Common Use Cases
One of the goals of ouster-cli
is to easily allow the most common sensor and recorded data
interactions. We cover some common use cases here, listed alphabetically. Please note that wherever
<SENSOR_HOSTNAME> is used, you are expected to substitute in your sensor’s hostname or IP, e.g.,
os1-991913000010.local
.
Benchmarking
To help users obtain performance metrics for the Ouster SDK, we provide a benchmarking utility which will download 8 seconds of OS2 data, gather system info, time various data operations, and generate a report which you can share with others. Give it a try!
$ ouster-cli util benchmark
This will generate a report in a directory named ouster-bench, which will be located in the current working directory.
Discovering sensors on local network
Sensors announce their presence on the network using Multicast Domain Name Service (mDNS). Use
helper utility command discover
to list names and IPs of all available sensors on the local
network:
$ ouster-cli discover
Collecting Metadata
Sensor metadata, necessary for interpreting and parsing the pcap data, can be collected from sensors using:
$ ouster-cli source <SENSOR_HOSTNAME> info > <SENSOR_HOSTNAME>.json
This will generate a .json
file named <SENSOR_HOSTNAME>.json
with the metadata inside. To
output it to a differently named file, simply change <SENSOR_HOSNTAME>.json
to
<FILL_IN_ALTERNATE_NAME>.json
. You can also print the metadata to screen by removing >
and
everything after it in the command.
Configuring Your Sensor
ouster-cli
provides utilities for configuring your sensor with configuration parameters such as
lidar_mode
and azimuth_window
.
To quickly auto-configure a sensor with with standard ports, azimuth window, operating mode, and auto udp dest:
$ ouster-cli source <SENSOR_HOSTNAME> config
But what if you want to specify the ports and lidar_mode? You can use the sensor config
command thusly:
$ ouster-cli source <SENSOR_HOSTNAME> config lidar_mode 1024x10 udp_port_lidar 29847
Note
Multiple <PARAM> <VALUE>
pairs can be passed this way!
You may have a configuration that you want to use repeatedly. Typing these in at the command line every time would be annoying. You can instead save your config to a json, named CONFIG_JSON, here, and run:
$ ouster-cli source <SENSOR_HOSTNAME> config -c <CONFIG JSON>
And finally, you may wish to save a configuration after setting your sensor up perfectly. To do so:
$ ouster-cli source <SENSOR_HOSTNAME> config -d
That will print your json to stdout. Use >
to redirect it to a file!
Recording Pcaps
To record data from a udp port (7502 by default) to a pcap file in the current directory and write the metadata to a json file with the same name, simply use:
$ ouster-cli source <SENSOR_HOSTNAME> record
This will record until you keyboard interrupt, i.e., use CTRL+C
. You can also set it to record
a specific length or number of packets, or to use different ports for lidar and IMU data. As always
with ouster-cli
, use --help
to discover how those options work.
Visualizing Lidar Data
The following visualizes lidar data arriving on a udp port. Note that you may have to use
ouster-cli source <SENSOR_HOSTNAME> config
first to configure your sensor properly.
$ ouster-cli source <SENSOR_HOSTNAME> viz
The following replays lidar data saved in a pcap file and visualizes the output. It will looks for a
metadata json file with the same name as PCAP FILE by default, but you can specify a file using -m
<METADATA JSON>
.
$ ouster-cli source <PCAP FILE> viz