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Colcon

Extension is intended to simplify use of colcon command line tool.

It provides tasks for colcon workspace and automatically run setup scripts in order to correctly adjust environment.

How to use

  1. Enable tasks by running command Colcon: Enable Tasks for current Workspace or manually set colcon.provideTasks to true.
  2. If default options doesn't suit your workspace, you may configure colcon.globalSetup and colcon.workspaceSetup lists of setup files.
  3. Run Colcon: Refresh Environment command to complete environment set up for your workspace.
  4. Now open yout task list and run any task you want!

Available tasks

Tasks provided at the moment:

Workspace level:

  • colcon: build Do exactly the same as command-line colcon build
  • colcon: test
  • colcon: test-results similarily to build
  • colcon: clean that is simple call to rm -f build install

Two tasks specially for current editor:

  • colcon: build <current package> - like
  • colcon: launch <current file.launch.py> that is by default calls ros2 launch ./<current file> command

First three commands use colcon as executable being launched, yet the last two could be configured with colcon.runCommand and colcon.cleanCommand settings.

By default tasks are runned using corresponding workspace folder as working directory but this could be configured via colcon.colconCwd option.

Colcon tool

colcon (COLlective CONstruction) is the command line tool that is known as default build system for ROS2. It may be used as build tool for literally any project (but as far as I know only CMake and Python setuptools are supported directly).

A little bit on workspaces

Main goal of colcon is to build packages in the order based on their dependecies.

colcon build system suppose that you separate your source files in the different workspaces while each of those contain any number of packages. As for ROS2, you may consider each ROS2 repo as different colcon workspace and work with each individually - or put all repos in the large src folder and build them all at once.

When you develop packages in VS Code, you may want to get access to several colcon workspaces within single VS Code workspace - it is possible with VS Code multi-root workspace feature. Each colcon workspace that you want to work with would be a different workspace folder inside VS Code.

This extension allows you to set up settings for each folder individually, whether you want to use it with colcon or not. Any changes to settings in nested folders may override settings for workspace folder, but it is recommended to set up colcon only in upper level folders.

Sourcing workspaces

When you build your workspace (I mean, colcon workspace, not VS Code one), there is two folders are being created: build/ and install/. As their names imply, the first one contains build files and the second contains final packages.

In order to make your package discoverable you must source special file depending on your platform and shell. There are several files created during colcon build command and for Linux with Bash the correct file would be install/setup.sh. (See available setup files in install/ if you use another platform/shell.)

This extension helps you to source workspace with just one command named Refresh colcon environment. You may list any necessary workspaces with two settings: colcon.globalSetup and colcon.workspaceSetup. You can add any setup file paths to either of lists. It is considered that globalSetup lists all workspaces that would be used with any colcon workspace - like /opt/ros/dashing/setup.sh - while workspaceSetup contains only local install/setup.sh and other workspaces that are needed to build this exact workspace.

As a special bonus, with this you can specify literally any file, not just colcon setups. For example, you may want to source /home/user/.bashrc in every your colcon workspace and therefore you should add it to your colcon.globalSetup list.

By default there is only /opt/ros/dashing/setup.sh in the globalSetup and install/setup.sh in the workspaceSetup. If you use e.g. ZSH as your terminal.integrated.shell, you must explicitely set corresponding setup file extension as .zsh.


More info about extension

Enabling extension

By default extension do nothing until you explicitly set "colcon.provideTasks": true in workspace or folder VS Code settings. If you use multi-root workspace, it is highly recommended to set colcon settings in each workspace folder individually.

After you set provideTask option, you will get colcon tasks in the task list based on the default settings. Tasks are collected only for workspace folder that is parent to document in current editor.

There may be no tasks if you open task list for document outside your workspace, yet there may be tasks for all of your workspace folders if there is no current editor.

Refresh colcon environment command

After you build your project, in order to get your newest packages being discovered you must refresh your environment. This could be done by launching such command in VS Code command panel.

Command sources all of your workspaces that you listed in colcon.globalSetup and colcon.workspaceSetup then put correct environment variable values in file specified by colcon.env configuration setting. This file would be transferred to each task before execution.

If you find out there is some variable missing, you can add it through colcon.defaultEnvironment or you may change environment file manually. In the last case your changes would be overwritten in the next Refresh command execution.

NOTE that this command may run automatically if either of colcon.refreshOnStart, colcon.refreshOnTasksOpened or colcon.refreshOnConfigurationChanged is set to true.

Tasks configuration via settings.json

Each command has corresponding args setting like colcon.buildArgs. These args are inserted right after the command. In the case of build the default value is ['--symlink-install'] (more on argument meaning see colcon documentation or --help page).

If you open *.launch.py file, you'll get colcon: launch command which actually have no relation to colcon, but is very useful for ROS2 workspaces. It launches

  • ros2 launch *.launch.py
    • ros2 = could be configured with colcon.runCommand option
    • launch = could be configured with colcon.runArgs

Chaining tasks

By default each task is run independently. But in some cases you may want to run command in chains. You may use VS Code tasks.json to customize your colcon tasks and integrate with your other tasks. Example on how to automatically run colcon test before test-results when you run the latter:

{
    "type": "colcon",
    "task": "test-results",
    "problemMatcher": [],
    "dependsOn": [
        {
            "type": "colcon",
            "task": "test"
        }
    ]
}

Disclaimer

Extension is in slow development and there may be divergencies between this file, help tooltips and actual code. Feel free to ask anything and open issues.

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