os.getenv("LEROBOT_RERUN_MEMORY_LIMIT", "5%")
def display_and_save_video_stream(output_dir: Path, fps: int, width: int, height: int):
def display_and_save_video_stream(output_dir: Path, fps: int, width: int, height: int, duration: int):
rr.init("lerobot_capture_camera_feed")
rr.spawn(memory_limit=RERUN_MEMORY_LIMIT)
now = dt.datetime.now()
capture_dir = output_dir / f"{now:%Y-%m-%d}" / f"{now:%H-%M-%S}"
if not capture_dir.exists():
@@ -39,24 +48,21 @@ def display_and_save_video_stream(output_dir: Path, fps: int, width: int, height
cap.set(cv2.CAP_PROP_FRAME_HEIGHT, height)
frame_index = 0
while True:
start_time = time.time()
while time.time() - start_time < duration:
ret, frame = cap.read()
if not ret:
print("Error: Could not read frame.")
break
cv2.imshow("Video Stream", frame)
rr.log("video/stream", rr.Image(frame), static=True)
cv2.imwrite(str(capture_dir / f"frame_{frame_index:06d}.png"), frame)
frame_index += 1
# Break the loop on 'q' key press
if cv2.waitKey(1) & 0xFF == ord("q"):
break
# Release the capture and destroy all windows
# Release the capture
cap.release()
cv2.destroyAllWindows()
# TODO(Steven): Add a graceful shutdown via a close() method for the Viewer context, though not currently supported in the Rerun API.
if __name__ == "__main__":
@@ -86,5 +92,11 @@ if __name__ == "__main__":
default=720,
help="Height of the captured images.",
)
parser.add_argument(
"--duration",
type=int,
default=20,
help="Duration in seconds for which the video stream should be captured.",
)
args = parser.parse_args()
display_and_save_video_stream(**vars(args))

View File

@@ -35,12 +35,12 @@ import torch
from skimage.metrics import mean_squared_error, peak_signal_noise_ratio, structural_similarity
from tqdm import tqdm
from lerobot.common.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset
from lerobot.common.datasets.video_utils import (
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset
from lerobot.datasets.video_utils import (
decode_video_frames_torchvision,
encode_video_frames,
)
from lerobot.common.utils.benchmark import TimeBenchmark
from lerobot.utils.benchmark import TimeBenchmark
BASE_ENCODING = OrderedDict(
[
@@ -67,7 +67,7 @@ def parse_int_or_none(value) -> int | None:
def check_datasets_formats(repo_ids: list) -> None:
for repo_id in repo_ids:
dataset = LeRobotDataset(repo_id)
if dataset.video:
if len(dataset.meta.video_keys) > 0:
raise ValueError(
f"Use only image dataset for running this benchmark. Video dataset provided: {repo_id}"
)
@@ -416,7 +416,7 @@ if __name__ == "__main__":
"--vcodec",
type=str,
nargs="*",
default=["libx264", "libx265", "libsvtav1"],
default=["libx264", "hevc", "libsvtav1"],
help="Video codecs to be tested",
)
parser.add_argument(
@@ -446,7 +446,7 @@ if __name__ == "__main__":
# nargs="*",
# default=[0, 1],
# help="Use the fastdecode tuning option. 0 disables it. "
# "For libx264 and libx265, only 1 is possible. "
# "For libx264 and libx265/hevc, only 1 is possible. "
# "For libsvtav1, 1, 2 or 3 are possible values with a higher number meaning a faster decoding optimization",
# )
parser.add_argument(

View File

@@ -1,32 +1,29 @@
# Configure image
ARG PYTHON_VERSION=3.10
FROM python:${PYTHON_VERSION}-slim
# Configure environment variables
ARG PYTHON_VERSION
ARG DEBIAN_FRONTEND=noninteractive
# Install apt dependencies
RUN apt-get update && apt-get install -y --no-install-recommends \
build-essential cmake \
libglib2.0-0 libgl1-mesa-glx libegl1-mesa ffmpeg \
speech-dispatcher \
&& apt-get clean && rm -rf /var/lib/apt/lists/*
# Create virtual environment
RUN ln -s /usr/bin/python${PYTHON_VERSION} /usr/bin/python
RUN python -m venv /opt/venv
ENV DEBIAN_FRONTEND=noninteractive
ENV MUJOCO_GL="egl"
ENV PATH="/opt/venv/bin:$PATH"
RUN echo "source /opt/venv/bin/activate" >> /root/.bashrc
# Install LeRobot
# Install dependencies and set up Python in a single layer
RUN apt-get update && apt-get install -y --no-install-recommends \
build-essential cmake git \
libglib2.0-0 libgl1-mesa-glx libegl1-mesa ffmpeg \
speech-dispatcher libgeos-dev \
&& ln -s /usr/bin/python${PYTHON_VERSION} /usr/bin/python \
&& python -m venv /opt/venv \
&& apt-get clean && rm -rf /var/lib/apt/lists/* \
&& echo "source /opt/venv/bin/activate" >> /root/.bashrc
# Clone repository and install LeRobot in a single layer
COPY . /lerobot
WORKDIR /lerobot
RUN pip install --upgrade --no-cache-dir pip
RUN pip install --no-cache-dir ".[test, aloha, xarm, pusht, dynamixel]" \
--extra-index-url https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cpu
# Set EGL as the rendering backend for MuJoCo
ENV MUJOCO_GL="egl"
RUN /opt/venv/bin/pip install --upgrade --no-cache-dir pip \
&& /opt/venv/bin/pip install --no-cache-dir ".[test, aloha, xarm, pusht, smolvla]" \
--extra-index-url https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cpu
# Execute in bash shell rather than python
CMD ["/bin/bash"]

View File

@@ -13,8 +13,8 @@ RUN apt-get update && apt-get install -y --no-install-recommends \
sed gawk grep curl wget zip unzip \
tcpdump sysstat screen tmux \
libglib2.0-0 libgl1-mesa-glx libegl1-mesa \
speech-dispatcher \
python${PYTHON_VERSION} python${PYTHON_VERSION}-venv \
speech-dispatcher portaudio19-dev libgeos-dev \
python${PYTHON_VERSION} python${PYTHON_VERSION}-venv python${PYTHON_VERSION}-dev \
&& apt-get clean && rm -rf /var/lib/apt/lists/*
# Install ffmpeg build dependencies. See:

View File

@@ -1,30 +1,24 @@
FROM nvidia/cuda:12.4.1-base-ubuntu22.04
# Configure image
# Configure environment variables
ARG PYTHON_VERSION=3.10
ARG DEBIAN_FRONTEND=noninteractive
# Install apt dependencies
RUN apt-get update && apt-get install -y --no-install-recommends \
build-essential cmake \
libglib2.0-0 libgl1-mesa-glx libegl1-mesa ffmpeg \
speech-dispatcher \
python${PYTHON_VERSION}-dev python${PYTHON_VERSION}-venv \
&& apt-get clean && rm -rf /var/lib/apt/lists/*
# Create virtual environment
RUN ln -s /usr/bin/python${PYTHON_VERSION} /usr/bin/python
RUN python -m venv /opt/venv
ENV DEBIAN_FRONTEND=noninteractive
ENV MUJOCO_GL="egl"
ENV PATH="/opt/venv/bin:$PATH"
RUN echo "source /opt/venv/bin/activate" >> /root/.bashrc
# Install LeRobot
# Install dependencies and set up Python in a single layer
RUN apt-get update && apt-get install -y --no-install-recommends \
build-essential cmake git \
libglib2.0-0 libgl1-mesa-glx libegl1-mesa ffmpeg \
speech-dispatcher libgeos-dev \
python${PYTHON_VERSION}-dev python${PYTHON_VERSION}-venv \
&& ln -s /usr/bin/python${PYTHON_VERSION} /usr/bin/python \
&& python -m venv /opt/venv \
&& apt-get clean && rm -rf /var/lib/apt/lists/* \
&& echo "source /opt/venv/bin/activate" >> /root/.bashrc
# Clone repository and install LeRobot in a single layer
COPY . /lerobot
WORKDIR /lerobot
RUN pip install --upgrade --no-cache-dir pip
RUN pip install --no-cache-dir ".[test, aloha, xarm, pusht, dynamixel]"
# Set EGL as the rendering backend for MuJoCo
ENV MUJOCO_GL="egl"
RUN /opt/venv/bin/pip install --upgrade --no-cache-dir pip \
&& /opt/venv/bin/pip install --no-cache-dir ".[test, aloha, xarm, pusht, dynamixel, smolvla]"

137
docs/README.md Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,137 @@
<!---
Copyright 2020 The HuggingFace 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.
-->
# Generating the documentation
To generate the documentation, you first have to build it. Several packages are necessary to build the doc,
you can install them with the following command, at the root of the code repository:
```bash
pip install -e ".[docs]"
```
You will also need `nodejs`. Please refer to their [installation page](https://nodejs.org/en/download)
---
**NOTE**
You only need to generate the documentation to inspect it locally (if you're planning changes and want to
check how they look before committing for instance). You don't have to `git commit` the built documentation.
---
## Building the documentation
Once you have setup the `doc-builder` and additional packages, you can generate the documentation by
typing the following command:
```bash
doc-builder build lerobot docs/source/ --build_dir ~/tmp/test-build
```
You can adapt the `--build_dir` to set any temporary folder that you prefer. This command will create it and generate
the MDX files that will be rendered as the documentation on the main website. You can inspect them in your favorite
Markdown editor.
## Previewing the documentation
To preview the docs, first install the `watchdog` module with:
```bash
pip install watchdog
```
Then run the following command:
```bash
doc-builder preview lerobot docs/source/
```
The docs will be viewable at [http://localhost:3000](http://localhost:3000). You can also preview the docs once you have opened a PR. You will see a bot add a comment to a link where the documentation with your changes lives.
---
**NOTE**
The `preview` command only works with existing doc files. When you add a completely new file, you need to update `_toctree.yml` & restart `preview` command (`ctrl-c` to stop it & call `doc-builder preview ...` again).
---
## Adding a new element to the navigation bar
Accepted files are Markdown (.md).
Create a file with its extension and put it in the source directory. You can then link it to the toc-tree by putting
the filename without the extension in the [`_toctree.yml`](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/docs/source/_toctree.yml) file.
## Renaming section headers and moving sections
It helps to keep the old links working when renaming the section header and/or moving sections from one document to another. This is because the old links are likely to be used in Issues, Forums, and Social media and it'd make for a much more superior user experience if users reading those months later could still easily navigate to the originally intended information.
Therefore, we simply keep a little map of moved sections at the end of the document where the original section was. The key is to preserve the original anchor.
So if you renamed a section from: "Section A" to "Section B", then you can add at the end of the file:
```
Sections that were moved:
[ <a href="#section-b">Section A</a><a id="section-a"></a> ]
```
and of course, if you moved it to another file, then:
```
Sections that were moved:
[ <a href="../new-file#section-b">Section A</a><a id="section-a"></a> ]
```
Use the relative style to link to the new file so that the versioned docs continue to work.
For an example of a rich moved sections set please see the very end of [the transformers Trainer doc](https://github.com/huggingface/transformers/blob/main/docs/source/en/main_classes/trainer.md).
### Adding a new tutorial
Adding a new tutorial or section is done in two steps:
- Add a new file under `./source`. This file can either be ReStructuredText (.rst) or Markdown (.md).
- Link that file in `./source/_toctree.yml` on the correct toc-tree.
Make sure to put your new file under the proper section. If you have a doubt, feel free to ask in a Github Issue or PR.
### Writing source documentation
Values that should be put in `code` should either be surrounded by backticks: \`like so\`. Note that argument names
and objects like True, None or any strings should usually be put in `code`.
#### Writing a multi-line code block
Multi-line code blocks can be useful for displaying examples. They are done between two lines of three backticks as usual in Markdown:
````
```
# first line of code
# second line
# etc
```
````
#### Adding an image
Due to the rapidly growing repository, it is important to make sure that no files that would significantly weigh down the repository are added. This includes images, videos, and other non-text files. We prefer to leverage a hf.co hosted `dataset` like
the ones hosted on [`hf-internal-testing`](https://huggingface.co/hf-internal-testing) in which to place these files and reference
them by URL. We recommend putting them in the following dataset: [huggingface/documentation-images](https://huggingface.co/datasets/huggingface/documentation-images).
If an external contribution, feel free to add the images to your PR and ask a Hugging Face member to migrate your images
to this dataset.

44
docs/source/_toctree.yml Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,44 @@
- sections:
- local: index
title: LeRobot
- local: installation
title: Installation
title: Get started
- sections:
- local: il_robots
title: Imitation Learning for Robots
- local: il_sim
title: Imitation Learning in Sim
- local: cameras
title: Cameras
- local: integrate_hardware
title: Bring Your Own Hardware
- local: hilserl
title: Train a Robot with RL
- local: hilserl_sim
title: Train RL in Simulation
title: "Tutorials"
- sections:
- local: smolvla
title: Finetune SmolVLA
title: "Policies"
- sections:
- local: so101
title: SO-101
- local: so100
title: SO-100
- local: koch
title: Koch v1.1
- local: lekiwi
title: LeKiwi
title: "Robots"
- sections:
- local: notebooks
title: Notebooks
title: "Resources"
- sections:
- local: contributing
title: Contribute to LeRobot
- local: backwardcomp
title: Backward compatibility
title: "About"

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,82 @@
# Backward compatibility
## Hardware API redesign
PR [#777](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/pull/777) improves the LeRobot calibration but is **not backward-compatible**. Below is a overview of what changed and how you can continue to work with datasets created before this pull request.
### What changed?
| | Before PR #777 | After PR #777 |
| --------------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------- | --------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| **Joint range** | Degrees `-180...180°` | **Normalised range** Joints: `100...100` Gripper: `0...100` |
| **Zero position (SO100 / SO101)** | Arm fully extended horizontally | **In middle of the range for each joint** |
| **Boundary handling** | Software safeguards to detect ±180 ° wrap-arounds | No wrap-around logic needed due to mid-range zero |
---
### Impact on existing datasets
* Recorded trajectories created **before** PR #777 will replay incorrectly if loaded directly:
* Joint angles are offset and incorrectly normalized.
* Any models directly finetuned or trained on the old data will need their inputs and outputs converted.
### Using datasets made with the previous calibration system
We provide a migration example script for replaying an episode recorded with the previous calibration here: `examples/backward_compatibility/replay.py`.
Below we take you through the modifications that are done in the example script to make the previous calibration datasets work.
```diff
+ key = f"{name.removeprefix('main_')}.pos"
action[key] = action_array[i].item()
+ action["shoulder_lift.pos"] = -(action["shoulder_lift.pos"] - 90)
+ action["elbow_flex.pos"] -= 90
```
Let's break this down.
New codebase uses `.pos` suffix for the position observations and we have removed `main_` prefix:
```python
key = f"{name.removeprefix('main_')}.pos"
```
For `"shoulder_lift"` (id = 2), the 0 position is changed by -90 degrees and the direction is reversed compared to old calibration/code.
```python
action["shoulder_lift.pos"] = -(action["shoulder_lift.pos"] - 90)
```
For `"elbow_flex"` (id = 3), the 0 position is changed by -90 degrees compared to old calibration/code.
```python
action["elbow_flex.pos"] -= 90
```
To use degrees normalization we then set the `--robot.use_degrees` option to `true`.
```diff
python examples/backward_compatibility/replay.py \
--robot.type=so101_follower \
--robot.port=/dev/tty.usbmodem5A460814411 \
--robot.id=blue \
+ --robot.use_degrees=true \
--dataset.repo_id=my_dataset_id \
--dataset.episode=0
```
### Using policies trained with the previous calibration system
Policies output actions in the same format as the datasets (`torch.Tensors`). Therefore, the same transformations should be applied.
To find these transformations, we recommend to first try and and replay an episode of the dataset your policy was trained on using the section above.
Then, add these same transformations on your inference script (shown here in the `record.py` script):
```diff
action_values = predict_action(
observation_frame,
policy,
get_safe_torch_device(policy.config.device),
policy.config.use_amp,
task=single_task,
robot_type=robot.robot_type,
)
action = {key: action_values[i].item() for i, key in enumerate(robot.action_features)}
+ action["shoulder_lift.pos"] = -(action["shoulder_lift.pos"] - 90)
+ action["elbow_flex.pos"] -= 90
robot.send_action(action)
```
If you have questions or run into migration issues, feel free to ask them on [Discord](https://discord.gg/s3KuuzsPFb)

173
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@@ -0,0 +1,173 @@
# Cameras
LeRobot offers multiple options for video capture, including phone cameras, built-in laptop cameras, external webcams, and Intel RealSense cameras. To efficiently record frames from most cameras, you can use either the `OpenCVCamera` or `RealSenseCamera` class. For additional compatibility details on the `OpenCVCamera` class, refer to the [Video I/O with OpenCV Overview](https://docs.opencv.org/4.x/d0/da7/videoio_overview.html).
### Finding your camera
To instantiate a camera, you need a camera identifier. This identifier might change if you reboot your computer or re-plug your camera, a behavior mostly dependant on your operating system.
To find the camera indices of the cameras plugged into your system, run the following script:
```bash
python -m lerobot.find_cameras opencv # or realsense for Intel Realsense cameras
```
The output will look something like this if you have two cameras connected:
```
--- Detected Cameras ---
Camera #0:
Name: OpenCV Camera @ 0
Type: OpenCV
Id: 0
Backend api: AVFOUNDATION
Default stream profile:
Format: 16.0
Width: 1920
Height: 1080
Fps: 15.0
--------------------
(more cameras ...)
```
> [!WARNING]
> When using Intel RealSense cameras in `macOS`, you could get this [error](https://github.com/IntelRealSense/librealsense/issues/12307): `Error finding RealSense cameras: failed to set power state`, this can be solved by running the same command with `sudo` permissions. Note that using RealSense cameras in `macOS` is unstable.
## Use Cameras
Below are two examples, demonstrating how to work with the API.
- **Asynchronous frame capture** using an OpenCV-based camera
- **Color and depth capture** using an Intel RealSense camera
<hfoptions id="shell_restart">
<hfoption id="Open CV Camera">
```python
from lerobot.cameras.opencv.configuration_opencv import OpenCVCameraConfig
from lerobot.cameras.opencv.camera_opencv import OpenCVCamera
from lerobot.cameras.configs import ColorMode, Cv2Rotation
# Construct an `OpenCVCameraConfig` with your desired FPS, resolution, color mode, and rotation.
config = OpenCVCameraConfig(
index_or_path=0,
fps=15,
width=1920,
height=1080,
color_mode=ColorMode.RGB,
rotation=Cv2Rotation.NO_ROTATION
)
# Instantiate and connect an `OpenCVCamera`, performing a warm-up read (default).
camera = OpenCVCamera(config)
camera.connect()
# Read frames asynchronously in a loop via `async_read(timeout_ms)`
try:
for i in range(10):
frame = camera.async_read(timeout_ms=200)
print(f"Async frame {i} shape:", frame.shape)
finally:
camera.disconnect()
```
</hfoption>
<hfoption id="Intel Realsense Camera">
```python
from lerobot.cameras.realsense.configuration_realsense import RealSenseCameraConfig
from lerobot.cameras.realsense.camera_realsense import RealSenseCamera
from lerobot.cameras.configs import ColorMode, Cv2Rotation
# Create a `RealSenseCameraConfig` specifying your cameras serial number and enabling depth.
config = RealSenseCameraConfig(
serial_number_or_name="233522074606",
fps=15,
width=640,
height=480,
color_mode=ColorMode.RGB,
use_depth=True,
rotation=Cv2Rotation.NO_ROTATION
)
# Instantiate and connect a `RealSenseCamera` with warm-up read (default).
camera = RealSenseCamera(config)
camera.connect()
# Capture a color frame via `read()` and a depth map via `read_depth()`.
try:
color_frame = camera.read()
depth_map = camera.read_depth()
print("Color frame shape:", color_frame.shape)
print("Depth map shape:", depth_map.shape)
finally:
camera.disconnect()
```
</hfoption>
</hfoptions>
## Use your phone
<hfoptions id="use phone">
<hfoption id="Mac">
To use your iPhone as a camera on macOS, enable the Continuity Camera feature:
- Ensure your Mac is running macOS 13 or later, and your iPhone is on iOS 16 or later.
- Sign in both devices with the same Apple ID.
- Connect your devices with a USB cable or turn on Wi-Fi and Bluetooth for a wireless connection.
For more details, visit [Apple support](https://support.apple.com/en-gb/guide/mac-help/mchl77879b8a/mac).
Your iPhone should be detected automatically when running the camera setup script in the next section.
</hfoption>
<hfoption id="Linux">
If you want to use your phone as a camera on Linux, follow these steps to set up a virtual camera
1. *Install `v4l2loopback-dkms` and `v4l-utils`*. Those packages are required to create virtual camera devices (`v4l2loopback`) and verify their settings with the `v4l2-ctl` utility from `v4l-utils`. Install them using:
```python
sudo apt install v4l2loopback-dkms v4l-utils
```
2. *Install [DroidCam](https://droidcam.app) on your phone*. This app is available for both iOS and Android.
3. *Install [OBS Studio](https://obsproject.com)*. This software will help you manage the camera feed. Install it using [Flatpak](https://flatpak.org):
```python
flatpak install flathub com.obsproject.Studio
```
4. *Install the DroidCam OBS plugin*. This plugin integrates DroidCam with OBS Studio. Install it with:
```python
flatpak install flathub com.obsproject.Studio.Plugin.DroidCam
```
5. *Start OBS Studio*. Launch with:
```python
flatpak run com.obsproject.Studio
```
6. *Add your phone as a source*. Follow the instructions [here](https://droidcam.app/obs/usage). Be sure to set the resolution to `640x480`.
7. *Adjust resolution settings*. In OBS Studio, go to `File > Settings > Video`. Change the `Base(Canvas) Resolution` and the `Output(Scaled) Resolution` to `640x480` by manually typing it in.
8. *Start virtual camera*. In OBS Studio, follow the instructions [here](https://obsproject.com/kb/virtual-camera-guide).
9. *Verify the virtual camera setup*. Use `v4l2-ctl` to list the devices:
```python
v4l2-ctl --list-devices
```
You should see an entry like:
```
VirtualCam (platform:v4l2loopback-000):
/dev/video1
```
10. *Check the camera resolution*. Use `v4l2-ctl` to ensure that the virtual camera output resolution is `640x480`. Change `/dev/video1` to the port of your virtual camera from the output of `v4l2-ctl --list-devices`.
```python
v4l2-ctl -d /dev/video1 --get-fmt-video
```
You should see an entry like:
```
>>> Format Video Capture:
>>> Width/Height : 640/480
>>> Pixel Format : 'YUYV' (YUYV 4:2:2)
```
Troubleshooting: If the resolution is not correct you will have to delete the Virtual Camera port and try again as it cannot be changed.
If everything is set up correctly, you can proceed with the rest of the tutorial.
</hfoption>
</hfoptions>

1
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@@ -0,0 +1 @@
../../CONTRIBUTING.md

