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Quickly install Java Development Kit (JDK)
without
administrative privileges and set environment variables in current R
session or project to solve common issues with ‘Java’ environment
management in ‘R’. Recommended to users of
Java
/{rJava}
-dependent R
packages
such as {r5r}
, {opentripplanner}
,
{xlsx}
, {openNLP}
, {rWeka}
,
{RJDBC}
, {tabulapdf}
, and many more.
{rJavaEnv}
prevents common problems like Java
not found, Java
version conflicts, missing
Java
installations, and the inability to install
Java
due to lack of administrative privileges.
{rJavaEnv}
automates the download, installation, and setup
of the Java
on a per-project basis by setting the relevant
JAVA_HOME
in the current R
session or the
current working directory (via .Rprofile
, with the user’s
consent). Similar to what {renv}
does for R
packages, {rJavaEnv}
allows different Java
versions to be used across different projects, but can also be
configured to allow multiple versions within the same project (e.g. with
the help of {targets}
package). Note: there are a
few extra steps for ‘Linux’ users, who don’t have any ‘Java’ previously
installed in their system, and who prefer package installation from
source, rather then installing binaries from ‘Posit Package Manager’.
See documentation
for details.
Install from CRAN:
install.packages('rJavaEnv')
Install latest release from R-multiverse:
install.packages('rJavaEnv',
repos = c('https://community.r-multiverse.org', 'https://cloud.r-project.org')
)
You can also install the development version of rJavaEnv
from GitHub:
if (!requireNamespace("remotes", quietly = TRUE)) {
install.packages("remotes")
}
::install_github("e-kotov/rJavaEnv@dev", force = TRUE) remotes
::java_quick_install(version = 21) rJavaEnv
This will:
download Java
21 distribution compatible with the
current operating system and processor architecture into a local cache
folder;
extract the downloaded Java
distribution into
another cache folder;
create a symbolic link (for macOS and Linux) or junction (for
Windows, if that fails, just copies the files)
rjavaenv/platform
/processor_architecture
/java_version
in the current directory/project to point to the cached
installation;
set the current session’s JAVA_HOME
and
PATH
environment variables to point to the installed
(symlinked) Java
distribution;
add code to .Rprofile
file in the current
directory/project to set JAVA_HOME
and PATH
environment variables when the project is opened in RStudio.
As part of normal operation, rJavaEnv
will update the
JAVA_HOME
and PATH
environment variables in
the current R session, the local cache in your R package library, and
the .Rprofile
file in the project/current working
directory. In line with CRAN
policies, explicit user consent is required before making these
changes. Therefore, the first time you run any function from
rJavaEnv
that makes such changes, you will be asked for
consent. To explicitly consent and/or to prevent interruptions in
non-interactive mode, you can use the rje_consent()
function:
rje_consent(provided = TRUE)
rJavaEnv
with targets
and
callr
Just insert this line into the begining of any script that you run
with targets
or callr
:
::use_java("21") rJavaEnv
This acts exactly like java_quick_install()
, but only
sets the environment variables in the current session and does not copy
or link Java
binaries into the project directory.
More details are in the vignette Multiple
Java
environments in one project with targets
and callr
.
If you do not want to use rJavaEnv
anymore, please clear
the cache folders before removing the package:
java_clear("project", delete_all = TRUE)
java_clear("installed", delete_all = TRUE)
java_clear("distrib", delete_all = TRUE)
Also, clear the .Rprofile
file in the projects there you
used the package:
java_env_unset()
The package has several core functions:
java_quick_install()
java_check_version_cmd()
opentripplanner
, that performs Java
calls using command line.java_version_check_rjava()
Java
version using
rJava
in a separate R session. For
rJava
-dependent packages such as
r5r
.java_download()
Java
.java_install()
Java
distribution file into current (or
user-specified) project directory.java_env_set()
JAVA_HOME
and PATH
environment
variables to a given path in current R session and/or in the
.Rprofile
file in the project directory.java_env_unset()
JAVA_HOME
and PATH
environment
variables from the .Rrpofile
file in the project directory
(but not in the current R session, please restart the session so that R
picks up the system Java).java_list()
Java
versions linked in the current
project (or cached distributions or installations).java_clear()
Java
versions linked in the current
project (or cached distributions or installations).use_java()
java_quick_install()
, but in a less intrusive
way. Does not copy or link the Java
installation folder
from cache into the project directory and does not create or edit your
.Rprofile
file. Only sets requested java in the current R
session.See more details on all the functions in the Reference.
For detailed usage, see the Quick Start Vignette (work in progress).
Currently, rJavaEnv
only supports major
Java
versions such as 8, 11, 17, 21, 22. The download and
install functions ignore the minor version of the Java
distribution and just downloads the latest stable subversion of the
specified major version. This is done to simplify the process and avoid
the need to update the package every time a new minor version of
Java
is released. For most users this should be sufficient,
but this is substandard for full reproducibility.
The main limitation is that if you want to switch to another
Java
environment, you will most likely have to restart the
current R session and set the JAVA_HOME
and
PATH
environment variables to the desired Java
environment using rJavaEnv::java_env_set()
. This cannot be
done dynamically within the same R session due to the way Java is
initialized in R, particularly with the rJava
-dependent
packages such as r5r
. With packages like
opentripplanner
, that performs
Java
calls using command line, you can switch
Java
environments dynamically within the same R session as
much as you want.
Therefore, if you need to use R packages that depend on different
Java
versions within the same project, you will have to
create separate R scripts for each Java
environment and run
them in separate R sessions. One effective way of doing this is to use
the callr
package to run R scripts in
separate R sessions. Another option is to use the
targets
package to manage the whole
project workflow, which, as a side effect, will lead to all R scripts
being run in separate R sessions. To use rJavaEnv
with
targets
, you will need to download and install several Java
environments using rJavaEnv::java_download()
and
rJavaEnv::java_install()
and set the relevant path with
rJavaEnv::java_env_set()
at the beginning of each function
that requires a certain Java
version.
The future work includes:
Add support for more Java
distributions and
versions
Take care of R CMD javareconf
Possibly add support for specifying Java
version
beyond the major version
Possibly allow downloading several Java
distributions in one function call, e.g. different major versions of the
same ‘flavour’ or different ‘flavours’ of the same major
version
Possibly add automation to get the Java
that is
required by specific Java
-dependent R packages
I am open to suggestions and contributions, welcome to issues and pull requests.
I thank rOpenSci for the Dev Guide, as well as Hadley Wickham and Jennifer Bryan for the R Packages book.
Package hex sticker logo is partially generated by DALL-E by OpenAI. The logo also contains the original R logo.
To cite package ‘rJavaEnv’ in publications use:
Kotov E (2024). rJavaEnv: Java Environments for R Projects. doi:10.32614/CRAN.package.rJavaEnv https://doi.org/10.32614/CRAN.package.rJavaEnv, https://github.com/e-kotov/rJavaEnv.
BibTeX:
@Manual{rjavaenv,
title = {rJavaEnv: Java Environments for R Projects},
author = {Egor Kotov},
year = {2024},
url = {https://github.com/e-kotov/rJavaEnv},
doi = {10.32614/CRAN.package.rJavaEnv},
}
These binaries (installable software) and packages are in development.
They may not be fully stable and should be used with caution. We make no claims about them.