tar_timestamp {targets} | R Documentation |
Get the timestamp(s) of a target.
Description
Get the timestamp associated with a target's last successful run.
Usage
tar_timestamp(
name = NULL,
format = NULL,
tz = NULL,
parse = NULL,
store = targets::tar_config_get("store")
)
Arguments
name |
Symbol, name of the target. If |
format |
Deprecated in |
tz |
Deprecated in |
parse |
Deprecated in |
store |
Character of length 1, path to the
|
Details
tar_timestamp()
checks the metadata in _targets/meta/meta
,
not the actual returned data of the target.
The timestamp depends on the storage format of the target.
If storage is local, e.g. formats like "rds"
and "file"
,
then the time stamp is the latest modification time
of the target data files at the time the target
last successfully ran. For non-local storage as with
repository = "aws"
and format = "url"
, targets
chooses instead
to simply record the time the target last successfully ran.
Value
If the target is not recorded in the metadata
or cannot be parsed correctly, then
tar_timestamp()
returns a POSIXct
object at 1970-01-01 UTC
.
See Also
Other time:
tar_newer()
,
tar_older()
,
tar_timestamp_raw()
Examples
if (identical(Sys.getenv("TAR_EXAMPLES"), "true")) { # for CRAN
tar_dir({ # tar_dir() runs code from a temp dir for CRAN.
tar_script({
list(tar_target(x, 1))
}, ask = FALSE)
tar_make()
# Get the timestamp.
tar_timestamp(x)
# We can use the timestamp to cancel the target
# if it already ran within the last hour.
# Be sure to set `cue = tar_cue(mode = "always")`
# if you want the target to always check the timestamp.
tar_script({
list(
tar_target(
x,
tar_cancel((Sys.time() - tar_timestamp()) < 3600),
cue = tar_cue(mode = "always")
)
)}, ask = FALSE)
tar_make()
})
}