548
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@@ -0,0 +1,548 @@
# HIL-SERL Real Robot Training Workflow Guide
In this tutorial you will go through the full Human-in-the-Loop Sample-Efficient Reinforcement Learning (HIL-SERL) workflow using LeRobot. You will master training a policy with RL on a real robot in just a few hours.
HIL-SERL is a sample-efficient reinforcement learning algorithm that combines human demonstrations with online learning and human interventions. The approach starts from a small set of human demonstrations, uses them to train a reward classifier, and then employs an actor-learner architecture where humans can intervene during policy execution to guide exploration and correct unsafe behaviors. In this tutorial, you'll use a gamepad to provide interventions and control the robot during the learning process.
It combines three key ingredients:
1. **Offline demonstrations & reward classifier:** a handful of human-teleop episodes plus a vision-based success detector give the policy a shaped starting point.
2. **On-robot actor / learner loop with human interventions:** a distributed Soft Actor Critic (SAC) learner updates the policy while an actor explores on the physical robot; the human can jump in at any time to correct dangerous or unproductive behaviour.
3. **Safety & efficiency tools:** joint/end-effector (EE) bounds, crop region of interest (ROI) preprocessing and WandB monitoring keep the data useful and the hardware safe.
Together these elements let HIL-SERL reach near-perfect task success and faster cycle times than imitation-only baselines.
<p align="center">
<img src="https://huggingface.co/datasets/huggingface/documentation-images/resolve/main/lerobot/hilserl-main-figure.png" alt="HIL-SERL workflow" title="HIL-SERL workflow" width="100%"></img>
</p>
<p align="center"><i>HIL-SERL workflow, Luo et al. 2024</i></p>
This guide provides step-by-step instructions for training a robot policy using LeRobot's HilSerl implementation to train on a real robot.
## What do I need?
- A gamepad (recommended) or keyboard to control the robot
- A Nvidia GPU
- A real robot with a follower and leader arm (optional if you use the keyboard or the gamepad)
- A URDF file for the robot for the kinematics package (check `lerobot/common/model/kinematics.py`)
## What kind of tasks can I train?
One can use HIL-SERL to train on a variety of manipulation tasks. Some recommendations:
- Start with a simple task to understand how the system works.
- Push cube to a goal region
- Pick and lift cube with the gripper
- Avoid extremely long horizon tasks. Focus on tasks that can be completed in 5-10 seconds.
- Once you have a good idea of how the system works, you can try more complex tasks and longer horizons.
- Pick and place cube
- Bimanual tasks to pick objects with two arms
- Hand-over tasks to transfer objects from one arm to another
- Go crazy!
## Install LeRobot with HIL-SERL
To install LeRobot with HIL-SERL, you need to install the `hilserl` extra.
```bash
pip install -e ".[hilserl]"
```
## Real Robot Training Workflow
### Understanding Configuration
The training process begins with proper configuration for the HILSerl environment. The configuration class of interest is `HILSerlRobotEnvConfig` in `lerobot/envs/configs.py`. Which is defined as:
```python
class HILSerlRobotEnvConfig(EnvConfig):
robot: RobotConfig | None = None # Main robot agent (defined in `lerobot/robots`)
teleop: TeleoperatorConfig | None = None # Teleoperator agent, e.g., gamepad or leader arm, (defined in `lerobot/teleoperators`)
wrapper: EnvTransformConfig | None = None # Environment wrapper settings; check `lerobot/scripts/server/gym_manipulator.py`
fps: int = 10 # Control frequency
name: str = "real_robot" # Environment name
mode: str = None # "record", "replay", or None (for training)
repo_id: str | None = None # LeRobot dataset repository ID
dataset_root: str | None = None # Local dataset root (optional)
task: str = "" # Task identifier
num_episodes: int = 10 # Number of episodes for recording
episode: int = 0 # episode index for replay
device: str = "cuda" # Compute device
push_to_hub: bool = True # Whether to push the recorded datasets to Hub
pretrained_policy_name_or_path: str | None = None # For policy loading
reward_classifier_pretrained_path: str | None = None # For reward model
number_of_steps_after_success: int = 0 # For reward classifier, collect more positive examples after a success to train a classifier
```
### Finding Robot Workspace Bounds
Before collecting demonstrations, you need to determine the appropriate operational bounds for your robot.
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 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
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**
1. Run the script and move the robot through the space that solves the task
2. The script will record the minimum and maximum end-effector positions and the joint angles and prints them to the console, for example:
```
Max ee position [0.2417 0.2012 0.1027]
Min ee position [0.1663 -0.0823 0.0336]
Max joint positions [-20.0, -20.0, -20.0, -20.0, -20.0, -20.0]
Min joint positions [50.0, 50.0, 50.0, 50.0, 50.0, 50.0]
```
3. Use these values in the configuration of your teleoperation device (TeleoperatorConfig) under the `end_effector_bounds` field
**Example Configuration**
```json
"end_effector_bounds": {
"max": [0.24, 0.20, 0.10],
"min": [0.16, -0.08, 0.03]
}
```
### Collecting Demonstrations
With the bounds defined, you can safely collect demonstrations for training. Training RL with off-policy algorithm allows us to use offline datasets collected in order to improve the efficiency of the learning process.
**Setting Up Record Mode**
Create a configuration file for recording demonstrations (or edit an existing one like [env_config_so100.json](https://huggingface.co/datasets/aractingi/lerobot-example-config-files/blob/main/env_config_so100.json)):
1. Set `mode` to `"record"`
2. Specify a unique `repo_id` for your dataset (e.g., "username/task_name")
3. Set `num_episodes` to the number of demonstrations you want to collect
4. Set `crop_params_dict` to `null` initially (we'll determine crops later)
5. Configure `robot`, `cameras`, and other hardware settings
Example configuration section:
```json
"mode": "record",
"repo_id": "username/pick_lift_cube",
"dataset_root": null,
"task": "pick_and_lift",
"num_episodes": 15,
"episode": 0,
"push_to_hub": true
```
### Using a Teleoperation Device
Along with your robot, you will need a teleoperation device to control it in order to collect datasets of your task and perform interventions during the online training.
We support using a gamepad or a keyboard or the leader arm of the robot.
HIL-Serl learns actions in the end-effector space of the robot. Therefore, the teleoperation will control the end-effector's x,y,z displacements.
For that we need to define a version of the robot that takes actions in the end-effector space. Check the robot class `SO100FollowerEndEffector` and its configuration `SO100FollowerEndEffectorConfig` for the default parameters related to the end-effector space.
```python
class SO100FollowerEndEffectorConfig(SO100FollowerConfig):
"""Configuration for the SO100FollowerEndEffector robot."""
# Default bounds for the end-effector position (in meters)
end_effector_bounds: dict[str, list[float]] = field( # bounds for the end-effector in x,y,z direction
default_factory=lambda: {
"min": [-1.0, -1.0, -1.0], # min x, y, z
"max": [1.0, 1.0, 1.0], # max x, y, z
}
)
max_gripper_pos: float = 50 # maximum gripper position that the gripper will be open at
end_effector_step_sizes: dict[str, float] = field( # maximum step size for the end-effector in x,y,z direction
default_factory=lambda: {
"x": 0.02,
"y": 0.02,
"z": 0.02,
}
)
```
The `Teleoperator` defines the teleoperation device. You can check the list of available teleoperators in `lerobot/teleoperators`.
**Setting up the Gamepad**
The gamepad provides a very convenient way to control the robot and the episode state.
To setup the gamepad, you need to set the `control_mode` to `"gamepad"` and define the `teleop` section in the configuration file.
```json
"teleop": {
"type": "gamepad",
"use_gripper": true
},
```
<p align="center">
<img src="https://huggingface.co/datasets/huggingface/documentation-images/resolve/main/lerobot/gamepad_guide.jpg?raw=true" alt="Figure shows the control mappings on a Logitech gamepad." title="Gamepad Control Mapping" width="100%"></img>
</p>
<p align="center"><i>Gamepad button mapping for robot control and episode management</i></p>
**Setting up the SO101 leader**
The SO101 leader arm has reduced gears that allows it to move and track the follower arm during exploration. Therefore, taking over is much smoother than the gearless SO100.
To setup the SO101 leader, you need to set the `control_mode` to `"leader"` and define the `teleop` section in the configuration file.
```json
"teleop": {
"type": "so101_leader",
"port": "/dev/tty.usbmodem585A0077921", # check your port number
"use_degrees": true
},
```
In order to annotate the success/failure of the episode, **you will need** to use a keyboard to press `s` for success, `esc` for failure.
During the online training, press `space` to take over the policy and `space` again to give the control back to the policy.
<details>
<summary><strong>Video: SO101 leader teleoperation</strong></summary>
<div class="video-container">
<video controls width="600">
<source src="https://huggingface.co/datasets/huggingface/documentation-images/resolve/main/lerobot/so101_leader_tutorial.mp4" type="video/mp4" />
</video>
</div>
<p align="center"><i>SO101 leader teleoperation example, the leader tracks the follower, press `space` to intervene</i></p>
</details>
**Recording Demonstrations**
Start the recording process, an example of the config file can be found [here](https://huggingface.co/datasets/aractingi/lerobot-example-config-files/blob/main/env_config_so100.json):
```bash
python -m lerobot.scripts.rl.gym_manipulator --config_path src/lerobot/configs/env_config_so100.json
```
During recording:
1. The robot will reset to the initial position defined in the configuration file `fixed_reset_joint_positions`
2. Complete the task successfully
3. The episode ends with a reward of 1 when you press the "success" button
4. If the time limit is reached, or the fail button is pressed, the episode ends with a reward of 0
5. You can rerecord an episode by pressing the "rerecord" button
6. The process automatically continues to the next episode
7. After recording all episodes, the dataset is pushed to the Hugging Face Hub (optional) and saved locally
### Processing the Dataset
After collecting demonstrations, process them to determine optimal camera crops.
Reinforcement learning is sensitive to background distractions, so it is important to crop the images to the relevant workspace area.
Visual RL algorithms learn directly from pixel inputs, making them vulnerable to irrelevant visual information. Background elements like changing lighting, shadows, people moving, or objects outside the workspace can confuse the learning process. Good ROI selection should:
- Include only the essential workspace where the task happens
- Capture the robot's end-effector and all objects involved in the task
- Exclude unnecessary background elements and distractions
Note: If you already know the crop parameters, you can skip this step and just set the `crop_params_dict` in the configuration file during recording.
**Determining Crop Parameters**
Use the `crop_dataset_roi.py` script to interactively select regions of interest in your camera images:
```bash
python -m lerobot.scripts.rl.crop_dataset_roi --repo-id username/pick_lift_cube
```
1. For each camera view, the script will display the first frame
2. Draw a rectangle around the relevant workspace area
3. Press 'c' to confirm the selection
4. Repeat for all camera views
5. The script outputs cropping parameters and creates a new cropped dataset
Example output:
```
Selected Rectangular Regions of Interest (top, left, height, width):
observation.images.side: [180, 207, 180, 200]
observation.images.front: [180, 250, 120, 150]
```
<p align="center">
<img src="https://huggingface.co/datasets/huggingface/documentation-images/resolve/main/lerobot/crop_dataset.gif" width="600"/>
</p>
<p align="center"><i>Interactive cropping tool for selecting regions of interest</i></p>
**Updating Configuration**
Add these crop parameters to your training configuration:
```json
"crop_params_dict": {
"observation.images.side": [180, 207, 180, 200],
"observation.images.front": [180, 250, 120, 150]
},
"resize_size": [128, 128]
```
**Recommended image resolution**
Most vision-based policies have been validated on square inputs of either **128×128** (default) or **64×64** pixels. We therefore advise setting the resize_size parameter to [128, 128] or [64, 64] if you need to save GPU memory and bandwidth. Other resolutions are possible but have not been extensively tested.
### Training a Reward Classifier
The reward classifier plays an important role in the HIL-SERL workflow by automating reward assignment and automatically detecting episode success. Instead of manually defining reward functions or relying on human feedback for every timestep, the reward classifier learns to predict success/failure from visual observations. This enables the RL algorithm to learn efficiently by providing consistent and automated reward signals based on the robot's camera inputs.
This guide explains how to train a reward classifier for human-in-the-loop reinforcement learning implementation of LeRobot. Reward classifiers learn to predict the reward value given a state which can be used in an RL setup to train a policy.
**Note**: Training a reward classifier is optional. You can start the first round of RL experiments by annotating the success manually with your gamepad or keyboard device.
The reward classifier implementation in `modeling_classifier.py` uses a pretrained vision model to process the images. It can output either a single value for binary rewards to predict success/fail cases or multiple values for multi-class settings.
**Collecting a Dataset for the reward classifier**
Before training, you need to collect a dataset with labeled examples. The `record_dataset` function in `gym_manipulator.py` enables the process of collecting a dataset of observations, actions, and rewards.
To collect a dataset, you need to modify some parameters in the environment configuration based on HILSerlRobotEnvConfig.
```bash
python -m lerobot.scripts.rl.gym_manipulator --config_path src/lerobot/configs/reward_classifier_train_config.json
```
**Key Parameters for Data Collection**
- **mode**: set it to `"record"` to collect a dataset
- **repo_id**: `"hf_username/dataset_name"`, name of the dataset and repo on the hub
- **num_episodes**: Number of episodes to record
- **number_of_steps_after_success**: Number of additional frames to record after a success (reward=1) is detected
- **fps**: Number of frames per second to record
- **push_to_hub**: Whether to push the dataset to the hub
The `number_of_steps_after_success` parameter is crucial as it allows you to collect more positive examples. When a success is detected, the system will continue recording for the specified number of steps while maintaining the reward=1 label. Otherwise, there won't be enough states in the dataset labeled to 1 to train a good classifier.
Example configuration section for data collection:
```json
{
"mode": "record",
"repo_id": "hf_username/dataset_name",
"dataset_root": "data/your_dataset",
"num_episodes": 20,
"push_to_hub": true,
"fps": 10,
"number_of_steps_after_success": 15
}
```
**Reward Classifier Configuration**
The reward classifier is configured using `configuration_classifier.py`. Here are the key parameters:
- **model_name**: Base model architecture (e.g., we mainly use `"helper2424/resnet10"`)
- **model_type**: `"cnn"` or `"transformer"`
- **num_cameras**: Number of camera inputs
- **num_classes**: Number of output classes (typically 2 for binary success/failure)
- **hidden_dim**: Size of hidden representation
- **dropout_rate**: Regularization parameter
- **learning_rate**: Learning rate for optimizer
Example configuration for training the [reward classifier](https://huggingface.co/datasets/aractingi/lerobot-example-config-files/blob/main/reward_classifier_train_config.json):
```json
{
"policy": {
"type": "reward_classifier",
"model_name": "helper2424/resnet10",
"model_type": "cnn",
"num_cameras": 2,
"num_classes": 2,
"hidden_dim": 256,
"dropout_rate": 0.1,
"learning_rate": 1e-4,
"device": "cuda",
"use_amp": true,
"input_features": {
"observation.images.front": {
"type": "VISUAL",
"shape": [3, 128, 128]
},
"observation.images.side": {
"type": "VISUAL",
"shape": [3, 128, 128]
}
}
}
}
```
**Training the Classifier**
To train the classifier, use the `train.py` script with your configuration:
```bash
python -m lerobot.scripts.train --config_path path/to/reward_classifier_train_config.json
```
**Deploying and Testing the Model**
To use your trained reward classifier, configure the `HILSerlRobotEnvConfig` to use your model:
```python
env_config = HILSerlRobotEnvConfig(
reward_classifier_pretrained_path="path_to_your_pretrained_trained_model",
# Other environment parameters
)
```
or set the argument in the json config file.
```json
{
"reward_classifier_pretrained_path": "path_to_your_pretrained_model"
}
```
Run `gym_manipulator.py` to test the model.
```bash
python -m lerobot.scripts.rl.gym_manipulator --config_path path/to/env_config.json
```
The reward classifier will automatically provide rewards based on the visual input from the robot's cameras.
**Example Workflow for training the reward classifier**
1. **Create the configuration files**:
Create the necessary json configuration files for the reward classifier and the environment. Check the examples [here](https://huggingface.co/datasets/aractingi/lerobot-example-config-files/tree/main).
2. **Collect a dataset**:
```bash
python -m lerobot.scripts.rl.gym_manipulator --config_path src/lerobot/configs/env_config.json
```
3. **Train the classifier**:
```bash
python -m lerobot.scripts.train --config_path src/lerobot/configs/reward_classifier_train_config.json
```
4. **Test the classifier**:
```bash
python -m lerobot.scripts.rl.gym_manipulator --config_path src/lerobot/configs/env_config.json
```
### Training with Actor-Learner
The LeRobot system uses a distributed actor-learner architecture for training. This architecture decouples robot interactions from the learning process, allowing them to run concurrently without blocking each other. The actor server handles robot observations and actions, sending interaction data to the learner server. The learner server performs gradient descent and periodically updates the actor's policy weights. You will need to start two processes: a learner and an actor.
**Configuration Setup**
Create a training configuration file (example available [here](https://huggingface.co/datasets/aractingi/lerobot-example-config-files/blob/main/train_config_hilserl_so100.json)). The training config is based on the main `TrainRLServerPipelineConfig` class in `lerobot/configs/train.py`.
1. Configure the policy settings (`type="sac"`, `device`, etc.)
2. Set `dataset` to your cropped dataset
3. Configure environment settings with crop parameters
4. Check the other parameters related to SAC in [configuration_sac.py](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/19bb621a7d0a31c20cd3cc08b1dbab68d3031454/lerobot/policies/sac/configuration_sac.py#L79).
5. Verify that the `policy` config is correct with the right `input_features` and `output_features` for your task.
**Starting the Learner**
First, start the learner server process:
```bash
python -m lerobot.scripts.rl.learner --config_path src/lerobot/configs/train_config_hilserl_so100.json
```
The learner:
- Initializes the policy network
- Prepares replay buffers
- Opens a `gRPC` server to communicate with actors
- Processes transitions and updates the policy
**Starting the Actor**
In a separate terminal, start the actor process with the same configuration:
```bash
python -m lerobot.scripts.rl.actor --config_path src/lerobot/configs/train_config_hilserl_so100.json
```
The actor:
- Connects to the learner via `gRPC`
- Initializes the environment
- Execute rollouts of the policy to collect experience
- Sends transitions to the learner
- Receives updated policy parameters
**Training Flow**
The training proceeds automatically:
1. The actor executes the policy in the environment
2. Transitions are collected and sent to the learner
3. The learner updates the policy based on these transitions
4. Updated policy parameters are sent back to the actor
5. The process continues until the specified step limit is reached
**Human in the Loop**
- The key to learning efficiently is to have human interventions to provide corrective feedback and completing the task to aide the policy learning and exploration.
- To perform human interventions, you can press the upper right trigger button on the gamepad (or the `space` key on the keyboard). This will pause the policy actions and allow you to take over.
- A successful experiment is one where the human has to intervene at the start but then reduces the amount of interventions as the policy improves. You can monitor the intervention rate in the `wandb` dashboard.
<p align="center">
<img src="https://huggingface.co/datasets/huggingface/documentation-images/resolve/main/lerobot/hil_effect.png?raw=true" alt="Figure shows the control mappings on a Logitech gamepad." title="Gamepad Control Mapping" width="100%"></img>
</p>
<p align="center"><i>Example showing how human interventions help guide policy learning over time</i></p>
- The figure shows the plot of the episodic reward over interaction step. The figure shows the effect of human interventions on the policy learning.
- The orange curve is an experiment without any human interventions. While the pink and blue curves are experiments with human interventions.
- We can observe that the number of steps where the policy starts achieving the maximum reward is cut by a quarter when human interventions are present.
**Monitoring and Debugging**
If you have `wandb.enable` set to `true` in your configuration, you can monitor training progress in real-time through the [Weights & Biases](https://wandb.ai/site/) dashboard.
### Guide to Human Interventions
The learning process is very sensitive to the intervention strategy. It will takes a few runs to understand how to intervene effectively. Some tips and hints:
- Allow the policy to explore for a few episodes at the start of training.
- Avoid intervening for long periods of time. Try to intervene in situation to correct the robot's behaviour when it goes off track.
- Once the policy starts achieving the task, even if its not perfect, you can limit your interventions to simple quick actions like a simple grasping commands.
The ideal behaviour is that your intervention rate should drop gradually during training as shown in the figure below.
<p align="center">
<img src="https://huggingface.co/datasets/huggingface/documentation-images/resolve/main/lerobot/intervention_rate_tutorial_rl.png?raw=true" alt="Intervention rate" title="Intervention rate during training" width="100%"></img>
</p>
<p align="center"><i>Plot of the intervention rate during a training run on a pick and lift cube task</i></p>
### Key hyperparameters to tune
Some configuration values have a disproportionate impact on training stability and speed:
- **`temperature_init`** (`policy.temperature_init`) initial entropy temperature in SAC. Higher values encourage more exploration; lower values make the policy more deterministic early on. A good starting point is `1e-2`. We observed that setting it too high can make human interventions ineffective and slow down learning.
- **`policy_parameters_push_frequency`** (`policy.actor_learner_config.policy_parameters_push_frequency`) interval in *seconds* between two weight pushes from the learner to the actor. The default is `4 s`. Decrease to **1-2 s** to provide fresher weights (at the cost of more network traffic); increase only if your connection is slow, as this will reduce sample efficiency.
- **`storage_device`** (`policy.storage_device`) device on which the learner keeps the policy parameters. If you have spare GPU memory, set this to `"cuda"` (instead of the default `"cpu"`). Keeping the weights on-GPU removes CPU→GPU transfer overhead and can significantly increase the number of learner updates per second.
Congrats 🎉, you have finished this tutorial!
> [!TIP]
> If you have any questions or need help, please reach out on [Discord](https://discord.com/invite/s3KuuzsPFb).
Paper citation:
```
@article{luo2024precise,
title={Precise and Dexterous Robotic Manipulation via Human-in-the-Loop Reinforcement Learning},
author={Luo, Jianlan and Xu, Charles and Wu, Jeffrey and Levine, Sergey},
journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2410.21845},
year={2024}
}
```

120
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@@ -0,0 +1,120 @@
# Train RL in Simulation
This guide explains how to use the `gym_hil` simulation environments as an alternative to real robots when working with the LeRobot framework for Human-In-the-Loop (HIL) reinforcement learning.
`gym_hil` is a package that provides Gymnasium-compatible simulation environments specifically designed for Human-In-the-Loop reinforcement learning. These environments allow you to:
- Train policies in simulation to test the RL stack before training on real robots
- Collect demonstrations in sim using external devices like gamepads or keyboards
- Perform human interventions during policy learning
Currently, the main environment is a Franka Panda robot simulation based on MuJoCo, with tasks like picking up a cube.
## Installation
First, install the `gym_hil` package within the LeRobot environment:
```bash
pip install -e ".[hilserl]"
```
## What do I need?
- A gamepad or keyboard to control the robot
- A Nvidia GPU
## Configuration
To use `gym_hil` with LeRobot, you need to create a configuration file. An example is provided [here](https://huggingface.co/datasets/aractingi/lerobot-example-config-files/blob/main/gym_hil_env.json). Key configuration sections include:
### Environment Type and Task
```json
{
"type": "hil",
"name": "franka_sim",
"task": "PandaPickCubeGamepad-v0",
"device": "cuda"
}
```
Available tasks:
- `PandaPickCubeBase-v0`: Basic environment
- `PandaPickCubeGamepad-v0`: With gamepad control
- `PandaPickCubeKeyboard-v0`: With keyboard control
### Gym Wrappers Configuration
```json
"wrapper": {
"gripper_penalty": -0.02,
"control_time_s": 15.0,
"use_gripper": true,
"fixed_reset_joint_positions": [0.0, 0.195, 0.0, -2.43, 0.0, 2.62, 0.785],
"end_effector_step_sizes": {
"x": 0.025,
"y": 0.025,
"z": 0.025
},
"control_mode": "gamepad"
}
```
Important parameters:
- `gripper_penalty`: Penalty for excessive gripper movement
- `use_gripper`: Whether to enable gripper control
- `end_effector_step_sizes`: Size of the steps in the x,y,z axes of the end-effector
- `control_mode`: Set to `"gamepad"` to use a gamepad controller
## Running with HIL RL of LeRobot
### Basic Usage
To run the environment, set mode to null:
```python
python -m lerobot.scripts.rl.gym_manipulator --config_path path/to/gym_hil_env.json
```
### Recording a Dataset
To collect a dataset, set the mode to `record` whilst defining the repo_id and number of episodes to record:
```python
python -m lerobot.scripts.rl.gym_manipulator --config_path path/to/gym_hil_env.json
```
### Training a Policy
To train a policy, checkout the configuration example available [here](https://huggingface.co/datasets/aractingi/lerobot-example-config-files/blob/main/train_gym_hil_env.json) and run the actor and learner servers:
```python
python -m lerobot.scripts.rl.actor --config_path path/to/train_gym_hil_env.json
```
In a different terminal, run the learner server:
```python
python -m lerobot.scripts.rl.learner --config_path path/to/train_gym_hil_env.json
```
The simulation environment provides a safe and repeatable way to develop and test your Human-In-the-Loop reinforcement learning components before deploying to real robots.
Congrats 🎉, you have finished this tutorial!
> [!TIP]
> If you have any questions or need help, please reach out on [Discord](https://discord.com/invite/s3KuuzsPFb).
Paper citation:
```
@article{luo2024precise,
title={Precise and Dexterous Robotic Manipulation via Human-in-the-Loop Reinforcement Learning},
author={Luo, Jianlan and Xu, Charles and Wu, Jeffrey and Levine, Sergey},
journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2410.21845},
year={2024}
}
```

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# Imitation Learning on Real-World Robots
This tutorial will explain how to train a neural network to control a real robot autonomously.
**You'll learn:**
1. How to record and visualize your dataset.
2. How to train a policy using your data and prepare it for evaluation.
3. How to evaluate your policy and visualize the results.
By following these steps, you'll be able to replicate tasks, such as picking up a Lego block and placing it in a bin with a high success rate, as shown in the video below.
<details>
<summary><strong>Video: pickup lego block task</strong></summary>
<div class="video-container">
<video controls width="600">
<source src="https://huggingface.co/datasets/huggingface/documentation-images/resolve/main/lerobot/lerobot_task.mp4" type="video/mp4" />
</video>
</div>
</details>
This tutorial isnt tied to a specific robot: we walk you through the commands and API snippets you can adapt for any supported platform.
During data collection, youll use a “teloperation” device, such as a leader arm or keyboard to teleoperate the robot and record its motion trajectories.
Once youve gathered enough trajectories, youll train a neural network to imitate these trajectories and deploy the trained model so your robot can perform the task autonomously.
If you run into any issues at any point, jump into our [Discord community](https://discord.com/invite/s3KuuzsPFb) for support.
## Set up and Calibrate
If you haven't yet set up and calibrated your robot and teleop device, please do so by following the robot-specific tutorial.
## Teleoperate
In this example, well demonstrate how to teleoperate the SO101 robot. For each command, we also provide a corresponding API example.
Note that the `id` associated with a robot is used to store the calibration file. It's important to use the same `id` when teleoperating, recording, and evaluating when using the same setup.
<hfoptions id="teleoperate_so101">
<hfoption id="Command">
```bash
python -m lerobot.teleoperate \
--robot.type=so101_follower \
--robot.port=/dev/tty.usbmodem58760431541 \
--robot.id=my_awesome_follower_arm \
--teleop.type=so101_leader \
--teleop.port=/dev/tty.usbmodem58760431551 \
--teleop.id=my_awesome_leader_arm
```
</hfoption>
<hfoption id="API example">
```python
from lerobot.teleoperators.so101_leader import SO101LeaderConfig, SO101Leader
from lerobot.robots.so101_follower import SO101FollowerConfig, SO101Follower
robot_config = SO101FollowerConfig(
port="/dev/tty.usbmodem58760431541",
id="my_red_robot_arm",
)
teleop_config = SO101LeaderConfig(
port="/dev/tty.usbmodem58760431551",
id="my_blue_leader_arm",
)
robot = SO101Follower(robot_config)
teleop_device = SO101Leader(teleop_config)
robot.connect()
teleop_device.connect()
while True:
action = teleop_device.get_action()
robot.send_action(action)
```
</hfoption>
</hfoptions>
The teleoperate command will automatically:
1. Identify any missing calibrations and initiate the calibration procedure.
2. Connect the robot and teleop device and start teleoperation.
## Cameras
To add cameras to your setup, follow this [Guide](./cameras#setup-cameras).
## Teleoperate with cameras
With `rerun`, you can teleoperate again while simultaneously visualizing the camera feeds and joint positions. In this example, were using the Koch arm.
<hfoptions id="teleoperate_koch_camera">
<hfoption id="Command">
```bash
python -m lerobot.teleoperate \
--robot.type=koch_follower \
--robot.port=/dev/tty.usbmodem58760431541 \
--robot.id=my_awesome_follower_arm \
--robot.cameras="{ front: {type: opencv, index_or_path: 0, width: 1920, height: 1080, fps: 30}}" \
--teleop.type=koch_leader \
--teleop.port=/dev/tty.usbmodem58760431551 \
--teleop.id=my_awesome_leader_arm \
--display_data=true
```
</hfoption>
<hfoption id="API example">
```python
from lerobot.cameras.opencv.configuration_opencv import OpenCVCameraConfig
from lerobot.teleoperators.koch_leader import KochLeaderConfig, KochLeader
from lerobot.robots.koch_follower import KochFollowerConfig, KochFollower
camera_config = {
"front": OpenCVCameraConfig(index_or_path=0, width=1920, height=1080, fps=30)
}
robot_config = KochFollowerConfig(
port="/dev/tty.usbmodem585A0076841",
id="my_red_robot_arm",
cameras=camera_config
)
teleop_config = KochLeaderConfig(
port="/dev/tty.usbmodem58760431551",
id="my_blue_leader_arm",
)
robot = KochFollower(robot_config)
teleop_device = KochLeader(teleop_config)
robot.connect()
teleop_device.connect()
while True:
observation = robot.get_observation()
action = teleop_device.get_action()
robot.send_action(action)
```
</hfoption>
</hfoptions>
## Record a dataset
Once you're familiar with teleoperation, you can record your first dataset.
We use the Hugging Face hub features for uploading your dataset. If you haven't previously used the Hub, make sure you can login via the cli using a write-access token, this token can be generated from the [Hugging Face settings](https://huggingface.co/settings/tokens).
Add your token to the CLI by running this command:
```bash
huggingface-cli login --token ${HUGGINGFACE_TOKEN} --add-to-git-credential
```
Then store your Hugging Face repository name in a variable:
```bash
HF_USER=$(huggingface-cli whoami | head -n 1)
echo $HF_USER
```
Now you can record a dataset. To record 5 episodes and upload your dataset to the hub, adapt the code below for your robot and execute the command or API example.
<hfoptions id="record">
<hfoption id="Command">
```bash
python -m lerobot.record \
--robot.type=so101_follower \
--robot.port=/dev/tty.usbmodem585A0076841 \
--robot.id=my_awesome_follower_arm \
--robot.cameras="{ front: {type: opencv, index_or_path: 0, width: 1920, height: 1080, fps: 30}}" \
--teleop.type=so101_leader \
--teleop.port=/dev/tty.usbmodem58760431551 \
--teleop.id=my_awesome_leader_arm \
--display_data=true \
--dataset.repo_id=${HF_USER}/record-test \
--dataset.num_episodes=5 \
--dataset.single_task="Grab the black cube"
```
</hfoption>
<hfoption id="API example">
```python
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.robots.so100_follower import SO100Follower, SO100FollowerConfig
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.record import record_loop
NUM_EPISODES = 5
FPS = 30
EPISODE_TIME_SEC = 60
RESET_TIME_SEC = 10
TASK_DESCRIPTION = "My task description"
# Create the robot and teleoperator configurations
camera_config = {"front": OpenCVCameraConfig(index_or_path=0, width=640, height=480, fps=FPS)}
robot_config = SO100FollowerConfig(
port="/dev/tty.usbmodem58760434471", id="my_awesome_follower_arm", cameras=camera_config
)
teleop_config = SO100LeaderConfig(port="/dev/tty.usbmodem585A0077581", id="my_awesome_leader_arm")
# Initialize the robot and teleoperator
robot = SO100Follower(robot_config)
teleop = SO100Leader(teleop_config)
# Configure the dataset features
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
dataset = LeRobotDataset.create(
repo_id="<hf_username>/<dataset_repo_id>",
fps=FPS,
features=dataset_features,
robot_type=robot.name,
use_videos=True,
image_writer_threads=4,
)
# Initialize the keyboard listener and rerun visualization
_, events = init_keyboard_listener()
_init_rerun(session_name="recording")
# Connect the robot and teleoperator
robot.connect()
teleop.connect()
episode_idx = 0
while episode_idx < NUM_EPISODES and not events["stop_recording"]:
log_say(f"Recording episode {episode_idx + 1} of {NUM_EPISODES}")
record_loop(
robot=robot,
events=events,
fps=FPS,
teleop=teleop,
dataset=dataset,
control_time_s=EPISODE_TIME_SEC,
single_task=TASK_DESCRIPTION,
display_data=True,
)
# Reset the environment if not stopping or re-recording
if not events["stop_recording"] and (episode_idx < NUM_EPISODES - 1 or events["rerecord_episode"]):
log_say("Reset the environment")
record_loop(
robot=robot,
events=events,
fps=FPS,
teleop=teleop,
control_time_s=RESET_TIME_SEC,
single_task=TASK_DESCRIPTION,
display_data=True,
)
if events["rerecord_episode"]:
log_say("Re-recording episode")
events["rerecord_episode"] = False
events["exit_early"] = False
dataset.clear_episode_buffer()
continue
dataset.save_episode()
episode_idx += 1
# Clean up
log_say("Stop recording")
robot.disconnect()
teleop.disconnect()
dataset.push_to_hub()
```
</hfoption>
</hfoptions>
#### Dataset upload
Locally, your dataset is stored in this folder: `~/.cache/huggingface/lerobot/{repo-id}`. At the end of data recording, your dataset will be uploaded on your Hugging Face page (e.g. https://huggingface.co/datasets/cadene/so101_test) that you can obtain by running:
```bash
echo https://huggingface.co/datasets/${HF_USER}/so101_test
```
Your dataset will be automatically tagged with `LeRobot` for the community to find it easily, and you can also add custom tags (in this case `tutorial` for example).
You can look for other LeRobot datasets on the hub by searching for `LeRobot` [tags](https://huggingface.co/datasets?other=LeRobot).
#### Record function
The `record` function provides a suite of tools for capturing and managing data during robot operation:
##### 1. Data Storage
- Data is stored using the `LeRobotDataset` format and is stored on disk during recording.
- By default, the dataset is pushed to your Hugging Face page after recording.
- To disable uploading, use `--dataset.push_to_hub=False`.
##### 2. Checkpointing and Resuming
- Checkpoints are automatically created during recording.
- If an issue occurs, you can resume by re-running the same command with `--resume=true`.
- To start recording from scratch, **manually delete** the dataset directory.
##### 3. Recording Parameters
Set the flow of data recording using command-line arguments:
- `--dataset.episode_time_s=60`
Duration of each data recording episode (default: **60 seconds**).
- `--dataset.reset_time_s=60`
Duration for resetting the environment after each episode (default: **60 seconds**).
- `--dataset.num_episodes=50`
Total number of episodes to record (default: **50**).
##### 4. Keyboard Controls During Recording
Control the data recording flow using keyboard shortcuts:
- Press **Right Arrow (`→`)**: Early stop the current episode or reset time and move to the next.
- Press **Left Arrow (`←`)**: Cancel the current episode and re-record it.
- Press **Escape (`ESC`)**: Immediately stop the session, encode videos, and upload the dataset.
#### Tips for gathering data
Once you're comfortable with data recording, you can create a larger dataset for training. A good starting task is grasping an object at different locations and placing it in a bin. We suggest recording at least 50 episodes, with 10 episodes per location. Keep the cameras fixed and maintain consistent grasping behavior throughout the recordings. Also make sure the object you are manipulating is visible on the camera's. A good rule of thumb is you should be able to do the task yourself by only looking at the camera images.
In the following sections, youll train your neural network. After achieving reliable grasping performance, you can start introducing more variations during data collection, such as additional grasp locations, different grasping techniques, and altering camera positions.
Avoid adding too much variation too quickly, as it may hinder your results.
If you want to dive deeper into this important topic, you can check out the [blog post](https://huggingface.co/blog/lerobot-datasets#what-makes-a-good-dataset) we wrote on what makes a good dataset.
#### Troubleshooting:
- On Linux, if the left and right arrow keys and escape key don't have any effect during data recording, make sure you've set the `$DISPLAY` environment variable. See [pynput limitations](https://pynput.readthedocs.io/en/latest/limitations.html#linux).
## Visualize a dataset
If you uploaded your dataset to the hub with `--control.push_to_hub=true`, you can [visualize your dataset online](https://huggingface.co/spaces/lerobot/visualize_dataset) by copy pasting your repo id given by:
```bash
echo ${HF_USER}/so101_test
```
## Replay an episode
A useful feature is the `replay` function, which allows you to replay any episode that you've recorded or episodes from any dataset out there. This function helps you test the repeatability of your robot's actions and assess transferability across robots of the same model.
You can replay the first episode on your robot with either the command below or with the API example:
<hfoptions id="replay">
<hfoption id="Command">
```bash
python -m lerobot.replay \
--robot.type=so101_follower \
--robot.port=/dev/tty.usbmodem58760431541 \
--robot.id=my_awesome_follower_arm \
--dataset.repo_id=${HF_USER}/record-test \
--dataset.episode=0 # choose the episode you want to replay
```
</hfoption>
<hfoption id="API example">
```python
import time
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.config_so100_follower import SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.so100_follower import SO100Follower
from lerobot.utils.robot_utils import busy_wait
from lerobot.utils.utils import log_say
episode_idx = 0
robot_config = SO100FollowerConfig(port="/dev/tty.usbmodem58760434471", id="my_awesome_follower_arm")
robot = SO100Follower(robot_config)
robot.connect()
dataset = LeRobotDataset("<hf_username>/<dataset_repo_id>", episodes=[episode_idx])
actions = dataset.hf_dataset.select_columns("action")
log_say(f"Replaying episode {episode_idx}")
for idx in range(dataset.num_frames):
t0 = time.perf_counter()
action = {
name: float(actions[idx]["action"][i]) for i, name in enumerate(dataset.features["action"]["names"])
}
robot.send_action(action)
busy_wait(1.0 / dataset.fps - (time.perf_counter() - t0))
robot.disconnect()
```
</hfoption>
</hfoptions>
Your robot should replicate movements similar to those you recorded. For example, check out [this video](https://x.com/RemiCadene/status/1793654950905680090) where we use `replay` on a Aloha robot from [Trossen Robotics](https://www.trossenrobotics.com).
## Train a policy
To train a policy to control your robot, use the [`python -m lerobot.scripts.train`](../src/lerobot/scripts/train.py) script. A few arguments are required. Here is an example command:
```bash
python -m lerobot.scripts.train \
--dataset.repo_id=${HF_USER}/so101_test \
--policy.type=act \
--output_dir=outputs/train/act_so101_test \
--job_name=act_so101_test \
--policy.device=cuda \
--wandb.enable=true \
--policy.repo_id=${HF_USER}/my_policy
```
Let's explain the command:
1. We provided the dataset as argument with `--dataset.repo_id=${HF_USER}/so101_test`.
2. We provided the policy with `policy.type=act`. This loads configurations from [`configuration_act.py`](../src/lerobot/policies/act/configuration_act.py). Importantly, this policy will automatically adapt to the number of motor states, motor actions and cameras of your robot (e.g. `laptop` and `phone`) which have been saved in your dataset.
4. We provided `policy.device=cuda` since we are training on a Nvidia GPU, but you could use `policy.device=mps` to train on Apple silicon.
5. We provided `wandb.enable=true` to use [Weights and Biases](https://docs.wandb.ai/quickstart) for visualizing training plots. This is optional but if you use it, make sure you are logged in by running `wandb login`.
Training should take several hours. You will find checkpoints in `outputs/train/act_so101_test/checkpoints`.
To resume training from a checkpoint, below is an example command to resume from `last` checkpoint of the `act_so101_test` policy:
```bash
python -m lerobot.scripts.train \
--config_path=outputs/train/act_so101_test/checkpoints/last/pretrained_model/train_config.json \
--resume=true
```
If you do not want to push your model to the hub after training use `--policy.push_to_hub=false`.
Additionally you can provide extra `tags` or specify a `license` for your model or make the model repo `private` by adding this: `--policy.private=true --policy.tags=\[ppo,rl\] --policy.license=mit`
#### Train using Collab
If your local computer doesn't have a powerful GPU you could utilize Google Collab to train your model by following the [ACT training notebook](./notebooks#training-act).
#### Upload policy checkpoints
Once training is done, upload the latest checkpoint with:
```bash
huggingface-cli upload ${HF_USER}/act_so101_test \
outputs/train/act_so101_test/checkpoints/last/pretrained_model
```
You can also upload intermediate checkpoints with:
```bash
CKPT=010000
huggingface-cli upload ${HF_USER}/act_so101_test${CKPT} \
outputs/train/act_so101_test/checkpoints/${CKPT}/pretrained_model
```
## Run inference and evaluate your policy
You can use the `record` script from [`lerobot/record.py`](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/lerobot/record.py) with a policy checkpoint as input, to run inference and evaluate your policy. For instance, run this command or API example to run inference and record 10 evaluation episodes:
<hfoptions id="eval">
<hfoption id="Command">
```bash
python -m lerobot.record \
--robot.type=so100_follower \
--robot.port=/dev/ttyACM1 \
--robot.cameras="{ up: {type: opencv, index_or_path: /dev/video10, width: 640, height: 480, fps: 30}, side: {type: intelrealsense, serial_number_or_name: 233522074606, width: 640, height: 480, fps: 30}}" \
--robot.id=my_awesome_follower_arm \
--display_data=false \
--dataset.repo_id=${HF_USER}/eval_so100 \
--dataset.single_task="Put lego brick into the transparent box" \
# <- Teleop optional if you want to teleoperate in between episodes \
# --teleop.type=so100_leader \
# --teleop.port=/dev/ttyACM0 \
# --teleop.id=my_awesome_leader_arm \
--policy.path=${HF_USER}/my_policy
```
</hfoption>
<hfoption id="API example">
```python
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.robots.so100_follower.config_so100_follower import SO100FollowerConfig
from lerobot.robots.so100_follower.so100_follower import SO100Follower
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.record import record_loop
NUM_EPISODES = 5
FPS = 30
EPISODE_TIME_SEC = 60
TASK_DESCRIPTION = "My task description"
# Create the robot configuration
camera_config = {"front": OpenCVCameraConfig(index_or_path=0, width=640, height=480, fps=FPS)}
robot_config = SO100FollowerConfig(
port="/dev/tty.usbmodem58760434471", id="my_awesome_follower_arm", cameras=camera_config
)
# Initialize the robot
robot = SO100Follower(robot_config)
# Initialize the policy
policy = ACTPolicy.from_pretrained("<hf_username>/<my_policy_repo_id>")
# Configure the dataset features
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
dataset = LeRobotDataset.create(
repo_id="<hf_username>/eval_<dataset_repo_id>",
fps=FPS,
features=dataset_features,
robot_type=robot.name,
use_videos=True,
image_writer_threads=4,
)
# Initialize the keyboard listener and rerun visualization
_, events = init_keyboard_listener()
_init_rerun(session_name="recording")
# Connect the robot
robot.connect()
for episode_idx in range(NUM_EPISODES):
log_say(f"Running inference, recording eval episode {episode_idx + 1} of {NUM_EPISODES}")
# Run the policy inference loop
record_loop(
robot=robot,
events=events,
fps=FPS,
policy=policy,
dataset=dataset,
control_time_s=EPISODE_TIME_SEC,
single_task=TASK_DESCRIPTION,
display_data=True,
)
dataset.save_episode()
# Clean up
robot.disconnect()
dataset.push_to_hub()
```
</hfoption>
</hfoptions>
As you can see, it's almost the same command as previously used to record your training dataset. Two things changed:
1. There is an additional `--control.policy.path` argument which indicates the path to your policy checkpoint with (e.g. `outputs/train/eval_act_so101_test/checkpoints/last/pretrained_model`). You can also use the model repository if you uploaded a model checkpoint to the hub (e.g. `${HF_USER}/act_so101_test`).
2. The name of dataset begins by `eval` to reflect that you are running inference (e.g. `${HF_USER}/eval_act_so101_test`).

