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Open source drivers for the Kinect for Windows v2 device

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libfreenect2

Description

Driver for Kinect for Windows v2 (K4W2) devices (release and developer preview).

Note: libfreenect2 does not do anything for either Kinect for Windows v1 or Kinect for Xbox 360 sensors. Use libfreenect1 for those sensors.

This driver supports:

  • RGB image transfer
  • IR and depth image transfer
  • registration of RGB and depth images

Missing features:

  • audio transfer
  • firmware updates

Watch the OpenKinect wiki at www.openkinect.org and the mailing list at https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/openkinect for the latest developments and more information about the K4W2 USB protocol.

FAQ

Can I use the Kinect v2 without an USB3 port?

No. It's a pure USB3 device due to the high bandwidth requirements.

Protonect complains about "no device connected" or "failure opening device".

Either your device is connected to an USB2-only port (see above), or you don't have permissions to access the device. On Linux, try running Protonect as root (e.g. using sudo). If that fixes things, place rules/90-kinect2.rules into /etc/udev/rules.d/ and re-plug the device.

On Linux, also check dmesg. If there are warnings like usb 4-1.1: Not enough bandwidth for new device state. it means the hardware does not have the capacity for USB3 even if it claims so, or its capacity is not well supported.

On Mac OS X, open "System Information" from Spotlight, go to the USB section, and verify "Xbox NUI Sensor" is under "USB 3.0 SuperSpeed Bus" not "High-Speed Bus". If this is not the case, try unplugging the Kinect from power source with the USB cable connected, and plug the power again, then verify.

I'm getting lots of USB transfer errors, and/or only blank windows.

USB3 as a whole is a flaky thing. If you're running Linux, try upgrading to a recent kernel (>= 3.16) first. If that doesn't work, try a different USB3 controller. The following ones are known to work on a 3.16 kernel:

  • Intel Corporation 8 Series/C220 Series Chipset Family USB xHCI
  • Intel Corporation 7 Series/C210 Series Chipset Family USB xHCI
  • NEC Corporation uPD720200 USB 3.0 Host Controller

Probably not working:

  • ASMedia Technology Inc. Device 1142
  • ASMedia Technology Inc. ASM1042

Messages in dmesg like this means bugs in the USB driver. Updating kernel might help.

[  509.238571] xhci_hcd 0000:03:00.0: xHCI host not responding to stop endpoint command.
[  509.238580] xhci_hcd 0000:03:00.0: Assuming host is dying, halting host.

Finally, it's also possible that your executable is not actually using the patched libusb from the depends/ folder which is required at the moment. Check this using ldd | grep libusb (shows libusb-1.0 under depends/), and adjust your LD_LIBRARY_PATH if necessary.

I'm seeing the color camera stream, but no depth/IR (black windows).

The depth packet processor runs on OpenGL by default. You can try alternatives, such as OpenCL (by running Protonect cl) or CPU (Protonect cpu). At least the CPU DPP should always produce some output, although slow. For OpenCL on Intel/Linux, you can also try to set /sys/module/i915/parameters/enable_cmd_parser to 0.

Maintainers:

Installation

This project uses the libusbx drivers and API. Setting things up varies by platform.

Windows / Visual Studio

libusbK driver

If you have the Kinect for Windows v2 SDK, install it first. You don't need to uninstall the SDK or the driver before doing this procedure.

Install the libusbK backend driver for libusbx:

  1. Download Zadig from http://zadig.akeo.ie/.
  2. Run Zadig and in options, check List All Devices and uncheck Ignore Hubs or Composite Parents
  3. Select the Xbox NUI Sensor (composite parent) from the drop-down box. (Ignore the Interface 0 and Interface 2 varieties.) The current driver will list usbccgp. USB ID is VID 045E, PID 02C4.
  4. Select libusbK (v3.0.6.0) from the replacement driver list.
  5. Click the Replace Driver button. Click yes on the warning about replacing a system driver. (This is because it is a composite parent.)
  6. Done.

To uninstall the libusbK driver (and get back the official SDK driver, if installed):

  1. Open Device Manager
  2. Under libusbK USB Devices, right click the "Xbox NUI Sensor (Composite Parent)" device and select uninstall.
  3. Important: Check the "Delete the driver software for this device." checkbox, then click OK.

If you already had the official SDK driver installed and you want to use it:

  1. In Device Manager, in the Action menu, click "Scan for hardware changes."

This will enumerate the Kinect sensor again and it will pick up the K4W2 SDK driver, and you should be ready to run KinectService.exe again immediately.

