When you start R, it will by default source a .Rprofile
file if it exists. This allows you to automatically tweak your R
settings to meet your everyday needs. For instance, you may want to set
the default CRAN repository (options("repos")
) so you don’t
have to choose one every time you install a package.
The startup
package extends the default R startup process by allowing you to put
multiple startup scripts in a common ‘Rprofile.d’ directory and have
them all be sourced during the R startup process. This way you can have
one file to configure the default CRAN repository and another one to
configure your personal devtools settings. Similarly, you can use a
‘Renviron.d’ directory with multiple files defining different
environment variables. For instance, one file may define environment
variable LANGUAGE
, whereas another file may contain your
private GITHUB_PAT
key. The advantages of this approach are
that it gives a better overview when you list the files, makes it easier
to share certain settings (= certain files) with other users, and enable
you to keep specific files completely private (by setting the file
privileges so only you can access those settings).
When R starts, the following user-specific setup takes place:
The first .Renviron
file found on the R
startup search path is processed. The search path is (in order): (i)
Sys.getenv("R_ENVIRON_USER")
, (ii)
./.Renviron
, and (iii) ~/.Renviron
. The format
of this file is one ENV_VAR=VALUE
statement per line,
cf. ?.Renviron
. NOTE: Some environment variables
must be set already in this step in order to be acknowledged by R,
i.e. it is too late to set some of them in Step 2 and Step 3
below.
The first .Rprofile
file found on the R
startup search path is processed. The search path is (in order): (i)
Sys.getenv("R_PROFILE_USER")
, (ii)
./.Rprofile
, and (iii) ~/.Rprofile
. The format
of this file must be a valid R script (with a trailing newline),
cf. ?.Rprofile
.
If the .Rprofile
file (in Step 2) calls
startup::startup()
then the following will also take
place:
The first ‘Renviron.d’ directory on the R startup search
path is processed. The search path is (in order): (i)
paste0(Sys.getenv("R_ENVIRON_USER"), ".d")
, (ii)
./.Renviron.d
, (iii) ~/.Renviron.d
, and (iv)
{user-config-dir}/Renviron.d
, where
{user-config-dir}
corresponds to
tools::R_user_dir("startup", which = "config")
,
e.g. ${XDG_CONFIG_HOME}/R/startup
. The format of these
files should be the same as for .Renviron
. NOTE:
Some environment variables must be set already in Step 1 above in order
to be acknowledged by R.
A set of handy R options that can be use in Step 3c are set.
Their names are prefixed startup.session.
- see
?startup::startup_session_options
for details.
The first ‘Rprofile.d’ directory found on the R startup
search path is processed. The search path is (in order): (i)
paste0(Sys.getenv("R_PROFILE_USER"), ".d")
, (ii)
./.Rprofile.d
, (iii) ~/.Rprofile.d
, and (iv)
{user-config-dir}/Rprofile.d
. The format of these files
should be the same as for .Rprofile
, that is, they must be
valid R scripts.
If no errors occur above, the startup
package will be unloaded, leaving no trace of itself behind, except for
R options startup.session.*
set in Step 3b - these will be
erased if startup::startup()
is called with
keep = NULL
.
All relevant files in ‘Renviron.d’ and ‘Rprofile.d’ directories,
including those found recursively in subdirectories thereof, will be
processed (in lexicographic order sorted under the C
locale). There are no restrictions on what the file names should be
(except for the ones ignored as explained below). However, for
‘Rprofile.d’ files we recommend to use filename extension
*.R
to indicate that the files are regular R scripts. For
‘Renviron.d’ files we recommend to use files without extensions (or
*.Renviron
for clarification). To avoid confusions, do
not use an *.R
extension for ‘Renviron.d’ files
because they are not R script per se (as some editors may warn you
about).
Files with file extensions *.txt
, *.md
and
*~
are ignored as well as any files named
.Rhistory
, .RData
and .DS_Store
.
Directories named __MACOSX
and their content are ignored.
Files and directories with names starting with two periods
(..
) are ignored,
e.g. ~/.Rprofile.d/..my-tests/
.
