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Aligator

Documentation Conda Version

Aligator is an efficient and versatile trajectory optimization library for robotics and beyond.

It can be used for motion generation and planning, optimal estimation, deployment of model-predictive control on complex systems, and much more.

Developing advanced, open-source, and versatile robotic software such as Aligator takes time and energy while requiring a lot of engineering support. In recognition of our commitment, we would be grateful if you would quote our papers and software in your publications, software, and research articles. Please refer to the Citation section for further details.

Features

Aligator is a C++ library, which provides

  • a modelling interface for optimal control problems, node-per-node
  • a set of efficient solvers for constrained trajectory optimization
  • multiple routines for factorization of linear problems arising in numerical OC
  • support for the pinocchio rigid-body dynamics library and its analytical derivatives
  • an interface to the Crocoddyl trajectory optimization library which can be used as an alternative frontend
  • a Python API which can be used for prototyping formulations or even deployment.

Aligator provides efficient implementations of the following algorithms for (constrained) trajectory optimization:

  • ProxDDP: Proximal Differentiable Dynamic Programming, detailed in this paper
  • FeasibleDDP: Feasible Differentiable Dynamic Programming, detailed in this paper

Installation

From Conda

From either conda-forge or our channel.

conda install -c conda-forge aligator

From source with Pixi

To build aligator from source the easiest way is to use Pixi.

Pixi is a cross-platform package management tool for developers that will install all required dependencies in .pixi directory. It's used by our CI agent so you have the guarantee to get the right dependencies.

Run the following command to install dependencies, configure, build and test the project:

pixi run test

The project will be built in the build directory. You can run pixi shell and build the project with cmake and ninja manually.

Build from source

git clone https://github.com/Simple-Robotics/aligator --recursive
cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=your_install_folder -S . -B build/ && cd build/
cmake --build . -jNCPUS

Dependencies

Python dependencies

Notes on building

  • For developers, add the -DCMAKE_EXPORT_COMPILE_COMMANDS=1 when working with language servers e.g. clangd.
  • To use the Crocoddyl interface, add -DBUILD_CROCODDYL_COMPAT=ON
  • By default, building the library will instantiate the templates for the double scalar type.
  • To build against a Conda environment, activate the environment and run export CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=$CONDA_PREFIX before running CMake and use $CONDA_PREFIX as your install folder.

Usage

aligator can be used in both C++ (with CMake to create builds) and Python.

Users can refer to examples in either language to see how to build a trajectory optimization problem, create a solver instance (with parameters), and solve their problem.

For how to use aligator in CMake, including creation of a Python extension module in C++, please refer to the developer's guide.

Benchmarking

The repo aligator-bench provides a comparison of aligator against other solvers.

For developer info on benchmarking, see doc/developers-guide.md.

Citing Aligator

To cite Aligator in your academic research, please use the following bibtex entry:

@misc{aligatorweb,
  author = {Jallet, Wilson and Bambade, Antoine and El Kazdadi, Sarah and Justin, Carpentier and Nicolas, Mansard},
  title = {aligator},
  url = {https://github.com/Simple-Robotics/aligator}
}

Please also consider citing the reference paper for the ProxDDP algorithm:

@article{jalletPROXDDPProximalConstrained2025,
  title = {PROXDDP: Proximal Constrained Trajectory Optimization},
  shorttitle = {PROXDDP},
  author = {Jallet, Wilson and Bambade, Antoine and Arlaud, Etienne and {El-Kazdadi}, Sarah and Mansard, Nicolas and Carpentier, Justin},
  year = {2025},
  month = mar,
  journal = {IEEE Transactions on Robotics},
  volume = {41},
  pages = {2605--2624},
  issn = {1941-0468},
  doi = {10.1109/TRO.2025.3554437},
  urldate = {2025-04-04}
}

Contributors

Acknowledgments

The development of Aligator is actively supported by the Willow team @INRIA and the Gepetto team @LAAS-CNRS.

Associated scientific and technical publications

  • E. Ménager, A. Bilger, W. Jallet, J. Carpentier, and C. Duriez, ‘Condensed semi-implicit dynamics for trajectory optimization in soft robotics’, in IEEE International Conference on Soft Robotics (RoboSoft), San Diego (CA), United States: IEEE, Apr. 2024. doi: 10.1109/RoboSoft60065.2024.10521997.
  • W. Jallet, N. Mansard, and J. Carpentier, ‘Implicit Differential Dynamic Programming’, in 2022 International Conference on Robotics and Automation (ICRA), Philadelphia, United States: IEEE Robotics and Automation Society, May 2022. doi: 10.1109/ICRA46639.2022.9811647.
  • W. Jallet, A. Bambade, N. Mansard, and J. Carpentier, ‘Constrained Differential Dynamic Programming: A primal-dual augmented Lagrangian approach’, in 2022 IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems, Kyoto, Japan, Oct. 2022. doi: 10.1109/IROS47612.2022.9981586.
  • W. Jallet, A. Bambade, N. Mansard, and J. Carpentier, ‘ProxNLP: a primal-dual augmented Lagrangian solver for nonlinear programming in Robotics and beyond’, in 6th Legged Robots Workshop, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States, May 2022. Accessed: Oct. 10, 2022. [Online]. Available: https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03680510
  • W. Jallet, A. Bambade, E. Arlaud, S. El-Kazdadi, N. Mansard, and J. Carpentier, ‘PROXDDP: Proximal Constrained Trajectory Optimization’, IEEE Transactions on Robotics, vol. 41, pp. 2605–2624, Mar. 2025, doi: 10.1109/TRO.2025.3554437.
  • S. Kazdadi, J. Carpentier, and J. Ponce, ‘Equality Constrained Differential Dynamic Programming’, presented at the ICRA 2021 - IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation, May 2021. Accessed: Sep. 07, 2021. [Online]. Available: https://hal.inria.fr/hal-03184203
  • A. Bambade, S. El-Kazdadi, A. Taylor, and J. Carpentier, ‘PROX-QP: Yet another Quadratic Programming Solver for Robotics and beyond’, in Robotics: Science and Systems XVIII, Robotics: Science and Systems Foundation, Jun. 2022. doi: 10.15607/RSS.2022.XVIII.040.
  • W. Jallet, E. Dantec, E. Arlaud, N. Mansard, and J. Carpentier, ‘Parallel and Proximal Constrained Linear-Quadratic Methods for Real-Time Nonlinear MPC’, in Proceedings of Robotics: Science and Systems, Delft, Netherlands, Jul. 2024. doi: 10.15607/RSS.2024.XX.002.
  • E. Dantec, W. Jallet, and J. Carpentier, ‘From centroidal to whole-body models for legged locomotion: a comparative analysis’, presented at the 2024 IEEE-RAS International Conference on Humanoid Robots, Nancy, France: IEEE, Jul. 2024. [Online]. Available: https://inria.hal.science/hal-04647996