Developer

A new chapter in ArduPilot development

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The ArduPilot core development team is starting on a new phase in the project's development. We’ve been having a lot of discussions lately about how to become better organised and better meet the needs of both our great user community and the increasing number of organisations using ArduPilot professionally. The dev team is passionate about making the best autopilot software we can and we are putting the structures in place to make that happen.

Those of you who have been following the developments over the years know that ArduPilot has enjoyed a very close relationship with 3DRobotics for a long time, including a lot of direct funding of ArduPilot developers by 3DR. As 3DR changes its focus that relationship has changed, and the relationship now is not one of financial support for developers but instead 3DR will be one of many companies contributing to open source development both in ArduPilot and the wider DroneCode community. The reduction in direct funding by 3DR is not really too surprising as the level of financial support in the past was quite unusual by open source project standards.

Meanwhile the number of other individuals and companies directly supporting ArduPilot development has been increasing a lot recently, with over 130 separate people contributing to the code in the last year alone, and the range of companies making autopilot hardware and airframes aimed at ArduPilot users has also grown enormously.

We’re really delighted with how the developer community is working together, and we’re very confident that ArduPilot has a very bright future

Creation of ArduPilot non-profit

The ArduPilot dev team is creating a non-profit entity to act as a focal point for ArduPilot development. It will take a while to get this setup, but the aim is to have a governance body that aims to guide the direction the project takes and ensure the project meets the needs of the very diverse user community. Once the organisation is in place we will make another announcement, but you can expect it to be modelled on the many successful open source non-profits that exist across the free software community.

The non-profit organisation will oversee the management of the documentation, the auto-build and test servers and will help set priorities for future development.

We’re working with 3DR now to organise the transfer of the ardupilot.com domain to the development team leads, and will transfer it to the non-profit once that is established. The dev team has always led the administration of that site, so this is mostly a formality, but we are also planning on a re-work of the documentation to create an improved experience for the community and to make it easier to maintain.

Expansion of ArduPilot consulting businesses

In addition to the non-profit, we think there is a need for more consulting services around ArduPilot and DroneCode. We’ve recognised this need for a while as the developers have often received requests for commercial support and consulting services. That is why we created this commercial support list on the website last year:

http://planner.ardupilot.com/wiki/common-commercial-support/

It is time to take that to the next level by promoting a wider range of consulting services for ArduPilot. As part of that a group of the ArduPilot developers are in the process of creating a company that will provide a broad range of consulting services around ArduPilot. You will see some more announcements about this soon and we think this will really help ArduPIlot expand into places that are hard to get to now. We are delighted at this development, and hope these  companies listed on the website will provide a vibrant commercial support ecosystem for the benefit of the entire ArduPilot community.

Best of both worlds

We think that having a non-profit to steer the project while having consulting businesses to support those who need commercial support provides the best of both worlds. The non-profit ArduPilot project and the consulting businesses will be separate entities, but the close personal and professional relationships that have built up in the family of ArduPilot developers will help both to support each other.

Note that ArduPilot is committed to open source and free software principles, and there will be no reduction in features or attempt to limit the open source project. ArduPilot is free and always will be. We care just as much about the hobbyist users as we do about supporting commercial use. We just want to make a great autopilot while providing good service to all users, whether commercial or hobbyist.

Thank you!

We’d also like to say a huge thank you to all the ArduPilot users and developers that have allowed ArduPilot to develop so much in recent years. We’ve come a very long way and we’re really proud of what we have built.

Finally we’d also like to thank all the hardware makers that support ArduPilot. The huge range of hardware available to our users from so many companies is fantastic, and we want to make it easier for our users to find the right hardware for their needs. We will continue working to improve the documentation to make that easier.

Happy flying!

The ArduPilot Dev Team

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Comments

  • Developer

    @Tom, actually it is over 5500 commits in the last year. We're averaging a commit every 40 minutes year round.

    Since 3DR stopped sponsoring the commit rate has actually gone up.

  • I agree with Tom, tons of nice new things comming, not easy to follow them :D

  • Developer

    The development is not stalled. Not even close, its just Plane has a different release cycle than Copter does. Same goes with Rover. There are 81 pending pull requests from contributed authors. There's so much new code all the time that the releases get delayed so that new code/features/bigFixes can get tested by the Beta teams before release. In about a year there have been about 2000 commits to the repo. That's a ton of action!

    ArduPilot/ardupilot
    ArduPlane, ArduCopter, ArduRover source. Contribute to ArduPilot/ardupilot development by creating an account on GitHub.
  • Are the article you linked to @Cala is discussing 3.3.3 vs 3.3.4 for ardupilot. Whereas arduplane is at 3.5 now. Maybe I'm missing something but it seems as if arducopter development is somewhat stalled. Maybe we can as a a community raise some funds for the development leads to use so we can all benefit.
  • Thank you

  • Terry Copter 3.4 is in master yet, you can download from MP with Q-ctrl and you don't need to pay for it, If you try, do it with carefull, some issues are still unsolved or in process, you can follow some discussion here http://diydrones.com/forum/topics/pixracer-with-ardupilot?commentId... but it's unoficial yet.

  • I hope the new organization is taking shape and thank you to all the developers that have put so much into Ardupilot over the years. It is very difficult to find any information on Copter 3.4 development so I hope someone here can give some kind of idea if it is still in the works and, if so, roughly when will test versions be put out and where to find information. BTW, I would be more than happy to pay a membership/server fee to download the firmware.

  • Nice job on the new site!!!

  • looking forward to this new chapter on Ardupilot!

  • The Pixhawk firmware on the development of traditional helicopters, new plans do next?

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