cereal is both a messaging spec for robotics systems as well as generic high performance IPC pub sub messaging with a single publisher and multiple subscribers.
Imagine this use case:
- A sensor process reads gyro measurements directly from an IMU and publishes a
sensorEvents
packet - A calibration process subscribes to the
sensorEvents
packet to use the IMU - A localization process subscribes to the
sensorEvents
packet to use the IMU also
You'll find the message types in log.capnp. It uses Cap'n proto and defines one struct called Event
.
All Events
have a logMonoTime
and a valid
. Then a big union defines the packet type.
- All fields must describe quantities in SI units, unless otherwise specified in the field name.
- In the context of the message they are in, field names should be completely unambiguous.
- All values should be easy to plot and be human-readable with minimal parsing.
When making changes to the messaging spec you want to maintain backwards-compatibility, such that old logs can be parsed with a new version of cereal. Adding structs and adding members to structs is generally safe, most other things are not. Read more details here.
Forks of openpilot might want to add things to the messaging spec, however this could conflict with future changes made in mainline cereal/openpilot. Rebasing against mainline openpilot then means breaking backwards-compatibility with all old logs of your fork. So we added reserved events in custom.capnp that we will leave empty in mainline cereal/openpilot. If you only modify those, you can ensure your fork will remain backwards-compatible with all versions of mainline cereal/openpilot and your fork.
cereal supports two backends, one based on zmq and another called msgq, a custom pub sub based on shared memory that doesn't require the bytes to pass through the kernel.
import cereal.messaging as messaging
# in subscriber
sm = messaging.SubMaster(['sensorEvents'])
while 1:
sm.update()
print(sm['sensorEvents'])
# in publisher
pm = messaging.PubMaster(['sensorEvents'])
dat = messaging.new_message('sensorEvents', size=1)
dat.sensorEvents[0] = {"gyro": {"v": [0.1, -0.1, 0.1]}}
pm.send('sensorEvents', dat)