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# Imitation Learning in Sim
This tutorial will explain how to train a neural network to control a robot in simulation with imitation learning.
**You'll learn:**
1. How to record a dataset in simulation with [gym-hil](https://github.com/huggingface/gym-hil) and visualize the dataset.
2. How to train a policy using your data.
3. How to evaluate your policy in simulation and visualize the results.
For the simulation environment we use the same [repo](https://github.com/huggingface/gym-hil) that is also being used by the Human-In-the-Loop (HIL) reinforcement learning algorithm.
This environment is based on [MuJoCo](https://mujoco.org) and allows you to record datasets in LeRobotDataset format.
Teleoperation is easiest with a controller like the Logitech F710, but you can also use your keyboard if you are up for the challenge.
## Installation
First, install the `gym_hil` package within the LeRobot environment, go to your LeRobot folder and run this command:
```bash
pip install -e ".[hilserl]"
```
## Teleoperate and Record a Dataset
To use `gym_hil` with LeRobot, you need to use a configuration file. An example config file can be found [here](https://huggingface.co/datasets/aractingi/lerobot-example-config-files/blob/main/env_config_gym_hil_il.json).
To teleoperate and collect a dataset, we need to modify this config file and you should add your `repo_id` here: `"repo_id": "il_gym",` and `"num_episodes": 30,` and make sure you set `mode` to `record`, "mode": "record".
If you do not have a Nvidia GPU also change `"device": "cuda"` parameter in the config file (for example to `mps` for MacOS).
By default the config file assumes you use a controller. To use your keyboard please change the envoirment specified at `"task"` in the config file and set it to `"PandaPickCubeKeyboard-v0"`.
Then we can run this command to start:
<hfoptions id="teleop_sim">
<hfoption id="Linux">
```bash
python -m lerobot.scripts.rl.gym_manipulator --config_path path/to/env_config_gym_hil_il.json
```
</hfoption>
<hfoption id="MacOS">
```bash
mjpython -m lerobot.scripts.rl.gym_manipulator --config_path path/to/env_config_gym_hil_il.json
```
</hfoption>
</hfoptions>
Once rendered you can teleoperate the robot with the gamepad or keyboard, below you can find the gamepad/keyboard controls.
Note that to teleoperate the robot you have to hold the "Human Take Over Pause Policy" Button `RB` to enable control!
**Gamepad Controls**
<p align="center">
<img src="https://huggingface.co/datasets/huggingface/documentation-images/resolve/main/lerobot/gamepad_guide.jpg?raw=true" alt="Figure shows the control mappings on a Logitech gamepad." title="Gamepad Control Mapping" width="100%"></img>
</p>
<p align="center"><i>Gamepad button mapping for robot control and episode management</i></p>
**Keyboard controls**
For keyboard controls use the `spacebar` to enable control and the following keys to move the robot:
```bash
Arrow keys: Move in X-Y plane
Shift and Shift_R: Move in Z axis
Right Ctrl and Left Ctrl: Open and close gripper
ESC: Exit
```
## Visualize a dataset
If you uploaded your dataset to the hub you can [visualize your dataset online](https://huggingface.co/spaces/lerobot/visualize_dataset) by copy pasting your repo id.
<p align="center">
<img src="https://huggingface.co/datasets/huggingface/documentation-images/resolve/main/lerobot/dataset_visualizer_sim.png" alt="Figure shows the dataset visualizer" title="Dataset visualization" width="100%"></img>
</p>
<p align="center"><i>Dataset visualizer</i></p>
## Train a policy
To train a policy to control your robot, use the [`python -m lerobot.scripts.train`](../src/lerobot/scripts/train.py) script. A few arguments are required. Here is an example command:
```bash
python -m lerobot.scripts.train \
--dataset.repo_id=${HF_USER}/il_gym \
--policy.type=act \
--output_dir=outputs/train/il_sim_test \
--job_name=il_sim_test \
--policy.device=cuda \
--wandb.enable=true
```
Let's explain the command:
1. We provided the dataset as argument with `--dataset.repo_id=${HF_USER}/il_gym`.
2. We provided the policy with `policy.type=act`. This loads configurations from [`configuration_act.py`](../src/lerobot/policies/act/configuration_act.py). Importantly, this policy will automatically adapt to the number of motor states, motor actions and cameras of your robot (e.g. `laptop` and `phone`) which have been saved in your dataset.
4. We provided `policy.device=cuda` since we are training on a Nvidia GPU, but you could use `policy.device=mps` to train on Apple silicon.
5. We provided `wandb.enable=true` to use [Weights and Biases](https://docs.wandb.ai/quickstart) for visualizing training plots. This is optional but if you use it, make sure you are logged in by running `wandb login`.
Training should take several hours, 100k steps (which is the default) will take about 1h on Nvidia A100. You will find checkpoints in `outputs/train/il_sim_test/checkpoints`.
#### Train using Collab
If your local computer doesn't have a powerful GPU you could utilize Google Collab to train your model by following the [ACT training notebook](./notebooks#training-act).
#### Upload policy checkpoints
Once training is done, upload the latest checkpoint with:
```bash
huggingface-cli upload ${HF_USER}/il_sim_test \
outputs/train/il_sim_test/checkpoints/last/pretrained_model
```
You can also upload intermediate checkpoints with:
```bash
CKPT=010000
huggingface-cli upload ${HF_USER}/il_sim_test${CKPT} \
outputs/train/il_sim_test/checkpoints/${CKPT}/pretrained_model
```
## Evaluate your policy in Sim
To evaluate your policy we have to use the config file that can be found [here](https://huggingface.co/datasets/aractingi/lerobot-example-config-files/blob/main/eval_config_gym_hil.json).
Make sure to replace the `repo_id` with the dataset you trained on, for example `pepijn223/il_sim_dataset` and replace the `pretrained_policy_name_or_path` with your model id, for example `pepijn223/il_sim_model`
Then you can run this command to visualize your trained policy
<hfoptions id="eval_policy">
<hfoption id="Linux">
```bash
python -m lerobot.scripts.rl.eval_policy --config_path=path/to/eval_config_gym_hil.json
```
</hfoption>
<hfoption id="MacOS">
```bash
mjpython -m lerobot.scripts.rl.eval_policy --config_path=path/to/eval_config_gym_hil.json
```
</hfoption>
</hfoptions>
> [!WARNING]
> While the main workflow of training ACT in simulation is straightforward, there is significant room for exploring how to set up the task, define the initial state of the environment, and determine the type of data required during collection to learn the most effective policy. If your trained policy doesn't perform well, investigate the quality of the dataset it was trained on using our visualizers, as well as the action values and various hyperparameters related to ACT and the simulation.
Congrats 🎉, you have finished this tutorial. If you want to continue with using LeRobot in simulation follow this [Tutorial on reinforcement learning in sim with HIL-SERL](https://huggingface.co/docs/lerobot/hilserl_sim)
> [!TIP]
> If you have any questions or need help, please reach out on [Discord](https://discord.com/invite/s3KuuzsPFb).

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<div class="flex justify-center">
<a target="_blank" href="https://huggingface.co/lerobot">
<img alt="HuggingFace Expert Acceleration Program" src="https://huggingface.co/datasets/huggingface/documentation-images/resolve/main/lerobot/lerobot-logo-thumbnail.png" style="width: 100%"></img>
</a>
</div>
# LeRobot
**State-of-the-art machine learning for real-world robotics**
🤗 LeRobot aims to provide models, datasets, and tools for real-world robotics in PyTorch. The goal is to lower the barrier for entry to robotics so that everyone can contribute and benefit from sharing datasets and pretrained models.
🤗 LeRobot contains state-of-the-art approaches that have been shown to transfer to the real-world with a focus on imitation learning and reinforcement learning.
🤗 LeRobot already provides a set of pretrained models, datasets with human collected demonstrations, and simulated environments so that everyone can get started.
🤗 LeRobot hosts pretrained models and datasets on the LeRobot HuggingFace page.
Join the LeRobot community on [Discord](https://discord.gg/s3KuuzsPFb)

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# Installation
## Install LeRobot
Currently only available from source.
Download our source code:
```bash
git clone https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot.git
cd lerobot
```
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
```
Then activate your conda environment, you have to do this each time you open a shell to use lerobot:
```bash
conda activate lerobot
```
When using `miniconda`, install `ffmpeg` in your environment:
```bash
conda install ffmpeg -c conda-forge
```
> [!TIP]
> This usually installs `ffmpeg 7.X` for your platform compiled with the `libsvtav1` encoder. If `libsvtav1` is not supported (check supported encoders with `ffmpeg -encoders`), you can:
> - _[On any platform]_ Explicitly install `ffmpeg 7.X` using:
> ```bash
> conda install ffmpeg=7.1.1 -c conda-forge
> ```
> - _[On Linux only]_ If you want to bring your own ffmpeg: Install [ffmpeg build dependencies](https://trac.ffmpeg.org/wiki/CompilationGuide/Ubuntu#GettheDependencies) and [compile ffmpeg from source with libsvtav1](https://trac.ffmpeg.org/wiki/CompilationGuide/Ubuntu#libsvtav1), and make sure you use the corresponding ffmpeg binary to your install with `which ffmpeg`.
Install 🤗 LeRobot:
```bash
pip install -e .
```
### Troubleshooting
If you encounter build errors, you may need to install additional dependencies: `cmake`, `build-essential`, and `ffmpeg libs`.
To install these for linux run:
```bash
sudo apt-get install cmake build-essential python-dev pkg-config libavformat-dev libavcodec-dev libavdevice-dev libavutil-dev libswscale-dev libswresample-dev libavfilter-dev pkg-config
```
For other systems, see: [Compiling PyAV](https://pyav.org/docs/develop/overview/installation.html#bring-your-own-ffmpeg)
## Optional dependencies
LeRobot provides optional extras for specific functionalities. Multiple extras can be combined (e.g., `.[aloha,feetech]`). For all available extras, refer to `pyproject.toml`.
### Simulations
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
pip install -e ".[aloha]" # or "[pusht]" for example
```
### Motor Control
For Koch v1.1 install the Dynamixel SDK, for SO100/SO101/Moss install the Feetech SDK.
```bash
pip install -e ".[feetech]" # or "[dynamixel]" for example
```
### Experiment Tracking
To use [Weights and Biases](https://docs.wandb.ai/quickstart) for experiment tracking, log in with
```bash
wandb login
```
You can now assemble your robot if it's not ready yet, look for your robot type on the left. Then follow the link below to use Lerobot with your robot.

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# Bring Your Own Hardware
This tutorial will explain how to integrate your own robot design into the LeRobot ecosystem and have it access all of our tools (data collection, control pipelines, policy training and inference).
To that end, we provide the [`Robot`](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/lerobot/robots/robot.py) base class in the LeRobot which specifies a standard interface for physical robot integration. Let's see how to implement it.
## Prerequisites
- 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).
## Choose your motors
If you're using Feetech or Dynamixel motors, LeRobot provides built-in bus interfaces:
- [`FeetechMotorsBus`](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/lerobot/motors/feetech/feetech.py) for controlling Feetech servos
- [`DynamixelMotorsBus`](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/lerobot/motors/dynamixel/dynamixel.py) for controlling Dynamixel servos
Please refer to the [`MotorsBus`](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/lerobot/motors/motors_bus.py) abstract class to learn about its API.
For a good example of how it can be used, you can have a look at our own [SO101 follower implementation](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/lerobot/robots/so101_follower/so101_follower.py)
Use these if compatible. Otherwise, you'll need to find or write a Python interface (not covered in this tutorial):
- Find an existing SDK in Python (or use bindings to C/C++)
- Or implement a basic communication wrapper (e.g., via pyserial, socket, or CANopen)
You're not alone—many community contributions use custom boards or firmware!
For Feetech and Dynamixel, we currently support these servos:
- Feetech:
- STS & SMS series (protocol 0): `sts3215`, `sts3250`, `sm8512bl`
- SCS series (protocol 1): `scs0009`
- Dynamixel (protocol 2.0 only): `xl330-m077`, `xl330-m288`, `xl430-w250`, `xm430-w350`, `xm540-w270`, `xc430-w150`
If you are using Feetech or Dynamixel servos that are not in this list, you can add those in the [Feetech table](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/lerobot/motors/feetech/tables.py) or [Dynamixel table](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/lerobot/motors/dynamixel/tables.py). Depending on the model, this will require you to add model-specific information. In most cases though, there shouldn't be a lot of additions to do.
In the next sections, we'll use a `FeetechMotorsBus` as the motors interface for the examples. Replace it and adapt to your motors if necessary.
## Step 1: Subclass the `Robot` Interface
Youll first need to specify the config class and a string identifier (`name`) for your robot. If your robot has special needs that you'd like to be able to change easily, it should go here (e.g. port/address, baudrate).
Here, we'll add the port name and one camera by default for our robot:
```python
from dataclasses import dataclass, field
from lerobot.cameras import CameraConfig
from lerobot.cameras.opencv import OpenCVCameraConfig
from lerobot.robots import RobotConfig
@RobotConfig.register_subclass("my_cool_robot")
@dataclass
class MyCoolRobotConfig(RobotConfig):
port: str
cameras: dict[str, CameraConfig] = field(
default_factory={
"cam_1": OpenCVCameraConfig(
index_or_path=2,
fps=30,
width=480,
height=640,
),
}
)
```
Have a look at our [Cameras tutorial](./cameras) 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.
Here we'll create a simple 5-DoF robot with one camera. It could be a simple arm but notice that the `Robot` abstract class does not assume anything on your robot's form factor. You can let you imagination run wild when designing new robots!
```python
from lerobot.cameras import make_cameras_from_configs
from lerobot.motors import Motor, MotorNormMode
from lerobot.motors.feetech import FeetechMotorsBus
from lerobot.robots import Robot
class MyCoolRobot(Robot):
config_class = MyCoolRobotConfig
name = "my_cool_robot"
def __init__(self, config: MyCoolRobotConfig):
super().__init__(config)
self.bus = FeetechMotorsBus(
port=self.config.port,
motors={
"joint_1": Motor(1, "sts3250", MotorNormMode.RANGE_M100_100),
"joint_2": Motor(2, "sts3215", MotorNormMode.RANGE_M100_100),
"joint_3": Motor(3, "sts3215", MotorNormMode.RANGE_M100_100),
"joint_4": Motor(4, "sts3215", MotorNormMode.RANGE_M100_100),
"joint_5": Motor(5, "sts3215", MotorNormMode.RANGE_M100_100),
},
calibration=self.calibration,
)
self.cameras = make_cameras_from_configs(config.cameras)
```
## Step 2: Define Observation and Action Features
These two properties define the *interface contract* between your robot and tools that consume it (such as data collection or learning pipelines).
> [!WARNING]
> Note that these properties must be callable even if the robot is not yet connected, so avoid relying on runtime hardware state to define them.
### `observation_features`
This property should return a dictionary describing the structure of sensor outputs from your robot. The keys match what `get_observation()` returns, and the values describe either the shape (for arrays/images) or the type (for simple values).
Example for our 5-DoF arm with one camera:
```python
@property
def _motors_ft(self) -> dict[str, type]:
return {
"joint_1.pos": float,
"joint_2.pos": float,
"joint_3.pos": float,
"joint_4.pos": float,
"joint_5.pos": float,
}
@property
def _cameras_ft(self) -> dict[str, tuple]:
return {
cam: (self.cameras[cam].height, self.cameras[cam].width, 3) for cam in self.cameras
}
@property
def observation_features(self) -> dict:
return {**self._motors_ft, **self._cameras_ft}
```
In this case, observations consist of a simple dict storing each motor's position and a camera image.
### `action_features`
This property describes the commands your robot expects via `send_action()`. Again, keys must match the expected input format, and values define the shape/type of each command.
Here, we simply use the same joints proprioceptive features (`self._motors_ft`) as with `observation_features`: the action sent will simply the goal position for each motor.
```python
def action_features(self) -> dict:
return self._motors_ft
```
## Step 3: Handle Connection and Disconnection
These methods should handle opening and closing communication with your hardware (e.g. serial ports, CAN interfaces, USB devices, cameras).
### `is_connected`
This property should simply reflect that communication with the robot's hardware is established. When this property is `True`, it should be possible to read and write to the hardware using `get_observation()` and `send_action()`.
```python
@property
def is_connected(self) -> bool:
return self.bus.is_connected and all(cam.is_connected for cam in self.cameras.values())
```
### `connect()`
This method should establish communication with the hardware. Moreover, if your robot needs calibration and is not calibrated, it should start a calibration procedure by default. If your robot needs some specific configuration, this should also be called here.
```python
def connect(self, calibrate: bool = True) -> None:
self.bus.connect()
if not self.is_calibrated and calibrate:
self.calibrate()
for cam in self.cameras.values():
cam.connect()
self.configure()
```
### `disconnect()`
This method should gracefully terminate communication with the hardware: free any related resources (threads or processes), close ports, etc.
Here, we already handle this in our `MotorsBus` and `Camera` classes so we just need to call their own `disconnect()` methods:
```python
def disconnect(self) -> None:
self.bus.disconnect()
for cam in self.cameras.values():
cam.disconnect()
```
## Step 4: Support Calibration and Configuration
LeRobot supports saving and loading calibration data automatically. This is useful for joint offsets, zero positions, or sensor alignment.
> Note that depending on your hardware, this may not apply. If that's the case, you can simply leave these methods as no-ops:
> ```python
> @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.
```python
@property
def is_calibrated(self) -> bool:
return self.bus.is_calibrated
```
### `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.
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.
```python
def calibrate(self) -> None:
self.bus.disable_torque()
for motor in self.bus.motors:
self.bus.write("Operating_Mode", motor, OperatingMode.POSITION.value)
input(f"Move {self} to the middle of its range of motion and press ENTER....")
homing_offsets = self.bus.set_half_turn_homings()
print(
"Move all joints sequentially through their entire ranges "
"of motion.\nRecording positions. Press ENTER to stop..."
)
range_mins, range_maxes = self.bus.record_ranges_of_motion()
self.calibration = {}
for motor, m in self.bus.motors.items():
self.calibration[motor] = MotorCalibration(
id=m.id,
drive_mode=0,
homing_offset=homing_offsets[motor],
range_min=range_mins[motor],
range_max=range_maxes[motor],
)
self.bus.write_calibration(self.calibration)
self._save_calibration()
print("Calibration saved to", self.calibration_fpath)
```
### `configure()`
Use this to set up any configuration for your hardware (servos control modes, controller gains, etc.). This should usually be run at connection time and be idempotent.
```python
def configure(self) -> None:
with self.bus.torque_disabled():
self.bus.configure_motors()
for motor in self.bus.motors:
self.bus.write("Operating_Mode", motor, OperatingMode.POSITION.value)
self.bus.write("P_Coefficient", motor, 16)
self.bus.write("I_Coefficient", motor, 0)
self.bus.write("D_Coefficient", motor, 32)
```
## Step 5: Implement Sensors Reading and Action Sending
These are the most important runtime functions: the core I/O loop.
### `get_observation()`
Returns a dictionary of sensor values from the robot. These typically include motor states, camera frames, various sensors, etc. In the LeRobot framework, these observations are what will be fed to a policy in order to predict the actions to take. The dictionary keys and structure must match `observation_features`.
```python
def get_observation(self) -> dict[str, Any]:
if not self.is_connected:
raise ConnectionError(f"{self} is not connected.")
# Read arm position
obs_dict = self.bus.sync_read("Present_Position")
obs_dict = {f"{motor}.pos": val for motor, val in obs_dict.items()}
# Capture images from cameras
for cam_key, cam in self.cameras.items():
obs_dict[cam_key] = cam.async_read()
return obs_dict
```
### `send_action()`
Takes a dictionary that matches `action_features`, and sends it to your hardware. You can add safety limits (clipping, smoothing) and return what was actually sent.
For simplicity, we won't be adding any modification of the actions in our example here.
```python
def send_action(self, action: dict[str, Any]) -> dict[str, Any]:
goal_pos = {key.removesuffix(".pos"): val for key, val in action.items()}
# Send goal position to the arm
self.bus.sync_write("Goal_Position", goal_pos)
return action
```
## Adding a Teleoperator
For implementing teleoperation devices, we also provide a [`Teleoperator`](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/lerobot/teleoperators/teleoperator.py) base class. This class is very similar to the `Robot` base class and also doesn't assume anything on form factor.
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.
## Wrapping Up
Once your robot class is complete, you can leverage the LeRobot ecosystem:
- Control your robot with available teleoperators or integrate directly your teleoperating device
- Record training data and visualize it
- Integrate it into RL or imitation learning pipelines
Don't hesitate to reach out to the community for help on our [Discord](https://discord.gg/s3KuuzsPFb) 🤗

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# 🤗 LeRobot Notebooks
This repository contains example notebooks for using LeRobot. These notebooks demonstrate how to train policies on real or simulation datasets using standardized policies.
---
### Training ACT
[ACT](https://huggingface.co/papers/2304.13705) (Action Chunking Transformer) is a transformer-based policy architecture for imitation learning that processes robot states and camera inputs to generate smooth, chunked action sequences.
We provide a ready-to-run Google Colab notebook to help you train ACT policies using datasets from the Hugging Face Hub, with optional logging to Weights & Biases.
| Notebook | Colab |
|:---------|:------|
| [Train ACT with LeRobot](https://github.com/huggingface/notebooks/blob/main/lerobot/training-act.ipynb) | [![Open in Colab](https://colab.research.google.com/assets/colab-badge.svg)](https://colab.research.google.com/github/huggingface/notebooks/blob/main/lerobot/training-act.ipynb) |
Expected training time for 100k steps: ~1.5 hours on an NVIDIA A100 GPU with batch size of `64`.
### Training SmolVLA
[SmolVLA](https://huggingface.co/papers/2506.01844) is a small but efficient Vision-Language-Action model. It is compact in size with 450 M-parameter and is developed by Hugging Face.
We provide a ready-to-run Google Colab notebook to help you train SmolVLA policies using datasets from the Hugging Face Hub, with optional logging to Weights & Biases.
| Notebook | Colab |
| :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
| [Train SmolVLA with LeRobot](https://github.com/huggingface/notebooks/blob/main/lerobot/training-smolvla.ipynb) | [![Open in Colab](https://colab.research.google.com/assets/colab-badge.svg)](https://colab.research.google.com/github/huggingface/notebooks/blob/main/lerobot/training-smolvla.ipynb) |
Expected training time for 20k steps: ~5 hours on an NVIDIA A100 GPU with batch size of `64`.

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# Finetune SmolVLA
SmolVLA is Hugging Faces lightweight foundation model for robotics. Designed for easy fine-tuning on LeRobot datasets, it helps accelerate your development!
<p align="center">
<img src="https://cdn-uploads.huggingface.co/production/uploads/640e21ef3c82bd463ee5a76d/aooU0a3DMtYmy_1IWMaIM.png" alt="SmolVLA architecture." width="500"/>
<br/>
<em>Figure 1. SmolVLA takes as input (i) multiple cameras views, (ii) the robots current sensorimotor state, and (iii) a natural language instruction, encoded into contextual features used to condition the action expert when generating an action chunk.</em>
</p>
## Set Up Your Environment
1. Install LeRobot by following our [Installation Guide](./installation).
2. Install SmolVLA dependencies by running:
```bash
pip install -e ".[smolvla]"
```
## 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](https://huggingface.co/docs/lerobot/getting_started_real_world_robot#record-a-dataset)
<Tip>
In your dataset, make sure to have enough demonstrations per each variation (e.g. the cube position on the table if it is cube pick-place task) you are introducing.
We recommend checking out the dataset linked below for reference that was used in the [SmolVLA paper](https://huggingface.co/papers/2506.01844):
🔗 [SVLA SO100 PickPlace](https://huggingface.co/spaces/lerobot/visualize_dataset?path=%2Flerobot%2Fsvla_so100_pickplace%2Fepisode_0)
In this dataset, we recorded 50 episodes across 5 distinct cube positions. For each position, we collected 10 episodes of pick-and-place interactions. This structure, repeating each variation several times, helped the model generalize better. We tried similar dataset with 25 episodes, and it was not enough leading to a bad performance. So, the data quality and quantity is definitely a key.
After you have your dataset available on the Hub, you are good to go to use our finetuning script to adapt SmolVLA to your application.
</Tip>
## Finetune SmolVLA on your data
Use [`smolvla_base`](https://hf.co/lerobot/smolvla_base), our pretrained 450M model, and fine-tune it on your data.
Training the model for 20k steps will roughly take ~4 hrs on a single A100 GPU. You should tune the number of steps based on performance and your use-case.
If you don't have a gpu device, you can train using our notebook on [![Google Colab](https://colab.research.google.com/assets/colab-badge.svg)](https://colab.research.google.com/github/huggingface/notebooks/blob/main/lerobot/training-smolvla.ipynb)
Pass your dataset to the training script using `--dataset.repo_id`. If you want to test your installation, run the following command where we use one of the datasets we collected for the [SmolVLA Paper](https://huggingface.co/papers/2506.01844).
```bash
cd lerobot && python -m lerobot.scripts.train \
--policy.path=lerobot/smolvla_base \
--dataset.repo_id=${HF_USER}/mydataset \
--batch_size=64 \
--steps=20000 \
--output_dir=outputs/train/my_smolvla \
--job_name=my_smolvla_training \
--policy.device=cuda \
--wandb.enable=true
```
<Tip>
You can start with a small batch size and increase it incrementally, if the GPU allows it, as long as loading times remain short.
</Tip>
Fine-tuning is an art. For a complete overview of the options for finetuning, run
```bash
python -m lerobot.scripts.train --help
```
<p align="center">
<img src="https://cdn-uploads.huggingface.co/production/uploads/640e21ef3c82bd463ee5a76d/S-3vvVCulChREwHDkquoc.gif" alt="Comparison of SmolVLA across task variations." width="500"/>
<br/>
<em>Figure 2: Comparison of SmolVLA across task variations. From left to right: (1) pick-place cube counting, (2) pick-place cube counting, (3) pick-place cube counting under perturbations, and (4) generalization on pick-and-place of the lego block with real-world SO101.</em>
</p>
## Evaluate the finetuned model and run it in real-time
Similarly for when recording an episode, it is recommended that you are logged in to the HuggingFace Hub. You can follow the corresponding steps: [Record a dataset](./getting_started_real_world_robot#record-a-dataset).
Once you are logged in, you can run inference in your setup by doing:
```bash
python -m lerobot.record \
--robot.type=so101_follower \
--robot.port=/dev/ttyACM0 \ # <- Use your port
--robot.id=my_blue_follower_arm \ # <- Use your robot id
--robot.cameras="{ front: {type: opencv, index_or_path: 8, width: 640, height: 480, fps: 30}}" \ # <- Use your cameras
--dataset.single_task="Grasp a lego block and put it in the bin." \ # <- Use the same task description you used in your dataset recording
--dataset.repo_id=${HF_USER}/eval_DATASET_NAME_test \ # <- This will be the dataset name on HF Hub
--dataset.episode_time_s=50 \
--dataset.num_episodes=10 \
# <- Teleop optional if you want to teleoperate in between episodes \
# --teleop.type=so100_leader \
# --teleop.port=/dev/ttyACM0 \
# --teleop.id=my_red_leader_arm \
--policy.path=HF_USER/FINETUNE_MODEL_NAME # <- Use your fine-tuned model
```
Depending on your evaluation setup, you can configure the duration and the number of episodes to record for your evaluation suite.