You can go back and forth between the SDK driver and the libusbK driver very quickly and easily with these steps.

libusb

  • Build from source (recommended)
cd depends/
git clone https://github.com/libusb/libusb.git
cd libusb
git remote add joshblake https://github.com/JoshBlake/libusbx.git
git fetch joshblake
git merge joshblake/winiso  # patches for libusbK backend

Open libusb/msvc/libusb_2013.sln with Visual Studio 2013 (or older version, accordingly), set configurations to "Release x64", and build "libusb-1.0 (dll)". You can clone the libusb repo to somewhere else, but you will need to set environment variable LibUSB_ROOT to that path. Building with "Win32" is not recommended as it results in lower performance.

  • Pre-built binary

Joshua Blake provided a Debug version binary: https://www.dropbox.com/s/madoye1ayaoajet/libusbx-winiso.zip. Install it as depends/libusbx. This version was built in 2013.

TurboJPEG

GLFW

  • Download 64-bit Windows binaries from http://www.glfw.org/download.html
  • Extract it as depends/glfw (rename glfw-3.x.x.bin.WIN64 to glfw), or anywhere as long as the environment variable GLFW_ROOT is set to the installed path.

OpenCV

OpenCL

Build

You need to specify the location of OpenCV installation in OpenCV_DIR.

cd example\protonect
mkdir build && cd build
cmake .. -G "Visual Studio 12 2013 Win64" -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=. -DOpenCV_DIR=%cd%\..\..\..\depends\opencv\build 
cmake --build . --config Release --target install

Then you can run the program with .\bin\Protonect.exe. If DLLs are missing, you can copy them to the bin folder.

Mac OSX

  1. cd into a directory where you want to keep libfreenect2 stuff in

  2. Install opencv and git via brew (or your own favorite package manager, ie ports)

brew update brew tap homebrew/science brew install opencv git nasm wget jpeg-turbo brew tap homebrew/versions brew install glfw3


1. Download the libfreenect2 repository

    ```
git clone [email protected]:OpenKinect/libfreenect2.git
  1. Install a bunch of dependencies

cd ./libfreenect2 sh ./depends/install_mac.sh


1. Build the actual protonect executable

    ```
cd ./examples/protonect/
cmake CMakeLists.txt
make && make install
  1. Run the program

./bin/Protonect


### Debian/Ubuntu 14.04 (perhaps earlier)

1. Install libfreenect2

    ```
git clone https://github.com/OpenKinect/libfreenect2.git
  1. Install a bunch of dependencies

sudo apt-get install build-essential libjpeg-turbo8-dev libtool autoconf libudev-dev cmake mesa-common-dev freeglut3-dev libxrandr-dev doxygen libxi-dev libopencv-dev automake

sudo apt-get install libturbojpeg0-dev (Debian)

cd libfreenect2/depends sh install_ubuntu.sh sudo dpkg -i libglfw3*3.0.4-1*.deb # Ubuntu 14.04 only

sudo apt-get install libglfw3-dev (Debian/Ubuntu 14.10+:)


1. OpenCL dependency
  * AMD GPU: Install the latest version of the AMD Catalyst drivers from https://support.amd.com and `apt-get install opencl-headers`.
  * Nvidia GPU: Install the latest version of the Nvidia drivers, for example nvidia-346 from `ppa:xorg-edgers` and `apt-get install opencl-headers`.
  * Intel GPU (kernel 3.16+ recommended): Install beignet-dev 1.0+, `apt-get install beignet-dev`. If not available, use this ppa `sudo apt-add-repository ppa:pmjdebruijn/beignet-testing`.

1. Build the actual protonect executable

    ```
cd ../examples/protonect/
cmake CMakeLists.txt
make && sudo make install
  1. Run the program

./bin/Protonect


### Other operating systems

I'm not sure, but look for libusbx installation instructions for your OS. Figure out how to attach the driver to the Xbox NUI Sensor composite parent device, VID 045E PID 02C4, then contribute your procedure.

## Building

Make sure you install the driver as describe above first.

1. Follow directions in the ./depends/README.depends.txt to get the dependencies. (Process may be streamlined later.)

### Windows / Visual Studio

	1. Use CMake to generate a solution.
	2. Build and run.

### Other platforms

2. ?
3. Build and run.
4. Contribute your solution for your platform back to the project please.

## Required notification

The K4W2 hardware is currently pre-release. Per the K4W2 developer program agreement, all public demonstrations and code should display this notice:

    "This is preliminary software and/or hardware and APIs are preliminary and subject to change."

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