Machine Common Sense Python API to Unity 3D Simulation Environment
Project description
MCS Python Package
Python interface for interacting with MCS AI2Thor environment and running scenes. The latest release of the MCS Python library is 0.6.3
. You can find the latest documentation here.
- Quickstart Installation
- Usage
- Documentation
- Other MCS GitHub Repositories
- Troubleshooting/Email
- License
Quickstart Installation
Virtual Environments
Python virtual environments are recommended when using the Machine Common Sense package. All steps below presume the activation of the virtual environment. The developer can choose between traditional Python or Anaconda depending on need. These instructions work for Ubuntu Linux or MacOS. The MCS package has a minimum requirement of Python 3.7 regardless of Python distribution. As of 0.4.4, the MCS package will automatically download the Unity app release for that version. On the first run, the Unity app may take a while to start in order to download all the assets.
Traditional Python Environment
$ python3.7 -m venv --prompt mcs venv
$ source venv/bin/activate
(venv) $ python -m pip install --upgrade pip setuptools wheel
Alternate Anaconda Environment
For developers using Anaconda Python distributions instead of traditional Python, create your project virtual environment from the base Anaconda environment.
(base) $ conda create -n myenv python=3.8
(base) $ conda env list
# conda environments:
#
base * /home/user/anaconda3
myenv /home/user/anaconda3/envs/myenv
(base) $ conda activate myenv
(myenv) $
Install MCS
With the activated Python virtual environment, install the MCS package from the git url.
(venv) $ python -m pip install machine-common-sense
Sample MCS Config File
There may be additional settings you want to specify, which can be accomplished via the MCS configuration file. You can use the sample_config.ini file to start. This file has the metadata
level set to oracle
, which ensures that the data for all objects in a scene is returned, as well as object masks. For the purposes of this guide, we will pass this along to the MCS controller via the config_file_or_dict
, which is outlined in the Usage
example below.
For more in-depth information on configuration files and more about the different properties within, see the documentation about the MCS configuration file
Usage
Example usage of the MCS library:
import machine_common_sense as mcs
# Unity app file will be downloaded automatically
controller = mcs.create_controller(config_file_or_dict='./some-path/sample_config.ini')
# Either load the scene data dict from an MCS scene config JSON file or create your own.
# We will give you the training scene config JSON files and the format to make your own.
scene_data = mcs.load_scene_json_file(scene_json_file_path)
output = controller.start_scene(scene_data)
# Use your machine learning algorithm to select your next action based on the scene
# output (goal, actions, images, metadata, etc.) from your previous action.
action, params = select_action(output)
# Continue to select actions until your algorithm decides to stop.
while action != '':
controller.step(action, params)
action, params = select_action(output)
# For interaction-based goals, your series of selected actions will be scored.
# For observation-based goals, you will pass a classification and a confidence
# to the end_scene function here.
controller.end_scene()
Documentation
- Documentation Home
- Installation and Setup
- MCS Configuration File
- Example Usage
- Python API
- Example Scene Configuration Files
- Scene Configuration JSON Schema
- Developer Docs
Other MCS GitHub Repositories
Troubleshooting
mcs-ta2@machinecommonsense.com
Acknowledgements
This material is based upon work supported by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) and Naval Information Warfare Center, Pacific (NIWC Pacific) under Contract No. N6600119C4030. Any opinions, findings and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the DARPA or NIWC Pacific.
Apache 2 Open Source License
Code in this repository is made available by CACI (formerly Next Century Corporation) under the Apache 2 Open Source License. You may freely download, use, and modify, in whole or in part, the source code or release packages. Any restrictions or attribution requirements are spelled out in the license file. For more information about the Apache license, please visit the The Apache Software Foundation’s License FAQ.
Copyright 2021 CACI (formerly Next Century Corporation)
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