Deep-dive into AppLauncher — Isaac Lab Documentation (original) (raw)
Deep-dive into AppLauncher#
In this tutorial, we will dive into the app.AppLauncher class to configure the simulator using CLI arguments and environment variables (envars). Particularly, we will demonstrate how to useAppLauncher to enable livestreaming and configure the isaacsim.simulation_app.SimulationApp
instance it wraps, while also allowing user-provided options.
The AppLauncher is a wrapper for SimulationApp
to simplify its configuration. The SimulationApp
has many extensions that must be loaded to enable different capabilities, and some of these extensions are order- and inter-dependent. Additionally, there are startup options such as headless
which must be set at instantiation time, and which have an implied relationship with some extensions, e.g. the livestreaming extensions. The AppLauncher presents an interface that can handle these extensions and startup options in a portable manner across a variety of use cases. To achieve this, we offer CLI and envar flags which can be merged with user-defined CLI args, while passing forward arguments intended for SimulationApp
.
The Code#
The tutorial corresponds to the launch_app.py
script in thescripts/tutorials/00_sim
directory.
1# Copyright (c) 2022-2025, The Isaac Lab Project Developers. 2# All rights reserved. 3# 4# SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause 5 6""" 7This script demonstrates how to run IsaacSim via the AppLauncher 8 9.. code-block:: bash 10 11 # Usage 12 ./isaaclab.sh -p scripts/tutorials/00_sim/launch_app.py 13 14""" 15 16"""Launch Isaac Sim Simulator first.""" 17 18 19import argparse 20 21from isaaclab.app import AppLauncher 22 23# create argparser 24parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description="Tutorial on running IsaacSim via the AppLauncher.") 25parser.add_argument("--size", type=float, default=1.0, help="Side-length of cuboid") 26# SimulationApp arguments https://docs.omniverse.nvidia.com/py/isaacsim/source/isaacsim.simulation_app/docs/index.html?highlight=simulationapp#isaacsim.simulation_app.SimulationApp 27parser.add_argument( 28 "--width", type=int, default=1280, help="Width of the viewport and generated images. Defaults to 1280" 29) 30parser.add_argument( 31 "--height", type=int, default=720, help="Height of the viewport and generated images. Defaults to 720" 32) 33 34# append AppLauncher cli args 35AppLauncher.add_app_launcher_args(parser) 36# parse the arguments 37args_cli = parser.parse_args() 38# launch omniverse app 39app_launcher = AppLauncher(args_cli) 40simulation_app = app_launcher.app 41 42"""Rest everything follows.""" 43 44import isaaclab.sim as sim_utils 45 46 47def design_scene(): 48 """Designs the scene by spawning ground plane, light, objects and meshes from usd files.""" 49 # Ground-plane 50 cfg_ground = sim_utils.GroundPlaneCfg() 51 cfg_ground.func("/World/defaultGroundPlane", cfg_ground) 52 53 # spawn distant light 54 cfg_light_distant = sim_utils.DistantLightCfg( 55 intensity=3000.0, 56 color=(0.75, 0.75, 0.75), 57 ) 58 cfg_light_distant.func("/World/lightDistant", cfg_light_distant, translation=(1, 0, 10)) 59 60 # spawn a cuboid 61 cfg_cuboid = sim_utils.CuboidCfg( 62 size=[args_cli.size] * 3, 63 visual_material=sim_utils.PreviewSurfaceCfg(diffuse_color=(1.0, 1.0, 1.0)), 64 ) 65 # Spawn cuboid, altering translation on the z-axis to scale to its size 66 cfg_cuboid.func("/World/Object", cfg_cuboid, translation=(0.0, 0.0, args_cli.size / 2)) 67 68 69def main(): 70 """Main function.""" 71 72 # Initialize the simulation context 73 sim_cfg = sim_utils.SimulationCfg(dt=0.01, device=args_cli.device) 74 sim = sim_utils.SimulationContext(sim_cfg) 75 # Set main camera 76 sim.set_camera_view([2.0, 0.0, 2.5], [-0.5, 0.0, 0.5]) 77 78 # Design scene by adding assets to it 79 design_scene() 80 81 # Play the simulator 82 sim.reset() 83 # Now we are ready! 84 print("[INFO]: Setup complete...") 85 86 # Simulate physics 87 while simulation_app.is_running(): 88 # perform step 89 sim.step() 90 91 92if name == "main": 93 # run the main function 94 main() 95 # close sim app 96 simulation_app.close()
The Code Explained#
Adding arguments to the argparser#
AppLauncher is designed to be compatible with custom CLI args that users need for their own scripts, while still providing a portable CLI interface.
In this tutorial, a standard argparse.ArgumentParser is instantiated and given the script-specific --size
argument, as well as the arguments --height
and --width
. The latter are ingested by SimulationApp
.
