appDependencies {rsconnect} | R Documentation |
Detect application dependencies
Description
appDependencies()
recursively detects all R package dependencies for an
application by parsing all .R
and .Rmd
files and looking for calls
to library()
, require()
, requireNamespace()
, ::
, and so on.
It then adds implicit dependencies (i.e. an .Rmd
requires Rmarkdown)
and adds all recursive dependencies to create a complete manifest of
package packages need to be installed to run the app.
Usage
appDependencies(
appDir = getwd(),
appFiles = NULL,
appFileManifest = NULL,
appMode = NULL
)
Arguments
appDir |
A directory containing an application (e.g. a Shiny app or plumber API). Defaults to the current directory. |
appFiles , appFileManifest |
Use |
appMode |
Optional; the type of content being deployed.
Provide this option when the inferred type of content is incorrect. This
can happen, for example, when static HTML content includes a downloadable
Shiny application |
Value
A data frame with one row for each dependency (direct, indirect, and inferred), and 4 columns:
-
Package
: package name. -
Version
: local version. -
Source
: a short string describing the source of the package install, as described above. -
Repository
: for CRAN and CRAN-like repositories, the URL to the repository. This will be ignored by the server if it has been configured with its own repository name -> repository URL mapping.
Dependency discovery
rsconnect use one of three mechanisms to find which packages your application uses:
If
renv.lock
is present, it will use the versions and sources defined in that file. If you're using the lockfile for some other purpose and don't want it to affect deployment, addrenv.lock
to.rscignore
.Otherwise, rsconnect will call
renv::snapshot()
to find all packages used by your code. If you'd instead prefer to only use the packages declared in aDESCRIPTION
file, runrenv::settings$snapshot.type("explicit")
to activate renv's "explicit" mode.Dependency resolution using renv is a new feature in rsconnect 1.0.0, and while we have done our best to test it, it still might fail for your app. If this happens, please file an issue then set
options(rsconnect.packrat = TRUE)
to revert to the old dependency discovery mechanism.
Remote installation
When deployed, the app must first install all of these packages, and rsconnect ensures the versions used on the server will match the versions you used locally. It knows how to install packages from the following sources:
CRAN and BioConductor (
Source: CRAN
orSource: Bioconductor
). The remote server will ignore the specific CRAN or Bioconductor mirror that you use locally, always using the CRAN/BioC mirror that has been configured on the server.Other CRAN like and CRAN-like repositories. These packages will have a
Source
determined by the value ofgetOptions("repos")
. For example, if you've set the following options:options( repos = c( CRAN = "https://cran.rstudio.com/", CORPORATE = "https://corporate-packages.development.company.com" ) )
Then packages installed from your corporate package repository will have source
CORPORATE
. Posit Connect can be configured to override their repository url so that (e.g.) you can use different packages versions on staging and production servers.Packages installed from GitHub, GitLab, or BitBucket, have
Source
github
,gitlab
, andbitbucket
respectively. When deployed, the bundle contains the additional metadata needed to precisely recreated the installed version.
It's not possible to recreate the packages that you have built and installed
from a directory on your local computer. This will have Source: NA
and
will cause the deployment to error. To resolve this issue, you'll need to
install from one of the known sources described above.
Suggested packages
The Suggests
field is not included when determining recursive dependencies,
so it's possible that not every package required to run your application will
be detected.
For example, ggplot2's geom_hex()
requires the hexbin package to be
installed, but it is only suggested by ggplot2. So if your app uses
geom_hex()
it will fail, reporting that the hexbin package is not
installed.
You can overcome this problem with (e.g.) requireNamespace(hexbin)
.
This will tell rsconnect that your app needs the hexbin package, without
otherwise affecting your code.
See Also
rsconnectPackages(Using Packages with rsconnect)
Examples
## Not run:
# dependencies for the app in the current working dir
appDependencies()
# dependencies for an app in another directory
appDependencies("~/projects/shiny/app1")
## End(Not run)