1
docs/source/so100.mdx Symbolic link
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../../src/lerobot/robots/so100_follower/so100.mdx

1
docs/source/so101.mdx Symbolic link
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../../src/lerobot/robots/so101_follower/so101.mdx

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@@ -1,296 +0,0 @@
# Using the [SO-100](https://github.com/TheRobotStudio/SO-ARM100) with LeRobot
## A. Source the parts
Follow this [README](https://github.com/TheRobotStudio/SO-ARM100). It contains the bill of materials, with link to source the parts, as well as the instructions to 3D print the parts, and advices if it's your first time printing or if you don't own a 3D printer already.
**Important**: Before assembling, you will first need to configure your motors. To this end, we provide a nice script, so let's first install LeRobot. After configuration, we will also guide you through assembly.
## B. Install LeRobot
On your computer:
1. [Install Miniconda](https://docs.anaconda.com/miniconda/#quick-command-line-install):
```bash
mkdir -p ~/miniconda3
# Linux:
wget https://repo.anaconda.com/miniconda/Miniconda3-latest-Linux-x86_64.sh -O ~/miniconda3/miniconda.sh
# Mac M-series:
# curl https://repo.anaconda.com/miniconda/Miniconda3-latest-MacOSX-arm64.sh -o ~/miniconda3/miniconda.sh
# Mac Intel:
# curl https://repo.anaconda.com/miniconda/Miniconda3-latest-MacOSX-x86_64.sh -o ~/miniconda3/miniconda.sh
bash ~/miniconda3/miniconda.sh -b -u -p ~/miniconda3
rm ~/miniconda3/miniconda.sh
~/miniconda3/bin/conda init bash
```
2. Restart shell or `source ~/.bashrc` (*Mac*: `source ~/.bash_profile`) or `source ~/.zshrc` if you're using zshell
3. Create and activate a fresh conda environment for lerobot
```bash
conda create -y -n lerobot python=3.10 && conda activate lerobot
```
4. Clone LeRobot:
```bash
git clone https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot.git ~/lerobot
```
5. Install LeRobot with dependencies for the feetech motors:
```bash
cd ~/lerobot && pip install -e ".[feetech]"
```
*For Linux only (not Mac)*: install extra dependencies for recording datasets:
```bash
conda install -y -c conda-forge ffmpeg
pip uninstall -y opencv-python
conda install -y -c conda-forge "opencv>=4.10.0"
```
## C. Configure the motors
### 1. Find the USB ports associated to each arm
Designate one bus servo adapter and 6 motors for your leader arm, and similarly the other bus servo adapter and 6 motors for the follower arm.
#### a. Run the script to find ports
Follow Step 1 of the [assembly video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FioA2oeFZ5I), which illustrates the use of our scripts below.
To find the port for each bus servo adapter, run the utility script:
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/find_motors_bus_port.py
```
#### b. Example outputs
Example output when identifying the leader arm's port (e.g., `/dev/tty.usbmodem575E0031751` on Mac, or possibly `/dev/ttyACM0` on Linux):
```
Finding all available ports for the MotorBus.
['/dev/tty.usbmodem575E0032081', '/dev/tty.usbmodem575E0031751']
Remove the usb cable from your DynamixelMotorsBus and press Enter when done.
[...Disconnect leader arm and press Enter...]
The port of this DynamixelMotorsBus is /dev/tty.usbmodem575E0031751
Reconnect the usb cable.
```
Example output when identifying the follower arm's port (e.g., `/dev/tty.usbmodem575E0032081`, or possibly `/dev/ttyACM1` on Linux):
```
Finding all available ports for the MotorBus.
['/dev/tty.usbmodem575E0032081', '/dev/tty.usbmodem575E0031751']
Remove the usb cable from your DynamixelMotorsBus and press Enter when done.
[...Disconnect follower arm and press Enter...]
The port of this DynamixelMotorsBus is /dev/tty.usbmodem575E0032081
Reconnect the usb cable.
```
#### c. Troubleshooting
On Linux, you might need to give access to the USB ports by running:
```bash
sudo chmod 666 /dev/ttyACM0
sudo chmod 666 /dev/ttyACM1
```
#### d. Update YAML file
Now that you have the ports, modify the *port* sections in `so100.yaml`
### 2. Configure the motors
#### a. Set IDs for all 12 motors
Plug your first motor and run this script to set its ID to 1. It will also set its present position to 2048, so expect your motor to rotate:
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/configure_motor.py \
--port /dev/tty.usbmodem58760432961 \
--brand feetech \
--model sts3215 \
--baudrate 1000000 \
--ID 1
```
*Note: These motors are currently limitated. They can take values between 0 and 4096 only, which corresponds to a full turn. They can't turn more than that. 2048 is at the middle of this range, so we can take -2048 steps (180 degrees anticlockwise) and reach the maximum range, or take +2048 steps (180 degrees clockwise) and reach the maximum range. The configuration step also sets the homing offset to 0, so that if you misassembled the arm, you can always update the homing offset to account for a shift up to ± 2048 steps (± 180 degrees).*
Then unplug your motor and plug the second motor and set its ID to 2.
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/configure_motor.py \
--port /dev/tty.usbmodem58760432961 \
--brand feetech \
--model sts3215 \
--baudrate 1000000 \
--ID 2
```
Redo the process for all your motors until ID 6. Do the same for the 6 motors of the leader arm.
#### b. Remove the gears of the 6 leader motors
Follow step 2 of the [assembly video](https://youtu.be/FioA2oeFZ5I?t=248). You need to remove the gear for the motors of the leader arm. As a result, you will only use the position encoding of the motor and reduce friction to more easily operate the leader arm.
#### c. Add motor horn to all 12 motors
Follow step 3 of the [assembly video](https://youtu.be/FioA2oeFZ5I?t=569). For SO-100, you need to align the holes on the motor horn to the motor spline to be approximately 1:30, 4:30, 7:30 and 10:30.
Try to avoid rotating the motor while doing so to keep position 2048 set during configuration. It is especially tricky for the leader motors as it is more sensible without the gears, but it's ok if it's a bit rotated.
## D. Assemble the arms
Follow step 4 of the [assembly video](https://youtu.be/FioA2oeFZ5I?t=610). The first arm should take a bit more than 1 hour to assemble, but once you get use to it, you can do it under 1 hour for the second arm.
## E. Calibrate
Next, you'll need to calibrate your SO-100 robot to ensure that the leader and follower arms have the same position values when they are in the same physical position. This calibration is essential because it allows a neural network trained on one SO-100 robot to work on another.
#### a. Manual calibration of follower arm
/!\ Contrarily to step 6 of the [assembly video](https://youtu.be/FioA2oeFZ5I?t=724) which illustrates the auto calibration, we will actually do manual calibration of follower for now.
You will need to move the follower arm to these positions sequentially:
| 1. Zero position | 2. Rotated position | 3. Rest position |
|---|---|---|
| <img src="../media/so100/follower_zero.webp?raw=true" alt="SO-100 follower arm zero position" title="SO-100 follower arm zero position" style="width:100%;"> | <img src="../media/so100/follower_rotated.webp?raw=true" alt="SO-100 follower arm rotated position" title="SO-100 follower arm rotated position" style="width:100%;"> | <img src="../media/so100/follower_rest.webp?raw=true" alt="SO-100 follower arm rest position" title="SO-100 follower arm rest position" style="width:100%;"> |
Make sure both arms are connected and run this script to launch manual calibration:
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/control_robot.py calibrate \
--robot-path lerobot/configs/robot/so100.yaml \
--robot-overrides '~cameras' --arms main_follower
```
#### b. Manual calibration of leader arm
Follow step 6 of the [assembly video](https://youtu.be/FioA2oeFZ5I?t=724) which illustrates the manual calibration. You will need to move the leader arm to these positions sequentially:
| 1. Zero position | 2. Rotated position | 3. Rest position |
|---|---|---|
| <img src="../media/so100/leader_zero.webp?raw=true" alt="SO-100 leader arm zero position" title="SO-100 leader arm zero position" style="width:100%;"> | <img src="../media/so100/leader_rotated.webp?raw=true" alt="SO-100 leader arm rotated position" title="SO-100 leader arm rotated position" style="width:100%;"> | <img src="../media/so100/leader_rest.webp?raw=true" alt="SO-100 leader arm rest position" title="SO-100 leader arm rest position" style="width:100%;"> |
Run this script to launch manual calibration:
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/control_robot.py calibrate \
--robot-path lerobot/configs/robot/so100.yaml \
--robot-overrides '~cameras' --arms main_leader
```
## F. Teleoperate
**Simple teleop**
Then you are ready to teleoperate your robot! Run this simple script (it won't connect and display the cameras):
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/control_robot.py teleoperate \
--robot-path lerobot/configs/robot/so100.yaml \
--robot-overrides '~cameras' \
--display-cameras 0
```
#### a. Teleop with displaying cameras
Follow [this guide to setup your cameras](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/examples/7_get_started_with_real_robot.md#c-add-your-cameras-with-opencvcamera). Then you will be able to display the cameras on your computer while you are teleoperating by running the following code. This is useful to prepare your setup before recording your first dataset.
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/control_robot.py teleoperate \
--robot-path lerobot/configs/robot/so100.yaml
```
## G. Record a dataset
Once you're familiar with teleoperation, you can record your first dataset with SO-100.
If you want to use the Hugging Face hub features for uploading your dataset and you haven't previously done it, make sure you've logged in using a write-access token, which can be generated from the [Hugging Face settings](https://huggingface.co/settings/tokens):
```bash
huggingface-cli login --token ${HUGGINGFACE_TOKEN} --add-to-git-credential
```
Store your Hugging Face repository name in a variable to run these commands:
```bash
HF_USER=$(huggingface-cli whoami | head -n 1)
echo $HF_USER
```
Record 2 episodes and upload your dataset to the hub:
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/control_robot.py record \
--robot-path lerobot/configs/robot/so100.yaml \
--fps 30 \
--repo-id ${HF_USER}/so100_test \
--tags so100 tutorial \
--warmup-time-s 5 \
--episode-time-s 40 \
--reset-time-s 10 \
--num-episodes 2 \
--push-to-hub 1
```
## H. Visualize a dataset
If you uploaded your dataset to the hub with `--push-to-hub 1`, you can [visualize your dataset online](https://huggingface.co/spaces/lerobot/visualize_dataset) by copy pasting your repo id given by:
```bash
echo ${HF_USER}/so100_test
```
If you didn't upload with `--push-to-hub 0`, you can also visualize it locally with:
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/visualize_dataset_html.py \
--repo-id ${HF_USER}/so100_test
```
## I. Replay an episode
Now try to replay the first episode on your robot:
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/control_robot.py replay \
--robot-path lerobot/configs/robot/so100.yaml \
--fps 30 \
--repo-id ${HF_USER}/so100_test \
--episode 0
```
## J. Train a policy
To train a policy to control your robot, use the [`python lerobot/scripts/train.py`](../lerobot/scripts/train.py) script. A few arguments are required. Here is an example command:
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/train.py \
dataset_repo_id=${HF_USER}/so100_test \
policy=act_so100_real \
env=so100_real \
hydra.run.dir=outputs/train/act_so100_test \
hydra.job.name=act_so100_test \
device=cuda \
wandb.enable=true
```
Let's explain it:
1. We provided the dataset as argument with `dataset_repo_id=${HF_USER}/so100_test`.
2. We provided the policy with `policy=act_so100_real`. This loads configurations from [`lerobot/configs/policy/act_so100_real.yaml`](../lerobot/configs/policy/act_so100_real.yaml). Importantly, this policy uses 2 cameras as input `laptop`, `phone`.
3. We provided an environment as argument with `env=so100_real`. This loads configurations from [`lerobot/configs/env/so100_real.yaml`](../lerobot/configs/env/so100_real.yaml).
4. We provided `device=cuda` since we are training on a Nvidia GPU, but you can also use `device=mps` if you are using a Mac with Apple silicon, or `device=cpu` otherwise.
5. We provided `wandb.enable=true` to use [Weights and Biases](https://docs.wandb.ai/quickstart) for visualizing training plots. This is optional but if you use it, make sure you are logged in by running `wandb login`.
Training should take several hours. You will find checkpoints in `outputs/train/act_so100_test/checkpoints`.
## K. Evaluate your policy
You can use the `record` function from [`lerobot/scripts/control_robot.py`](../lerobot/scripts/control_robot.py) but with a policy checkpoint as input. For instance, run this command to record 10 evaluation episodes:
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/control_robot.py record \
--robot-path lerobot/configs/robot/so100.yaml \
--fps 30 \
--repo-id ${HF_USER}/eval_act_so100_test \
--tags so100 tutorial eval \
--warmup-time-s 5 \
--episode-time-s 40 \
--reset-time-s 10 \
--num-episodes 10 \
-p outputs/train/act_so100_test/checkpoints/last/pretrained_model
```
As you can see, it's almost the same command as previously used to record your training dataset. Two things changed:
1. There is an additional `-p` argument which indicates the path to your policy checkpoint with (e.g. `-p outputs/train/eval_so100_test/checkpoints/last/pretrained_model`). You can also use the model repository if you uploaded a model checkpoint to the hub (e.g. `-p ${HF_USER}/act_so100_test`).
2. The name of dataset begins by `eval` to reflect that you are running inference (e.g. `--repo-id ${HF_USER}/eval_act_so100_test`).
## L. More Information
Follow this [previous tutorial](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/examples/7_get_started_with_real_robot.md#4-train-a-policy-on-your-data) for a more in-depth tutorial on controlling real robots with LeRobot.
If you have any question or need help, please reach out on Discord in the channel [`#so100-arm`](https://discord.com/channels/1216765309076115607/1237741463832363039).

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@@ -1,275 +0,0 @@
This tutorial explains how to use [Moss v1](https://github.com/jess-moss/moss-robot-arms) with LeRobot.
## Source the parts
Follow this [README](https://github.com/jess-moss/moss-robot-arms). It contains the bill of materials, with link to source the parts, as well as the instructions to 3D print the parts, and advices if it's your first time printing or if you don't own a 3D printer already.
**Important**: Before assembling, you will first need to configure your motors. To this end, we provide a nice script, so let's first install LeRobot. After configuration, we will also guide you through assembly.
## Install LeRobot
On your computer:
1. [Install Miniconda](https://docs.anaconda.com/miniconda/#quick-command-line-install):
```bash
mkdir -p ~/miniconda3
wget https://repo.anaconda.com/miniconda/Miniconda3-latest-Linux-x86_64.sh -O ~/miniconda3/miniconda.sh
bash ~/miniconda3/miniconda.sh -b -u -p ~/miniconda3
rm ~/miniconda3/miniconda.sh
~/miniconda3/bin/conda init bash
```
2. Restart shell or `source ~/.bashrc`
3. Create and activate a fresh conda environment for lerobot
```bash
conda create -y -n lerobot python=3.10 && conda activate lerobot
```
4. Clone LeRobot:
```bash
git clone https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot.git ~/lerobot
```
5. Install LeRobot with dependencies for the feetech motors:
```bash
cd ~/lerobot && pip install -e ".[feetech]"
```
For Linux only (not Mac), install extra dependencies for recording datasets:
```bash
conda install -y -c conda-forge ffmpeg
pip uninstall -y opencv-python
conda install -y -c conda-forge "opencv>=4.10.0"
```
## Configure the motors
Follow steps 1 of the [assembly video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DA91NJOtMic) which illustrates the use of our scripts below.
**Find USB ports associated to your arms**
To find the correct ports for each arm, run the utility script twice:
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/find_motors_bus_port.py
```
Example output when identifying the leader arm's port (e.g., `/dev/tty.usbmodem575E0031751` on Mac, or possibly `/dev/ttyACM0` on Linux):
```
Finding all available ports for the MotorBus.
['/dev/tty.usbmodem575E0032081', '/dev/tty.usbmodem575E0031751']
Remove the usb cable from your DynamixelMotorsBus and press Enter when done.
[...Disconnect leader arm and press Enter...]
The port of this DynamixelMotorsBus is /dev/tty.usbmodem575E0031751
Reconnect the usb cable.
```
Example output when identifying the follower arm's port (e.g., `/dev/tty.usbmodem575E0032081`, or possibly `/dev/ttyACM1` on Linux):
```
Finding all available ports for the MotorBus.
['/dev/tty.usbmodem575E0032081', '/dev/tty.usbmodem575E0031751']
Remove the usb cable from your DynamixelMotorsBus and press Enter when done.
[...Disconnect follower arm and press Enter...]
The port of this DynamixelMotorsBus is /dev/tty.usbmodem575E0032081
Reconnect the usb cable.
```
Troubleshooting: On Linux, you might need to give access to the USB ports by running:
```bash
sudo chmod 666 /dev/ttyACM0
sudo chmod 666 /dev/ttyACM1
```
**Configure your motors**
Plug your first motor and run this script to set its ID to 1. It will also set its present position to 2048, so expect your motor to rotate:
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/configure_motor.py \
--port /dev/tty.usbmodem58760432961 \
--brand feetech \
--model sts3215 \
--baudrate 1000000 \
--ID 1
```
Note: These motors are currently limitated. They can take values between 0 and 4096 only, which corresponds to a full turn. They can't turn more than that. 2048 is at the middle of this range, so we can take -2048 steps (180 degrees anticlockwise) and reach the maximum range, or take +2048 steps (180 degrees clockwise) and reach the maximum range. The configuration step also sets the homing offset to 0, so that if you misassembled the arm, you can always update the homing offset to account for a shift up to ± 2048 steps (± 180 degrees).
Then unplug your motor and plug the second motor and set its ID to 2.
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/configure_motor.py \
--port /dev/tty.usbmodem58760432961 \
--brand feetech \
--model sts3215 \
--baudrate 1000000 \
--ID 2
```
Redo the process for all your motors until ID 6. Do the same for the 6 motors of the leader arm.
**Remove the gears of the 6 leader motors**
Follow step 2 of the [assembly video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DA91NJOtMic). You need to remove the gear for the motors of the leader arm. As a result, you will only use the position encoding of the motor and reduce friction to more easily operate the leader arm.
**Add motor horn to the motors**
Follow step 3 of the [assembly video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DA91NJOtMic). For Moss v1, you need to align the holes on the motor horn to the motor spline to be approximately 3, 6, 9 and 12 o'clock.
Try to avoid rotating the motor while doing so to keep position 2048 set during configuration. It is especially tricky for the leader motors as it is more sensible without the gears, but it's ok if it's a bit rotated.
## Assemble the arms
Follow step 4 of the [assembly video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DA91NJOtMic). The first arm should take a bit more than 1 hour to assemble, but once you get use to it, you can do it under 1 hour for the second arm.
## Calibrate
Next, you'll need to calibrate your Moss v1 robot to ensure that the leader and follower arms have the same position values when they are in the same physical position. This calibration is essential because it allows a neural network trained on one Moss v1 robot to work on another.
**Manual calibration of follower arm**
/!\ Contrarily to step 6 of the [assembly video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DA91NJOtMic) which illustrates the auto calibration, we will actually do manual calibration of follower for now.
You will need to move the follower arm to these positions sequentially:
| 1. Zero position | 2. Rotated position | 3. Rest position |
|---|---|---|
| <img src="../media/moss/follower_zero.webp?raw=true" alt="Moss v1 follower arm zero position" title="Moss v1 follower arm zero position" style="width:100%;"> | <img src="../media/moss/follower_rotated.webp?raw=true" alt="Moss v1 follower arm rotated position" title="Moss v1 follower arm rotated position" style="width:100%;"> | <img src="../media/moss/follower_rest.webp?raw=true" alt="Moss v1 follower arm rest position" title="Moss v1 follower arm rest position" style="width:100%;"> |
Make sure both arms are connected and run this script to launch manual calibration:
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/control_robot.py calibrate \
--robot-path lerobot/configs/robot/moss.yaml \
--robot-overrides '~cameras' --arms main_follower
```
**Manual calibration of leader arm**
Follow step 6 of the [assembly video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DA91NJOtMic) which illustrates the manual calibration. You will need to move the leader arm to these positions sequentially:
| 1. Zero position | 2. Rotated position | 3. Rest position |
|---|---|---|
| <img src="../media/moss/leader_zero.webp?raw=true" alt="Moss v1 leader arm zero position" title="Moss v1 leader arm zero position" style="width:100%;"> | <img src="../media/moss/leader_rotated.webp?raw=true" alt="Moss v1 leader arm rotated position" title="Moss v1 leader arm rotated position" style="width:100%;"> | <img src="../media/moss/leader_rest.webp?raw=true" alt="Moss v1 leader arm rest position" title="Moss v1 leader arm rest position" style="width:100%;"> |
Run this script to launch manual calibration:
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/control_robot.py calibrate \
--robot-path lerobot/configs/robot/moss.yaml \
--robot-overrides '~cameras' --arms main_leader
```
## Teleoperate
**Simple teleop**
Then you are ready to teleoperate your robot! Run this simple script (it won't connect and display the cameras):
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/control_robot.py teleoperate \
--robot-path lerobot/configs/robot/moss.yaml \
--robot-overrides '~cameras' \
--display-cameras 0
```
**Teleop with displaying cameras**
Follow [this guide to setup your cameras](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/examples/7_get_started_with_real_robot.md#c-add-your-cameras-with-opencvcamera). Then you will be able to display the cameras on your computer while you are teleoperating by running the following code. This is useful to prepare your setup before recording your first dataset.
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/control_robot.py teleoperate \
--robot-path lerobot/configs/robot/moss.yaml
```
## Record a dataset
Once you're familiar with teleoperation, you can record your first dataset with Moss v1.
If you want to use the Hugging Face hub features for uploading your dataset and you haven't previously done it, make sure you've logged in using a write-access token, which can be generated from the [Hugging Face settings](https://huggingface.co/settings/tokens):
```bash
huggingface-cli login --token ${HUGGINGFACE_TOKEN} --add-to-git-credential
```
Store your Hugging Face repository name in a variable to run these commands:
```bash
HF_USER=$(huggingface-cli whoami | head -n 1)
echo $HF_USER
```
Record 2 episodes and upload your dataset to the hub:
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/control_robot.py record \
--robot-path lerobot/configs/robot/moss.yaml \
--fps 30 \
--repo-id ${HF_USER}/moss_test \
--tags moss tutorial \
--warmup-time-s 5 \
--episode-time-s 40 \
--reset-time-s 10 \
--num-episodes 2 \
--push-to-hub 1
```
## Visualize a dataset
If you uploaded your dataset to the hub with `--push-to-hub 1`, you can [visualize your dataset online](https://huggingface.co/spaces/lerobot/visualize_dataset) by copy pasting your repo id given by:
```bash
echo ${HF_USER}/moss_test
```
If you didn't upload with `--push-to-hub 0`, you can also visualize it locally with:
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/visualize_dataset_html.py \
--repo-id ${HF_USER}/moss_test
```
## Replay an episode
Now try to replay the first episode on your robot:
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/control_robot.py replay \
--robot-path lerobot/configs/robot/moss.yaml \
--fps 30 \
--repo-id ${HF_USER}/moss_test \
--episode 0
```
## Train a policy
To train a policy to control your robot, use the [`python lerobot/scripts/train.py`](../lerobot/scripts/train.py) script. A few arguments are required. Here is an example command:
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/train.py \
dataset_repo_id=${HF_USER}/moss_test \
policy=act_moss_real \
env=moss_real \
hydra.run.dir=outputs/train/act_moss_test \
hydra.job.name=act_moss_test \
device=cuda \
wandb.enable=true
```
Let's explain it:
1. We provided the dataset as argument with `dataset_repo_id=${HF_USER}/moss_test`.
2. We provided the policy with `policy=act_moss_real`. This loads configurations from [`lerobot/configs/policy/act_moss_real.yaml`](../lerobot/configs/policy/act_moss_real.yaml). Importantly, this policy uses 2 cameras as input `laptop`, `phone`.
3. We provided an environment as argument with `env=moss_real`. This loads configurations from [`lerobot/configs/env/moss_real.yaml`](../lerobot/configs/env/moss_real.yaml).
4. We provided `device=cuda` since we are training on a Nvidia GPU, but you can also use `device=mps` if you are using a Mac with Apple silicon, or `device=cpu` otherwise.
5. We provided `wandb.enable=true` to use [Weights and Biases](https://docs.wandb.ai/quickstart) for visualizing training plots. This is optional but if you use it, make sure you are logged in by running `wandb login`.
Training should take several hours. You will find checkpoints in `outputs/train/act_moss_test/checkpoints`.
## Evaluate your policy
You can use the `record` function from [`lerobot/scripts/control_robot.py`](../lerobot/scripts/control_robot.py) but with a policy checkpoint as input. For instance, run this command to record 10 evaluation episodes:
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/control_robot.py record \
--robot-path lerobot/configs/robot/moss.yaml \
--fps 30 \
--repo-id ${HF_USER}/eval_act_moss_test \
--tags moss tutorial eval \
--warmup-time-s 5 \
--episode-time-s 40 \
--reset-time-s 10 \
--num-episodes 10 \
-p outputs/train/act_moss_test/checkpoints/last/pretrained_model
```
As you can see, it's almost the same command as previously used to record your training dataset. Two things changed:
1. There is an additional `-p` argument which indicates the path to your policy checkpoint with (e.g. `-p outputs/train/eval_moss_test/checkpoints/last/pretrained_model`). You can also use the model repository if you uploaded a model checkpoint to the hub (e.g. `-p ${HF_USER}/act_moss_test`).
2. The name of dataset begins by `eval` to reflect that you are running inference (e.g. `--repo-id ${HF_USER}/eval_act_moss_test`).
## More
Follow this [previous tutorial](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/examples/7_get_started_with_real_robot.md#4-train-a-policy-on-your-data) for a more in-depth tutorial on controlling real robots with LeRobot.
If you have any question or need help, please reach out on Discord in the channel [`#moss-arm`](https://discord.com/channels/1216765309076115607/1275374638985252925).

View File

@@ -1,3 +1,17 @@
# Copyright 2024 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 script demonstrates the use of `LeRobotDataset` class for handling and processing robotic datasets from Hugging Face.
It illustrates how to load datasets, manipulate them, and apply transformations suitable for machine learning tasks in PyTorch.
@@ -18,7 +32,7 @@ import torch
from huggingface_hub import HfApi
import lerobot
from lerobot.common.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset, LeRobotDatasetMetadata
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset, LeRobotDatasetMetadata
# We ported a number of existing datasets ourselves, use this to see the list:
print("List of available datasets:")
@@ -105,7 +119,7 @@ print(dataset.features[camera_key]["shape"])
delta_timestamps = {
# loads 4 images: 1 second before current frame, 500 ms before, 200 ms before, and current frame
camera_key: [-1, -0.5, -0.20, 0],
# loads 8 state vectors: 1.5 seconds before, 1 second before, ... 200 ms, 100 ms, and current frame
# loads 6 state vectors: 1.5 seconds before, 1 second before, ... 200 ms, 100 ms, and current frame
"observation.state": [-1.5, -1, -0.5, -0.20, -0.10, 0],
# loads 64 action vectors: current frame, 1 frame in the future, 2 frames, ... 63 frames in the future
"action": [t / dataset.fps for t in range(64)],
@@ -129,6 +143,6 @@ dataloader = torch.utils.data.DataLoader(
for batch in dataloader:
print(f"{batch[camera_key].shape=}") # (32, 4, c, h, w)
print(f"{batch['observation.state'].shape=}") # (32, 5, c)
print(f"{batch['observation.state'].shape=}") # (32, 6, c)
print(f"{batch['action'].shape=}") # (32, 64, c)
break

View File

@@ -1,6 +1,25 @@
# Copyright 2024 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 scripts demonstrates how to evaluate a pretrained policy from the HuggingFace Hub or from your local
This script demonstrates how to evaluate a pretrained policy from the HuggingFace Hub or from your local
training outputs directory. In the latter case, you might want to run examples/3_train_policy.py first.
It requires the installation of the 'gym_pusht' simulation environment. Install it by running:
```bash
pip install -e ".[pusht]"
```
"""
from pathlib import Path
@@ -10,33 +29,22 @@ import gymnasium as gym
import imageio
import numpy
import torch
from huggingface_hub import snapshot_download
from lerobot.common.policies.diffusion.modeling_diffusion import DiffusionPolicy
from lerobot.policies.diffusion.modeling_diffusion import DiffusionPolicy
# Create a directory to store the video of the evaluation
output_directory = Path("outputs/eval/example_pusht_diffusion")
output_directory.mkdir(parents=True, exist_ok=True)
# Download the diffusion policy for pusht environment
pretrained_policy_path = Path(snapshot_download("lerobot/diffusion_pusht"))
# OR uncomment the following to evaluate a policy from the local outputs/train folder.
# Select your device
device = "cuda"
# Provide the [hugging face repo id](https://huggingface.co/lerobot/diffusion_pusht):
pretrained_policy_path = "lerobot/diffusion_pusht"
# OR a path to a local outputs/train folder.
# pretrained_policy_path = Path("outputs/train/example_pusht_diffusion")
policy = DiffusionPolicy.from_pretrained(pretrained_policy_path)
policy.eval()
# Check if GPU is available
if torch.cuda.is_available():
device = torch.device("cuda")
print("GPU is available. Device set to:", device)
else:
device = torch.device("cpu")
print(f"GPU is not available. Device set to: {device}. Inference will be slower than on GPU.")
# Decrease the number of reverse-diffusion steps (trades off a bit of quality for 10x speed)
policy.diffusion.num_inference_steps = 10
policy.to(device)
# Initialize evaluation environment to render two observation types:
# an image of the scene and state/position of the agent. The environment
@@ -47,7 +55,17 @@ env = gym.make(
max_episode_steps=300,
)
# Reset the policy and environmens to prepare for rollout
# We can verify that the shapes of the features expected by the policy match the ones from the observations
# produced by the environment
print(policy.config.input_features)
print(env.observation_space)
# Similarly, we can check that the actions produced by the policy will match the actions expected by the
# environment
print(policy.config.output_features)
print(env.action_space)
# Reset the policy and environments to prepare for rollout
policy.reset()
numpy_observation, info = env.reset(seed=42)
@@ -101,7 +119,7 @@ while not done:
rewards.append(reward)
frames.append(env.render())
# The rollout is considered done when the success state is reach (i.e. terminated is True),
# The rollout is considered done when the success state is reached (i.e. terminated is True),
# or the maximum number of iterations is reached (i.e. truncated is True)
done = terminated | truncated | done
step += 1

View File

@@ -1,4 +1,18 @@
"""This scripts demonstrates how to train Diffusion Policy on the PushT environment.
# Copyright 2024 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 script demonstrates how to train Diffusion Policy on the PushT environment.
Once you have trained a model with this script, you can try to evaluate it on
examples/2_evaluate_pretrained_policy.py
@@ -8,72 +22,99 @@ from pathlib import Path
import torch
from lerobot.common.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset
from lerobot.common.policies.diffusion.configuration_diffusion import DiffusionConfig
from lerobot.common.policies.diffusion.modeling_diffusion import DiffusionPolicy
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
# Create a directory to store the training checkpoint.
output_directory = Path("outputs/train/example_pusht_diffusion")
output_directory.mkdir(parents=True, exist_ok=True)
# Number of offline training steps (we'll only do offline training for this example.)
# Adjust as you prefer. 5000 steps are needed to get something worth evaluating.
training_steps = 5000
device = torch.device("cuda")
log_freq = 250
def main():
# Create a directory to store the training checkpoint.
output_directory = Path("outputs/train/example_pusht_diffusion")
output_directory.mkdir(parents=True, exist_ok=True)
# Set up the dataset.
delta_timestamps = {
# Load the previous image and state at -0.1 seconds before current frame,
# then load current image and state corresponding to 0.0 second.
"observation.image": [-0.1, 0.0],
"observation.state": [-0.1, 0.0],
# Load the previous action (-0.1), the next action to be executed (0.0),
# and 14 future actions with a 0.1 seconds spacing. All these actions will be
# used to supervise the policy.
"action": [-0.1, 0.0, 0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 0.4, 0.5, 0.6, 0.7, 0.8, 0.9, 1.0, 1.1, 1.2, 1.3, 1.4],
}
dataset = LeRobotDataset("lerobot/pusht", delta_timestamps=delta_timestamps)
# # Select your device
device = torch.device("cuda")
# Set up the the policy.
# Policies are initialized with a configuration class, in this case `DiffusionConfig`.
# For this example, no arguments need to be passed because the defaults are set up for PushT.
# If you're doing something different, you will likely need to change at least some of the defaults.
cfg = DiffusionConfig()
policy = DiffusionPolicy(cfg, dataset_stats=dataset.meta.stats)
policy.train()
policy.to(device)
# Number of offline training steps (we'll only do offline training for this example.)
# Adjust as you prefer. 5000 steps are needed to get something worth evaluating.
training_steps = 5000
log_freq = 1
optimizer = torch.optim.Adam(policy.parameters(), lr=1e-4)
# When starting from scratch (i.e. not from a pretrained policy), we need to specify 2 things before
# creating the policy:
# - input/output shapes: to properly size the policy
# - dataset stats: for normalization and denormalization of input/outputs
dataset_metadata = LeRobotDatasetMetadata("lerobot/pusht")
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}
# Create dataloader for offline training.
dataloader = torch.utils.data.DataLoader(
dataset,
num_workers=4,
batch_size=64,
shuffle=True,
pin_memory=device != torch.device("cpu"),
drop_last=True,
)
# Policies are initialized with a configuration class, in this case `DiffusionConfig`. For this example,
# we'll just use the defaults and so no arguments other than input/output features need to be passed.
cfg = DiffusionConfig(input_features=input_features, output_features=output_features)
# Run training loop.
step = 0
done = False
while not done:
for batch in dataloader:
batch = {k: v.to(device, non_blocking=True) for k, v in batch.items()}
output_dict = policy.forward(batch)
loss = output_dict["loss"]
loss.backward()
optimizer.step()
optimizer.zero_grad()
# We can now instantiate our policy with this config and the dataset stats.
policy = DiffusionPolicy(cfg, dataset_stats=dataset_metadata.stats)
policy.train()
policy.to(device)
if step % log_freq == 0:
print(f"step: {step} loss: {loss.item():.3f}")
step += 1
if step >= training_steps:
done = True
break
# Another policy-dataset interaction is with the delta_timestamps. Each policy expects a given number frames
# which can differ for inputs, outputs and rewards (if there are some).
delta_timestamps = {
"observation.image": [i / dataset_metadata.fps for i in cfg.observation_delta_indices],
"observation.state": [i / dataset_metadata.fps for i in cfg.observation_delta_indices],
"action": [i / dataset_metadata.fps for i in cfg.action_delta_indices],
}
# Save a policy checkpoint.
policy.save_pretrained(output_directory)
# In this case with the standard configuration for Diffusion Policy, it is equivalent to this:
delta_timestamps = {
# Load the previous image and state at -0.1 seconds before current frame,
# then load current image and state corresponding to 0.0 second.
"observation.image": [-0.1, 0.0],
"observation.state": [-0.1, 0.0],
# Load the previous action (-0.1), the next action to be executed (0.0),
# and 14 future actions with a 0.1 seconds spacing. All these actions will be
# used to supervise the policy.
"action": [-0.1, 0.0, 0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 0.4, 0.5, 0.6, 0.7, 0.8, 0.9, 1.0, 1.1, 1.2, 1.3, 1.4],
}
# We can then instantiate the dataset with these delta_timestamps configuration.
dataset = LeRobotDataset("lerobot/pusht", delta_timestamps=delta_timestamps)
# Then we create our optimizer and dataloader for offline training.
optimizer = torch.optim.Adam(policy.parameters(), lr=1e-4)
dataloader = torch.utils.data.DataLoader(
dataset,
num_workers=4,
batch_size=64,
shuffle=True,
pin_memory=device.type != "cpu",
drop_last=True,
)
# Run training loop.
step = 0
done = False
while not done:
for batch in dataloader:
batch = {k: (v.to(device) if isinstance(v, torch.Tensor) else v) for k, v in batch.items()}
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 a policy checkpoint.
policy.save_pretrained(output_directory)
if __name__ == "__main__":
main()

