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Guide on setting up phantom omni on Ubuntu. Important files are included in this repository. Also added some tips on solving problems which aren't covered widely on websites.

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PhantomOmniUbuntu

Guide on setting up phantom omni with the IEEE1394 firewire on Ubuntu. Important files are included in this repository. Also added some tips on solving problems which aren't covered widely on websites.

Preliminary Step

Make sure the following libraries are installed in your computer.

$ sudo apt-get install freeglut3-dev x11proto-gl-dev libmotif-dev mesa-utils libglw1-mesa-dev libncurses5-dev

PHANToM Device Driver (PDD) Installation

Download the contents from this folder. Install the PHANTOM Device Drivers (PDD) via:

For x86 system:

$ cd [DOWNLOAD DIR]/OpenHapticsAE_Linux_v3_0/PHANTOM Device Drivers/32-bit/
$ sudo dpkg -i phantomdevicedrivers_4.3-3_i386.deb

For x64 system:

$ cd [DOWNLOAD DIR]/OpenHapticsAE_Linux_v3_0/PHANTOM Device Drivers/64-bit/
$ sudo dpkg -i phantomdevicedrivers_4.3-3_amd64.deb

After this step, download the Linux_JUJU_PDD folder available here. The PDD is contained within libPHANToMIO.so.4.3. Hence, before continuing, make sure the previous PDD files or associated symbolic links are removed. First, check if such files exists.

$ find /usr/lib/ libPHAN*

If the results shows this:

/usr/lib/libPHANToMIO.so.4.3
/usr/lib/libPHANToMIO.so.4
/usr/lib/libPHANToMIO.so

Remove them via:

$ cd /usr/lib/
$ sudo rm libPHANToMIO.so.4.3
$ sudo rm libPHANToMIO.so.4
$ sudo rm libPHANToMIO.so

With that done, copy the provided PDD files in the Linux_JUJU_PDD into /usr/lib, via:

For x86 system:

$ cd [DOWNLOAD DIR]/Linux_JUJU_PDD/Linux_JUJU_PDD_32-bit/
$ sudo cp libPHANToMIO.so.4.3 /usr/lib/
$ sudo cp libPHANToMIO.so.4 /usr/lib/
$ sudo cp libPHANToMIO.so /usr/lib/

For x64 system:

$ cd [DOWNLOAD DIR]/Linux_JUJU_PDD/Linux_JUJU_PDD_64-bit/
$ sudo cp libPHANToMIO.so.4.3 /usr/lib/
$ sudo cp libPHANToMIO.so.4 /usr/lib/
$ sudo cp libPHANToMIO.so /usr/lib/

NOTE: In most setup guides, only the libPHANToMIO.so.4.3 is copied to the directory whereas the remaining two files are created via symbolic link. Doing so resulted in a driver initialization error when PHANToMTest is launched, in my case. This problem is solved through the direct copy/paste method instead of creating symbolic links.

Next, copy the PHANToMConfiguration file into /usr/sbin/:

For x86 system:

$ cd [DOWNLOAD DIR]/Linux_JUJU_PDD/Linux_JUJU_PDD_32-bit/
$ sudo cp PHANToMConfiguration /usr/sbin/

For x64 system:

$ cd [DOWNLOAD DIR]/Linux_JUJU_PDD/Linux_JUJU_PDD_64-bit/
$ sudo cp PHANToMConfiguration /usr/sbin/

At this point, the setup for the PDD is completed. Launch PHANToMConfiguration (Three alternatives given below):

$ PHANToMConfiguration
$ /usr/sbin/PHANToMConfiguration
$ LANG=en_us /usr/sbin/PHANToMConfiguration

If the below error appears, for Ubuntu 11.04 and above, when lauching PHANToMConfiguration:

$ /usr/sbin/PHANToMConfiguration
/usr/sbin/PHANToMConfiguration: error while loading shared libraries: libraw1394.so.8: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory

Link the libraw1394.so.8 to libraw1394.so.11:

For x86 system:

$ cd /usr/lib/i386-linux-gnu
$ sudo ln -s libraw1394.so.11 libraw1394.so.8

For x64 system:

$ cd /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu
$ sudo ln -s libraw1394.so.11 libraw1394.so.8

A successful launch of PHANToMConfiguration should look like this:

PHANToMConfiguration

Please change the Phantom model to omni. If the device connection is correct, the serial number should be detected below. If so, select Apply and Ok.

Finally, launch PHANToMTest to calibrate your device and also to verify that the system can be run successfully.

$ PHANToMTest

If the following error appears:

GLX_error

But you have verified that GLX is installed and is working in your system. Then this is most likely because GLX wasn't enabled in your graphics driver. To enable it, follow the instructions below:

First, go to the xorg configuration directory.

$ cd /usr/share/x11/xorg.conf.d/

By listing out all the configuration files, you should see something like this:

$ ls

xorg_config

For example, if you are using nvidia driver, open and edit 10-nvidia.conf:

$ sudo gedit 10-nvidia.conf

At the end of the script, add this section:

Section "ServerFlags"
 	Option "AllowIndirectGLX" "on"
 	Option "IndirectGLX" "on"
EndSection

Then save and exit the file.

If permission is needed to access the firewire card, run the following line in the terminal:

$ sudo chmod 777 /dev/fw*

Relaunch PHANToMTest and it should appear successfully as so: phantom_test

OpenHaptics SDK installation

Lastly, install OpenHaptics via:

For x86 system:

$ cd [DOWNLOAD DIR]/OpenHapticsAE_Linux_v3_0/OpenHaptics-AE 3.0/32-bit/
$ sudo dpkg -i openhaptics-ae_3.0-2_i386.deb

For x64 system:

$ cd [DOWNLOAD DIR]/OpenHapticsAE_Linux_v3_0/OpenHaptics-AE 3.0/64-bit/
$ sudo dpkg -i openhaptics-ae_3.0-2_amd64.deb

Also add 3D Touch to /etc/environment file, by first opening the file in editing mode:

$ sudo gedit /etc/environment

Then add the following lines:

3DTOUCH_BASE=/usr/share/3DTouch

Once done, save and exit.

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Guide on setting up phantom omni on Ubuntu. Important files are included in this repository. Also added some tips on solving problems which aren't covered widely on websites.

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