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libnabo

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libnabo is a fast K Nearest Neighbour library for low-dimensional spaces. <br> <br>

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libnabo provides a clean, legacy-free, scalar-type–agnostic API thanks to C++ templates. Its current CPU implementation is strongly inspired by ANN, but with more compact data types. On the average, libnabo is 5% to 20% faster than ANN.

Dependencies:

Credit:

If you are interested in a pure-Rust version, check that repository out.


Supported OS And Architecture

libnabo is tested on our build system under the following architecture and OS:

Note:


★ Version 1.1.0 Release Note

This release of libnabo introduces the integration of norlab-build-system (NBS) as a git submodule for codebase development and testing.

Execute the following to clone the repository with its submodule:

git clone --recurse-submodules https://github.com/norlab-ulaval/libnabo.git

If libnabo was previously cloned, execute the following to fetch its new submodule

git submodule update --remote --recursive --init

★ Contributing Instructions

See contributing_instructions.md for instructions related to bug reporting, code contribution and for setting up the libnabo-build-system on your workstation to speed up your local development workflow.


Docker images

Run the following commands to pull and run libnabo in a docker container

docker pull norlabulaval/libnabo:latest-ubuntu-focal

docker run -it --rm norlabulaval/libnabo:latest-ubuntu-focal

See available libnabo image tags on dockerhub.

To install docker related dependencies on ubuntu, execute the following

cd ./build_system/nabo_utility_script

# Execute docker tools install script i.e. docker daemon, docker compose, docker buildx
bash nabo_install_docker_tools.bash

Compilation

For conveniences, you can use the provided build script for Unix

bash libnabo_dependencies_installer.bash

# Use the --help flag to see the list of optional flag
bash libnabo_installer.bash [<optional flag>]

If you want more control, you can follow these commands:

SRC_DIR=`pwd`
BUILD_DIR=${SRC_DIR}/build
mkdir -p ${BUILD_DIR} && cd ${BUILD_DIR}
cmake ${SRC_DIR}
cmake --build ${BUILD_DIR}
sudo cmake --build ${BUILD_DIR} --target install

These lines will compile libnabo in a build sub-directory and install it system-wide.

To uninstall libnabo, simply run sudo make uninstall from your build directory.

Compilation options

libnabo provides the following compilation options, available through CMake:

Documentation

You can access on https://norlab-ulaval.github.io/libnabo/. Alternatively, you can generate it locally by typing:

make doc

Prerequisites

If your operating system does not provide it, you must get Eigen, and Boost if you want to build the Python bindings. Eigen only needs to be downloaded and extracted.

Add libnabo to your CMake project

find_package(libnabo REQUIRED)
target_link_libraries(example PUBLIC ${libnabo_LIBRARIES})
target_include_directories(example PUBLIC ${libnabo_INCLUDE_DIRS})

Usage

libnabo is easy to use. For example, assuming that you are working with floats and that you have a point set M and a query point q, you can find the K nearest neighbours of q in M:

#include "nabo/nabo.h"
using namespace Nabo;
using namespace Eigen;
...
NNSearchF* nns = NNSearchF::createKDTreeLinearHeap(M);

const int K = 5;
VectorXi indices(K);
VectorXf dists2(K);

nns->knn(q, indices, dists2, K);

In this example, M is an Eigen (refering to the software, not to the math) matrix (column major, float) and q is an Eigen vector (float). Note that M must stay alive throughout the use of libnabo, otherwise the results of knn are undefined. The results indices and dists2 are Eigen vectors of indices and squared distances refering to the columns of M. See examples/trivial.cpp for a compilable version of this example, and examples/usage.cpp for a slightly more complex example involving multi-point queries.

Running make doc in your build directory will generate a browsable documentation in doc/html. The main page doc/html/index.html contains a detailed overview of the usage of libnabo.

You can find a complete CMake integration example in examples/libnabo-cmake-example to see how to look for, and link against this library.

Python bindings

libnabo includes python bindings that are compiled if Python is available. The resulting module is called pynabo, you can see an example in python/test.py. You can find more information in the docstring-based documentation:

python -c "import pynabo; help(pynabo.NearestNeighbourSearch)"

Building

The Python bindings can be generated for Python 2 or Python 3. To specify the version of the interpreter to use when building the bindings, set the PYTHON_VERSION_MAJOR and PYTHON_VERSION_MINOR variables. For example if you have both Python 2.7 and 3.5 installed, you could ask CMake to generate Python 3 bindings by using the following command.

cmake -DPYTHON_VERSION_MAJOR=3 -DPYTHON_VERSION_MINOR=5 ..

On Debian-based distributions you may also need the -DPYTHON_DEB_INSTALL_TARGET option enabled.

Unit testing

The distribution of libnabo integrates a unit test module, based on CTest. Just type:

make test

...in the build directory to run the tests. Their outputs are available in the Testing directory. These consist of validation and benchmarking tests. If ANN or FLANN are detected when compiling libnabo, make test will also perform comparative benchmarks.

Citing libnabo

If you use libnabo in the academic context, please cite this paper that evaluates its performances in the contex of ICP:

@article{elsebergcomparison,
	title={Comparison of nearest-neighbor-search strategies and implementations for efficient shape registration},
	author={Elseberg, J. and Magnenat, S. and Siegwart, R. and N{\"u}chter, A.},
	journal={Journal of Software Engineering for Robotics (JOSER)},
	pages={2--12},
	volume={3},
	number={1},
	year={2012},
	issn={2035-3928}
}

License

libnabo is released under a permissive BSD license.