ROS package to subscribe to an ROS Image topic (and as many other video sources as you want) and serve it up as a RTSP video feed with different mount points. Should provide a real-time video feed (or as close as possible).
This is still very much a work in progress. Developing on Ubuntu 16.04 and 18.04 with ROS kinetic and melodic.
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ROS
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gstreamer development libs:
sudo apt-get install libgstreamer-plugins-base1.0-dev libgstreamer-plugins-good1.0-dev libgstreamer-plugins-bad1.0-dev libgstrtspserver-1.0-dev
Navigate to your catkin workspace src
folder. I.e. cd ~/catkin_ws/src
.
Clone this package to the repository:
git clone https://github.com/CircusMonkey/ros_rtsp.git
Navigate back to the catkin workspace root and make the package:
cd ..
catkin_make pkg:=ros_rtsp
Change the config/stream_setup.yaml
to suit your required streams.
# Set up your streams to rtsp here.
streams: # Cannot rename - must leave this as is.
# Example v4l2 camera stream
stream-x: # Can name this whatever you choose
type: cam # cam - Will not look in ROS for a image. The video src is set in the 'source' parameter.
source: "v4l2src device=/dev/video0 ! videoconvert ! videoscale ! video/x-raw,framerate=15/1,width=1280,height=720" # Should work with most valid gstreamer piplines (ending with raw video)
mountpoint: /front # Choose the mountpoint for the rtsp stream. This will be able to be accessed from rtsp://<server_ip>/front
bitrate: 800 # bitrate for the h264 encoding.
# Example ROS Image topic stream
this-is-stream-42: # Can name this whatever you choose
type: topic # topic - Image is sourced from a sensor_msgs::Image topic
source: /usb_cam0/image_raw # The ROS topic to subscribe to
mountpoint: /back # Choose the mountpoint for the rtsp stream. This will be able to be accessed from rtsp://<server_ip>/back
caps: video/x-raw,framerate=10/1,width=640,height=480 # Set the caps to be applied after getting the ROS Image and before the x265 encoder.
bitrate: 500 # bitrate for the h264 encoding.
Add as many streams as you require.
Launch the streams from the ROS launch file:
roslaunch ros_rtsp rtsp_streams.launch
The best way to check a stream is working is to use gst-launch-1.0
. You will need to install gstreamer for your client system. See https://gstreamer.freedesktop.org/documentation/installing/index.html
gst-launch-1.0 -v rtspsrc location=rtsp://<server_ip>:8554/<your_stream_mountpoint> drop-on-latency=true use-pipeline-clock=true do-retransmission=false latency=0 protocols=GST_RTSP_LOWER_TRANS_UDP ! rtph264depay ! h264parse ! avdec_h264 ! autovideosink sync=true
The command I've had the lowest latency with is:
vlc --no-audio --avcodec-hw=any --sout-rtp-proto=udp --network-caching=300 --sout-udp-caching=0 --clock-jitter=0 --rtp-max-misorder=0 rtsp://<server_ip>:8554/<your_stream_mountpoint> :udp-timeout=0
- If too much latency is encounted with multiple streams running, the server computer may be maxing out its processor trying to encode all the streams. Try reducing the resolution of the source caps.
- The ROS Image topic stream may be buggy with framerates too fast for the Image publisher and the buffer writing. Stick with 10/1 fps unless you want to debug? :)
- If too many frames are being dropped, it is likely due to network bandwidth. Try dropping the bitrate.
- If the ROS topic isn't available, you will get a
can't prepare media
error after a delay.