Operation - Networking
Contents
Operation - Networking#
The instructions here are ordered in terms of preference, the first being the most preferable and best.
By default on boot your robot will look for a network with a “duckietown
” SSID, unless you changed it in the SD card flashing procedure. You can connect to your robot wirelessly by connecting to that network.
This page describes how to get your robot connected to the wide-area network (internet).
Add WiFi Networks without reinitializing the SD card#
To add networks at a later stage or modify existing settings, edit the file wpa_supplicant.conf
in the main partition of the SD card.
For robots based on Raspberry Pi, (e.g., DB17
, DB18
, DB19
), this file is located at /etc/wpa_supplicant/wpa_supplicant.conf
in the root
partition;
For robots based on Nvidia Jetson Nano, (e.g., DB21M
), this file is located at /etc/wpa_supplicant.conf
in the APP
partition;
New networks can be created by adding a new network={}
paragraph, and then entering the network information. An example network configuration is shown below:
ctrl_interface=DIR=/var/run/wpa_supplicant GROUP=netdev
update_config=1
country=CH
network={
id_str="network_1"
ssid="comnet23243"
psk="MSNDJWKE32"
key_mgmt=WPA-PSK
}
network={
id_str="network_2"
ssid="TPlink23432"
psk="ksnbn4wn3"
key_mgmt=WPA-PSK
}
Testing if your Duckiebot is Connected to the Internet#
Some networks block pings from passing through, so a better way is to execute on your duckiebot:
duckiebot $ sudo curl google.com
which will try to download the Google homepage. If it is successful, you should see an output like:
<HTML><HEAD><meta http-equiv="content-type" content="text/html;charset=utf-8">
<TITLE>301 Moved</TITLE></HEAD><BODY>
<H1>301 Moved</H1>
The document has moved
<A HREF="http://www.google.com/">here</A>.
</BODY></HTML>
Option 1: Connect your Duckiebot to the internet through a WiFi router that you control#
If you are working from your home, for example, you simply need to make the Duckiebot connect to your home network. You may have input the proper SSID and password when you initialized the SD card, in which case, your Duckiebot should be connected to the internet already.
If you didn’t enter the right SSID and password for your network or you want to change you need to connect to your robot somehow (e.g. with Ethernet) and then edit the file /etc/wpa_supplicant/wpa_supplicant.conf
as explained in the Duckiebot initialization procedure.
This is the best option.
Option 2: Bridge the internet connection through your laptop with Ethernet#
This method assumes that you can connect your laptop to a network but it is one that you don’t control or is not open. For example, on campus many networks are more protected, e.g., with PEAP
. In that case, it can be difficult to get your configurations right on the Duckiebot. An alternative is bridge the connection between your laptop and your Duckiebot whenever you need internet access on the robot.
Ubuntu#
Connect your laptop to a wireless network.
Connect the Duckiebot to your laptop via an Ethernet cable.
Make a new Ethernet connection:
Network Settings… (or run the command
nm-connection-editor
)Click “Add”
Type -> Ethernet
Connection Name: “Shared to Duckiebot”
Select “IPV4” tab
Select Method
Select “Shared to other computers”
Click apply.
Now, you should be able to SSH to your Duckiebot:
$ ssh ![hostname]
Note
The next three commands should be executed on your Duckiebot through SSH
Check whether you can access the internet from your Duckiebot:
$ sudo curl google.com
Now, try to pull a Docker image:
$ sudo docker pull duckietown/rpi-simple-server # This should complete successfully
If the previous command does not work, you may need to change the system date. To do so, run the following command:
$ sudo date -s "2018-09-18 15:00:00" # Where this is the current date in YYYY-MM-DD HH-mm-ss
Mac#
Untested instructions here
duckiebot-network-push = ## Option 3: Push Docker Images from Laptop
Since we are primarily using the internet to pull Docker images, we can simply connect the laptop and the Duckiebot then push Docker images from the laptop over SSH like so:
$ docker save duckietown/![image-name] | ssh -C ![hostname] docker load
Then the image will be available on your Duckiebot.
If you can connect to your laptop (e.g. through a router) but do not have internet access then you can proceed for now, but everytime you see a command starting with:
$ docker run ...