After installing the startup packages (see instructions at the end), call
::install() startup
once. This will append
tryCatch(startup::startup(), error=function(ex) message(".Rprofile error: ", conditionMessage(ex)))
to your ~/.Rprofile
. The file will be created if
missing. This will also create directories ~/.Renviron.d/
and ~/.Rprofile.d/
if missing. To find the location of
these folder on Windows, use normalizePath("~")
- it’s
often located under C:\Users\Alice\Documents\
.
Alternatively to the above installation setup, you can just add that
line to your ~/.Rprofile
file manually. The reason for
using tryCatch(..., error = ...)
is for the case when
startup is not installed and you try to install it,
e.g. after upgrading R to a new major release. Without
try()
, R will fail to install the startup
package (or any other package) because the R profile startup script
produces an error complaining about startup not being
available.
Just start R :)
To debug the startup process, use
startup::startup(debug = TRUE)
or set environment variable
R_STARTUP_DEBUG=TRUE
, e.g. on Linux you can do
$ R_STARTUP_DEBUG=TRUE R
On MS Windows, you can do:
$ R R_STARTUP_DEBUG=TRUE
This will produce time-stamped messages during startup specifying which files are included together with details on the files and what they modified.
If the name of a file consists of a
<key>=<value>
specification, then that file
will be included / used only if the specification is fulfilled (on the
current system with the current R setup). For instance, a file
~/.Rprofile.d/os=windows.R
will be ignored unless
startup::sysinfo()$os == "windows"
, i.e. the R session is
started on a Windows system.
The following startup::sysinfo()
keys are available for
conditional inclusion of files by their path names:
System values:
dirname
- (character) the name of the current working
directory (= basename(getwd())
)gui
- (character) the graphical user interface (=
.Platform$GUI
)nodename
- (character) the host name (=
Sys.info()[["nodename"]]
)machine
- (character) the machine type (=
Sys.info()[["machine"]]
)os
- (character) the operating system (=
.Platform$OS.type
)sysname
- (character) the system name (=
Sys.info()[["sysname"]]
)user
- (character) the user name (=
Sys.info()[["user"]]
)System flags:
interactive
- (logical) whether running R interactively
or not (= interactive()
)ess
- (logical) whether running R in Emacs Speaks Statistics (ESS) or
notpqr
- (logical) whether running pqR (“A Pretty Quick Version of
R”) or notradian
- (logical) whether running R in radian (formerly known as
‘rtichoke’ and ‘rice’) or notmicrosoftr
- (logical) whether running R in Microsoft R Open or notrstudio
- (logical) whether running R in RStudio Console or
notrstudioterm
- (logical) whether running R in RStudio Terminal or
notwine
- (logical) whether running R on Windows via Linux Wine or notInstalled packages:
package
- (character) whether a package is installed or
not. In addition to checking the availability, having
package=<name>
in the filename makes it clear that
the startup file concerns settings specific to that package.With a specific frequency:
when
- (character) specify how often the file should be
processed:
when=once
- the startup file is processed only
oncewhen=hourly
- the startup file is processed at most
once per hourwhen=daily
- the startup file is processed at most once
per daywhen=weekly
- the startup file is processed at most
once per weekwhen=fortnightly
- the startup file is processed at
most once every two weekswhen=monthly
- the startup file is processed at most
once per monthIf such a file, or its timestamp, is updated, then it will be processed the next time R is started.
Environment variables:
<key>=<value>
specifications
with keys matching none of the above known keys are interpreted as
system environment variables and startup will test such
conditions against their values. Note, if <key>
does not correspond to a known environment variable, then the file is
skipped if <key>=<value>
is used but included
if <key>!=<value>
is used.To condition on more than one key, separate
<key>=<value>
pairs by commas,
e.g. ~/.Rprofile.d/work,interactive=TRUE,os=windows.R
. This
also works for directory names. For instance,
~/.Rprofile.d/os=windows/work,interactive=TRUE.R
will be
processed if running on Windows and in interactive mode. Multiple
packages may be specified. For instance,
~/.Rprofile.d/package=devtools,package=future.R
will be
used only if both the devtools and the future packages are
installed.
It is also possible to negate a conditional filename test by using
the <key>!=<value>
specification. For instance,
~/.Rprofile.d/package=doMC,os!=windows.R
will be processed
if package doMC
is installed and the operating system is
not Windows.
Renviron and Rprofile startup files with a non-declared
<key>
in their file names are skipped. A non-declared
key is any key that is neither one of the above predefined keys nor a
declared environment variable.
