nix-home VS rclcpp

Compare nix-home vs rclcpp and see what are their differences.

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nix-home rclcpp
1 4
5 489
- 4.1%
6.6 9.1
9 days ago 1 day ago
Nix C++
- Apache License 2.0
The number of mentions indicates the total number of mentions that we've tracked plus the number of user suggested alternatives.
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.

nix-home

Posts with mentions or reviews of nix-home. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2021-04-09.

rclcpp

Posts with mentions or reviews of rclcpp. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2022-11-06.
  • How to use various QoS settings in ros2 used in moveit software?
    1 project | /r/ROS | 8 Apr 2023
    I think there's an overload of rclcpp::action::create_client that will accept an rcl_action_client_options_t (see here https://github.com/ros2/rclcpp/pull/1133/files) but it looks like MoveGroupInterface doesn't pass anything in when it creates the action clients:
  • Making the jump to ROS2
    2 projects | /r/ROS | 6 Nov 2022
    So one of the bigger issues I've encountered is that re-entrant services can break with the multi-threaded executor https://github.com/ros2/rclcpp/issues/1212 Services in ROS2 by default are not reentrant meaning they need to be called asynchronously. Since my team was porting ROS1 nodes over we wanted to keep the old blocking service call behavior in ROS2 to avoid changing decision logic. Unfortunately, we found out that this can cause the node to crash per the issue above. The fix for that issue was implemented in Humble irc, but can't be ported back to foxy. That's one specific example, but we've seen a few other issues like that as well.
  • RADU: Motor Controller Software for Arduino and Raspberry Pico
    9 projects | dev.to | 17 Apr 2022
    Alternatively, you can use the default client libraries like rclpy or rclcpp for writing custom code that reads and writes ROS2 messages.
  • Nix is the ultimate DevOps toolkit
    21 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 9 Apr 2021
    Thanks for the response!

    > This is difficult to answer without knowing more details.

    The situation specifically is the ROS ecosystem, where metadata is managed in these package.xml files:

    https://github.com/ros2/rclcpp/blob/master/rclcpp/package.xm...

    The federated nature of the ecosystem has led to a culture where it's very normal to be building dozens of these at once, in the same workspace together, often from multiple repos (the repo above has four in it). So there are several build tools which automate the work of examining a source workspace and building all the packages within it in the correct topological order, respecting build_depend tags. The newest of these tools (colcon) has actually made the package.xml optional in many cases, as it can examine CMakelists, setup.py, BUILD, etc, and discover for itself what the dependencies are.

    Your "distribution" of ROS is formed by listing all the packages and repos in this big file, for which there is other tooling to manage pulling dependency sources, whatever: https://github.com/ros/rosdistro/blob/master/foxy/distributi...

    Anyway, so the existing ROS/nix efforts (1) seem to basically consume all of this package/distribution metadata at once and generate a giant parallel structure of nix definitions (eg https://github.com/lopsided98/nix-ros-overlay/blob/master/di...), which I fear would be completely opaque to users and any system which required everyone to leave behind these existing workflows would be an immediate non-starter.

    I think the ideal scenario (and what it would look like if I built this myself based on debs) would be that you could source the "base" workspace as usual (enter the nix-shell?), and check out source, build packages as usual with colcon, the usual workspace-building tool, but there'd be an extra plugin/verb/flag for it, which would make it build each package as a nix package instead of into the usual installspace. The verb would generate the nix definitions on the fly, and probably handle the invocation and build-parallelism side of it as well.

    [1]: https://github.com/acowley/ros2nix, https://github.com/lopsided98/nix-ros-overlay

What are some alternatives?

When comparing nix-home and rclcpp you can also consider the following projects:

nickel - Better configuration for less

micro_ros_arduino - micro-ROS library for Arduino

haskell-nix - Nix and Haskell in production

robotnix - Build Android (AOSP) using Nix [maintainer=@danielfullmer,@Atemu]

rosdistro - This repo maintains a lists of repositories for each ROS distribution

ros2_serial_example

nix-1p - A (more or less) one page introduction to Nix, the language.

asdf - Extendable version manager with support for Ruby, Node.js, Elixir, Erlang & more

rclpy - rclpy (ROS Client Library for Python)

nix-ros-overlay - ROS overlay for the Nix package manager

rosserial - A ROS client library for small, embedded devices, such as Arduino. See: http://wiki.ros.org/rosserial