Step 1: Dependency Installation
Step 1: Dependency Installation#
Select the tab for your operating system below, and follow the instructions to begin installing the Duckietown software dependencies.
1) Install dependencies
The basic development tools that you will need are pip3, git, git-lfs, curl, and wget. Install these by running the
following commands in the shell:
sudo apt update
sudo apt install -y python3-pip git git-lfs curl wget
If you are running Ubuntu on a virtual machine, install the package open-vm-tools in addition to the
normal Ubuntu dependencies:
sudo apt install open-vm-tools
Checkpoint ✅
Before continuing, run the following test command
Test
pip3 --version
Expected Result
This command should output a version number for the pip3 package.
Tip
Never skip a checkpoint!
If you continue past a test that did not work, you will have further software issues down the line, and they will be more complex to fix. Instead, if you do not get the expected outcome at any checkpoint:
First check for any troubleshooting sections on the page that might match the problem.
If you run into any issues that can’t be solved using the troubleshooting sections, join the Duckietown community on StackOverflow and Slack following the instructions below and search for previous solutions.
You can join the Duckietown community on Slack at this link. There you can request an invitation to the Duckietown Stack Overflow team.
1) Install Git
Most versions of MacOS will already have Git installed, and you can check that it is installed
by running the command git version in a terminal.
However, if you don’t have Git installed, you can follow
these instructions
to install it.
Once you confirm that git is installed on your system, follow
these instructions
to install git-lfs.
2) Install Quartz
You will also need the latest version of XQuartz.
You can install it using brew,
brew install xquartz
Or, download it from here and follow the instructions.
After installing XQuartz, run it by executing the command,
open -a XQuartz
Go to “Preferences” and in the “Security” tab make sure that the checkbox next to
“Allow connections from network clients” is ticked. You can now close XQuartz.
You may want to add the following lines to your .bashrc file.
Attention
If you are using zsh, replace the .bashrc in the command below with .zshrc instead.
export IP=$(ifconfig en0 | grep inet | awk '$1=="inet" {print $2}')
xhost +$IP
These will find your IP and then allow incoming connections to it in order to be able to popup windows from within docker containers.
Alternatively, if you do not wish to make these changes permanent, you can run the commands above every time you open a new terminal.
Troubleshooting
SYMPTOM
The command xhost is not found.
RESOLUTION
Add the path /usr/X11/bin to your PATH variable. e.g., PATH=/usr/X11/bin:${PATH} xhost ....
Checkpoint ✅
Before continuing, run the following test command
Test
pip3 --version
Expected Result
This command should output a version number for the pip3 package.
Tip
Never skip a checkpoint!
If you continue past a test that did not work, you will have further software issues down the line, and they will be more complex to fix. Instead, if you do not get the expected outcome at any checkpoint:
First check for any troubleshooting sections on the page that might match the problem.
If you run into any issues that can’t be solved using the troubleshooting sections, join the Duckietown community on StackOverflow and Slack following the instructions below and search for previous solutions.
You can join the Duckietown community on Slack at this link. There you can request an invitation to the Duckietown Stack Overflow team.
1) Install dependencies
The basic development tools that you will need are pip3, git, git-lfs, curl, and wget. Install these in your Ubuntu WSL by running the following commands in the shell:
sudo apt update
sudo apt install -y python3-pip git git-lfs curl wget
Checkpoint ✅
Before continuing, run the following test command
Test
pip3 --version
Expected Result
This command should output a version number for the pip3 package.
Tip
Never skip a checkpoint!
If you continue past a test that did not work, you will have further software issues down the line, and they will be more complex to fix. Instead, if you do not get the expected outcome at any checkpoint:
First check for any troubleshooting sections on the page that might match the problem.
If you run into any issues that can’t be solved using the troubleshooting sections, join the Duckietown community on StackOverflow and Slack following the instructions below and search for previous solutions.
You can join the Duckietown community on Slack at this link. There you can request an invitation to the Duckietown Stack Overflow team.