Mavelous is an open source browser-based ground control station (GCS) for drones/UAVs/micro air vehicles.
Mavelous can be used with any vehicle that speaks the MAVLink 1.0 protocol. It has been tested with Arducopter and ArduPlane.
Here's a screenshot of Mavelous running in a desktop web browser:
Mavelous running on an iPhone:
Here's a video of Mavelous being used in the field with an iPad to fly an ArduCopter:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QNql3n4C8iA
-
Situational awareness. Mavelous will show you a vehicle's current position on a map. It also has a primary flight display that displays attitude, speed and altitude.
-
Tap-the-map navigation. You can double tap on the map, and the vehicle will switch to GUIDED mode and fly to that position.
-
Flight mode. You can arm and disarm the vehicle, and you can put it into LOITER, RTL, or LAND mode.
Mavelous is written in Python, and it depends on mavlink, CherryPy and Flask.
First clone the mavelous and mavlink repositories:
$ cd src
$ git clone https://github.com/wiseman/mavlink # Fork required to fix bugs
$ git clone [email protected]:wiseman/mavelous.git
Then install CherryPy, Flask and pyserial. The easiest way is with pip:
$ pip install cherrypy flask pyserial
The online demo of Mavelous runs completely within the browser. The simulated drone is very low fidelity and simply follows a fixed path. It will not respond to navigation commands such as guided mode.
You can also run the demo on your own machine by cloning the repository and
opening the html page in your browser via the filesystem. The index.html
file can be found at:
mavelous/modules/lib/mavelous_web/index.html
-
Connect your ArduCopter or ArduPlane to your computer with an Xbee or 3DR Radio. Power on the vehicle.
-
Start mavproxy, specifying the serial port and data rate. On Linux, the serial port is probably named something like
/dev/ttyUSB0
or/dev/ttyUSB1
. For 3DR Radios, the data rate is usually 57600. For example:$ cd src/mavelous $ python mavproxy.py --module mavelous --master=/dev/ttyUSB0 --baud=57600
You can then point at browser at http://localhost:9999.
You'll be able to use the Mavelous interface to control Guided mode once in flight. Find out more about guided mode on ArduCopter.
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Compile the ArduCopter firmware for Software in the loop similation (SITL). You'll need to use the ardupilot-mega project's Makefile build system: see details on the ardupilot-mega wiki.
$ make sitl
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Run the ArduCopter executable in desktop mode. For example:
$ ~/ardupilot-mega/tmp/ArduCopter.build/ArduCopter.elf -H 20
On some systems, this directory will be found at
/tmp/ArduCopter.build/
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Start the simulated multicopter. For example:
$ python ~/ardupilot-mega/Tools/autotest/pysim/sim_multicopter.py \ --frame=+ --rate=400 --home=34.092047,-118.267136,20,0 --wind=6,45,.3
-
Start mavproxy:
$ python mavproxy.py --master=tcp:127.0.0.1:5760 --out=127.0.0.1:14550 \ --aircraft=test.ArduCopter --sitl=127.0.0.1:5501 --out=127.0.0.1:19550 \ --quadcopter --streamrate=5 --module mavelous
A web browser will open showing you the Mavelous interface, or you can point a browser to http://localhost:9999.
-
Take off. Soon, arducopter may support automated take-off. Until then:
GUIDED> switch 6 # Stabilize mode GUIDED> rc 3 1510 # Take-off throttle
* Drone
|
*---+---*
|
*
^
|
| Radio link
|
V
.............................................
. Mavelous .
. .
. +--------+ +-----------------+ .
. | | HTTP | Front end, runs | .
. | Server |<-------->| in browser | .
. | | | | .
. +--------+ +-----------------+ .
.............................................
Mavelous has two main parts:
-
Front end. This is the HTML application that runs in a browser. It uses many HTML5 features, so you'll need a reasonably modern browser.
-
Server. The server manages communication between the front end and the drone. It has a web server that talks to the front end, and it sends and receives drone commands using a wireless modem (like an XBee radio or a 3D Robotics radio).
The front end and the server can run on the same computer, or on two different computers.
The server is written in Python, and probably requires a laptop or netbook. The front end is written in HTML/CSS/Javascript, and can run on anything with a web browser, including phones and tablets.
Portability. Controlling a drone with an iPad is kind of awesome, and there are currently no open-source ground control stations that can run on an iPhone or iPad--Mavelous can (at least the front end can).
The most popular ArduCopter GCS, APM Mission Planner, is primarily a Windows application. It can run under OS X and Linux with Mono, but the experience is not always smooth.
The goal of Mavelous is to have a highly portable GCS that can talk to anything that speaks the MAVLink protocol (and hopefully ROS devices, too, some day).
Currently Mavelous is capable of monitoring and guiding a drone in flight.
- You can see basic flight data (speed, altitude, attitude) on the primary flight display.
- You can double click/tap on the map to send the drone to that location.
- Multiple users can control the same drone.
- Arm/Disarm, loiter, and land an ArduCopter (or other drones that obey Mavlink Navigation Commands).
We're working to add the following features soon:
- Control auto takeoff
- Mission creation and editing
- Offline support (map caching)
I'd like to add these features:
- Multi-vehicle control
There is a public mailing list for Mavelous users and developers.
To generate HTML files from templates, generate javascript
dependencies (mavelous-deps.js
) and minify/compile javascript:
$ make
To lint the code:
$ make lint
To fix some lint issues automatically:
$ make lintfix
To regenerate mavelous-deps.js
:
$ make deps
The Mavelous backend is based on Mavproxy,a command line ground station by Andrew Tridgell.
Mavelous uses open source code from the following projects: Leaflet.js, Backbone.js, Bootstrap, jQuery, Underscore.js, Kinetic.js, Google Closure tools and others.
Mavelous is covered by the MIT license, see the accompanying file LICENSE.md for details.
This repository contains additional code that may be covered by other licenses, including MAVProxy, which uses the GPL license.