View File

@@ -1,193 +1,223 @@
This tutorial will explain the training script, how to use it, and particularly the use of Hydra to configure everything needed for the training run.
This tutorial will explain the training script, how to use it, and particularly how to configure everything needed for the training run.
> **Note:** The following assumes you're running these commands on a machine equipped with a cuda GPU. If you don't have one (or if you're using a Mac), you can add `--policy.device=cpu` (`--policy.device=mps` respectively). However, be advised that the code executes much slower on cpu.
## The training script
LeRobot offers a training script at [`lerobot/scripts/train.py`](../../lerobot/scripts/train.py). At a high level it does the following:
LeRobot offers a training script at [`lerobot/scripts/train.py`](../src/lerobot/scripts/train.py). At a high level it does the following:
- Loads a Hydra configuration file for the following steps (more on Hydra in a moment).
- Makes a simulation environment.
- Makes a dataset corresponding to that simulation environment.
- Makes a policy.
- Initialize/load a configuration for the following steps using.
- Instantiates a dataset.
- (Optional) Instantiates a simulation environment corresponding to that dataset.
- Instantiates a policy.
- Runs a standard training loop with forward pass, backward pass, optimization step, and occasional logging, evaluation (of the policy on the environment), and checkpointing.
## Basics of how we use Hydra
Explaining the ins and outs of [Hydra](https://hydra.cc/docs/intro/) is beyond the scope of this document, but here we'll share the main points you need to know.
First, `lerobot/configs` has a directory structure like this:
```
.
├── default.yaml
├── env
│ ├── aloha.yaml
│ ├── pusht.yaml
│ └── xarm.yaml
└── policy
├── act.yaml
├── diffusion.yaml
└── tdmpc.yaml
```
**_For brevity, in the rest of this document we'll drop the leading `lerobot/configs` path. So `default.yaml` really refers to `lerobot/configs/default.yaml`._**
When you run the training script with
## Overview of the configuration system
In the training script, the main function `train` expects a `TrainPipelineConfig` object:
```python
python lerobot/scripts/train.py
# train.py
@parser.wrap()
def train(cfg: TrainPipelineConfig):
```
Hydra is set up to read `default.yaml` (via the `@hydra.main` decorator). If you take a look at the `@hydra.main`'s arguments you will see `config_path="../configs", config_name="default"`. At the top of `default.yaml`, is a `defaults` section which looks likes this:
You can inspect the `TrainPipelineConfig` defined in [`lerobot/configs/train.py`](../src/lerobot/configs/train.py) (which is heavily commented and meant to be a reference to understand any option)
```yaml
defaults:
- _self_
- env: pusht
- policy: diffusion
When running the script, inputs for the command line are parsed thanks to the `@parser.wrap()` decorator and an instance of this class is automatically generated. Under the hood, this is done with [Draccus](https://github.com/dlwh/draccus) which is a tool dedicated to this purpose. If you're familiar with Hydra, Draccus can similarly load configurations from config files (.json, .yaml) and also override their values through command line inputs. Unlike Hydra, these configurations are pre-defined in the code through dataclasses rather than being defined entirely in config files. This allows for more rigorous serialization/deserialization, typing, and to manipulate configuration as objects directly in the code and not as dictionaries or namespaces (which enables nice features in an IDE such as autocomplete, jump-to-def, etc.)
Let's have a look at a simplified example. Amongst other attributes, the training config has the following attributes:
```python
@dataclass
class TrainPipelineConfig:
dataset: DatasetConfig
env: envs.EnvConfig | None = None
policy: PreTrainedConfig | None = None
```
in which `DatasetConfig` for example is defined as such:
```python
@dataclass
class DatasetConfig:
repo_id: str
episodes: list[int] | None = None
video_backend: str = "pyav"
```
This logic tells Hydra to incorporate configuration parameters from `env/pusht.yaml` and `policy/diffusion.yaml`. _Note: Be aware of the order as any configuration parameters with the same name will be overidden. Thus, `default.yaml` is overridden by `env/pusht.yaml` which is overidden by `policy/diffusion.yaml`_.
This creates a hierarchical relationship where, for example assuming we have a `cfg` instance of `TrainPipelineConfig`, we can access the `repo_id` value with `cfg.dataset.repo_id`.
From the command line, we can specify this value by using a very similar syntax `--dataset.repo_id=repo/id`.
Then, `default.yaml` also contains common configuration parameters such as `device: cuda` or `use_amp: false` (for enabling fp16 training). Some other parameters are set to `???` which indicates that they are expected to be set in additional yaml files. For instance, `training.offline_steps: ???` in `default.yaml` is set to `200000` in `diffusion.yaml`.
By default, every field takes its default value specified in the dataclass. If a field doesn't have a default value, it needs to be specified either from the command line or from a config file which path is also given in the command line (more in this below). In the example above, the `dataset` field doesn't have a default value which means it must be specified.
Thanks to this `defaults` section in `default.yaml`, if you want to train Diffusion Policy with PushT, you really only need to run:
## Specifying values from the CLI
Let's say that we want to train [Diffusion Policy](../src/lerobot/policies/diffusion) on the [pusht](https://huggingface.co/datasets/lerobot/pusht) dataset, using the [gym_pusht](https://github.com/huggingface/gym-pusht) environment for evaluation. The command to do so would look like this:
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/train.py
python -m lerobot.scripts.train \
--dataset.repo_id=lerobot/pusht \
--policy.type=diffusion \
--env.type=pusht
```
However, you can be more explicit and launch the exact same Diffusion Policy training on PushT with:
Let's break this down:
- To specify the dataset, we just need to specify its `repo_id` on the hub which is the only required argument in the `DatasetConfig`. The rest of the fields have default values and in this case we are fine with those so we can just add the option `--dataset.repo_id=lerobot/pusht`.
- To specify the policy, we can just select diffusion policy using `--policy` appended with `.type`. Here, `.type` is a special argument which allows us to select config classes inheriting from `draccus.ChoiceRegistry` and that have been decorated with the `register_subclass()` method. To have a better explanation of this feature, have a look at this [Draccus demo](https://github.com/dlwh/draccus?tab=readme-ov-file#more-flexible-configuration-with-choice-types). In our code, we use this mechanism mainly to select policies, environments, robots, and some other components like optimizers. The policies available to select are located in [lerobot/policies](../src/lerobot/policies)
- Similarly, we select the environment with `--env.type=pusht`. The different environment configs are available in [`lerobot/envs/configs.py`](../src/lerobot/envs/configs.py)
Let's see another example. Let's say you've been training [ACT](../src/lerobot/policies/act) on [lerobot/aloha_sim_insertion_human](https://huggingface.co/datasets/lerobot/aloha_sim_insertion_human) using the [gym-aloha](https://github.com/huggingface/gym-aloha) environment for evaluation with:
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/train.py policy=diffusion env=pusht
python -m lerobot.scripts.train \
--policy.type=act \
--dataset.repo_id=lerobot/aloha_sim_insertion_human \
--env.type=aloha \
--output_dir=outputs/train/act_aloha_insertion
```
> Notice we added `--output_dir` to explicitly tell where to write outputs from this run (checkpoints, training state, configs etc.). This is not mandatory and if you don't specify it, a default directory will be created from the current date and time, env.type and policy.type. This will typically look like `outputs/train/2025-01-24/16-10-05_aloha_act`.
This way of overriding defaults via the CLI is especially useful when you want to change the policy and/or environment. For instance, you can train ACT on the default Aloha environment with:
We now want to train a different policy for aloha on another task. We'll change the dataset and use [lerobot/aloha_sim_transfer_cube_human](https://huggingface.co/datasets/lerobot/aloha_sim_transfer_cube_human) instead. Of course, we also need to change the task of the environment as well to match this other task.
Looking at the [`AlohaEnv`](../src/lerobot/envs/configs.py) config, the task is `"AlohaInsertion-v0"` by default, which corresponds to the task we trained on in the command above. The [gym-aloha](https://github.com/huggingface/gym-aloha?tab=readme-ov-file#description) environment also has the `AlohaTransferCube-v0` task which corresponds to this other task we want to train on. Putting this together, we can train this new policy on this different task using:
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/train.py policy=act env=aloha
python -m lerobot.scripts.train \
--policy.type=act \
--dataset.repo_id=lerobot/aloha_sim_transfer_cube_human \
--env.type=aloha \
--env.task=AlohaTransferCube-v0 \
--output_dir=outputs/train/act_aloha_transfer
```
There are two things to note here:
- Config overrides are passed as `param_name=param_value`.
- Here we have overridden the defaults section. `policy=act` tells Hydra to use `policy/act.yaml`, and `env=aloha` tells Hydra to use `env/aloha.yaml`.
## Loading from a config file
_As an aside: we've set up all of our configurations so that they reproduce state-of-the-art results from papers in the literature._
## Overriding configuration parameters in the CLI
Now let's say that we want to train on a different task in the Aloha environment. If you look in `env/aloha.yaml` you will see something like:
```yaml
# lerobot/configs/env/aloha.yaml
env:
task: AlohaInsertion-v0
Now, let's assume that we want to reproduce the run just above. That run has produced a `train_config.json` file in its checkpoints, which serializes the `TrainPipelineConfig` instance it used:
```json
{
"dataset": {
"repo_id": "lerobot/aloha_sim_transfer_cube_human",
"episodes": null,
...
},
"env": {
"type": "aloha",
"task": "AlohaTransferCube-v0",
"fps": 50,
...
},
"policy": {
"type": "act",
"n_obs_steps": 1,
...
},
...
}
```
And if you look in `policy/act.yaml` you will see something like:
```yaml
# lerobot/configs/policy/act.yaml
dataset_repo_id: lerobot/aloha_sim_insertion_human
```
But our Aloha environment actually supports a cube transfer task as well. To train for this task, you could manually modify the two yaml configuration files respectively.
First, we'd need to switch to using the cube transfer task for the ALOHA environment.
```diff
# lerobot/configs/env/aloha.yaml
env:
- task: AlohaInsertion-v0
+ task: AlohaTransferCube-v0
```
Then, we'd also need to switch to using the cube transfer dataset.
```diff
# lerobot/configs/policy/act.yaml
-dataset_repo_id: lerobot/aloha_sim_insertion_human
+dataset_repo_id: lerobot/aloha_sim_transfer_cube_human
```
Then, you'd be able to run:
We can then simply load the config values from this file using:
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/train.py policy=act env=aloha
python -m lerobot.scripts.train \
--config_path=outputs/train/act_aloha_transfer/checkpoints/last/pretrained_model/ \
--output_dir=outputs/train/act_aloha_transfer_2
```
`--config_path` is also a special argument which allows to initialize the config from a local config file. It can point to a directory that contains `train_config.json` or to the config file itself directly.
and you'd be training and evaluating on the cube transfer task.
An alternative approach to editing the yaml configuration files, would be to override the defaults via the command line:
Similarly to Hydra, we can still override some parameters in the CLI if we want to, e.g.:
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/train.py \
policy=act \
dataset_repo_id=lerobot/aloha_sim_transfer_cube_human \
env=aloha \
env.task=AlohaTransferCube-v0
python -m lerobot.scripts.train \
--config_path=outputs/train/act_aloha_transfer/checkpoints/last/pretrained_model/ \
--output_dir=outputs/train/act_aloha_transfer_2
--policy.n_action_steps=80
```
> Note: While `--output_dir` is not required in general, in this case we need to specify it since it will otherwise take the value from the `train_config.json` (which is `outputs/train/act_aloha_transfer`). In order to prevent accidental deletion of previous run checkpoints, we raise an error if you're trying to write in an existing directory. This is not the case when resuming a run, which is what you'll learn next.
There's something new here. Notice the `.` delimiter used to traverse the configuration hierarchy. _But be aware that the `defaults` section is an exception. As you saw above, we didn't need to write `defaults.policy=act` in the CLI. `policy=act` was enough._
Putting all that knowledge together, here's the command that was used to train https://huggingface.co/lerobot/act_aloha_sim_transfer_cube_human.
`--config_path` can also accept the repo_id of a repo on the hub that contains a `train_config.json` file, e.g. running:
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/train.py \
hydra.run.dir=outputs/train/act_aloha_sim_transfer_cube_human \
device=cuda
env=aloha \
env.task=AlohaTransferCube-v0 \
dataset_repo_id=lerobot/aloha_sim_transfer_cube_human \
policy=act \
training.eval_freq=10000 \
training.log_freq=250 \
training.offline_steps=100000 \
training.save_model=true \
training.save_freq=25000 \
eval.n_episodes=50 \
eval.batch_size=50 \
wandb.enable=false \
python -m lerobot.scripts.train --config_path=lerobot/diffusion_pusht
```
will start a training run with the same configuration used for training [lerobot/diffusion_pusht](https://huggingface.co/lerobot/diffusion_pusht)
There's one new thing here: `hydra.run.dir=outputs/train/act_aloha_sim_transfer_cube_human`, which specifies where to save the training output.
## Using a configuration file not in `lerobot/configs`
## Resume training
Above we discusses the our training script is set up such that Hydra looks for `default.yaml` in `lerobot/configs`. But, if you have a configuration file elsewhere in your filesystem you may use:
Being able to resume a training run is important in case it crashed or aborted for any reason. We'll demonstrate how to do that here.
Let's reuse the command from the previous run and add a few more options:
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/train.py --config-dir PARENT/PATH --config-name FILE_NAME_WITHOUT_EXTENSION
python -m lerobot.scripts.train \
--policy.type=act \
--dataset.repo_id=lerobot/aloha_sim_transfer_cube_human \
--env.type=aloha \
--env.task=AlohaTransferCube-v0 \
--log_freq=25 \
--save_freq=100 \
--output_dir=outputs/train/run_resumption
```
Note: here we use regular syntax for providing CLI arguments to a Python script, not Hydra's `param_name=param_value` syntax.
As a concrete example, this becomes particularly handy when you have a folder with training outputs, and would like to re-run the training. For example, say you previously ran the training script with one of the earlier commands and have `outputs/train/my_experiment/checkpoints/pretrained_model/config.yaml`. This `config.yaml` file will have the full set of configuration parameters within it. To run the training with the same configuration again, do:
Here we've taken care to set up the log frequency and checkpointing frequency to low numbers so we can showcase resumption. You should be able to see some logging and have a first checkpoint within 1 minute (depending on hardware). Wait for the first checkpoint to happen, you should see a line that looks like this in your terminal:
```
INFO 2025-01-24 16:10:56 ts/train.py:263 Checkpoint policy after step 100
```
Now let's simulate a crash by killing the process (hit `ctrl`+`c`). We can then simply resume this run from the last checkpoint available with:
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/train.py --config-dir outputs/train/my_experiment/checkpoints/last/pretrained_model --config-name config
python -m lerobot.scripts.train \
--config_path=outputs/train/run_resumption/checkpoints/last/pretrained_model/ \
--resume=true
```
You should see from the logging that your training picks up from where it left off.
Another reason for which you might want to resume a run is simply to extend training and add more training steps. The number of training steps is set by the option `--steps`, which is 100 000 by default.
You could double the number of steps of the previous run with:
```bash
python -m lerobot.scripts.train \
--config_path=outputs/train/run_resumption/checkpoints/last/pretrained_model/ \
--resume=true \
--steps=200000
```
Note that you may still use the regular syntax for config parameter overrides (eg: by adding `training.offline_steps=200000`).
## Outputs of a run
In the output directory, there will be a folder called `checkpoints` with the following structure:
```bash
outputs/train/run_resumption/checkpoints
├── 000100 # checkpoint_dir for training step 100
│ ├── pretrained_model/
│ │ ├── config.json # policy config
│ │ ├── model.safetensors # policy weights
│ │ └── train_config.json # train config
│ └── training_state/
│ ├── optimizer_param_groups.json # optimizer param groups
│ ├── optimizer_state.safetensors # optimizer state
│ ├── rng_state.safetensors # rng states
│ ├── scheduler_state.json # scheduler state
│ └── training_step.json # training step
├── 000200
└── last -> 000200 # symlink to the last available checkpoint
```
## Fine-tuning a pre-trained policy
In addition to the features currently in Draccus, we've added a special `.path` argument for the policy, which allows to load a policy as you would with `PreTrainedPolicy.from_pretrained()`. In that case, `path` can be a local directory that contains a checkpoint or a repo_id pointing to a pretrained policy on the hub.
For example, we could fine-tune a [policy pre-trained on the aloha transfer task](https://huggingface.co/lerobot/act_aloha_sim_transfer_cube_human) on the aloha insertion task. We can achieve this with:
```bash
python -m lerobot.scripts.train \
--policy.path=lerobot/act_aloha_sim_transfer_cube_human \
--dataset.repo_id=lerobot/aloha_sim_insertion_human \
--env.type=aloha \
--env.task=AlohaInsertion-v0
```
When doing so, keep in mind that the features of the fine-tuning dataset would have to match the input/output features of the pretrained policy.
## Typical logs and metrics
When you start the training process, you will first see your full configuration being printed in the terminal. You can check it to make sure that you config it correctly and your config is not overrided by other files. The final configuration will also be saved with the checkpoint.
When you start the training process, you will first see your full configuration being printed in the terminal. You can check it to make sure that you configured your run correctly. The final configuration will also be saved with the checkpoint.
After that, you will see training log like this one:
```
INFO 2024-08-14 13:35:12 ts/train.py:192 step:0 smpl:64 ep:1 epch:0.00 loss:1.112 grdn:15.387 lr:2.0e-07 updt_s:1.738 data_s:4.774
```
or evaluation log like:
or evaluation log:
```
INFO 2024-08-14 13:38:45 ts/train.py:226 step:100 smpl:6K ep:52 epch:0.25 ∑rwrd:20.693 success:0.0% eval_s:120.266
```
These logs will also be saved in wandb if `wandb.enable` is set to `true`. Here are the meaning of some abbreviations:
- `smpl`: number of samples seen during training.
- `ep`: number of episodes seen during training. An episode contains multiple samples in a complete manipulation task.
- `epch`: number of time all unique samples are seen (epoch).
@@ -200,14 +230,45 @@ These logs will also be saved in wandb if `wandb.enable` is set to `true`. Here
Some metrics are useful for initial performance profiling. For example, if you find the current GPU utilization is low via the `nvidia-smi` command and `data_s` sometimes is too high, you may need to modify batch size or number of dataloading workers to accelerate dataloading. We also recommend [pytorch profiler](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot?tab=readme-ov-file#improve-your-code-with-profiling) for detailed performance probing.
---
## In short
So far we've seen how to train Diffusion Policy for PushT and ACT for ALOHA. Now, what if we want to train ACT for PushT? Well, there are aspects of the ACT configuration that are specific to the ALOHA environments, and these happen to be incompatible with PushT. Therefore, trying to run the following will almost certainly raise an exception of sorts (eg: feature dimension mismatch):
We'll summarize here the main use cases to remember from this tutorial.
#### Train a policy from scratch CLI
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/train.py policy=act env=pusht dataset_repo_id=lerobot/pusht
python -m lerobot.scripts.train \
--policy.type=act \ # <- select 'act' policy
--env.type=pusht \ # <- select 'pusht' environment
--dataset.repo_id=lerobot/pusht # <- train on this dataset
```
Please, head on over to our [advanced tutorial on adapting policy configuration to various environments](./advanced/train_act_pusht/train_act_pusht.md) to learn more.
#### Train a policy from scratch - config file + CLI
```bash
python -m lerobot.scripts.train \
--config_path=path/to/pretrained_model \ # <- can also be a repo_id
--policy.n_action_steps=80 # <- you may still override values
```
Or in the meantime, happy coding! 🤗
#### Resume/continue a training run
```bash
python -m lerobot.scripts.train \
--config_path=checkpoint/pretrained_model/ \
--resume=true \
--steps=200000 # <- you can change some training parameters
```
#### Fine-tuning
```bash
python -m lerobot.scripts.train \
--policy.path=lerobot/act_aloha_sim_transfer_cube_human \ # <- can also be a local path to a checkpoint
--dataset.repo_id=lerobot/aloha_sim_insertion_human \
--env.type=aloha \
--env.task=AlohaInsertion-v0
```
---
Now that you know the basics of how to train a policy, you might want to know how to apply this knowledge to actual robots, or how to record your own datasets and train policies on your specific task?
If that's the case, head over to the next tutorial [`7_get_started_with_real_robot.md`](./7_get_started_with_real_robot.md).
Or in the meantime, happy training! 🤗

View File

@@ -1,37 +0,0 @@
This tutorial explains how to resume a training run that you've started with the training script. If you don't know how our training script and configuration system works, please read [4_train_policy_with_script.md](./4_train_policy_with_script.md) first.
## Basic training resumption
Let's consider the example of training ACT for one of the ALOHA tasks. Here's a command that can achieve that:
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/train.py \
hydra.run.dir=outputs/train/run_resumption \
policy=act \
dataset_repo_id=lerobot/aloha_sim_transfer_cube_human \
env=aloha \
env.task=AlohaTransferCube-v0 \
training.log_freq=25 \
training.save_checkpoint=true \
training.save_freq=100
```
Here we're using the default dataset and environment for ACT, and we've taken care to set up the log frequency and checkpointing frequency to low numbers so we can test resumption. You should be able to see some logging and have a first checkpoint within 1 minute. Please interrupt the training after the first checkpoint.
To resume, all that we have to do is run the training script, providing the run directory, and the resume option:
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/train.py \
hydra.run.dir=outputs/train/run_resumption \
resume=true
```
You should see from the logging that your training picks up from where it left off.
Note that with `resume=true`, the configuration file from the last checkpoint in the training output directory is loaded. So it doesn't matter that we haven't provided all the other configuration parameters from our previous command (although there may be warnings to notify you that your command has a different configuration than than the checkpoint).
---
Now you should know how to resume your training run in case it gets interrupted or you want to extend a finished training run.
Happy coding! 🤗

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@@ -1,174 +0,0 @@
This tutorial explains how to use [Aloha and Aloha 2 stationary](https://www.trossenrobotics.com/aloha-stationary) with LeRobot.
## Setup
Follow the [documentation from Trossen Robotics](https://docs.trossenrobotics.com/aloha_docs/getting_started/stationary/hardware_setup.html) for setting up the hardware and plugging the 4 arms and 4 cameras to your computer.
## Install LeRobot
On your computer:
1. [Install Miniconda](https://docs.anaconda.com/miniconda/#quick-command-line-install):
```bash
mkdir -p ~/miniconda3
wget https://repo.anaconda.com/miniconda/Miniconda3-latest-Linux-x86_64.sh -O ~/miniconda3/miniconda.sh
bash ~/miniconda3/miniconda.sh -b -u -p ~/miniconda3
rm ~/miniconda3/miniconda.sh
~/miniconda3/bin/conda init bash
```
2. Restart shell or `source ~/.bashrc`
3. Create and activate a fresh conda environment for lerobot
```bash
conda create -y -n lerobot python=3.10 && conda activate lerobot
```
4. Clone LeRobot:
```bash
git clone https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot.git ~/lerobot
```
5. Install LeRobot with dependencies for the Aloha motors (dynamixel) and cameras (intelrealsense):
```bash
cd ~/lerobot && pip install -e ".[dynamixel, intelrealsense]"
```
For Linux only (not Mac), install extra dependencies for recording datasets:
```bash
conda install -y -c conda-forge ffmpeg
pip uninstall -y opencv-python
conda install -y -c conda-forge "opencv>=4.10.0"
```
## Teleoperate
**/!\ FOR SAFETY, READ THIS /!\**
Teleoperation consists in manually operating the leader arms to move the follower arms. Importantly:
1. Make sure your leader arms are in the same position as the follower arms, so that the follower arms don't move too fast to match the leader arms,
2. Our code assumes that your robot has been assembled following Trossen Robotics instructions. This allows us to skip calibration, as we use the pre-defined calibration files in `.cache/calibration/aloha_default`. If you replace a motor, make sure you follow the exact instructions from Trossen Robotics.
By running the following code, you can start your first **SAFE** teleoperation:
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/control_robot.py teleoperate \
--robot-path lerobot/configs/robot/aloha.yaml \
--robot-overrides max_relative_target=5
```
By adding `--robot-overrides max_relative_target=5`, we override the default value for `max_relative_target` defined in `lerobot/configs/robot/aloha.yaml`. It is expected to be `5` to limit the magnitude of the movement for more safety, but the teleoperation won't be smooth. When you feel confident, you can disable this limit by adding `--robot-overrides max_relative_target=null` to the command line:
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/control_robot.py teleoperate \
--robot-path lerobot/configs/robot/aloha.yaml \
--robot-overrides max_relative_target=null
```
## Record a dataset
Once you're familiar with teleoperation, you can record your first dataset with Aloha.
If you want to use the Hugging Face hub features for uploading your dataset and you haven't previously done it, make sure you've logged in using a write-access token, which can be generated from the [Hugging Face settings](https://huggingface.co/settings/tokens):
```bash
huggingface-cli login --token ${HUGGINGFACE_TOKEN} --add-to-git-credential
```
Store your Hugging Face repository name in a variable to run these commands:
```bash
HF_USER=$(huggingface-cli whoami | head -n 1)
echo $HF_USER
```
Record 2 episodes and upload your dataset to the hub:
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/control_robot.py record \
--robot-path lerobot/configs/robot/aloha.yaml \
--robot-overrides max_relative_target=null \
--fps 30 \
--repo-id ${HF_USER}/aloha_test \
--tags aloha tutorial \
--warmup-time-s 5 \
--episode-time-s 40 \
--reset-time-s 10 \
--num-episodes 2 \
--push-to-hub 1
```
## Visualize a dataset
If you uploaded your dataset to the hub with `--push-to-hub 1`, you can [visualize your dataset online](https://huggingface.co/spaces/lerobot/visualize_dataset) by copy pasting your repo id given by:
```bash
echo ${HF_USER}/aloha_test
```
If you didn't upload with `--push-to-hub 0`, you can also visualize it locally with:
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/visualize_dataset_html.py \
--repo-id ${HF_USER}/aloha_test
```
## Replay an episode
**/!\ FOR SAFETY, READ THIS /!\**
Replay consists in automatically replaying the sequence of actions (i.e. goal positions for your motors) recorded in a given dataset episode. Make sure the current initial position of your robot is similar to the one in your episode, so that your follower arms don't move too fast to go to the first goal positions. For safety, you might want to add `--robot-overrides max_relative_target=5` to your command line as explained above.
Now try to replay the first episode on your robot:
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/control_robot.py replay \
--robot-path lerobot/configs/robot/aloha.yaml \
--robot-overrides max_relative_target=null \
--fps 30 \
--repo-id ${HF_USER}/aloha_test \
--episode 0
```
## Train a policy
To train a policy to control your robot, use the [`python lerobot/scripts/train.py`](../lerobot/scripts/train.py) script. A few arguments are required. Here is an example command:
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/train.py \
dataset_repo_id=${HF_USER}/aloha_test \
policy=act_aloha_real \
env=aloha_real \
hydra.run.dir=outputs/train/act_aloha_test \
hydra.job.name=act_aloha_test \
device=cuda \
wandb.enable=true
```
Let's explain it:
1. We provided the dataset as argument with `dataset_repo_id=${HF_USER}/aloha_test`.
2. We provided the policy with `policy=act_aloha_real`. This loads configurations from [`lerobot/configs/policy/act_aloha_real.yaml`](../lerobot/configs/policy/act_aloha_real.yaml). Importantly, this policy uses 4 cameras as input `cam_right_wrist`, `cam_left_wrist`, `cam_high`, and `cam_low`.
3. We provided an environment as argument with `env=aloha_real`. This loads configurations from [`lerobot/configs/env/aloha_real.yaml`](../lerobot/configs/env/aloha_real.yaml). Note: this yaml defines 18 dimensions for the `state_dim` and `action_dim`, corresponding to 18 motors, not 14 motors as used in previous Aloha work. This is because, we include the `shoulder_shadow` and `elbow_shadow` motors for simplicity.
4. We provided `device=cuda` since we are training on a Nvidia GPU.
5. We provided `wandb.enable=true` to use [Weights and Biases](https://docs.wandb.ai/quickstart) for visualizing training plots. This is optional but if you use it, make sure you are logged in by running `wandb login`.
Training should take several hours. You will find checkpoints in `outputs/train/act_aloha_test/checkpoints`.
## Evaluate your policy
You can use the `record` function from [`lerobot/scripts/control_robot.py`](../lerobot/scripts/control_robot.py) but with a policy checkpoint as input. For instance, run this command to record 10 evaluation episodes:
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/control_robot.py record \
--robot-path lerobot/configs/robot/aloha.yaml \
--robot-overrides max_relative_target=null \
--fps 30 \
--repo-id ${HF_USER}/eval_act_aloha_test \
--tags aloha tutorial eval \
--warmup-time-s 5 \
--episode-time-s 40 \
--reset-time-s 10 \
--num-episodes 10 \
--num-image-writer-processes 1 \
-p outputs/train/act_aloha_test/checkpoints/last/pretrained_model
```
As you can see, it's almost the same command as previously used to record your training dataset. Two things changed:
1. There is an additional `-p` argument which indicates the path to your policy checkpoint with (e.g. `-p outputs/train/eval_aloha_test/checkpoints/last/pretrained_model`). You can also use the model repository if you uploaded a model checkpoint to the hub (e.g. `-p ${HF_USER}/act_aloha_test`).
2. The name of dataset begins by `eval` to reflect that you are running inference (e.g. `--repo-id ${HF_USER}/eval_act_aloha_test`).
3. We use `--num-image-writer-processes 1` instead of the default value (`0`). On our computer, using a dedicated process to write images from the 4 cameras on disk allows to reach constent 30 fps during inference. Feel free to explore different values for `--num-image-writer-processes`.
## More
Follow this [previous tutorial](https://github.com/huggingface/lerobot/blob/main/examples/7_get_started_with_real_robot.md#4-train-a-policy-on-your-data) for a more in-depth explaination.
If you have any question or need help, please reach out on Discord in the channel `#aloha-arm`.

