Contents
Introduction
Ceres Solver is a C++ library by Google for solving least-square optimization problems, providing a variety of functions and options for different types of problems.
Optimization problems on Euclidean-space states are common, and can be solved using a standardized workflow. States are incremented automatically by addition, and Jacobians of error functions w.r.t. to the states can be calculated using the built-in auto-diff utility, both of which are handled by the solver, and users need not worry about them.
However, in many applications, such as the bundle adjustment (BA) problem in computer vision, the camera poses are non-Eucliean, and lie in the SE(3) manifold, which requires on-manifold optimization techniques. Although the auto-diff utility can still be used, we sometimes prefer manually handling the on-manifold structures.
Here we demonstrate a demo project on solving an on-manifold graph optimization problem with Ceres Solver. For a similar demo with g2o, another popular graph optimization library, please read SLAM Implementation: Bundle Adjustment with g2o.
Demo Project
Project repo: izhengfan/ba_demo_ceres.
This project implements a simple bundle adjustment problem using Ceres Solver.
The constraints are defined with customized cost functions and self-defined Jacobians.
In Ceres Solver, this can be achieved by inheriting the ceres::SizedCostFunction
class,
and overloading the Evaluate()
function:
template<int PoseBlockSize>
class ReprojectionErrorSE3XYZ: public ceres::SizedCostFunction<2, PoseBlockSize, 3>
{
public:
virtual bool Evaluate(double const* const* parameters,
double* residuals,
double** jacobians) const;
};
Two versions of on-manifold local parameterization of SE(3) poses (both of which using 6-dof Lie algebra for updating) are used, including
- quaternion + translation vector (7d), and
- rotation vector + translation vector (6d)
Local parameterization of states is implemented by inheriting the ceres::LocalParameterization
class,
with the overloaded function Plus()
to designate the state incrementing method,
ComputeJacobian()
to compute the Jacobians of the incremented states w.r.t to the incremental Lie algebra,
GlobalSize()
and LocalSize()
to specify the dimension of the Lie group parameter block and the incremental Lie algebra respectively.
template<int PoseBlockSize>
class PoseSE3Parameterization : public ceres::LocalParameterization {
public:
PoseSE3Parameterization() {}
virtual ~PoseSE3Parameterization() {}
virtual bool Plus(const double* x,
const double* delta,
double* x_plus_delta) const;
virtual bool ComputeJacobian(const double* x,
double* jacobian) const;
virtual int GlobalSize() const { return PoseBlockSize; }
virtual int LocalSize() const { return 6; }
};
Please check parametersse3.hpp
parametersse3.cpp
for the implementation of customized cost functions and local parameterization.
Jacobians
For convenience in expression, we denote the Jacobian matrix of the error function w.r.t. the Lie group by J_err_grp
,
the Jacobian matrix of the Lie group w.r.t. the local Lie algebra increment by J_grp_alg
,
and the Jacobian matrix of the error function w.r.t. the local Lie algebra increment by J_err_alg
.
In many on-manifold graph optimization problems, only J_err_alg
are required.
However, in Ceres Solver, one can only seperately assign J_err_grp
and J_grp_alg
, but cannot directly define J_err_alg
.
This may be redundant and cost extra computational resources:
- One has to derive the explicit Jacobians equations of both
J_err_grp
andJ_grp_alg
. - The solver would spend extra time to compute
J_err_alg
by multiplyingJ_err_grp
andJ_grp_alg
.
Therefore, for convenience, we use a not-that-elegant but effective trick.
Let’s say that the error function term is of dimension m
, the Lie group N
, and the Lie algebra n
.
We define the leading m*n
block in J_err_grp
to be the actual J_err_alg
, with other elements to be zero;
and define the leading n*n
block in J_grp_alg
to be identity matrix, with other elements to be zero.
Thus, we are free of deriving the two extra Jacobians, and the computational burden of the solver is reduced –
although Ceres still has to multiply the two Jacobians, the overall computational process gets simpler.
Still, I wish the Ceres team add the functionality of directly designating J_err_alg
in a future version.
g2o can do this explicitly.
There are already some issues concerning this problem.
Other tips
One advice for self-defined Jacobians: do not access jacobians[0]
and jacobians[1]
in the meantime, which may cause seg-fault.