DeepMind's software stack for physics-based simulation and Reinforcement Learning environments, using MuJoCo physics.
An introductory tutorial for this package is available as a Colaboratory
notebook:
This package consists of the following "core" components:
-
dm_control.mujoco: Libraries that provide Python bindings to the MuJoCo physics engine. -
dm_control.suite: A set of Python Reinforcement Learning environments powered by the MuJoCo physics engine. -
dm_control.viewer: An interactive environment viewer.
Additionally, the following components are available for the creation of more complex control tasks:
-
dm_control.mjcf: A library for composing and modifying MuJoCo MJCF models in Python. -
dm_control.composer: A library for defining rich RL environments from reusable, self-contained components. -
dm_control.locomotion: Additional libraries for custom tasks. -
dm_control.locomotion.soccer: Multi-agent soccer tasks.
If you use this package, please cite our accompanying tech report:
@misc{tassa2020dmcontrol,
title={dm_control: Software and Tasks for Continuous Control},
author={Yuval Tassa and Saran Tunyasuvunakool and Alistair Muldal and
Yotam Doron and Siqi Liu and Steven Bohez and Josh Merel and
Tom Erez and Timothy Lillicrap and Nicolas Heess},
year={2020},
eprint={2006.12983},
archivePrefix={arXiv},
primaryClass={cs.RO}
}
dm_control is regularly tested on Ubuntu 16.04 against the following Python
versions:
- 3.6
- 3.7
- 3.8
Various people have been successful in getting dm_control to work on other
Linux distros, OS X, and Windows. We do not provide active support for these,
but will endeavour to answer questions on a best-effort basis.
Follow these steps to install dm_control:
-
Download MuJoCo Pro 2.00 from the download page on the MuJoCo website. MuJoCo Pro must be installed before
dm_control, sincedm_control's install script generates Pythonctypesbindings based on MuJoCo's header files. By default,dm_controlassumes that the MuJoCo Zip archive is extracted as~/.mujoco/mujoco200_$PLATFORMwhere$PLATFORMis eitherlinux,win64, ormacos. -
Install the
dm_controlPython package by runningpip install dm_control. We recommendpip installing into avirtualenv, or with the--userflag to avoid interfering with system packages. At installation time,dm_controllooks for the MuJoCo headers from Step 1 in~/.mujoco/mujoco200_$PLATFORM/include, however this path can be configured with theheaders-dircommand line argument. -
Install a license key for MuJoCo, required by
dm_controlat runtime. See the MuJoCo license key page for further details. By default,dm_controllooks for the MuJoCo license key file at~/.mujoco/mjkey.txt. -
If the license key (e.g.
mjkey.txt) or the shared library provided by MuJoCo Pro (e.g.libmujoco200.soorlibmujoco200.dylib) are installed at non-default paths, specify their locations using theMJKEY_PATHandMJLIB_PATHenvironment variables respectively. These environment variables should be set to the full path to the relevant file itself, e.g.export MJLIB_PATH=/path/to/libmujoco200.so.
dm_control is released on a rolling basis: the latest commit on the master
branch of our GitHub repository represents our latest release. Our Python
package is versioned 0.0.N, where N is the number that appears in the
PiperOrigin-RevId field of the commit message. We always ensure that N
strictly increases between a parent commit and its children. We do not upload
all versions to PyPI, and occasionally the latest version on PyPI may lag behind
the latest commit on GitHub. Should this happen, you can still install the
newest version available by running pip install git+git://github.com/deepmind/dm_control.git.
The MuJoCo Python bindings support three different OpenGL rendering backends:
EGL (headless, hardware-accelerated), GLFW (windowed, hardware-accelerated), and
OSMesa (purely software-based). At least one of these three backends must be
available in order render through dm_control.
-
Hardware rendering with a windowing system is supported via GLFW and GLEW. On Linux these can be installed using your distribution's package manager. For example, on Debian and Ubuntu, this can be done by running
sudo apt-get install libglfw3 libglew2.0. Please note that:dm_control.viewercan only be used with GLFW.- GLFW will not work on headless machines.
-
"Headless" hardware rendering (i.e. without a windowing system such as X11) requires EXT_platform_device support in the EGL driver. Recent Nvidia drivers support this. You will also need GLEW. On Debian and Ubuntu, this can be installed via
sudo apt-get install libglew2.0. -
Software rendering requires GLX and OSMesa. On Debian and Ubuntu these can be installed using
sudo apt-get install libgl1-mesa-glx libosmesa6.
By default, dm_control will attempt to use GLFW first, then EGL, then OSMesa.
You can also specify a particular backend to use by setting the MUJOCO_GL=
environment variable to "glfw", "egl", or "osmesa", respectively. When
rendering with EGL, you can also specify which GPU to use for rendering by
setting the environment variable EGL_DEVICE_ID= to the target GPU ID.
-
The above instructions using
pipshould work, provided that you use a Python interpreter that is installed by Homebrew (rather than the system-default one). -
Before running, the
DYLD_LIBRARY_PATHenvironment variable needs to be updated with the path to the GLFW library. This can be done by runningexport DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH=$(brew --prefix)/lib:$DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH.