These three steps will run Gazebo with a default world.
Install Gazebo.
Open a terminal. On most Ubuntu systems you can press CTRL+ALT+t
Start Gazebo by entering the following at the command prompt.
gazebo
Note: The first time you launch gazebo, it will try to download a couple of models so this process may take some time.
Let's simulate something a bit more interesting by loading a world with a pioneer2dx.
Open a terminal and enter the following command.
gazebo worlds/pioneer2dx.world
Note: If you don't have the pioneer2dx model already, Gazebo will download it from the online model database which may take some time.
You may have noticed the mysterious worlds/pioneer2dx.world
argument in the above command. This instructs gazebo to find the pioneer2dx.world
file, and load it on start.
World files are located in a versioned system directory, for example /usr/share/gazebo-7
on Ubuntu. If you have Gazebo 7.0 installed on Ubuntu, in a terminal type the following to see a complete list of worlds.
ls /usr/share/gazebo-7/worlds
For a Gazebo 7.0 installation on OS X using Homebrew, type the following to see a complete list of worlds.
ls /usr/local/share/gazebo-7/worlds
The gazebo
command actually runs two different executables for you. The
first is called gzserver
, and the second gzclient
.
The gzserver
executable runs the physics update-loop and sensor data
generation. This is the core of Gazebo, and can be used independently of a
graphical interface. You may see the phrase "run headless" thrown about.
This phrase equates to running only the gzserver
. An example
use case would involve running gzserver
on a cloud computer where a user
interface is not needed.
The gzclient
executable runs a QT based user
interface. This application provides a nice visualization of simulation, and
convenient controls over various simulation properties.
Try running each of these executables. Open a terminal and run the server:
gzserver
Open another terminal and run the graphical client:
gzclient
At this point you should see the Gazebo user interface. You restart the
gzclient
application as often as you want, and even run multiple
interfaces.