View File

@@ -1,3 +1,17 @@
# Copyright 2024 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 script demonstrates how to use torchvision's image transformation with LeRobotDataset for data
augmentation purposes. The transformations are passed to the dataset as an argument upon creation, and
@@ -8,7 +22,7 @@ from pathlib import Path
from torchvision.transforms import ToPILImage, v2
from lerobot.common.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset
dataset_repo_id = "lerobot/aloha_static_screw_driver"

View File

@@ -1,87 +0,0 @@
# @package _global_
# Change the seed to match what PushT eval uses
# (to avoid evaluating on seeds used for generating the training data).
seed: 100000
# Change the dataset repository to the PushT one.
dataset_repo_id: lerobot/pusht
override_dataset_stats:
observation.image:
# stats from imagenet, since we use a pretrained vision model
mean: [[[0.485]], [[0.456]], [[0.406]]] # (c,1,1)
std: [[[0.229]], [[0.224]], [[0.225]]] # (c,1,1)
training:
offline_steps: 80000
online_steps: 0
eval_freq: 10000
save_freq: 100000
log_freq: 250
save_model: true
batch_size: 8
lr: 1e-5
lr_backbone: 1e-5
weight_decay: 1e-4
grad_clip_norm: 10
online_steps_between_rollouts: 1
delta_timestamps:
action: "[i / ${fps} for i in range(${policy.chunk_size})]"
eval:
n_episodes: 50
batch_size: 50
# See `configuration_act.py` for more details.
policy:
name: act
# Input / output structure.
n_obs_steps: 1
chunk_size: 100 # chunk_size
n_action_steps: 100
input_shapes:
observation.image: [3, 96, 96]
observation.state: ["${env.state_dim}"]
output_shapes:
action: ["${env.action_dim}"]
# Normalization / Unnormalization
input_normalization_modes:
observation.image: mean_std
# Use min_max normalization just because it's more standard.
observation.state: min_max
output_normalization_modes:
# Use min_max normalization just because it's more standard.
action: min_max
# Architecture.
# Vision backbone.
vision_backbone: resnet18
pretrained_backbone_weights: ResNet18_Weights.IMAGENET1K_V1
replace_final_stride_with_dilation: false
# Transformer layers.
pre_norm: false
dim_model: 512
n_heads: 8
dim_feedforward: 3200
feedforward_activation: relu
n_encoder_layers: 4
# Note: Although the original ACT implementation has 7 for `n_decoder_layers`, there is a bug in the code
# that means only the first layer is used. Here we match the original implementation by setting this to 1.
# See this issue https://github.com/tonyzhaozh/act/issues/25#issue-2258740521.
n_decoder_layers: 1
# VAE.
use_vae: true
latent_dim: 32
n_vae_encoder_layers: 4
# Inference.
temporal_ensemble_coeff: null
# Training and loss computation.
dropout: 0.1
kl_weight: 10.0