The argument --size
is not used by AppLauncher, but will merge seamlessly with the AppLauncher interface. In-script arguments can be merged with theAppLauncher interface via the add_app_launcher_args() method, which will return a modified ArgumentParser with the AppLauncherarguments appended. This can then be processed into an argparse.Namespace using the standard argparse.ArgumentParser.parse_args() method and passed directly toAppLauncher for instantiation.
import argparse
from isaaclab.app import AppLauncher
create argparser
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description="Tutorial on running IsaacSim via the AppLauncher.") parser.add_argument("--size", type=float, default=1.0, help="Side-length of cuboid")
SimulationApp arguments https://docs.omniverse.nvidia.com/py/isaacsim/source/isaacsim.simulation_app/docs/index.html?highlight=simulationapp#isaacsim.simulation_app.SimulationApp
parser.add_argument( "--width", type=int, default=1280, help="Width of the viewport and generated images. Defaults to 1280" ) parser.add_argument( "--height", type=int, default=720, help="Height of the viewport and generated images. Defaults to 720" )
append AppLauncher cli args
AppLauncher.add_app_launcher_args(parser)
parse the arguments
args_cli = parser.parse_args()
launch omniverse app
app_launcher = AppLauncher(args_cli) simulation_app = app_launcher.app
The above only illustrates only one of several ways of passing arguments to AppLauncher. Please consult its documentation page to see further options.
Understanding the output of –help#
While executing the script, we can pass the --help
argument and see the combined outputs of the custom arguments and those from AppLauncher.
./isaaclab.sh -p scripts/tutorials/00_sim/launch_app.py --help
[INFO] Using python from: /isaac-sim/python.sh [INFO][AppLauncher]: The argument 'width' will be used to configure the SimulationApp. [INFO][AppLauncher]: The argument 'height' will be used to configure the SimulationApp. usage: launch_app.py [-h] [--size SIZE] [--width WIDTH] [--height HEIGHT] [--headless] [--livestream {0,1,2}] [--enable_cameras] [--verbose] [--experience EXPERIENCE]
Tutorial on running IsaacSim via the AppLauncher.
options: -h, --help show this help message and exit --size SIZE Side-length of cuboid --width WIDTH Width of the viewport and generated images. Defaults to 1280 --height HEIGHT Height of the viewport and generated images. Defaults to 720
app_launcher arguments: --headless Force display off at all times. --livestream {0,1,2} Force enable livestreaming. Mapping corresponds to that for the "LIVESTREAM" environment variable. --enable_cameras Enable cameras when running without a GUI. --verbose Enable verbose terminal logging from the SimulationApp. --experience EXPERIENCE The experience file to load when launching the SimulationApp.
* If an empty string is provided, the experience file is determined based on the headless flag.
* If a relative path is provided, it is resolved relative to the `apps` folder in Isaac Sim and
Isaac Lab (in that order).
This readout details the --size
, --height
, and --width
arguments defined in the script directly, as well as the AppLauncher arguments.
The [INFO]
messages preceding the help output also reads out which of these arguments are going to be interpreted as arguments to the SimulationApp
instance which theAppLauncher class wraps. In this case, it is --height
and --width
. These are classified as such because they match the name and type of an argument which can be processed by SimulationApp
. Please refer to the specification for such arguments for more examples.
Using environment variables#
As noted in the help message, the AppLauncher arguments (--livestream
, --headless
) have corresponding environment variables (envar) as well. These are detailed in isaaclab.appdocumentation. Providing any of these arguments through CLI is equivalent to running the script in a shell environment where the corresponding envar is set.
The support for AppLauncher envars are simply a convenience to provide session-persistent configurations, and can be set in the user’s ${HOME}/.bashrc
for persistent settings between sessions. In the case where these arguments are provided from the CLI, they will override their corresponding envar, as we will demonstrate later in this tutorial.
These arguments can be used with any script that starts the simulation using AppLauncher, with one exception, --enable_cameras
. This setting sets the rendering pipeline to use the offscreen renderer. However, this setting is only compatible with the isaaclab.sim.SimulationContext. It will not work with Isaac Sim’s isaacsim.core.api.simulation_context.SimulationContext
class. For more information on this flag, please see the AppLauncher API documentation.
The Code Execution#
We will now run the example script:
LIVESTREAM=2 ./isaaclab.sh -p scripts/tutorials/00_sim/launch_app.py --size 0.5
This will spawn a 0.5m3 volume cuboid in the simulation. No GUI will appear, equivalent to if we had passed the --headless
flag because headlessness is implied by our LIVESTREAM
envar. If a visualization is desired, we could get one via Isaac’s WebRTC Livestreaming. Streaming is currently the only supported method of visualization from within the container. The process can be killed by pressing Ctrl+C
in the launching terminal.
Now, let’s look at how AppLauncher handles conflicting commands:
LIVESTREAM=0 ./isaaclab.sh -p scripts/tutorials/00_sim/launch_app.py --size 0.5 --livestream 2
This will cause the same behavior as in the previous run, because although we have set LIVESTREAM=0
in our envars, CLI args such as --livestream
take precedence in determining behavior. The process can be killed by pressing Ctrl+C
in the launching terminal.
Finally, we will examine passing arguments to SimulationApp
throughAppLauncher:
LIVESTREAM=2 ./isaaclab.sh -p scripts/tutorials/00_sim/launch_app.py --size 0.5 --width 1920 --height 1080
This will cause the same behavior as before, but now the viewport will be rendered at 1920x1080p resolution. This can be useful when we want to gather high-resolution video, or we can specify a lower resolution if we want our simulation to be more performant. The process can be killed by pressing Ctrl+C
in the launching terminal.