Codesys Ros2 May 2026
A year earlier, the company had bought a heterogeneous fleet: articulated arms for welding, mobile platforms for parts delivery, and a set of inspection drones to chase defects down narrow aisles. They weren’t cheap. They ran ROS 2 under the hood—publishers and subscribers, nodes and topics—an open-source brain built for distributed robotics. The fleet was brilliant at autonomy, but it lived in a different language than the plant. Where CODESYS spoke IEC 61131 and deterministic cycles, ROS 2 spoke asynchronous messages and Quality of Service policies. For weeks, the two worlds passed each other like ships in fog—each efficient in isolation, each unable to fully leverage the other.