View File

@@ -1,70 +0,0 @@
In this tutorial we will learn how to adapt a policy configuration to be compatible with a new environment and dataset. As a concrete example, we will adapt the default configuration for ACT to be compatible with the PushT environment and dataset.
If you haven't already read our tutorial on the [training script and configuration tooling](../4_train_policy_with_script.md) please do so prior to tackling this tutorial.
Let's get started!
Suppose we want to train ACT for PushT. Well, there are aspects of the ACT configuration that are specific to the ALOHA environments, and these happen to be incompatible with PushT. Therefore, trying to run the following will almost certainly raise an exception of sorts (eg: feature dimension mismatch):
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/train.py policy=act env=pusht dataset_repo_id=lerobot/pusht
```
We need to adapt the parameters of the ACT policy configuration to the PushT environment. The most important ones are the image keys.
ALOHA's datasets and environments typically use a variable number of cameras. In `lerobot/configs/policy/act.yaml` you may notice two relevant sections. Here we show you the minimal diff needed to adjust to PushT:
```diff
override_dataset_stats:
- observation.images.top:
+ observation.image:
# stats from imagenet, since we use a pretrained vision model
mean: [[[0.485]], [[0.456]], [[0.406]]] # (c,1,1)
std: [[[0.229]], [[0.224]], [[0.225]]] # (c,1,1)
policy:
input_shapes:
- observation.images.top: [3, 480, 640]
+ observation.image: [3, 96, 96]
observation.state: ["${env.state_dim}"]
output_shapes:
action: ["${env.action_dim}"]
input_normalization_modes:
- observation.images.top: mean_std
+ observation.image: mean_std
observation.state: min_max
output_normalization_modes:
action: min_max
```
Here we've accounted for the following:
- PushT uses "observation.image" for its image key.
- PushT provides smaller images.
_Side note: technically we could override these via the CLI, but with many changes it gets a bit messy, and we also have a bit of a challenge in that we're using `.` in our observation keys which is treated by Hydra as a hierarchical separator_.
For your convenience, we provide [`act_pusht.yaml`](./act_pusht.yaml) in this directory. It contains the diff above, plus some other (optional) ones that are explained within. Please copy it into `lerobot/configs/policy` with:
```bash
cp examples/advanced/1_train_act_pusht/act_pusht.yaml lerobot/configs/policy/act_pusht.yaml
```
(remember from a [previous tutorial](../4_train_policy_with_script.md) that Hydra will look in the `lerobot/configs` directory). Now try running the following.
<!-- Note to contributor: are you changing this command? Note that it's tested in `Makefile`, so change it there too! -->
```bash
python lerobot/scripts/train.py policy=act_pusht env=pusht
```
Notice that this is much the same as the command that failed at the start of the tutorial, only:
- Now we are using `policy=act_pusht` to point to our new configuration file.
- We can drop `dataset_repo_id=lerobot/pusht` as the change is incorporated in our new configuration file.
Hurrah! You're now training ACT for the PushT environment.
---
The bottom line of this tutorial is that when training policies for different environments and datasets you will need to understand what parts of the policy configuration are specific to those and make changes accordingly.
Happy coding! 🤗

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@@ -1,3 +1,17 @@
# Copyright 2024 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 script demonstrates how to slice a dataset and calculate the loss on a subset of the data.
This technique can be useful for debugging and testing purposes, as well as identifying whether a policy
@@ -9,76 +23,82 @@ on the target environment, whether that be in simulation or the real world.
"""
import math
from pathlib import Path
import torch
from huggingface_hub import snapshot_download
from lerobot.common.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset, LeRobotDatasetMetadata
from lerobot.common.policies.diffusion.modeling_diffusion import DiffusionPolicy
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset, LeRobotDatasetMetadata
from lerobot.policies.diffusion.modeling_diffusion import DiffusionPolicy
device = torch.device("cuda")
# Download the diffusion policy for pusht environment
pretrained_policy_path = Path(snapshot_download("lerobot/diffusion_pusht"))
# OR uncomment the following to evaluate a policy from the local outputs/train folder.
# pretrained_policy_path = Path("outputs/train/example_pusht_diffusion")
def main():
device = torch.device("cuda")
policy = DiffusionPolicy.from_pretrained(pretrained_policy_path)
policy.eval()
policy.to(device)
# Download the diffusion policy for pusht environment
pretrained_policy_path = "lerobot/diffusion_pusht"
# OR uncomment the following to evaluate a policy from the local outputs/train folder.
# pretrained_policy_path = Path("outputs/train/example_pusht_diffusion")
# Set up the dataset.
delta_timestamps = {
# Load the previous image and state at -0.1 seconds before current frame,
# then load current image and state corresponding to 0.0 second.
"observation.image": [-0.1, 0.0],
"observation.state": [-0.1, 0.0],
# Load the previous action (-0.1), the next action to be executed (0.0),
# and 14 future actions with a 0.1 seconds spacing. All these actions will be
# used to calculate the loss.
"action": [-0.1, 0.0, 0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 0.4, 0.5, 0.6, 0.7, 0.8, 0.9, 1.0, 1.1, 1.2, 1.3, 1.4],
}
policy = DiffusionPolicy.from_pretrained(pretrained_policy_path)
policy.eval()
policy.to(device)
# Load the last 10% of episodes of the dataset as a validation set.
# - Load dataset metadata
dataset_metadata = LeRobotDatasetMetadata("lerobot/pusht")
# - Calculate train and val episodes
total_episodes = dataset_metadata.total_episodes
episodes = list(range(dataset_metadata.total_episodes))
num_train_episodes = math.floor(total_episodes * 90 / 100)
train_episodes = episodes[:num_train_episodes]
val_episodes = episodes[num_train_episodes:]
print(f"Number of episodes in full dataset: {total_episodes}")
print(f"Number of episodes in training dataset (90% subset): {len(train_episodes)}")
print(f"Number of episodes in validation dataset (10% subset): {len(val_episodes)}")
# - Load train an val datasets
train_dataset = LeRobotDataset("lerobot/pusht", episodes=train_episodes, delta_timestamps=delta_timestamps)
val_dataset = LeRobotDataset("lerobot/pusht", episodes=val_episodes, delta_timestamps=delta_timestamps)
print(f"Number of frames in training dataset (90% subset): {len(train_dataset)}")
print(f"Number of frames in validation dataset (10% subset): {len(val_dataset)}")
# Set up the dataset.
delta_timestamps = {
# Load the previous image and state at -0.1 seconds before current frame,
# then load current image and state corresponding to 0.0 second.
"observation.image": [-0.1, 0.0],
"observation.state": [-0.1, 0.0],
# Load the previous action (-0.1), the next action to be executed (0.0),
# and 14 future actions with a 0.1 seconds spacing. All these actions will be
# used to calculate the loss.
"action": [-0.1, 0.0, 0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 0.4, 0.5, 0.6, 0.7, 0.8, 0.9, 1.0, 1.1, 1.2, 1.3, 1.4],
}
# Create dataloader for evaluation.
val_dataloader = torch.utils.data.DataLoader(
val_dataset,
num_workers=4,
batch_size=64,
shuffle=False,
pin_memory=device != torch.device("cpu"),
drop_last=False,
)
# Load the last 10% of episodes of the dataset as a validation set.
# - Load dataset metadata
dataset_metadata = LeRobotDatasetMetadata("lerobot/pusht")
# - Calculate train and val episodes
total_episodes = dataset_metadata.total_episodes
episodes = list(range(dataset_metadata.total_episodes))
num_train_episodes = math.floor(total_episodes * 90 / 100)
train_episodes = episodes[:num_train_episodes]
val_episodes = episodes[num_train_episodes:]
print(f"Number of episodes in full dataset: {total_episodes}")
print(f"Number of episodes in training dataset (90% subset): {len(train_episodes)}")
print(f"Number of episodes in validation dataset (10% subset): {len(val_episodes)}")
# - Load train and val datasets
train_dataset = LeRobotDataset(
"lerobot/pusht", episodes=train_episodes, delta_timestamps=delta_timestamps
)
val_dataset = LeRobotDataset("lerobot/pusht", episodes=val_episodes, delta_timestamps=delta_timestamps)
print(f"Number of frames in training dataset (90% subset): {len(train_dataset)}")
print(f"Number of frames in validation dataset (10% subset): {len(val_dataset)}")
# Run validation loop.
loss_cumsum = 0
n_examples_evaluated = 0
for batch in val_dataloader:
batch = {k: v.to(device, non_blocking=True) for k, v in batch.items()}
output_dict = policy.forward(batch)
# Create dataloader for evaluation.
val_dataloader = torch.utils.data.DataLoader(
val_dataset,
num_workers=4,
batch_size=64,
shuffle=False,
pin_memory=device != torch.device("cpu"),
drop_last=False,
)
loss_cumsum += output_dict["loss"].item()
n_examples_evaluated += batch["index"].shape[0]
# Run validation loop.
loss_cumsum = 0
n_examples_evaluated = 0
for batch in val_dataloader:
batch = {k: v.to(device, non_blocking=True) for k, v in batch.items()}
loss, _ = policy.forward(batch)
# Calculate the average loss over the validation set.
average_loss = loss_cumsum / n_examples_evaluated
loss_cumsum += loss.item()
n_examples_evaluated += batch["index"].shape[0]
print(f"Average loss on validation set: {average_loss:.4f}")
# Calculate the average loss over the validation set.
average_loss = loss_cumsum / n_examples_evaluated
print(f"Average loss on validation set: {average_loss:.4f}")
if __name__ == "__main__":
main()

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@@ -0,0 +1,105 @@
# Copyright 2024 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.
"""
Replays the actions of an episode from a dataset on a robot.
Example:
```shell
python -m lerobot.replay \
--robot.type=so100_follower \
--robot.port=/dev/tty.usbmodem58760431541 \
--robot.id=black \
--dataset.repo_id=aliberts/record-test \
--dataset.episode=2
```
"""
import logging
import time
from dataclasses import asdict, dataclass
from pathlib import Path
from pprint import pformat
import draccus
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset
from lerobot.robots import ( # noqa: F401
Robot,
RobotConfig,
koch_follower,
make_robot_from_config,
so100_follower,
so101_follower,
)
from lerobot.utils.robot_utils import busy_wait
from lerobot.utils.utils import (
init_logging,
log_say,
)
@dataclass
class DatasetReplayConfig:
# Dataset identifier. By convention it should match '{hf_username}/{dataset_name}' (e.g. `lerobot/test`).
repo_id: str
# Episode to replay.
episode: int
# Root directory where the dataset will be stored (e.g. 'dataset/path').
root: str | Path | None = None
# Limit the frames per second. By default, uses the policy fps.
fps: int = 30
@dataclass
class ReplayConfig:
robot: RobotConfig
dataset: DatasetReplayConfig
# Use vocal synthesis to read events.
play_sounds: bool = True
@draccus.wrap()
def replay(cfg: ReplayConfig):
init_logging()
logging.info(pformat(asdict(cfg)))
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")
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 = {}
for i, name in enumerate(dataset.features["action"]["names"]):
key = f"{name.removeprefix('main_')}.pos"
action[key] = action_array[i].item()
action["shoulder_lift.pos"] = -(action["shoulder_lift.pos"] - 90)
action["elbow_flex.pos"] -= 90
robot.send_action(action)
dt_s = time.perf_counter() - start_episode_t
busy_wait(1 / dataset.fps - dt_s)
robot.disconnect()
if __name__ == "__main__":
replay()

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@@ -0,0 +1,90 @@
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.record import record_loop
from lerobot.robots.lekiwi import LeKiwiClient, LeKiwiClientConfig
from lerobot.utils.control_utils import init_keyboard_listener
from lerobot.utils.utils import log_say
from lerobot.utils.visualization_utils import _init_rerun
NUM_EPISODES = 2
FPS = 30
EPISODE_TIME_SEC = 60
TASK_DESCRIPTION = "My task description"
# Create the robot and teleoperator configurations
robot_config = LeKiwiClientConfig(remote_ip="172.18.134.136", id="lekiwi")
robot = LeKiwiClient(robot_config)
policy = ACTPolicy.from_pretrained("<hf_username>/<policy_repo_id>")
# Configure the dataset features
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
dataset = LeRobotDataset.create(
repo_id="<hf_username>/<eval_dataset_repo_id>",
fps=FPS,
features=dataset_features,
robot_type=robot.name,
use_videos=True,
image_writer_threads=4,
)
# To connect you already should have this script running on LeKiwi: `python -m lerobot.robots.lekiwi.lekiwi_host --robot.id=my_awesome_kiwi`
robot.connect()
_init_rerun(session_name="recording")
listener, events = init_keyboard_listener()
if not robot.is_connected:
raise ValueError("Robot is not connected!")
recorded_episodes = 0
while recorded_episodes < NUM_EPISODES and not events["stop_recording"]:
log_say(f"Running inference, recording eval episode {recorded_episodes} of {NUM_EPISODES}")
# Run the policy inference loop
record_loop(
robot=robot,
events=events,
fps=FPS,
policy=policy,
dataset=dataset,
control_time_s=EPISODE_TIME_SEC,
single_task=TASK_DESCRIPTION,
display_data=True,
)
# Logic for reset env
if not events["stop_recording"] and (
(recorded_episodes < NUM_EPISODES - 1) or events["rerecord_episode"]
):
log_say("Reset the environment")
record_loop(
robot=robot,
events=events,
fps=FPS,
control_time_s=EPISODE_TIME_SEC,
single_task=TASK_DESCRIPTION,
display_data=True,
)
if events["rerecord_episode"]:
log_say("Re-record episode")
events["rerecord_episode"] = False
events["exit_early"] = False
dataset.clear_episode_buffer()
continue
dataset.save_episode()
recorded_episodes += 1
# Upload to hub and clean up
dataset.push_to_hub()
robot.disconnect()
listener.stop()

101
examples/lekiwi/record.py Normal file
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@@ -0,0 +1,101 @@
from lerobot.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset
from lerobot.datasets.utils import hw_to_dataset_features
from lerobot.record import record_loop
from lerobot.robots.lekiwi.config_lekiwi import LeKiwiClientConfig
from lerobot.robots.lekiwi.lekiwi_client import LeKiwiClient
from lerobot.teleoperators.keyboard import KeyboardTeleop, KeyboardTeleopConfig
from lerobot.teleoperators.so100_leader import SO100Leader, SO100LeaderConfig
from lerobot.utils.control_utils import init_keyboard_listener
from lerobot.utils.utils import log_say
from lerobot.utils.visualization_utils import _init_rerun
NUM_EPISODES = 3
FPS = 30
EPISODE_TIME_SEC = 30
RESET_TIME_SEC = 10
TASK_DESCRIPTION = "My task description"
# Create the robot and teleoperator configurations
robot_config = LeKiwiClientConfig(remote_ip="172.18.134.136", id="lekiwi")
leader_arm_config = SO100LeaderConfig(port="/dev/tty.usbmodem585A0077581", id="my_awesome_leader_arm")
keyboard_config = KeyboardTeleopConfig()
robot = LeKiwiClient(robot_config)
leader_arm = SO100Leader(leader_arm_config)
keyboard = KeyboardTeleop(keyboard_config)
# Configure the dataset features
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
dataset = LeRobotDataset.create(
repo_id="<hf_username>/<dataset_repo_id>",
fps=FPS,
features=dataset_features,
robot_type=robot.name,
use_videos=True,
image_writer_threads=4,
)
# To connect you already should have this script running on LeKiwi: `python -m lerobot.robots.lekiwi.lekiwi_host --robot.id=my_awesome_kiwi`
robot.connect()
leader_arm.connect()
keyboard.connect()
_init_rerun(session_name="lekiwi_record")
listener, events = init_keyboard_listener()
if not robot.is_connected or not leader_arm.is_connected or not keyboard.is_connected:
raise ValueError("Robot, leader arm of keyboard is not connected!")
recorded_episodes = 0
while recorded_episodes < NUM_EPISODES and not events["stop_recording"]:
log_say(f"Recording episode {recorded_episodes}")
# Run the record loop
record_loop(
robot=robot,
events=events,
fps=FPS,
dataset=dataset,
teleop=[leader_arm, keyboard],
control_time_s=EPISODE_TIME_SEC,
single_task=TASK_DESCRIPTION,
display_data=True,
)
# Logic for reset env
if not events["stop_recording"] and (
(recorded_episodes < NUM_EPISODES - 1) or events["rerecord_episode"]
):
log_say("Reset the environment")
record_loop(
robot=robot,
events=events,
fps=FPS,
teleop=[leader_arm, keyboard],
control_time_s=RESET_TIME_SEC,
single_task=TASK_DESCRIPTION,
display_data=True,
)
if events["rerecord_episode"]:
log_say("Re-record episode")
events["rerecord_episode"] = False
events["exit_early"] = False
dataset.clear_episode_buffer()
continue
dataset.save_episode()
recorded_episodes += 1
# Upload to hub and clean up
dataset.push_to_hub()
robot.disconnect()
leader_arm.disconnect()
keyboard.disconnect()
listener.stop()

33
examples/lekiwi/replay.py Normal file
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@@ -0,0 +1,33 @@
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.robot_utils import busy_wait
from lerobot.utils.utils import log_say
EPISODE_IDX = 0
robot_config = LeKiwiClientConfig(remote_ip="172.18.134.136", id="lekiwi")
robot = LeKiwiClient(robot_config)
dataset = LeRobotDataset("<hf_username>/<dataset_repo_id>", episodes=[EPISODE_IDX])
actions = dataset.hf_dataset.select_columns("action")
robot.connect()
if not robot.is_connected:
raise ValueError("Robot is not connected!")
log_say(f"Replaying episode {EPISODE_IDX}")
for idx in range(dataset.num_frames):
t0 = time.perf_counter()
action = {
name: float(actions[idx]["action"][i]) for i, name in enumerate(dataset.features["action"]["names"])
}
robot.send_action(action)
busy_wait(max(1.0 / dataset.fps - (time.perf_counter() - t0), 0.0))
robot.disconnect()

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@@ -0,0 +1,47 @@
import time
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
FPS = 30
# Create the robot and teleoperator configurations
robot_config = LeKiwiClientConfig(remote_ip="172.18.134.136", id="my_lekiwi")
teleop_arm_config = SO100LeaderConfig(port="/dev/tty.usbmodem585A0077581", id="my_awesome_leader_arm")
keyboard_config = KeyboardTeleopConfig(id="my_laptop_keyboard")
robot = LeKiwiClient(robot_config)
leader_arm = SO100Leader(teleop_arm_config)
keyboard = KeyboardTeleop(keyboard_config)
# To connect you already should have this script running on LeKiwi: `python -m lerobot.robots.lekiwi.lekiwi_host --robot.id=my_awesome_kiwi`
robot.connect()
leader_arm.connect()
keyboard.connect()
_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, leader arm of keyboard is not connected!")
while True:
t0 = time.perf_counter()
observation = robot.get_observation()
arm_action = leader_arm.get_action()
arm_action = {f"arm_{k}": v for k, v in arm_action.items()}
keyboard_keys = keyboard.get_action()
base_action = robot._from_keyboard_to_base_action(keyboard_keys)
log_rerun_data(observation, {**arm_action, **base_action})
action = {**arm_action, **base_action} if len(base_action) > 0 else arm_action
robot.send_action(action)
busy_wait(max(1.0 / FPS - (time.perf_counter() - t0), 0.0))

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@@ -1,222 +0,0 @@
import shutil
from pathlib import Path
import numpy as np
import torch
from lerobot.common.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LEROBOT_HOME, LeRobotDataset
from lerobot.common.datasets.push_dataset_to_hub._download_raw import download_raw
PUSHT_TASK = "Push the T-shaped blue block onto the T-shaped green target surface."
PUSHT_FEATURES = {
"observation.state": {
"dtype": "float32",
"shape": (2,),
"names": {
"axes": ["x", "y"],
},
},
"action": {
"dtype": "float32",
"shape": (2,),
"names": {
"axes": ["x", "y"],
},
},
"next.reward": {
"dtype": "float32",
"shape": (1,),
"names": None,
},
"next.success": {
"dtype": "bool",
"shape": (1,),
"names": None,
},
"observation.environment_state": {
"dtype": "float32",
"shape": (16,),
"names": [
"keypoints",
],
},
"observation.image": {
"dtype": None,
"shape": (3, 96, 96),
"names": [
"channel",
"height",
"width",
],
},
}
def build_features(mode: str) -> dict:
features = PUSHT_FEATURES
if mode == "keypoints":
features.pop("observation.image")
else:
features.pop("observation.environment_state")
features["observation.image"]["dtype"] = mode
return features
def load_raw_dataset(zarr_path: Path):
try:
from lerobot.common.datasets.push_dataset_to_hub._diffusion_policy_replay_buffer import (
ReplayBuffer as DiffusionPolicyReplayBuffer,
)
except ModuleNotFoundError as e:
print("`gym_pusht` is not installed. Please install it with `pip install 'lerobot[gym_pusht]'`")
raise e
zarr_data = DiffusionPolicyReplayBuffer.copy_from_path(zarr_path)
return zarr_data
def calculate_coverage(zarr_data):
try:
import pymunk
from gym_pusht.envs.pusht import PushTEnv, pymunk_to_shapely
except ModuleNotFoundError as e:
print("`gym_pusht` is not installed. Please install it with `pip install 'lerobot[gym_pusht]'`")
raise e
block_pos = zarr_data["state"][:, 2:4]
block_angle = zarr_data["state"][:, 4]
num_frames = len(block_pos)
coverage = np.zeros((num_frames,))
# 8 keypoints with 2 coords each
keypoints = np.zeros((num_frames, 16))
# Set x, y, theta (in radians)
goal_pos_angle = np.array([256, 256, np.pi / 4])
goal_body = PushTEnv.get_goal_pose_body(goal_pos_angle)
for i in range(num_frames):
space = pymunk.Space()
space.gravity = 0, 0
space.damping = 0
# Add walls.
walls = [
PushTEnv.add_segment(space, (5, 506), (5, 5), 2),
PushTEnv.add_segment(space, (5, 5), (506, 5), 2),
PushTEnv.add_segment(space, (506, 5), (506, 506), 2),
PushTEnv.add_segment(space, (5, 506), (506, 506), 2),
]
space.add(*walls)
block_body, block_shapes = PushTEnv.add_tee(space, block_pos[i].tolist(), block_angle[i].item())
goal_geom = pymunk_to_shapely(goal_body, block_body.shapes)
block_geom = pymunk_to_shapely(block_body, block_body.shapes)
intersection_area = goal_geom.intersection(block_geom).area
goal_area = goal_geom.area
coverage[i] = intersection_area / goal_area
keypoints[i] = torch.from_numpy(PushTEnv.get_keypoints(block_shapes).flatten())
return coverage, keypoints
def calculate_success(coverage: float, success_threshold: float):
return coverage > success_threshold
def calculate_reward(coverage: float, success_threshold: float):
return np.clip(coverage / success_threshold, 0, 1)
def main(raw_dir: Path, repo_id: str, mode: str = "video", push_to_hub: bool = True):
if mode not in ["video", "image", "keypoints"]:
raise ValueError(mode)
if (LEROBOT_HOME / repo_id).exists():
shutil.rmtree(LEROBOT_HOME / repo_id)
if not raw_dir.exists():
download_raw(raw_dir, repo_id="lerobot-raw/pusht_raw")
zarr_data = load_raw_dataset(zarr_path=raw_dir / "pusht_cchi_v7_replay.zarr")
env_state = zarr_data["state"][:]
agent_pos = env_state[:, :2]
action = zarr_data["action"][:]
image = zarr_data["img"] # (b, h, w, c)
episode_data_index = {
"from": np.concatenate(([0], zarr_data.meta["episode_ends"][:-1])),
"to": zarr_data.meta["episode_ends"],
}
# Calculate success and reward based on the overlapping area
# of the T-object and the T-area.
coverage, keypoints = calculate_coverage(zarr_data)
success = calculate_success(coverage, success_threshold=0.95)
reward = calculate_reward(coverage, success_threshold=0.95)
features = build_features(mode)
dataset = LeRobotDataset.create(
repo_id=repo_id,
fps=10,
robot_type="2d pointer",
features=features,
image_writer_threads=4,
)
episodes = range(len(episode_data_index["from"]))
for ep_idx in episodes:
from_idx = episode_data_index["from"][ep_idx]
to_idx = episode_data_index["to"][ep_idx]
num_frames = to_idx - from_idx
for frame_idx in range(num_frames):
i = from_idx + frame_idx
frame = {
"action": torch.from_numpy(action[i]),
# Shift reward and success by +1 until the last item of the episode
"next.reward": reward[i + (frame_idx < num_frames - 1)],
"next.success": success[i + (frame_idx < num_frames - 1)],
}
frame["observation.state"] = torch.from_numpy(agent_pos[i])
if mode == "keypoints":
frame["observation.environment_state"] = torch.from_numpy(keypoints[i])
else:
frame["observation.image"] = torch.from_numpy(image[i])
dataset.add_frame(frame)
dataset.save_episode(task=PUSHT_TASK)
dataset.consolidate()
if push_to_hub:
dataset.push_to_hub()
if __name__ == "__main__":
# To try this script, modify the repo id with your own HuggingFace user (e.g cadene/pusht)
repo_id = "lerobot/pusht"
modes = ["video", "image", "keypoints"]
# Uncomment if you want to try with a specific mode
# modes = ["video"]
# modes = ["image"]
# modes = ["keypoints"]
raw_dir = Path("data/lerobot-raw/pusht_raw")
for mode in modes:
if mode in ["image", "keypoints"]:
repo_id += f"_{mode}"
# download and load raw dataset, create LeRobotDataset, populate it, push to hub
main(raw_dir, repo_id=repo_id, mode=mode)
# Uncomment if you want to load the local dataset and explore it
# dataset = LeRobotDataset(repo_id=repo_id, local_files_only=True)
# breakpoint()

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@@ -1,214 +0,0 @@
#!/usr/bin/env python
# Copyright 2024 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.
from copy import deepcopy
from math import ceil
import einops
import torch
import tqdm
def get_stats_einops_patterns(dataset, num_workers=0):
"""These einops patterns will be used to aggregate batches and compute statistics.
Note: We assume the images are in channel first format
"""
dataloader = torch.utils.data.DataLoader(
dataset,
num_workers=num_workers,
batch_size=2,
shuffle=False,
)
batch = next(iter(dataloader))
stats_patterns = {}
for key in dataset.features:
# sanity check that tensors are not float64
assert batch[key].dtype != torch.float64
# if isinstance(feats_type, (VideoFrame, Image)):
if key in dataset.meta.camera_keys:
# sanity check that images are channel first
_, c, h, w = batch[key].shape
assert c < h and c < w, f"expect channel first images, but instead {batch[key].shape}"
# sanity check that images are float32 in range [0,1]
assert batch[key].dtype == torch.float32, f"expect torch.float32, but instead {batch[key].dtype=}"
assert batch[key].max() <= 1, f"expect pixels lower than 1, but instead {batch[key].max()=}"
assert batch[key].min() >= 0, f"expect pixels greater than 1, but instead {batch[key].min()=}"
stats_patterns[key] = "b c h w -> c 1 1"
elif batch[key].ndim == 2:
stats_patterns[key] = "b c -> c "
elif batch[key].ndim == 1:
stats_patterns[key] = "b -> 1"
else:
raise ValueError(f"{key}, {batch[key].shape}")
return stats_patterns
def compute_stats(dataset, batch_size=8, num_workers=8, max_num_samples=None):
"""Compute mean/std and min/max statistics of all data keys in a LeRobotDataset."""
if max_num_samples is None:
max_num_samples = len(dataset)
# for more info on why we need to set the same number of workers, see `load_from_videos`
stats_patterns = get_stats_einops_patterns(dataset, num_workers)
# mean and std will be computed incrementally while max and min will track the running value.
mean, std, max, min = {}, {}, {}, {}
for key in stats_patterns:
mean[key] = torch.tensor(0.0).float()
std[key] = torch.tensor(0.0).float()
max[key] = torch.tensor(-float("inf")).float()
min[key] = torch.tensor(float("inf")).float()
def create_seeded_dataloader(dataset, batch_size, seed):
generator = torch.Generator()
generator.manual_seed(seed)
dataloader = torch.utils.data.DataLoader(
dataset,
num_workers=num_workers,
batch_size=batch_size,
shuffle=True,
drop_last=False,
generator=generator,
)
return dataloader
# Note: Due to be refactored soon. The point of storing `first_batch` is to make sure we don't get
# surprises when rerunning the sampler.
first_batch = None
running_item_count = 0 # for online mean computation
dataloader = create_seeded_dataloader(dataset, batch_size, seed=1337)
for i, batch in enumerate(
tqdm.tqdm(dataloader, total=ceil(max_num_samples / batch_size), desc="Compute mean, min, max")
):
this_batch_size = len(batch["index"])
running_item_count += this_batch_size
if first_batch is None:
first_batch = deepcopy(batch)
for key, pattern in stats_patterns.items():
batch[key] = batch[key].float()
# Numerically stable update step for mean computation.
batch_mean = einops.reduce(batch[key], pattern, "mean")
# Hint: to update the mean we need x̄ₙ = (Nₙ₋₁x̄ₙ₋₁ + Bₙxₙ) / Nₙ, where the subscript represents
# the update step, N is the running item count, B is this batch size, x̄ is the running mean,
# and x is the current batch mean. Some rearrangement is then required to avoid risking
# numerical overflow. Another hint: Nₙ₋₁ = Nₙ - Bₙ. Rearrangement yields
# x̄ₙ = x̄ₙ₋₁ + Bₙ * (xₙ - x̄ₙ₋₁) / Nₙ
mean[key] = mean[key] + this_batch_size * (batch_mean - mean[key]) / running_item_count
max[key] = torch.maximum(max[key], einops.reduce(batch[key], pattern, "max"))
min[key] = torch.minimum(min[key], einops.reduce(batch[key], pattern, "min"))
if i == ceil(max_num_samples / batch_size) - 1:
break
first_batch_ = None
running_item_count = 0 # for online std computation
dataloader = create_seeded_dataloader(dataset, batch_size, seed=1337)
for i, batch in enumerate(
tqdm.tqdm(dataloader, total=ceil(max_num_samples / batch_size), desc="Compute std")
):
this_batch_size = len(batch["index"])
running_item_count += this_batch_size
# Sanity check to make sure the batches are still in the same order as before.
if first_batch_ is None:
first_batch_ = deepcopy(batch)
for key in stats_patterns:
assert torch.equal(first_batch_[key], first_batch[key])
for key, pattern in stats_patterns.items():
batch[key] = batch[key].float()
# Numerically stable update step for mean computation (where the mean is over squared
# residuals).See notes in the mean computation loop above.
batch_std = einops.reduce((batch[key] - mean[key]) ** 2, pattern, "mean")
std[key] = std[key] + this_batch_size * (batch_std - std[key]) / running_item_count
if i == ceil(max_num_samples / batch_size) - 1:
break
for key in stats_patterns:
std[key] = torch.sqrt(std[key])
stats = {}
for key in stats_patterns:
stats[key] = {
"mean": mean[key],
"std": std[key],
"max": max[key],
"min": min[key],
}
return stats
def aggregate_stats(ls_datasets) -> dict[str, torch.Tensor]:
"""Aggregate stats of multiple LeRobot datasets into one set of stats without recomputing from scratch.
The final stats will have the union of all data keys from each of the datasets.
The final stats will have the union of all data keys from each of the datasets. For instance:
- new_max = max(max_dataset_0, max_dataset_1, ...)
- new_min = min(min_dataset_0, min_dataset_1, ...)
- new_mean = (mean of all data)
- new_std = (std of all data)
"""
data_keys = set()
for dataset in ls_datasets:
data_keys.update(dataset.meta.stats.keys())
stats = {k: {} for k in data_keys}
for data_key in data_keys:
for stat_key in ["min", "max"]:
# compute `max(dataset_0["max"], dataset_1["max"], ...)`
stats[data_key][stat_key] = einops.reduce(
torch.stack(
[ds.meta.stats[data_key][stat_key] for ds in ls_datasets if data_key in ds.meta.stats],
dim=0,
),
"n ... -> ...",
stat_key,
)
total_samples = sum(d.num_frames for d in ls_datasets if data_key in d.meta.stats)
# Compute the "sum" statistic by multiplying each mean by the number of samples in the respective
# dataset, then divide by total_samples to get the overall "mean".
# NOTE: the brackets around (d.num_frames / total_samples) are needed tor minimize the risk of
# numerical overflow!
stats[data_key]["mean"] = sum(
d.meta.stats[data_key]["mean"] * (d.num_frames / total_samples)
for d in ls_datasets
if data_key in d.meta.stats
)
# The derivation for standard deviation is a little more involved but is much in the same spirit as
# the computation of the mean.
# Given two sets of data where the statistics are known:
# σ_combined = sqrt[ (n1 * (σ1^2 + d1^2) + n2 * (σ2^2 + d2^2)) / (n1 + n2) ]
# where d1 = μ1 - μ_combined, d2 = μ2 - μ_combined
# NOTE: the brackets around (d.num_frames / total_samples) are needed tor minimize the risk of
# numerical overflow!
stats[data_key]["std"] = torch.sqrt(
sum(
(
d.meta.stats[data_key]["std"] ** 2
+ (d.meta.stats[data_key]["mean"] - stats[data_key]["mean"]) ** 2
)
* (d.num_frames / total_samples)
for d in ls_datasets
if data_key in d.meta.stats
)
)
return stats

View File

@@ -1,116 +0,0 @@
#!/usr/bin/env python
# Copyright 2024 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.
import logging
import torch
from omegaconf import ListConfig, OmegaConf
from lerobot.common.datasets.lerobot_dataset import LeRobotDataset, MultiLeRobotDataset
from lerobot.common.datasets.transforms import get_image_transforms
def resolve_delta_timestamps(cfg):
"""Resolves delta_timestamps config key (in-place) by using `eval`.
Doesn't do anything if delta_timestamps is not specified or has already been resolve (as evidenced by
the data type of its values).
"""
delta_timestamps = cfg.training.get("delta_timestamps")
if delta_timestamps is not None:
for key in delta_timestamps:
if isinstance(delta_timestamps[key], str):
# TODO(rcadene, alexander-soare): remove `eval` to avoid exploit
cfg.training.delta_timestamps[key] = eval(delta_timestamps[key])
def make_dataset(cfg, split: str = "train") -> LeRobotDataset | MultiLeRobotDataset:
"""
Args:
cfg: A Hydra config as per the LeRobot config scheme.
split: Select the data subset used to create an instance of LeRobotDataset.
All datasets hosted on [lerobot](https://huggingface.co/lerobot) contain only one subset: "train".
Thus, by default, `split="train"` selects all the available data. `split` aims to work like the
slicer in the hugging face datasets:
https://huggingface.co/docs/datasets/v2.19.0/loading#slice-splits
As of now, it only supports `split="train[:n]"` to load the first n frames of the dataset or
`split="train[n:]"` to load the last n frames. For instance `split="train[:1000]"`.
Returns:
The LeRobotDataset.
"""
if not isinstance(cfg.dataset_repo_id, (str, ListConfig)):
raise ValueError(
"Expected cfg.dataset_repo_id to be either a single string to load one dataset or a list of "
"strings to load multiple datasets."
)
# A soft check to warn if the environment matches the dataset. Don't check if we are using a real world env (dora).
if cfg.env.name != "dora":
if isinstance(cfg.dataset_repo_id, str):
dataset_repo_ids = [cfg.dataset_repo_id] # single dataset
else:
dataset_repo_ids = cfg.dataset_repo_id # multiple datasets
for dataset_repo_id in dataset_repo_ids:
if cfg.env.name not in dataset_repo_id:
logging.warning(
f"There might be a mismatch between your training dataset ({dataset_repo_id=}) and your "
f"environment ({cfg.env.name=})."
)
resolve_delta_timestamps(cfg)
image_transforms = None
if cfg.training.image_transforms.enable:
cfg_tf = cfg.training.image_transforms
image_transforms = get_image_transforms(
brightness_weight=cfg_tf.brightness.weight,
brightness_min_max=cfg_tf.brightness.min_max,
contrast_weight=cfg_tf.contrast.weight,
contrast_min_max=cfg_tf.contrast.min_max,
saturation_weight=cfg_tf.saturation.weight,
saturation_min_max=cfg_tf.saturation.min_max,
hue_weight=cfg_tf.hue.weight,
hue_min_max=cfg_tf.hue.min_max,
sharpness_weight=cfg_tf.sharpness.weight,
sharpness_min_max=cfg_tf.sharpness.min_max,
max_num_transforms=cfg_tf.max_num_transforms,
random_order=cfg_tf.random_order,
)
if isinstance(cfg.dataset_repo_id, str):
# TODO (aliberts): add 'episodes' arg from config after removing hydra
dataset = LeRobotDataset(
cfg.dataset_repo_id,
delta_timestamps=cfg.training.get("delta_timestamps"),
image_transforms=image_transforms,
video_backend=cfg.video_backend,
)
else:
dataset = MultiLeRobotDataset(
cfg.dataset_repo_id,
delta_timestamps=cfg.training.get("delta_timestamps"),
image_transforms=image_transforms,
video_backend=cfg.video_backend,
)
if cfg.get("override_dataset_stats"):
for key, stats_dict in cfg.override_dataset_stats.items():
for stats_type, listconfig in stats_dict.items():
# example of stats_type: min, max, mean, std
stats = OmegaConf.to_container(listconfig, resolve=True)
dataset.meta.stats[key][stats_type] = torch.tensor(stats, dtype=torch.float32)
return dataset

View File

@@ -1,56 +0,0 @@
## Using / Updating `CODEBASE_VERSION` (for maintainers)
Since our dataset pushed to the hub are decoupled with the evolution of this repo, we ensure compatibility of
the datasets with our code, we use a `CODEBASE_VERSION` (defined in
lerobot/common/datasets/lerobot_dataset.py) variable.
For instance, [`lerobot/pusht`](https://huggingface.co/datasets/lerobot/pusht) has many versions to maintain backward compatibility between LeRobot codebase versions:
- [v1.0](https://huggingface.co/datasets/lerobot/pusht/tree/v1.0)
- [v1.1](https://huggingface.co/datasets/lerobot/pusht/tree/v1.1)
- [v1.2](https://huggingface.co/datasets/lerobot/pusht/tree/v1.2)
- [v1.3](https://huggingface.co/datasets/lerobot/pusht/tree/v1.3)
- [v1.4](https://huggingface.co/datasets/lerobot/pusht/tree/v1.4)
- [v1.5](https://huggingface.co/datasets/lerobot/pusht/tree/v1.5)
- [v1.6](https://huggingface.co/datasets/lerobot/pusht/tree/v1.6) <-- last version
- [main](https://huggingface.co/datasets/lerobot/pusht/tree/main) <-- points to the last version
Starting with v1.6, every dataset pushed to the hub or saved locally also have this version number in their
`info.json` metadata.
### Uploading a new dataset
If you are pushing a new dataset, you don't need to worry about any of the instructions below, nor to be
compatible with previous codebase versions. The `push_dataset_to_hub.py` script will automatically tag your
dataset with the current `CODEBASE_VERSION`.
### Updating an existing dataset
If you want to update an existing dataset, you need to change the `CODEBASE_VERSION` from `lerobot_dataset.py`
before running `push_dataset_to_hub.py`. This is especially useful if you introduce a breaking change
intentionally or not (i.e. something not backward compatible such as modifying the reward functions used,
deleting some frames at the end of an episode, etc.). That way, people running a previous version of the
codebase won't be affected by your change and backward compatibility is maintained.
However, you will need to update the version of ALL the other datasets so that they have the new
`CODEBASE_VERSION` as a branch in their hugging face dataset repository. Don't worry, there is an easy way
that doesn't require to run `push_dataset_to_hub.py`. You can just "branch-out" from the `main` branch on HF
dataset repo by running this script which corresponds to a `git checkout -b` (so no copy or upload needed):
```python
from huggingface_hub import HfApi
from lerobot import available_datasets
from lerobot.common.datasets.lerobot_dataset import CODEBASE_VERSION
api = HfApi()
for repo_id in available_datasets:
dataset_info = api.list_repo_refs(repo_id, repo_type="dataset")
branches = [b.name for b in dataset_info.branches]
if CODEBASE_VERSION in branches:
print(f"{repo_id} already @{CODEBASE_VERSION}, skipping.")
continue
else:
# Now create a branch named after the new version by branching out from "main"
# which is expected to be the preceding version
api.create_branch(repo_id, repo_type="dataset", branch=CODEBASE_VERSION, revision="main")
print(f"{repo_id} successfully updated @{CODEBASE_VERSION}")
```

View File

@@ -1,85 +0,0 @@
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1_SOJkgfP5yZyVjMhTt3nwhvyUjcnlI51/view?usp=drive_link
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1rmgN8UUzph1qwJnzG1d-uOafodn-gLvb/view?usp=drive_link
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1NYQ-XxsBVinB6dUoZmVWweT83367P3i2/view?usp=drive_link
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1oAv_j74zxxCJieMG7r5Vl2BeHK1__3s3/view?usp=drive_link
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1wFUJQROsrTJt64YRuIeExhFjr2wnK5uu/view?usp=drive_link
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1KzL3Tt0Le7jVl58XVRUcmigmXjyiuhbK/view?usp=drive_link
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1qy_YBladeHtianSSGtgAPSHtMin7msvf/view?usp=drive_link
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1rA_F0V_qL_nyuC_0aBKCisF4-0TIkF2Y/view?usp=drive_link
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1hw-8qMpz9VgSt62XoASqNRuPECpCwJQP/view?usp=drive_link
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1BpHOl9rKMzdvNGka6js7C0s40hH6vnDA/view?usp=drive_link
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1PazhkhiDnJ-OUMyDVDFxEZNKQQqHiNWS/view?usp=drive_link
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1lZ665R6ATl57dypxH4dGJ2NSt6XYnbuz/view?usp=drive_link
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1V9HzLaf-tlG15wUzT7KrTDCS_z1vi5NV/view?usp=drive_link
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1aKauWiXoKqbNwn_2xs4MrmLlaNYlVNmO/view?usp=drive_link
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1WVD5DFhriO1YmmOgiVHhacR6HWoTPxav/view?usp=drive_link
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1_X43WgeBAsfkhH9EmpyPki8U9joMeAGC/view?usp=drive_link
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1t8x0GqWoNKWtnBsB7_D40Z34nL9ak4kf/view?usp=drive_link
https://drive.google.com/file/d/15V_f26WaKOXjKnq2T3HRWAmtQUi4lbu2/view?usp=drive_link
https://drive.google.com/file/d/11VFIAsiSDsMOBANgrOcZBpKB9AFWnLy7/view?usp=drive_link
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1M0NS7vVaxJv3FHnuRYtdwTFYF7We4LxP/view?usp=drive_link
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1mR0OItTNqFnVLoczcyKYlm6drAy778lO/view?usp=drive_link
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1NbVFWDQAh-z4JJ4D-Zw6Lps9kdvpqh2j/view?usp=drive_link
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1JQoZGBzl4W3QG26-n39tefcGN0fDRMbB/view?usp=drive_link
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1VBjHl-TvZpncopvasIP5G9gecbB2a5f6/view?usp=drive_link
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https://drive.google.com/file/d/19tyYt5FMn5kru0g9o2nMJhKPnsDqkIZv/view?usp=drive_link
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1XvTpUdsVTZ-vydvdYYmynbma--HfUGSl/view?usp=drive_link
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1MO3hFu68J6NohTzr9aB_fY02VA6QSOqj/view?usp=drive_link
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Lh-UjwAk__04YOTWINF_QGVU8SjetVaY/view?usp=drive_link
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1jkSOUwZV5GJ7rZlVeErjcu0DBQs8Np0d/view?usp=drive_link
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1VIN1eLI-93WrVQwCjsv6XQr353DqqBYA/view?usp=drive_link

View File

@@ -1,8 +0,0 @@
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1EgKar7rWBmTIRmeJYZciSwjZx3uP2mHO
https://drive.google.com/file/d/12eYWQO15atK2hBjXhynPJd9MKAj_42pz/view?usp=drive_link
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Ul4oEeICJDjgfYTl4H1uaisTzVYIM6wd/view?usp=drive_link
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1WSF-OG8lKSe2wVYCv5D1aJNipxpgddk-/view?usp=drive_link
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1_ppD5j5sFh26aWW0JmhLzJMeNB-lCArk/view?usp=drive_link
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1WUp846dgWXYhu4oJfhHxiU6YL_7N6s4W/view?usp=drive_link
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1HRZNAIoAQw_uYiPwnBvtBioQoqiqoXdA/view?usp=drive_link
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1hedGq-QDMnIn8GlXXBC3GiEJ_Y-LTxyt/view?usp=drive_link

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@@ -1,634 +0,0 @@
#!/usr/bin/env python
# Copyright 2024 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.
"""Helper code for loading PushT dataset from Diffusion Policy (https://diffusion-policy.cs.columbia.edu/)
Copied from the original Diffusion Policy repository and used in our `download_and_upload_dataset.py` script.
"""
from __future__ import annotations
import math
import numbers
import os
from functools import cached_property
import numcodecs
import numpy as np
import zarr
def check_chunks_compatible(chunks: tuple, shape: tuple):
assert len(shape) == len(chunks)
for c in chunks:
assert isinstance(c, numbers.Integral)
assert c > 0
def rechunk_recompress_array(group, name, chunks=None, chunk_length=None, compressor=None, tmp_key="_temp"):
old_arr = group[name]
if chunks is None:
chunks = (chunk_length,) + old_arr.chunks[1:] if chunk_length is not None else old_arr.chunks
check_chunks_compatible(chunks, old_arr.shape)
if compressor is None:
compressor = old_arr.compressor
if (chunks == old_arr.chunks) and (compressor == old_arr.compressor):
# no change
return old_arr
# rechunk recompress
group.move(name, tmp_key)
old_arr = group[tmp_key]
n_copied, n_skipped, n_bytes_copied = zarr.copy(
source=old_arr,
dest=group,
name=name,
chunks=chunks,
compressor=compressor,
)
del group[tmp_key]
arr = group[name]
return arr
def get_optimal_chunks(shape, dtype, target_chunk_bytes=2e6, max_chunk_length=None):
"""
Common shapes
T,D
T,N,D
T,H,W,C
T,N,H,W,C
"""
itemsize = np.dtype(dtype).itemsize
# reversed
rshape = list(shape[::-1])
if max_chunk_length is not None:
rshape[-1] = int(max_chunk_length)
split_idx = len(shape) - 1
for i in range(len(shape) - 1):
this_chunk_bytes = itemsize * np.prod(rshape[:i])
next_chunk_bytes = itemsize * np.prod(rshape[: i + 1])
if this_chunk_bytes <= target_chunk_bytes and next_chunk_bytes > target_chunk_bytes:
split_idx = i
rchunks = rshape[:split_idx]
item_chunk_bytes = itemsize * np.prod(rshape[:split_idx])
this_max_chunk_length = rshape[split_idx]
next_chunk_length = min(this_max_chunk_length, math.ceil(target_chunk_bytes / item_chunk_bytes))
rchunks.append(next_chunk_length)
len_diff = len(shape) - len(rchunks)
rchunks.extend([1] * len_diff)
chunks = tuple(rchunks[::-1])
# print(np.prod(chunks) * itemsize / target_chunk_bytes)
return chunks
class ReplayBuffer:
"""
Zarr-based temporal datastructure.
Assumes first dimension to be time. Only chunk in time dimension.