Note that you will need to pull onto your laptop and push to your Duckiebot in order to load the latest version of the image.
Troubleshooting#
I cannot ping the Duckiebot#
Troubleshooting
SYMPTOM
I cannot ping the Duckiebot (ping ![robot_name]
does not work).
RESOLUTION
Check if your laptop and Duckiebot are connected to the same network.
Additional debugging steps:
Step 1: Check that your Raspberry Pi is responsive by observing the blinking LED on the Raspberry Pi.
Step 2: Connect your Duckiebot with the laptop using the ethernet cable. Check if you are able to ping the Duckiebot. This will provide you an hint if there is an issue with the robot or network.
Step 3: Check that this file:
/etc/wpa_supplicant/wpa_supplicant.conf
contains all the wifi networks in the correct syntax that you want to connect.Step 4: If it’s your private access point, then you can access your router, typically connecting to
192.168.0.1
, where you can see all the devices connected. Make sure that both your Duckiebot and your laptop are in the list.Step 5: Check the file
~/.ssh/config
has the correct name hostname withhostname.local
defined.
Troubleshooting
SYMPTOM
When I run ssh ![robot_name].local
I get the error ssh: Could not resolve hostname ![robot_name].local
.
RESOLUTION
Make sure that your Duckiebot is ON. Connect it to a monitor, a USB mouse and a keyboard. Run the command:
On the duckiebot run:
$ sudo service avahi-daemon status
You should get something like the following:
● avahi-daemon.service - Avahi mDNS/DNS-SD Stack Loaded: loaded (/lib/systemd/system/avahi-daemon.service; enabled; vendor preset: enabled) Active: active (running) since Sun 2017-10-22 00:07:53 CEST; 1 day 3h ago Main PID: 699 (avahi-daemon) Status: "avahi-daemon 0.6.32-rc starting up." CGroup: /system.slice/avahi-daemon.service ├─699 avahi-daemon: running [![robot_name_in_avahi].local └─727 avahi-daemon: chroot helpe
Avahi is the module that in Ubuntu implements the mDNS responder. The mDNS responder is responsible for advertising the hostname of the Duckiebot on the network so that everybody else within the same network can run the command ping ![robot_name].local
and reach your Duckiebot. Focus on the line containing the hostname published by the avahi-daemon
on the network (i.e., the line that contains ![robot_name_in_avahi].local
).
If ![robot_name_in_avahi]
matches the ![robot_name]
, go to the next Resolution point.
If ![robot_name_in_avahi]
has the form ![robot_name]-XX
, where XX
can be any number, modify the file /etc/avahi/avahi-daemon.conf
as shown below.
Identify the line
use-ipv6=yes
and change it to
use-ipv6=no
Identify the line
#publish-aaaa-on-ipv4=yes
and change it to
publish-aaaa-on-ipv4=no
Restart Avahi by running the command
$ sudo service avahi-daemon restart
Troubleshooting
SYMPTOM
I can SSH to the Duckiebot but not without a password
RESOLUTION
Check the file ~.ssh/config
and make sure you add your ssh
key there, in case it doesn’t exists.
The init_sd_card
procedure should generate a paragraph in the above file in the following format:
Host duckiebot User duckie Hostname duckiebot.local IdentityFile /home/user/.ssh/DT18_key_00 StrictHostKeyChecking no
Do:
$ ssh-keygen -f "/home/user/.ssh/known_hosts" -R hostname.local
It will generate a key for you, if it doesn’t exists.
Troubleshooting
SYMPTOM
Error message appears saying I cannot communicate with docker
. Also a warning \"DOCKER_HOST\" is set to ![hostname].local
is present.
RESOLUTION
Unset the DOCKER_HOST
, running:
$ unset DOCKER_HOST
Troubleshooting
SYMPTOM
You can ping the robot, ssh
into it, start the demos, but the commands
from the virtual joystick do not seem to reach the robot.
RESOLUTION
A possible cause is that your computer’s firewall is blocking the incoming traffic from the robot. Check the settings for the firewall on your computer and make sure that any incoming traffic from the IP address of the robot is allowed on all ports. Keep in mind that if your robot’s IP address changes, you might need to update the rule.