This is useful, because it allows us to keep “secrets” in private
files and only load them conditionally on the value of an environment
variable. For instance, we put all our secret Renviron files under
~/.Renviron.d/private/SECRET=banana/
such that they are
only loaded if environment variable SECRET
is set to
exactly banana
. Moreover, by making sure the directory
~/.Renviron.d/private/
is only accessible by you, then it
will be harder for someone else two know what your secret “password”
(banana
) is. On a Unix system, you can set this up as:
$ mkdir -p ~/.Renviron.d/private/SECRET=banana/
$ chmod go-rw ~/.Renviron.d/private
Then go ahead an put your secret Renviron files in there, e.g.
.Renviron.d/private/SECRET=banana/
+-- amazon ## AWS_* credential & settings
+-- github ## GITHUB_TOKEN + GITHUB_PAT
Now, only if SECRET
is set to exactly
banana
when you launch R, the above secret files will be
processed and the corresponding environment variables will be available
from withing R. For instance, they will be loaded if you do:
$ SECRET=banana R
but not if you do:
$ SECRET=badguess R
or if SECRET
is unset.
Comment: You can use whichever variable name you like, it
does not have to be SECRET
. And, the “password”
banana
is obviously just an example.
Renviron startup files is a convenient and cross-platform way of
setting environment variables during the R startup process. However, for
some of the environment variables that R consults must be set early on
in the R startup process (immediately after Step 1), because R only
consults them once. Examples(*) of environment variables that need to be
set no later than .Renviron
(Step 1) are:
TMPDIR
, TMP
, TEMP
- the
parent of R’s temporary directory, cf. ?tempdir
LC_ALL
- locale settings used by R,
e.g. cf. ?locales
R_DEFAULT_PACKAGES
- default set of packages loaded
when R starts, cf. ?Rscript
R_LIBS_USER
- user’s library path,
e.g. R_LIBS_USER=~/R/%p-library/%v
is the folder
specification used by default on all platforms and and R version. The
folder must exist, otherwise it is ignored by R. The %p
(platform) and %v
(version) parts are R-specific conversion
specifiers, cf. ?R_LIBS_USER
R_MAX_NUM_DLLS
, cf. ?dyn.load
Any changes to these done in an ‘Renviron.d’ file (Step 3a), or via
Sys.setenv()
in .Rprofile
(Step 2) or
‘Rprofile.d’ files (Step 3c), will be ignored by R itself -
despite being reflected by Sys.getenv()
.
Furthermore, some environment variables can not even be set in
.Renviron
(Step 1) but must be set prior to
launching R. This is because those variables are consulted by R very
early on (prior to Step 1). Examples(*) of environment variables that
need to be set prior to .Renviron
(Step 1)
are:
HOME
- the user’s home directoryMKL_NUM_THREADS
and OMP_NUM_THREADS
- the
default number of threads used by OpenMP etc, cf. R Installation and
AdministrationThese variables have to be set using methods specific to the operating system or the calling shell, e.g. in a Unix shell
$ export OMP_NUM_THREADS=1
$ R
or per call as
OMP_NUM_THREADS=1 R
(*) For further details on which environment variables R consults and
what they are used for by R, see the R documentation and help,
e.g. ?"environment variables"
and
?Startup
.
Below is a list of “real-world” example files:
.Renviron.d/
+-- lang
+-- r_cmd_check
+-- secrets=banana
.Rprofile.d/
+-- interactive=TRUE/
+-- help.start.R
+-- misc.R
+-- package=fortunes.R
+-- os=windows.R
+-- repos.R
They are available as part of this package under
system.file(package = "startup")
, e.g.
> f <- system.file("Rprofile.d", "repos.R", package = "startup")
> file.show(f, type = "text")
local({
<- c(CRAN = "https://cloud.r-project.org")
repos if (.Platform$OS.type == "windows") {
"CRANextra"] <- "https://www.stats.ox.ac.uk/pub/RWin"
repos[
}options(repos = c(repos, getOption("repos")))
})
R package startup is available on CRAN and can be installed in R as:
install.packages("startup")
To install the pre-release version that is available in Git branch
develop
on GitHub, use:
::install_github("HenrikBengtsson/startup", ref="develop") remotes
This will install the package from source.