Udacity Self-Driving Car Engineer - Project7: Path Planning
This is the repository of the path planning project of the Udacity Self-Driving Car Nanodegree. Here are some outputs of the project:
The goal is to safely navigate around a virtual highway with other traffic that is driving +-10 MPH of the 50 MPH speed limit. The car's localization and sensor fusion data is provided and there is also a sparse map list of waypoints around the highway. The car should try to go as close as possible to the 50 MPH speed limit, which means passing slower traffic when possible, note that other cars will try to change lanes too. The car should avoid hitting other cars at all cost as well as driving inside of the marked road lanes at all times, unless going from one lane to another. The car should be able to make one complete loop around the 6946m highway. Since the car is trying to go 50 MPH, it should take a little over 5 minutes to complete 1 loop. Also the car should not experience total acceleration over 10 m/s^2 and jerk that is greater than 10 m/s^3. Finally, the car cannot spend more than 3 second out of the lanes, when changing lanes.
Each waypoint in the list contains [x,y,s,dx,dy] values. x and y are the waypoint's map coordinate position, the s value is the distance along the road to get to that waypoint in meters, the dx and dy values define the unit normal vector pointing outward of the highway loop.
The highway's waypoints loop around so the frenet s value, distance along the road, goes from 0 to 6945.554.
The vehicle will follow the following rules for navigation:
- The car will keep the lane and will try to go stright at a speed less than 50mph (always without passing it).
- If there is other car ahead in the same lane, the vehicle will try to pass it. So, sensor fusion data is used to verify that there is a free adjacent lane (with 15m clear to the rear and to the front). If there is a free lane, the car change to the new lane (respecting the conditions of acceleration, jerk and timing). If in the middle of the maneuver the target lane is occupied by a car, the lane change is aborted and the car return to the original lane.
- If the car cannot be passed, the vehicle copies the speed of the car ahead and the lane is held until an adjacent lane is cleared. It is checked all the time not to exceed the maximum speed.
- If the distance to the car in front decreases even more (less than 30 meters), el auto frena para aumentar el buffer de seguridad de distancia (respecting the conditions of acceleration, jerk). Once the buffer distance increases, the speed is copied again.
Respecting these rules, the output of the algorithm are the next 50 points of the path. These points are updated every 0.2s.
- Clone this repo.
- Make a build directory:
mkdir build && cd build
- Compile:
cmake .. && make
- Run it:
./path_planning
.
Here is the data provided from the Simulator to the C++ Program
["x"] The car's x position in map coordinates
["y"] The car's y position in map coordinates
["s"] The car's s position in frenet coordinates
["d"] The car's d position in frenet coordinates
["yaw"] The car's yaw angle in the map
["speed"] The car's speed in MPH
//Note: Return the previous list but with processed points removed, can be a nice tool to show how far along the path has processed since last time.
["previous_path_x"] The previous list of x points previously given to the simulator
["previous_path_y"] The previous list of y points previously given to the simulator
["end_path_s"] The previous list's last point's frenet s value
["end_path_d"] The previous list's last point's frenet d value
["sensor_fusion"] A 2d vector of cars and then that car's [car's unique ID, car's x position in map coordinates, car's y position in map coordinates, car's x velocity in m/s, car's y velocity in m/s, car's s position in frenet coordinates, car's d position in frenet coordinates.
You can download the Term3 Simulator which contains the Path Planning Project from the [releases tab (https://github.com/udacity/self-driving-car-sim/releases/tag/T3_v1.2).
To run the simulator on Mac/Linux, first make the binary file executable with the following command:
sudo chmod u+x {simulator_file_name}
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The car uses a perfect controller and will visit every (x,y) point it recieves in the list every .02 seconds. The units for the (x,y) points are in meters and the spacing of the points determines the speed of the car. The vector going from a point to the next point in the list dictates the angle of the car. Acceleration both in the tangential and normal directions is measured along with the jerk, the rate of change of total Acceleration. The (x,y) point paths that the planner recieves should not have a total acceleration that goes over 10 m/s^2, also the jerk should not go over 50 m/s^3. (NOTE: As this is BETA, these requirements might change. Also currently jerk is over a .02 second interval, it would probably be better to average total acceleration over 1 second and measure jerk from that.
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There will be some latency between the simulator running and the path planner returning a path, with optimized code usually its not very long maybe just 1-3 time steps. During this delay the simulator will continue using points that it was last given, because of this its a good idea to store the last points you have used so you can have a smooth transition. previous_path_x, and previous_path_y can be helpful for this transition since they show the last points given to the simulator controller with the processed points already removed. You would either return a path that extends this previous path or make sure to create a new path that has a smooth transition with this last path.
A really helpful resource for doing this project and creating smooth trajectories was using http://kluge.in-chemnitz.de/opensource/spline/, the spline function is in a single hearder file is really easy to use.
- cmake >= 3.5
- All OSes: click here for installation instructions
- make >= 4.1
- Linux: make is installed by default on most Linux distros
- Mac: install Xcode command line tools to get make
- Windows: Click here for installation instructions
- gcc/g++ >= 5.4
- Linux: gcc / g++ is installed by default on most Linux distros
- Mac: same deal as make - [install Xcode command line tools]((https://developer.apple.com/xcode/features/)
- Windows: recommend using MinGW
- uWebSockets
- Run either
install-mac.sh
orinstall-ubuntu.sh
. - If you install from source, checkout to commit
e94b6e1
, i.e.git clone https://github.com/uWebSockets/uWebSockets cd uWebSockets git checkout e94b6e1
- Run either