"""
def __init__(self, root: zarr.Group | dict[str, dict]):
"""
Dummy constructor. Use copy_from* and create_from* class methods instead.
"""
assert "data" in root
assert "meta" in root
assert "episode_ends" in root["meta"]
for value in root["data"].values():
assert value.shape[0] == root["meta"]["episode_ends"][-1]
self.root = root
# ============= create constructors ===============
@classmethod
def create_empty_zarr(cls, storage=None, root=None):
if root is None:
if storage is None:
storage = zarr.MemoryStore()
root = zarr.group(store=storage)
root.require_group("data", overwrite=False)
meta = root.require_group("meta", overwrite=False)
if "episode_ends" not in meta:
meta.zeros("episode_ends", shape=(0,), dtype=np.int64, compressor=None, overwrite=False)
return cls(root=root)
@classmethod
def create_empty_numpy(cls):
root = {"data": {}, "meta": {"episode_ends": np.zeros((0,), dtype=np.int64)}}
return cls(root=root)
@classmethod
def create_from_group(cls, group, **kwargs):
if "data" not in group:
# create from stratch
buffer = cls.create_empty_zarr(root=group, **kwargs)
else:
# already exist
buffer = cls(root=group, **kwargs)
return buffer
@classmethod
def create_from_path(cls, zarr_path, mode="r", **kwargs):
"""
Open a on-disk zarr directly (for dataset larger than memory).
Slower.
"""
group = zarr.open(os.path.expanduser(zarr_path), mode)
return cls.create_from_group(group, **kwargs)
# ============= copy constructors ===============
@classmethod
def copy_from_store(
cls,
src_store,
store=None,
keys=None,
chunks: dict[str, tuple] | None = None,
compressors: dict | str | numcodecs.abc.Codec | None = None,
if_exists="replace",
**kwargs,
):
"""
Load to memory.
"""
src_root = zarr.group(src_store)
if chunks is None:
chunks = {}
if compressors is None:
compressors = {}
root = None
if store is None:
# numpy backend
meta = {}
for key, value in src_root["meta"].items():
if len(value.shape) == 0:
meta[key] = np.array(value)
else:
meta[key] = value[:]
if keys is None:
keys = src_root["data"].keys()
data = {}
for key in keys:
arr = src_root["data"][key]
data[key] = arr[:]
root = {"meta": meta, "data": data}
else:
root = zarr.group(store=store)
# copy without recompression
n_copied, n_skipped, n_bytes_copied = zarr.copy_store(
source=src_store, dest=store, source_path="/meta", dest_path="/meta", if_exists=if_exists
)
data_group = root.create_group("data", overwrite=True)
if keys is None:
keys = src_root["data"].keys()
for key in keys:
value = src_root["data"][key]
cks = cls._resolve_array_chunks(chunks=chunks, key=key, array=value)
cpr = cls._resolve_array_compressor(compressors=compressors, key=key, array=value)
if cks == value.chunks and cpr == value.compressor:
# copy without recompression
this_path = "/data/" + key
n_copied, n_skipped, n_bytes_copied = zarr.copy_store(
source=src_store,
dest=store,
source_path=this_path,
dest_path=this_path,
if_exists=if_exists,
)
else:
# copy with recompression
n_copied, n_skipped, n_bytes_copied = zarr.copy(
source=value,
dest=data_group,
name=key,
chunks=cks,
compressor=cpr,
if_exists=if_exists,
)
buffer = cls(root=root)
return buffer
@classmethod
def copy_from_path(
cls,
zarr_path,
backend=None,
store=None,
keys=None,
chunks: dict[str, tuple] | None = None,
compressors: dict | str | numcodecs.abc.Codec | None = None,
if_exists="replace",
**kwargs,
):
"""
Copy a on-disk zarr to in-memory compressed.
Recommended
"""
if chunks is None:
chunks = {}
if compressors is None:
compressors = {}
if backend == "numpy":
print("backend argument is deprecated!")
store = None
group = zarr.open(os.path.expanduser(zarr_path), "r")
return cls.copy_from_store(
src_store=group.store,
store=store,
keys=keys,
chunks=chunks,
compressors=compressors,
if_exists=if_exists,
**kwargs,
)
# ============= save methods ===============
def save_to_store(
self,
store,
chunks: dict[str, tuple] | None = None,
compressors: str | numcodecs.abc.Codec | dict | None = None,
if_exists="replace",
**kwargs,
):
root = zarr.group(store)
if chunks is None:
chunks = {}
if compressors is None:
compressors = {}
if self.backend == "zarr":
# recompression free copy
n_copied, n_skipped, n_bytes_copied = zarr.copy_store(
source=self.root.store,
dest=store,
source_path="/meta",
dest_path="/meta",
if_exists=if_exists,
)
else:
meta_group = root.create_group("meta", overwrite=True)
# save meta, no chunking
for key, value in self.root["meta"].items():
_ = meta_group.array(name=key, data=value, shape=value.shape, chunks=value.shape)
# save data, chunk
data_group = root.create_group("data", overwrite=True)
for key, value in self.root["data"].items():
cks = self._resolve_array_chunks(chunks=chunks, key=key, array=value)
cpr = self._resolve_array_compressor(compressors=compressors, key=key, array=value)
if isinstance(value, zarr.Array):
if cks == value.chunks and cpr == value.compressor:
# copy without recompression
this_path = "/data/" + key
n_copied, n_skipped, n_bytes_copied = zarr.copy_store(
source=self.root.store,
dest=store,
source_path=this_path,
dest_path=this_path,
if_exists=if_exists,
)
else:
# copy with recompression
n_copied, n_skipped, n_bytes_copied = zarr.copy(
source=value,
dest=data_group,
name=key,
chunks=cks,
compressor=cpr,
if_exists=if_exists,
)
else:
# numpy
_ = data_group.array(name=key, data=value, chunks=cks, compressor=cpr)
return store
def save_to_path(
self,
zarr_path,
chunks: dict[str, tuple] | None = None,
compressors: str | numcodecs.abc.Codec | dict | None = None,
if_exists="replace",
**kwargs,
):
if chunks is None:
chunks = {}
if compressors is None:
compressors = {}
store = zarr.DirectoryStore(os.path.expanduser(zarr_path))
return self.save_to_store(
store, chunks=chunks, compressors=compressors, if_exists=if_exists, **kwargs
)
@staticmethod
def resolve_compressor(compressor="default"):
if compressor == "default":
compressor = numcodecs.Blosc(cname="lz4", clevel=5, shuffle=numcodecs.Blosc.NOSHUFFLE)
elif compressor == "disk":
compressor = numcodecs.Blosc("zstd", clevel=5, shuffle=numcodecs.Blosc.BITSHUFFLE)
return compressor
@classmethod
def _resolve_array_compressor(cls, compressors: dict | str | numcodecs.abc.Codec, key, array):
# allows compressor to be explicitly set to None
cpr = "nil"
if isinstance(compressors, dict):
if key in compressors:
cpr = cls.resolve_compressor(compressors[key])
elif isinstance(array, zarr.Array):
cpr = array.compressor
else:
cpr = cls.resolve_compressor(compressors)
# backup default
if cpr == "nil":
cpr = cls.resolve_compressor("default")
return cpr
@classmethod
def _resolve_array_chunks(cls, chunks: dict | tuple, key, array):
cks = None
if isinstance(chunks, dict):
if key in chunks:
cks = chunks[key]
elif isinstance(array, zarr.Array):
cks = array.chunks
elif isinstance(chunks, tuple):
cks = chunks
else:
raise TypeError(f"Unsupported chunks type {type(chunks)}")
# backup default
if cks is None:
cks = get_optimal_chunks(shape=array.shape, dtype=array.dtype)
# check
check_chunks_compatible(chunks=cks, shape=array.shape)
return cks
# ============= properties =================
@cached_property
def data(self):
return self.root["data"]
@cached_property
def meta(self):
return self.root["meta"]
def update_meta(self, data):
# sanitize data
np_data = {}
for key, value in data.items():
if isinstance(value, np.ndarray):
np_data[key] = value
else:
arr = np.array(value)
if arr.dtype == object:
raise TypeError(f"Invalid value type {type(value)}")
np_data[key] = arr
meta_group = self.meta
if self.backend == "zarr":
for key, value in np_data.items():
_ = meta_group.array(
name=key, data=value, shape=value.shape, chunks=value.shape, overwrite=True
)
else:
meta_group.update(np_data)
return meta_group
@property
def episode_ends(self):
return self.meta["episode_ends"]
def get_episode_idxs(self):
import numba
numba.jit(nopython=True)
def _get_episode_idxs(episode_ends):
result = np.zeros((episode_ends[-1],), dtype=np.int64)
for i in range(len(episode_ends)):
start = 0
if i > 0:
start = episode_ends[i - 1]
end = episode_ends[i]
for idx in range(start, end):
result[idx] = i
return result
return _get_episode_idxs(self.episode_ends)
@property
def backend(self):
backend = "numpy"
if isinstance(self.root, zarr.Group):
backend = "zarr"
return backend
# =========== dict-like API ==============
def __repr__(self) -> str:
if self.backend == "zarr":
return str(self.root.tree())
else:
return super().__repr__()
def keys(self):
return self.data.keys()
def values(self):
return self.data.values()
def items(self):
return self.data.items()
def __getitem__(self, key):
return self.data[key]
def __contains__(self, key):
return key in self.data
# =========== our API ==============
@property
def n_steps(self):
if len(self.episode_ends) == 0:
return 0
return self.episode_ends[-1]
@property
def n_episodes(self):
return len(self.episode_ends)
@property
def chunk_size(self):
if self.backend == "zarr":
return next(iter(self.data.arrays()))[-1].chunks[0]
return None
@property
def episode_lengths(self):
ends = self.episode_ends[:]
ends = np.insert(ends, 0, 0)
lengths = np.diff(ends)
return lengths
def add_episode(
self,
data: dict[str, np.ndarray],
chunks: dict[str, tuple] | None = None,
compressors: str | numcodecs.abc.Codec | dict | None = None,
):
if chunks is None:
chunks = {}
if compressors is None:
compressors = {}
assert len(data) > 0
is_zarr = self.backend == "zarr"
curr_len = self.n_steps
episode_length = None
for value in data.values():
assert len(value.shape) >= 1
if episode_length is None:
episode_length = len(value)
else:
assert episode_length == len(value)
new_len = curr_len + episode_length
for key, value in data.items():
new_shape = (new_len,) + value.shape[1:]
# create array
if key not in self.data:
if is_zarr:
cks = self._resolve_array_chunks(chunks=chunks, key=key, array=value)
cpr = self._resolve_array_compressor(compressors=compressors, key=key, array=value)
arr = self.data.zeros(
name=key, shape=new_shape, chunks=cks, dtype=value.dtype, compressor=cpr
)
else:
# copy data to prevent modify
arr = np.zeros(shape=new_shape, dtype=value.dtype)
self.data[key] = arr
else:
arr = self.data[key]
assert value.shape[1:] == arr.shape[1:]
# same method for both zarr and numpy
if is_zarr:
arr.resize(new_shape)
else:
arr.resize(new_shape, refcheck=False)
# copy data
arr[-value.shape[0] :] = value
# append to episode ends
episode_ends = self.episode_ends
if is_zarr:
episode_ends.resize(episode_ends.shape[0] + 1)
else:
episode_ends.resize(episode_ends.shape[0] + 1, refcheck=False)
episode_ends[-1] = new_len
# rechunk
if is_zarr and episode_ends.chunks[0] < episode_ends.shape[0]:
rechunk_recompress_array(self.meta, "episode_ends", chunk_length=int(episode_ends.shape[0] * 1.5))
def drop_episode(self):
is_zarr = self.backend == "zarr"
episode_ends = self.episode_ends[:].copy()
assert len(episode_ends) > 0
start_idx = 0
if len(episode_ends) > 1:
start_idx = episode_ends[-2]
for value in self.data.values():
new_shape = (start_idx,) + value.shape[1:]
if is_zarr:
value.resize(new_shape)
else:
value.resize(new_shape, refcheck=False)
if is_zarr:
self.episode_ends.resize(len(episode_ends) - 1)
else:
self.episode_ends.resize(len(episode_ends) - 1, refcheck=False)
def pop_episode(self):
assert self.n_episodes > 0
episode = self.get_episode(self.n_episodes - 1, copy=True)
self.drop_episode()
return episode
def extend(self, data):
self.add_episode(data)
def get_episode(self, idx, copy=False):
idx = list(range(len(self.episode_ends)))[idx]
start_idx = 0
if idx > 0:
start_idx = self.episode_ends[idx - 1]
end_idx = self.episode_ends[idx]
result = self.get_steps_slice(start_idx, end_idx, copy=copy)
return result
def get_episode_slice(self, idx):
start_idx = 0
if idx > 0:
start_idx = self.episode_ends[idx - 1]
end_idx = self.episode_ends[idx]
return slice(start_idx, end_idx)
def get_steps_slice(self, start, stop, step=None, copy=False):
_slice = slice(start, stop, step)
result = {}
for key, value in self.data.items():
x = value[_slice]
if copy and isinstance(value, np.ndarray):
x = x.copy()
result[key] = x
return result
# =========== chunking =============
def get_chunks(self) -> dict:
assert self.backend == "zarr"
chunks = {}
for key, value in self.data.items():
chunks[key] = value.chunks
return chunks
def set_chunks(self, chunks: dict):
assert self.backend == "zarr"
for key, value in chunks.items():
if key in self.data:
arr = self.data[key]
if value != arr.chunks:
check_chunks_compatible(chunks=value, shape=arr.shape)
rechunk_recompress_array(self.data, key, chunks=value)
def get_compressors(self) -> dict:
assert self.backend == "zarr"
compressors = {}
for key, value in self.data.items():
compressors[key] = value.compressor
return compressors
def set_compressors(self, compressors: dict):
assert self.backend == "zarr"
for key, value in compressors.items():
if key in self.data:
arr = self.data[key]
compressor = self.resolve_compressor(value)
if compressor != arr.compressor:
rechunk_recompress_array(self.data, key, compressor=compressor)

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@@ -1,202 +0,0 @@
#!/usr/bin/env python
# Copyright 2024 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 file contains download scripts for raw datasets.
Example of usage:
```
python lerobot/common/datasets/push_dataset_to_hub/_download_raw.py \
--raw-dir data/lerobot-raw/pusht_raw \
--repo-id lerobot-raw/pusht_raw
```
"""
import argparse
import logging
import warnings
from pathlib import Path
from huggingface_hub import snapshot_download
from lerobot.common.datasets.push_dataset_to_hub.utils import check_repo_id
# {raw_repo_id: raw_format}
AVAILABLE_RAW_REPO_IDS = {
"lerobot-raw/aloha_mobile_cabinet_raw": "aloha_hdf5",
"lerobot-raw/aloha_mobile_chair_raw": "aloha_hdf5",
"lerobot-raw/aloha_mobile_elevator_raw": "aloha_hdf5",
"lerobot-raw/aloha_mobile_shrimp_raw": "aloha_hdf5",
"lerobot-raw/aloha_mobile_wash_pan_raw": "aloha_hdf5",
"lerobot-raw/aloha_mobile_wipe_wine_raw": "aloha_hdf5",
"lerobot-raw/aloha_sim_insertion_human_raw": "aloha_hdf5",
"lerobot-raw/aloha_sim_insertion_scripted_raw": "aloha_hdf5",
"lerobot-raw/aloha_sim_transfer_cube_human_raw": "aloha_hdf5",
"lerobot-raw/aloha_sim_transfer_cube_scripted_raw": "aloha_hdf5",
"lerobot-raw/aloha_static_battery_raw": "aloha_hdf5",
"lerobot-raw/aloha_static_candy_raw": "aloha_hdf5",
"lerobot-raw/aloha_static_coffee_new_raw": "aloha_hdf5",
"lerobot-raw/aloha_static_coffee_raw": "aloha_hdf5",
"lerobot-raw/aloha_static_cups_open_raw": "aloha_hdf5",
"lerobot-raw/aloha_static_fork_pick_up_raw": "aloha_hdf5",
"lerobot-raw/aloha_static_pingpong_test_raw": "aloha_hdf5",
"lerobot-raw/aloha_static_pro_pencil_raw": "aloha_hdf5",
"lerobot-raw/aloha_static_screw_driver_raw": "aloha_hdf5",
"lerobot-raw/aloha_static_tape_raw": "aloha_hdf5",
"lerobot-raw/aloha_static_thread_velcro_raw": "aloha_hdf5",
"lerobot-raw/aloha_static_towel_raw": "aloha_hdf5",
"lerobot-raw/aloha_static_vinh_cup_left_raw": "aloha_hdf5",
"lerobot-raw/aloha_static_vinh_cup_raw": "aloha_hdf5",
"lerobot-raw/aloha_static_ziploc_slide_raw": "aloha_hdf5",
"lerobot-raw/umi_cup_in_the_wild_raw": "umi_zarr",
"lerobot-raw/pusht_raw": "pusht_zarr",
"lerobot-raw/unitreeh1_fold_clothes_raw": "aloha_hdf5",
"lerobot-raw/unitreeh1_rearrange_objects_raw": "aloha_hdf5",
"lerobot-raw/unitreeh1_two_robot_greeting_raw": "aloha_hdf5",
"lerobot-raw/unitreeh1_warehouse_raw": "aloha_hdf5",
"lerobot-raw/xarm_lift_medium_raw": "xarm_pkl",
"lerobot-raw/xarm_lift_medium_replay_raw": "xarm_pkl",
"lerobot-raw/xarm_push_medium_raw": "xarm_pkl",
"lerobot-raw/xarm_push_medium_replay_raw": "xarm_pkl",
"lerobot-raw/fractal20220817_data_raw": "openx_rlds.fractal20220817_data",
"lerobot-raw/kuka_raw": "openx_rlds.kuka",
"lerobot-raw/bridge_openx_raw": "openx_rlds.bridge_openx",
"lerobot-raw/taco_play_raw": "openx_rlds.taco_play",
"lerobot-raw/jaco_play_raw": "openx_rlds.jaco_play",
"lerobot-raw/berkeley_cable_routing_raw": "openx_rlds.berkeley_cable_routing",
"lerobot-raw/roboturk_raw": "openx_rlds.roboturk",
"lerobot-raw/nyu_door_opening_surprising_effectiveness_raw": "openx_rlds.nyu_door_opening_surprising_effectiveness",
"lerobot-raw/viola_raw": "openx_rlds.viola",
"lerobot-raw/berkeley_autolab_ur5_raw": "openx_rlds.berkeley_autolab_ur5",
"lerobot-raw/toto_raw": "openx_rlds.toto",
"lerobot-raw/language_table_raw": "openx_rlds.language_table",
"lerobot-raw/columbia_cairlab_pusht_real_raw": "openx_rlds.columbia_cairlab_pusht_real",
"lerobot-raw/stanford_kuka_multimodal_dataset_raw": "openx_rlds.stanford_kuka_multimodal_dataset",
"lerobot-raw/nyu_rot_dataset_raw": "openx_rlds.nyu_rot_dataset",
"lerobot-raw/io_ai_tech_raw": "openx_rlds.io_ai_tech",
"lerobot-raw/stanford_hydra_dataset_raw": "openx_rlds.stanford_hydra_dataset",
"lerobot-raw/austin_buds_dataset_raw": "openx_rlds.austin_buds_dataset",
"lerobot-raw/nyu_franka_play_dataset_raw": "openx_rlds.nyu_franka_play_dataset",
"lerobot-raw/maniskill_dataset_raw": "openx_rlds.maniskill_dataset",
"lerobot-raw/furniture_bench_dataset_raw": "openx_rlds.furniture_bench_dataset",
"lerobot-raw/cmu_franka_exploration_dataset_raw": "openx_rlds.cmu_franka_exploration_dataset",
"lerobot-raw/ucsd_kitchen_dataset_raw": "openx_rlds.ucsd_kitchen_dataset",
"lerobot-raw/ucsd_pick_and_place_dataset_raw": "openx_rlds.ucsd_pick_and_place_dataset",
"lerobot-raw/spoc_raw": "openx_rlds.spoc",
"lerobot-raw/austin_sailor_dataset_raw": "openx_rlds.austin_sailor_dataset",
"lerobot-raw/austin_sirius_dataset_raw": "openx_rlds.austin_sirius_dataset",
"lerobot-raw/bc_z_raw": "openx_rlds.bc_z",
"lerobot-raw/utokyo_pr2_opening_fridge_raw": "openx_rlds.utokyo_pr2_opening_fridge",
"lerobot-raw/utokyo_pr2_tabletop_manipulation_raw": "openx_rlds.utokyo_pr2_tabletop_manipulation",
"lerobot-raw/utokyo_xarm_pick_and_place_raw": "openx_rlds.utokyo_xarm_pick_and_place",
"lerobot-raw/utokyo_xarm_bimanual_raw": "openx_rlds.utokyo_xarm_bimanual",
"lerobot-raw/utokyo_saytap_raw": "openx_rlds.utokyo_saytap",
"lerobot-raw/robo_net_raw": "openx_rlds.robo_net",
"lerobot-raw/robo_set_raw": "openx_rlds.robo_set",
"lerobot-raw/berkeley_mvp_raw": "openx_rlds.berkeley_mvp",
"lerobot-raw/berkeley_rpt_raw": "openx_rlds.berkeley_rpt",
"lerobot-raw/kaist_nonprehensile_raw": "openx_rlds.kaist_nonprehensile",
"lerobot-raw/stanford_mask_vit_raw": "openx_rlds.stanford_mask_vit",
"lerobot-raw/tokyo_u_lsmo_raw": "openx_rlds.tokyo_u_lsmo",
"lerobot-raw/dlr_sara_pour_raw": "openx_rlds.dlr_sara_pour",
"lerobot-raw/dlr_sara_grid_clamp_raw": "openx_rlds.dlr_sara_grid_clamp",
"lerobot-raw/dlr_edan_shared_control_raw": "openx_rlds.dlr_edan_shared_control",
"lerobot-raw/asu_table_top_raw": "openx_rlds.asu_table_top",
"lerobot-raw/stanford_robocook_raw": "openx_rlds.stanford_robocook",
"lerobot-raw/imperialcollege_sawyer_wrist_cam_raw": "openx_rlds.imperialcollege_sawyer_wrist_cam",
"lerobot-raw/iamlab_cmu_pickup_insert_raw": "openx_rlds.iamlab_cmu_pickup_insert",
"lerobot-raw/uiuc_d3field_raw": "openx_rlds.uiuc_d3field",
"lerobot-raw/utaustin_mutex_raw": "openx_rlds.utaustin_mutex",
"lerobot-raw/berkeley_fanuc_manipulation_raw": "openx_rlds.berkeley_fanuc_manipulation",
"lerobot-raw/cmu_playing_with_food_raw": "openx_rlds.cmu_playing_with_food",
"lerobot-raw/cmu_play_fusion_raw": "openx_rlds.cmu_play_fusion",
"lerobot-raw/cmu_stretch_raw": "openx_rlds.cmu_stretch",
"lerobot-raw/berkeley_gnm_recon_raw": "openx_rlds.berkeley_gnm_recon",
"lerobot-raw/berkeley_gnm_cory_hall_raw": "openx_rlds.berkeley_gnm_cory_hall",
"lerobot-raw/berkeley_gnm_sac_son_raw": "openx_rlds.berkeley_gnm_sac_son",
"lerobot-raw/droid_raw": "openx_rlds.droid",
"lerobot-raw/droid_100_raw": "openx_rlds.droid100",
"lerobot-raw/fmb_raw": "openx_rlds.fmb",
"lerobot-raw/dobbe_raw": "openx_rlds.dobbe",
"lerobot-raw/usc_cloth_sim_raw": "openx_rlds.usc_cloth_sim",
"lerobot-raw/plex_robosuite_raw": "openx_rlds.plex_robosuite",
"lerobot-raw/conq_hose_manipulation_raw": "openx_rlds.conq_hose_manipulation",
"lerobot-raw/vima_raw": "openx_rlds.vima",
"lerobot-raw/robot_vqa_raw": "openx_rlds.robot_vqa",
"lerobot-raw/mimic_play_raw": "openx_rlds.mimic_play",
"lerobot-raw/tidybot_raw": "openx_rlds.tidybot",
"lerobot-raw/eth_agent_affordances_raw": "openx_rlds.eth_agent_affordances",
}
def download_raw(raw_dir: Path, repo_id: str):
check_repo_id(repo_id)
user_id, dataset_id = repo_id.split("/")
if not dataset_id.endswith("_raw"):
warnings.warn(
f"""`dataset_id` ({dataset_id}) doesn't end with '_raw' (e.g. 'lerobot/pusht_raw'). Following this
naming convention by renaming your repository is advised, but not mandatory.""",
stacklevel=1,
)
# Send warning if raw_dir isn't well formated
if raw_dir.parts[-2] != user_id or raw_dir.parts[-1] != dataset_id:
warnings.warn(
f"""`raw_dir` ({raw_dir}) doesn't contain a community or user id `/` the name of the dataset that
match the `repo_id` (e.g. 'data/lerobot/pusht_raw'). Following this naming convention is advised,
but not mandatory.""",
stacklevel=1,
)
raw_dir.mkdir(parents=True, exist_ok=True)
logging.info(f"Start downloading from huggingface.co/{user_id} for {dataset_id}")
snapshot_download(repo_id, repo_type="dataset", local_dir=raw_dir)
logging.info(f"Finish downloading from huggingface.co/{user_id} for {dataset_id}")
def download_all_raw_datasets(data_dir: Path | None = None):
if data_dir is None:
data_dir = Path("data")
for repo_id in AVAILABLE_RAW_REPO_IDS:
raw_dir = data_dir / repo_id
download_raw(raw_dir, repo_id)
def main():
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(
description=f"""A script to download raw datasets from Hugging Face hub to a local directory. Here is a
non exhaustive list of available repositories to use in `--repo-id`: {list(AVAILABLE_RAW_REPO_IDS.keys())}""",
)
parser.add_argument(
"--raw-dir",
type=Path,
required=True,
help="Directory containing input raw datasets (e.g. `data/aloha_mobile_chair_raw` or `data/pusht_raw).",
)
parser.add_argument(
"--repo-id",
type=str,
required=True,
help="""Repositery identifier on Hugging Face: a community or a user name `/` the name of
the dataset (e.g. `lerobot/pusht_raw`, `cadene/aloha_sim_insertion_human_raw`).""",
)
args = parser.parse_args()
download_raw(**vars(args))
if __name__ == "__main__":
main()

View File

@@ -1,184 +0,0 @@
#!/usr/bin/env python
# Copyright 2024 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.
"""
Use this script to batch encode lerobot dataset from their raw format to LeRobotDataset and push their updated
version to the hub. Under the hood, this script reuses 'push_dataset_to_hub.py'. It assumes that you already
downloaded raw datasets, which you can do with the related '_download_raw.py' script.
For instance, for codebase_version = 'v1.6', the following command was run, assuming raw datasets from
lerobot-raw were downloaded in 'raw/datasets/directory':
```bash
python lerobot/common/datasets/push_dataset_to_hub/_encode_datasets.py \
--raw-dir raw/datasets/directory \
--raw-repo-ids lerobot-raw \
--local-dir push/datasets/directory \
--tests-data-dir tests/data \
--push-repo lerobot \
--vcodec libsvtav1 \
--pix-fmt yuv420p \
--g 2 \
--crf 30
```
"""
import argparse
from pathlib import Path
from lerobot.common.datasets.lerobot_dataset import CODEBASE_VERSION
from lerobot.common.datasets.push_dataset_to_hub._download_raw import AVAILABLE_RAW_REPO_IDS
from lerobot.common.datasets.push_dataset_to_hub.utils import check_repo_id
from lerobot.scripts.push_dataset_to_hub import push_dataset_to_hub
def get_push_repo_id_from_raw(raw_repo_id: str, push_repo: str) -> str:
dataset_id_raw = raw_repo_id.split("/")[1]
dataset_id = dataset_id_raw.removesuffix("_raw")
return f"{push_repo}/{dataset_id}"
def encode_datasets(
raw_dir: Path,
raw_repo_ids: list[str],
push_repo: str,
vcodec: str,
pix_fmt: str,
g: int,
crf: int,
local_dir: Path | None = None,
tests_data_dir: Path | None = None,
raw_format: str | None = None,
dry_run: bool = False,
) -> None:
if len(raw_repo_ids) == 1 and raw_repo_ids[0].lower() == "lerobot-raw":
raw_repo_ids_format = AVAILABLE_RAW_REPO_IDS
else:
if raw_format is None:
raise ValueError(raw_format)
raw_repo_ids_format = {id_: raw_format for id_ in raw_repo_ids}
for raw_repo_id, repo_raw_format in raw_repo_ids_format.items():
check_repo_id(raw_repo_id)
dataset_repo_id_push = get_push_repo_id_from_raw(raw_repo_id, push_repo)
dataset_raw_dir = raw_dir / raw_repo_id
dataset_dir = local_dir / dataset_repo_id_push if local_dir is not None else None
encoding = {
"vcodec": vcodec,
"pix_fmt": pix_fmt,
"g": g,
"crf": crf,
}
if not (dataset_raw_dir).is_dir():
raise NotADirectoryError(dataset_raw_dir)
if not dry_run:
push_dataset_to_hub(
dataset_raw_dir,
raw_format=repo_raw_format,
repo_id=dataset_repo_id_push,
local_dir=dataset_dir,
resume=True,
encoding=encoding,
tests_data_dir=tests_data_dir,
)
else:
print(
f"DRY RUN: {dataset_raw_dir} --> {dataset_dir} --> {dataset_repo_id_push}@{CODEBASE_VERSION}"
)
def main():
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
parser.add_argument(
"--raw-dir",
type=Path,
default=Path("data"),
help="Directory where raw datasets are located.",
)
parser.add_argument(
"--raw-repo-ids",
type=str,
nargs="*",
default=["lerobot-raw"],
help="""Raw dataset repo ids. if 'lerobot-raw', the keys from `AVAILABLE_RAW_REPO_IDS` will be
used and raw datasets will be fetched from the 'lerobot-raw/' repo and pushed with their
associated format. It is assumed that each dataset is located at `raw_dir / raw_repo_id` """,
)
parser.add_argument(
"--raw-format",
type=str,
default=None,
help="""Raw format to use for the raw repo-ids. Must be specified if --raw-repo-ids is not
'lerobot-raw'""",
)
parser.add_argument(
"--local-dir",
type=Path,
default=None,
help="""When provided, writes the dataset converted to LeRobotDataset format in this directory
(e.g. `data/lerobot/aloha_mobile_chair`).""",
)
parser.add_argument(
"--push-repo",
type=str,
default="lerobot",
help="Repo to upload datasets to",
)
parser.add_argument(
"--vcodec",
type=str,
default="libsvtav1",
help="Codec to use for encoding videos",
)
parser.add_argument(
"--pix-fmt",
type=str,
default="yuv420p",
help="Pixel formats (chroma subsampling) to be used for encoding",
)
parser.add_argument(
"--g",
type=int,
default=2,
help="Group of pictures sizes to be used for encoding.",
)
parser.add_argument(
"--crf",
type=int,
default=30,
help="Constant rate factors to be used for encoding.",
)
parser.add_argument(
"--tests-data-dir",
type=Path,
default=None,
help=(
"When provided, save tests artifacts into the given directory "
"(e.g. `--tests-data-dir tests/data` will save to tests/data/{--repo-id})."
),
)
parser.add_argument(
"--dry-run",
type=int,
default=0,
help="If not set to 0, this script won't download or upload anything.",
)
args = parser.parse_args()
encode_datasets(**vars(args))
if __name__ == "__main__":
main()

View File

@@ -1,326 +0,0 @@
#!/usr/bin/env python
# Copyright 2024 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.
# imagecodecs/numcodecs.py
# Copyright (c) 2021-2022, Christoph Gohlke
# All rights reserved.
#
# Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
# modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
#
# 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice,
# this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
#
# 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice,
# this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation
# and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
#
# 3. Neither the name of the copyright holder nor the names of its
# contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from
# this software without specific prior written permission.
#
# THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS"
# AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
# IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
# ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE
# LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR
# CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF
# SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS
# INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN
# CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE)
# ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE
# POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
# Copied from: https://github.com/real-stanford/universal_manipulation_interface/blob/298776ce251f33b6b3185a98d6e7d1f9ad49168b/diffusion_policy/codecs/imagecodecs_numcodecs.py#L1
"""Additional numcodecs implemented using imagecodecs."""
__version__ = "2022.9.26"
__all__ = ("register_codecs",)
import imagecodecs
import numpy
from numcodecs.abc import Codec
from numcodecs.registry import get_codec, register_codec
# TODO (azouitine): Remove useless codecs
def protective_squeeze(x: numpy.ndarray):
"""
Squeeze dim only if it's not the last dim.
Image dim expected to be *, H, W, C
"""
img_shape = x.shape[-3:]
if len(x.shape) > 3:
n_imgs = numpy.prod(x.shape[:-3])
if n_imgs > 1:
img_shape = (-1,) + img_shape
return x.reshape(img_shape)
def get_default_image_compressor(**kwargs):
if imagecodecs.JPEGXL:
# has JPEGXL
this_kwargs = {
"effort": 3,
"distance": 0.3,
# bug in libjxl, invalid codestream for non-lossless
# when decoding speed > 1
"decodingspeed": 1,
}
this_kwargs.update(kwargs)
return JpegXl(**this_kwargs)
else:
this_kwargs = {"level": 50}
this_kwargs.update(kwargs)
return Jpeg2k(**this_kwargs)
class Jpeg2k(Codec):
"""JPEG 2000 codec for numcodecs."""
codec_id = "imagecodecs_jpeg2k"
def __init__(
self,
level=None,
codecformat=None,
colorspace=None,
tile=None,
reversible=None,
bitspersample=None,
resolutions=None,
numthreads=None,
verbose=0,
):
self.level = level
self.codecformat = codecformat
self.colorspace = colorspace
self.tile = None if tile is None else tuple(tile)
self.reversible = reversible
self.bitspersample = bitspersample
self.resolutions = resolutions
self.numthreads = numthreads
self.verbose = verbose
def encode(self, buf):
buf = protective_squeeze(numpy.asarray(buf))
return imagecodecs.jpeg2k_encode(
buf,
level=self.level,
codecformat=self.codecformat,
colorspace=self.colorspace,
tile=self.tile,
reversible=self.reversible,
bitspersample=self.bitspersample,
resolutions=self.resolutions,
numthreads=self.numthreads,
verbose=self.verbose,
)
def decode(self, buf, out=None):
return imagecodecs.jpeg2k_decode(buf, verbose=self.verbose, numthreads=self.numthreads, out=out)
class JpegXl(Codec):
"""JPEG XL codec for numcodecs."""
codec_id = "imagecodecs_jpegxl"
def __init__(
self,
# encode
level=None,
effort=None,
distance=None,
lossless=None,
decodingspeed=None,
photometric=None,
planar=None,
usecontainer=None,
# decode
index=None,
keeporientation=None,
# both
numthreads=None,
):
"""
Return JPEG XL image from numpy array.
Float must be in nominal range 0..1.
Currently L, LA, RGB, RGBA images are supported in contig mode.
Extra channels are only supported for grayscale images in planar mode.
Parameters
----------
level : Default to None, i.e. not overwriting lossess and decodingspeed options.
When < 0: Use lossless compression
When in [0,1,2,3,4]: Sets the decoding speed tier for the provided options.
Minimum is 0 (slowest to decode, best quality/density), and maximum
is 4 (fastest to decode, at the cost of some quality/density).
effort : Default to 3.
Sets encoder effort/speed level without affecting decoding speed.
Valid values are, from faster to slower speed: 1:lightning 2:thunder
3:falcon 4:cheetah 5:hare 6:wombat 7:squirrel 8:kitten 9:tortoise.
Speed: lightning, thunder, falcon, cheetah, hare, wombat, squirrel, kitten, tortoise
control the encoder effort in ascending order.
This also affects memory usage: using lower effort will typically reduce memory
consumption during encoding.
lightning and thunder are fast modes useful for lossless mode (modular).
falcon disables all of the following tools.
cheetah enables coefficient reordering, context clustering, and heuristics for selecting DCT sizes and quantization steps.
hare enables Gaborish filtering, chroma from luma, and an initial estimate of quantization steps.
wombat enables error diffusion quantization and full DCT size selection heuristics.
squirrel (default) enables dots, patches, and spline detection, and full context clustering.
kitten optimizes the adaptive quantization for a psychovisual metric.
tortoise enables a more thorough adaptive quantization search.
distance : Default to 1.0
Sets the distance level for lossy compression: target max butteraugli distance,
lower = higher quality. Range: 0 .. 15. 0.0 = mathematically lossless
(however, use JxlEncoderSetFrameLossless instead to use true lossless,
as setting distance to 0 alone is not the only requirement).
1.0 = visually lossless. Recommended range: 0.5 .. 3.0.
lossess : Default to False.
Use lossess encoding.
decodingspeed : Default to 0.
Duplicate to level. [0,4]
photometric : Return JxlColorSpace value.
Default logic is quite complicated but works most of the time.
Accepted value:
int: [-1,3]
str: ['RGB',
'WHITEISZERO', 'MINISWHITE',
'BLACKISZERO', 'MINISBLACK', 'GRAY',
'XYB', 'KNOWN']
planar : Enable multi-channel mode.
Default to false.
usecontainer :
Forces the encoder to use the box-based container format (BMFF)
even when not necessary.
When using JxlEncoderUseBoxes, JxlEncoderStoreJPEGMetadata or
JxlEncoderSetCodestreamLevel with level 10, the encoder will
automatically also use the container format, it is not necessary
to use JxlEncoderUseContainer for those use cases.
By default this setting is disabled.
index : Selectively decode frames for animation.
Default to 0, decode all frames.
When set to > 0, decode that frame index only.
keeporientation :
Enables or disables preserving of as-in-bitstream pixeldata orientation.
Some images are encoded with an Orientation tag indicating that the
decoder must perform a rotation and/or mirroring to the encoded image data.
If skip_reorientation is JXL_FALSE (the default): the decoder will apply
the transformation from the orientation setting, hence rendering the image
according to its specified intent. When producing a JxlBasicInfo, the decoder
will always set the orientation field to JXL_ORIENT_IDENTITY (matching the
returned pixel data) and also align xsize and ysize so that they correspond
to the width and the height of the returned pixel data.
If skip_reorientation is JXL_TRUE: the decoder will skip applying the
transformation from the orientation setting, returning the image in
the as-in-bitstream pixeldata orientation. This may be faster to decode
since the decoder doesnt have to apply the transformation, but can
cause wrong display of the image if the orientation tag is not correctly
taken into account by the user.
By default, this option is disabled, and the returned pixel data is
re-oriented according to the images Orientation setting.
threads : Default to 1.
If <= 0, use all cores.
If > 32, clipped to 32.
"""
self.level = level
self.effort = effort
self.distance = distance
self.lossless = bool(lossless)
self.decodingspeed = decodingspeed
self.photometric = photometric
self.planar = planar
self.usecontainer = usecontainer
self.index = index
self.keeporientation = keeporientation
self.numthreads = numthreads
def encode(self, buf):
# TODO: only squeeze all but last dim
buf = protective_squeeze(numpy.asarray(buf))
return imagecodecs.jpegxl_encode(
buf,
level=self.level,
effort=self.effort,
distance=self.distance,
lossless=self.lossless,
decodingspeed=self.decodingspeed,
photometric=self.photometric,
planar=self.planar,
usecontainer=self.usecontainer,
numthreads=self.numthreads,
)
def decode(self, buf, out=None):
return imagecodecs.jpegxl_decode(
buf,
index=self.index,
keeporientation=self.keeporientation,
numthreads=self.numthreads,
out=out,
)
def _flat(out):
"""Return numpy array as contiguous view of bytes if possible."""
if out is None:
return None
view = memoryview(out)
if view.readonly or not view.contiguous:
return None
return view.cast("B")
def register_codecs(codecs=None, force=False, verbose=True):
"""Register codecs in this module with numcodecs."""
for name, cls in globals().items():
if not hasattr(cls, "codec_id") or name == "Codec":
continue
if codecs is not None and cls.codec_id not in codecs:
continue
try:
try: # noqa: SIM105
get_codec({"id": cls.codec_id})
except TypeError:
# registered, but failed
pass
except ValueError:
# not registered yet
pass
else:
if not force:
if verbose:
log_warning(f"numcodec {cls.codec_id!r} already registered")
continue
if verbose:
log_warning(f"replacing registered numcodec {cls.codec_id!r}")
register_codec(cls)
def log_warning(msg, *args, **kwargs):
"""Log message with level WARNING."""
import logging
logging.getLogger(__name__).warning(msg, *args, **kwargs)

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@@ -1,233 +0,0 @@
#!/usr/bin/env python
# Copyright 2024 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.
"""
Contains utilities to process raw data format of HDF5 files like in: https://github.com/tonyzhaozh/act
"""
import gc
import shutil
from pathlib import Path
import h5py
import numpy as np
import torch
import tqdm
from datasets import Dataset, Features, Image, Sequence, Value
from PIL import Image as PILImage
from lerobot.common.datasets.lerobot_dataset import CODEBASE_VERSION
from lerobot.common.datasets.push_dataset_to_hub.utils import (
calculate_episode_data_index,
concatenate_episodes,
get_default_encoding,
save_images_concurrently,
)
from lerobot.common.datasets.utils import (
hf_transform_to_torch,
)
from lerobot.common.datasets.video_utils import VideoFrame, encode_video_frames
def get_cameras(hdf5_data):
# ignore depth channel, not currently handled
# TODO(rcadene): add depth
rgb_cameras = [key for key in hdf5_data["/observations/images"].keys() if "depth" not in key] # noqa: SIM118
return rgb_cameras
def check_format(raw_dir) -> bool:
# only frames from simulation are uncompressed
compressed_images = "sim" not in raw_dir.name
hdf5_paths = list(raw_dir.glob("episode_*.hdf5"))
assert len(hdf5_paths) != 0
for hdf5_path in hdf5_paths:
with h5py.File(hdf5_path, "r") as data:
assert "/action" in data
assert "/observations/qpos" in data
assert data["/action"].ndim == 2
assert data["/observations/qpos"].ndim == 2
num_frames = data["/action"].shape[0]
assert num_frames == data["/observations/qpos"].shape[0]
for camera in get_cameras(data):
assert num_frames == data[f"/observations/images/{camera}"].shape[0]
if compressed_images:
assert data[f"/observations/images/{camera}"].ndim == 2
else:
assert data[f"/observations/images/{camera}"].ndim == 4
b, h, w, c = data[f"/observations/images/{camera}"].shape
assert c < h and c < w, f"Expect (h,w,c) image format but ({h=},{w=},{c=}) provided."
def load_from_raw(
raw_dir: Path,
videos_dir: Path,
fps: int,
video: bool,
episodes: list[int] | None = None,
encoding: dict | None = None,
):
# only frames from simulation are uncompressed
compressed_images = "sim" not in raw_dir.name
hdf5_files = sorted(raw_dir.glob("episode_*.hdf5"))
num_episodes = len(hdf5_files)
ep_dicts = []
ep_ids = episodes if episodes else range(num_episodes)
for ep_idx in tqdm.tqdm(ep_ids):
ep_path = hdf5_files[ep_idx]
with h5py.File(ep_path, "r") as ep:
num_frames = ep["/action"].shape[0]
# last step of demonstration is considered done
done = torch.zeros(num_frames, dtype=torch.bool)
done[-1] = True
state = torch.from_numpy(ep["/observations/qpos"][:])
action = torch.from_numpy(ep["/action"][:])
if "/observations/qvel" in ep:
velocity = torch.from_numpy(ep["/observations/qvel"][:])
if "/observations/effort" in ep:
effort = torch.from_numpy(ep["/observations/effort"][:])
ep_dict = {}
for camera in get_cameras(ep):
img_key = f"observation.images.{camera}"
if compressed_images:
import cv2
# load one compressed image after the other in RAM and uncompress
imgs_array = []
for data in ep[f"/observations/images/{camera}"]:
imgs_array.append(cv2.imdecode(data, 1))
imgs_array = np.array(imgs_array)
else:
# load all images in RAM
imgs_array = ep[f"/observations/images/{camera}"][:]
if video:
# save png images in temporary directory
tmp_imgs_dir = videos_dir / "tmp_images"
save_images_concurrently(imgs_array, tmp_imgs_dir)
# encode images to a mp4 video
fname = f"{img_key}_episode_{ep_idx:06d}.mp4"
video_path = videos_dir / fname
encode_video_frames(tmp_imgs_dir, video_path, fps, **(encoding or {}))
# clean temporary images directory
shutil.rmtree(tmp_imgs_dir)
# store the reference to the video frame
ep_dict[img_key] = [
{"path": f"videos/{fname}", "timestamp": i / fps} for i in range(num_frames)
]
else:
ep_dict[img_key] = [PILImage.fromarray(x) for x in imgs_array]
ep_dict["observation.state"] = state
if "/observations/velocity" in ep:
ep_dict["observation.velocity"] = velocity
if "/observations/effort" in ep:
ep_dict["observation.effort"] = effort
ep_dict["action"] = action
ep_dict["episode_index"] = torch.tensor([ep_idx] * num_frames)
ep_dict["frame_index"] = torch.arange(0, num_frames, 1)
ep_dict["timestamp"] = torch.arange(0, num_frames, 1) / fps
ep_dict["next.done"] = done
# TODO(rcadene): add reward and success by computing them in sim
assert isinstance(ep_idx, int)
ep_dicts.append(ep_dict)
gc.collect()
data_dict = concatenate_episodes(ep_dicts)
total_frames = data_dict["frame_index"].shape[0]
data_dict["index"] = torch.arange(0, total_frames, 1)
return data_dict
def to_hf_dataset(data_dict, video) -> Dataset:
features = {}
keys = [key for key in data_dict if "observation.images." in key]
for key in keys:
if video:
features[key] = VideoFrame()
else:
features[key] = Image()
features["observation.state"] = Sequence(
length=data_dict["observation.state"].shape[1], feature=Value(dtype="float32", id=None)
)
if "observation.velocity" in data_dict:
features["observation.velocity"] = Sequence(
length=data_dict["observation.velocity"].shape[1], feature=Value(dtype="float32", id=None)
)
if "observation.effort" in data_dict:
features["observation.effort"] = Sequence(
length=data_dict["observation.effort"].shape[1], feature=Value(dtype="float32", id=None)
)
features["action"] = Sequence(
length=data_dict["action"].shape[1], feature=Value(dtype="float32", id=None)
)
features["episode_index"] = Value(dtype="int64", id=None)
features["frame_index"] = Value(dtype="int64", id=None)
features["timestamp"] = Value(dtype="float32", id=None)
features["next.done"] = Value(dtype="bool", id=None)
features["index"] = Value(dtype="int64", id=None)
hf_dataset = Dataset.from_dict(data_dict, features=Features(features))
hf_dataset.set_transform(hf_transform_to_torch)
return hf_dataset
def from_raw_to_lerobot_format(
raw_dir: Path,
videos_dir: Path,
fps: int | None = None,
video: bool = True,
episodes: list[int] | None = None,
encoding: dict | None = None,
):
# sanity check
check_format(raw_dir)
if fps is None:
fps = 50
data_dict = load_from_raw(raw_dir, videos_dir, fps, video, episodes, encoding)
hf_dataset = to_hf_dataset(data_dict, video)
episode_data_index = calculate_episode_data_index(hf_dataset)
info = {
"codebase_version": CODEBASE_VERSION,
"fps": fps,
"video": video,
}
if video:
info["encoding"] = get_default_encoding()
return hf_dataset, episode_data_index, info

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@@ -1,107 +0,0 @@
#!/usr/bin/env python
# Copyright 2024 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.
"""
Contains utilities to process raw data format of png images files recorded with capture_camera_feed.py
"""
from pathlib import Path
import torch
from datasets import Dataset, Features, Image, Value
from PIL import Image as PILImage
from lerobot.common.datasets.lerobot_dataset import CODEBASE_VERSION
from lerobot.common.datasets.push_dataset_to_hub.utils import (
calculate_episode_data_index,
concatenate_episodes,
)
from lerobot.common.datasets.utils import hf_transform_to_torch
from lerobot.common.datasets.video_utils import VideoFrame
def check_format(raw_dir: Path) -> bool:
image_paths = list(raw_dir.glob("frame_*.png"))
if len(image_paths) == 0:
raise ValueError
def load_from_raw(raw_dir: Path, fps: int, episodes: list[int] | None = None):
if episodes is not None:
# TODO(aliberts): add support for multi-episodes.
raise NotImplementedError()
ep_dict = {}
ep_idx = 0
image_paths = sorted(raw_dir.glob("frame_*.png"))
num_frames = len(image_paths)
ep_dict["observation.image"] = [PILImage.open(x) for x in image_paths]
ep_dict["episode_index"] = torch.tensor([ep_idx] * num_frames)
ep_dict["frame_index"] = torch.arange(0, num_frames, 1)
ep_dict["timestamp"] = torch.arange(0, num_frames, 1) / fps
ep_dicts = [ep_dict]
data_dict = concatenate_episodes(ep_dicts)
total_frames = data_dict["frame_index"].shape[0]
data_dict["index"] = torch.arange(0, total_frames, 1)
return data_dict
def to_hf_dataset(data_dict, video) -> Dataset:
features = {}
if video:
features["observation.image"] = VideoFrame()
else:
features["observation.image"] = Image()
features["episode_index"] = Value(dtype="int64", id=None)
features["frame_index"] = Value(dtype="int64", id=None)
features["timestamp"] = Value(dtype="float32", id=None)
features["index"] = Value(dtype="int64", id=None)
hf_dataset = Dataset.from_dict(data_dict, features=Features(features))
hf_dataset.set_transform(hf_transform_to_torch)
return hf_dataset
def from_raw_to_lerobot_format(
raw_dir: Path,
videos_dir: Path,
fps: int | None = None,
video: bool = True,
episodes: list[int] | None = None,
encoding: dict | None = None,
):
if video or episodes or encoding is not None:
# TODO(aliberts): support this
raise NotImplementedError
# sanity check
check_format(raw_dir)
if fps is None:
fps = 30
data_dict = load_from_raw(raw_dir, videos_dir, fps, video, episodes)
hf_dataset = to_hf_dataset(data_dict, video)
episode_data_index = calculate_episode_data_index(hf_dataset)
info = {
"codebase_version": CODEBASE_VERSION,
"fps": fps,
"video": video,
}
return hf_dataset, episode_data_index, info

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