A Scalable Framework for Parallelizing Sampling-Based Motion Planning Algorithms
Abstract
Motion planning is defined as the problem of finding a valid path taking a robot (or any movable object) from a given start configuration to a goal configuration in an environment. While motion planning has its roots in robotics, it now finds application in many other areas of scientific computing such as protein folding, drug design, virtual prototyping, computer-aided design (CAD), and computer animation. These new areas test the limits of the best sequential planners available, motivating
the need for methods that can exploit parallel processing.
This dissertation focuses on the design and implementation of a generic and scalable framework for parallelizing motion planning algorithms. In particular, we focus on sampling-based motion planning algorithms which are considered to be the state-of-the-art. Our work covers the two broad classes of sampling-based motion planning algorithms--the graph-based and the tree-based methods. Central to our approach is the subdivision of the planning space into regions. These regions represent sub-
problems that can be processed in parallel. Solutions to the sub-problems are later combined to form a solution to the entire problem. By subdividing the planning space and restricting the locality of connection attempts to adjacent regions, we reduce the work and inter-processor communication associated with nearest neighbor calculation, a critical bottleneck for scalability in existing parallel motion planning methods. We also describe how load balancing strategies can be applied in complex environments. We present experimental results that scale to thousands of processors
on different massively parallel machines for a range of motion planning problems.
Subject
Motion PlanningParallel Processing
Robotics
Parallel Algorithms
Sampling-Based Motion Planning
Probabilistic Roadmap Method (PRM), Rapidly-exploring Random Tree (RRT)
Performance
Algorithms
High Performance Computing
Standard Template Adaptive Parallel Library (STAPL)
C++
Citation
Jacobs, Samson Ade (2014). A Scalable Framework for Parallelizing Sampling-Based Motion Planning Algorithms. Doctoral dissertation, Texas A & M University. Available electronically from https : / /hdl .handle .net /1969 .1 /152806.