GTSAM is a library of C++ classes that implement smoothing and mapping (SAM) in robotics and vision, using factor graphs and Bayes networks as the underlying computing paradigm rather than sparse matrices.
Important Note
As of January 2023, the develop
branch is officially in “Pre 4.3” mode. We envision several API-breaking changes as we switch to C++17 and away from boost.
In addition, features deprecated in 4.2 will be removed. Please use the stable 4.2 release if you need those features. However, most are easily converted and can be tracked down (in 4.2) by disabling the cmake flag GTSAM_ALLOW_DEPRECATED_SINCE_V42
.
GTSAM is a C++ library that implements smoothing and
mapping (SAM) in robotics and vision, using Factor Graphs and Bayes
Networks as the underlying computing paradigm rather than sparse
matrices.
The current support matrix is:
Platform | Compiler | Build Status |
---|---|---|
Ubuntu 20.04/22.04 | gcc/clang | |
macOS | clang | |
Windows | MSVC |
On top of the C++ library, GTSAM includes wrappers for MATLAB & Python.
In the root library folder execute:
#!bash
mkdir build
cd build
cmake ..
make check (optional, runs unit tests)
make install
Prerequisites:
sudo apt-get install libboost-all-dev
)sudo apt-get install cmake
)Optional prerequisites - used automatically if findable by CMake:
sudo apt-get install libtbb-dev
)GTSAM 4 introduces several new features, most notably Expressions and a Python toolbox. It also introduces traits, a C++ technique that allows optimizing with non-GTSAM types. That opens the door to retiring geometric types such as Point2 and Point3 to pure Eigen types, which we also do. A significant change which will not trigger a compile error is that zero-initializing of Point2 and Point3 is deprecated, so please be aware that this might render functions using their default constructor incorrect.
We provide support for MATLAB and Python wrappers for GTSAM. Please refer to the linked documents for more details.
If you are using GTSAM for academic work, please use the following citation:
@software{gtsam,
author = {Frank Dellaert and GTSAM Contributors},
title = {borglab/gtsam},
month = May,
year = 2022,
publisher = {Georgia Tech Borg Lab},
version = {4.2a8},
doi = {10.5281/zenodo.5794541},
url = {https://github.com/borglab/gtsam)}}
}
To cite the Factor Graphs for Robot Perception
book, please use:
@book{factor_graphs_for_robot_perception,
author={Frank Dellaert and Michael Kaess},
year={2017},
title={Factor Graphs for Robot Perception},
publisher={Foundations and Trends in Robotics, Vol. 6},
url={http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~kaess/pub/Dellaert17fnt.pdf}
}
If you are using the IMU preintegration scheme, please cite:
@book{imu_preintegration,
author={Christian Forster and Luca Carlone and Frank Dellaert and Davide Scaramuzza},
title={IMU preintegration on Manifold for Efficient Visual-Inertial Maximum-a-Posteriori Estimation},
year={2015}
}
GTSAM includes a state of the art IMU handling scheme based on
Our implementation improves on this using integration on the manifold, as detailed in
If you are using the factor in academic work, please cite the publications above.
In GTSAM 4 a new and more efficient implementation, based on integrating on the NavState tangent space and detailed in this document, is enabled by default. To switch to the RSS 2015 version, set the flag GTSAM_TANGENT_PREINTEGRATION
to OFF.
There is a GTSAM users Google group
for general discussion.
Read about important GTSAM-Concepts
here. A primer on GTSAM Expressions,
which support (superfast) automatic differentiation,
can be found on the GTSAM wiki on BitBucket.
See the INSTALL
file for more detailed installation instructions.
GTSAM is open source under the BSD license, see the LICENSE
and LICENSE.BSD
files.
Please see the examples/
directory and the USAGE
file for examples on how to use GTSAM.
GTSAM was developed in the lab of Frank Dellaert at the Georgia Institute of Technology, with the help of many contributors over the years, see THANKS.