Pairing Controller¶
Remote controllers are used for teleoperation; they allow you to remotely drive the Dingo, whether it is a physical Dingo robot, or a simulated Dingo. The following instructions below detail how to pair different controllers to the Dingo’s computer; however, these instructions can also be used to pair these controllers to your own computer.
Logitech F710 Controller¶
Note
If your Dingo comes with a Logitech F710 controller, it will be paired already. Simply turn on the Dingo, plug the USB dongle into one of the Dingo’s USB ports, and turn on the controller.
To re-pair the Logitech F710 controller or pair a new Logitech F710 controller, plug the controller’s USB dongle into the Dingo’s computer and turn on the controller. The controller automatically pair.
PS4 Controller¶
Note
If your Dingo comes with a PS4 controller, it will be paired already. Simply turn on the Dingo and turn on the controller.
To re-pair the PS4 controller or pair a new PS4 controller:
Install the
python-ds4drv
package if it is not installed already. In terminal, run:
sudo apt-get install python-ds4drv
Put the controller in pairing mode. Press and hold the PS and Share buttons on your controller until the LED begins rapidly flashing white.
Run the
ds4drv-pair
script to pair the controller to the computer. In terminal, run:
sudo ds4drv-pair
This script will scan for nearby Bluetooth devices, and pair automatically to the controller.
Alternatively, if ds4drv-pair
fails to detect the controller, you can pair the controller using bluetoothctl
:
Install the
bluez
package if it is not installed already. In terminal, run:
sudo apt-get install bluez
Run the
bluetoothctl
command. In terminal, run:
sudo bluetoothctl
Use
bluetoothctl
to scan for nearby devices. In the bluetooth control application, run:
agent on
scan on
Put the controller in pairing mode. Press and hold the PS and Share buttons on your controller until the LED begins rapidly flashing white.
5. The bluetooth scan will display the MAC addresses of nearby devices. Determine which MAC address corresponds to the controller and copy it. In the bluetooth control application, run:
scan off
pair <MAC Address>
trust <MAC Address>
connect <MAC Address>
The controller should now be paired.
Once the PS4 controller is paired, you should see the file /dev/input/ps4
appear in Dingo’s terminal by running:
ls -l /dev/input
You should see these lines in the output:
crw-rw-rw-+ 1 root root 13, 0 Aug 10 12:16 js0
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 3 Aug 10 12:16 ps4 -> js0
If you do not see the ps4 device, create the /etc/udev/rules.d/41-playstation.rules
file and add the following line:
KERNEL=="js*", SUBSYSTEM=="input", ATTRS{name}=="Wireless Controller", MODE="0666", SYMLINK+="input/ps4"
Afterwards, reload udev
:
sudo udevadm control --reload-rules
sudo udevadm trigger