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Package development

Development

Often, R packages will have other R packages as dependencies. For this, one must declare their R package dependencies within the package DESCRIPTION file. If you want to prepare your environment for package development, you can use:

renv::install()

to install the packages as declared in the package’s DESCRIPTION file. This action is roughly analogous to remotes::install_deps().

If you’re developing a package that you intend to release to CRAN, then you likely want to build and test your package against the latest versions of your dependencies as available on CRAN. For this, you should consider using:

renv::update()

to ensure your package dependencies are up-to-date, as appropriate.

Isolation

Normally, a package under development should be tested against the latest-available versions of its dependencies on CRAN. However, in some cases, you may need to ensure your package is compatible with other packages also currently under development.

In these cases, the renv project library can be useful – you can install the development version(s) of your dependencies into the project library, without worrying about clobbering any packages already installed in your system library.

In these cases, you can declare your development dependencies using the Remotes field of the DESCRIPTION file; e.g.

Remotes:
  r-lib/ggplot2

and renv::install() will parse that remotes declaration and retrieve the requested package. See the remotes vignette, Dependency resolution for R package development, for more details.

Library Paths

For package projects using renv, a library path outside of the project directory will be used instead. As an example, on macOS, this might look like:

> .libPaths()
[1] "/Users/kevin/Library/Caches/org.R-project.R/R/renv/library/example-552f6e80/R-4.3/aarch64-apple-darwin20"
[2] "/Users/kevin/Library/Caches/org.R-project.R/R/renv/sandbox/R-4.3/aarch64-apple-darwin20/ac5c2659"

This is done to avoid issues with R CMD build, which can become very slow if your project contains a large number of files – as can happen if the project library is located in renv/library (the typical location). Note that even though the library is located outside of the project, the library path generated will still be unique to that project, and so the project is still effectively isolated in the same way as other renv projects normally are.

If you want to customize the location where renv places project libraries in this scenario, you can use the RENV_PATHS_LIBRARY_ROOT environment variable. For example:

RENV_PATHS_LIBRARY_ROOT = ~/.renv/library

If you’d still prefer to keep your project library within the project directory, you can set:

RENV_PATHS_LIBRARY = renv/library

within an appropriate .Renviron start-up profile – but please be aware of the caveats to doing this, as the performance of R CMD build will be affected.

Testing

While developing your package, you may want to use a continuous integration service (such as Travis CI) to build and test your package remotely. You can use renv to help facilitate this testing – see the Continuous Integration vignette for more information. In particular, clever use of the renv cache can help save time that might normally be spent on package installation. See https://github.com/rstudio/renv/blob/main/.github/workflows/R-CMD-check.yaml for an example of how renv uses itself for package management in its own CI tests.

Submitting to CRAN

Note that packages submitted to CRAN should be designed to work with the other R packages currently available on CRAN. For that reason, when preparing your package for submission, you’ll need to ensure your source package tarball does not include any renv infrastructure. renv makes this easy by automatically including

^renv$
^renv\.lock$

in your package’s .Rbuildignore file. This instructs R CMD build to not include these files and folders in the generated package tarball. Through this, even if renv is used during package development, it’s still easy to build and publish your package to CRAN as you would when developing packages without renv.

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.