Skip to content

UoMResearchIT/r-shinysender

Repository files navigation

shinysender

R-CMD-check Codecov test coverage

The aim of this package is to provide tools and a Shiny app to allow users to easily send their Shiny apps to the University of Manchester's pilot Shiny server. Apps published on the server will be public. To obtain an account on the server please email its-ri-team@manchester.ac.uk to request access.

(If you wish to use the package for another Shiny server, please see the notes at the end of this file)

Usage

1. Make sure you have access to the server

You must be connected to Globalprotect (or be on the campus network) to upload an app (You do not need to be connected to Globalprotect to view an app; these are visible worldwide)

If you are unsure, open a terminal and try to ssh into the server with your <userid>:

ssh <userid>@shiny.its.manchester.ac.uk

2. Install the shinysender package

From an R console:

install.packages("devtools")  # If you don't already have devtools installed
devtools::install_github("UoMResearchIT/r-shinysender")

Note: If your packageVersion("rsconnect") is older than 0.8, update your Rstudio, or try using the old version in the rsconnect_0.8 branch. Replacing the command above with:

devtools::install_github("UoMResearchIT/r-shinysender@rsconnect_0.8")

3. Prepare your environment:

  • Set your working directory to your Shiny app's application directory (this will usually happen automatically when you load the project)

  • Set the name of the server and your username on it:

# This is UoM pilot server - must be connected via global protect
# to upload your app.  Deployed apps will be visible on the public
# internet.  
Sys.setenv(SHINYSENDER_SERVER="shiny.its.manchester.ac.uk")

# Your username is your UoM login
Sys.setenv(SHINYSENDER_USER="alice")

(you may wish to add these lines to ~/.Rprofile, or set the environment variables in ~/.Renviron, to avoid having to set them each time you start R)

  • By default, your app will have the name of your local project directory, to set it to something different, set the SHINYSENDER_REMOTENAME environment variable before deploying: Sys.setenv('SHINYSENDER_REMOTENAME="appname").

  • If you are using packages from GitHub, you will have to make sure you have an active access token see Non CRAN packages below.

  • If you are using the Golem Framework, you will need to run golem::add_shinyserver_file() before deploying your app.

4. (Optional) create an .rscignore file

To reduce the size of your app on the server (and speed up the upload process), create a file called .rscignore on your project base directory, and populate it with files and folders that are not required for your app to run, e.g.:

.git
.Rhistory
.Rprofile
.Rproj.user

data-raw
...

Note: unfortunately, .rscignore files don't take wildcards, so you'll have to list each file or parent directory explicitly.

5. Upload your app

  • In Rstudio: Addins, Upload App from the main toolbar (this can be bound to a keyboard shortcut (Tools, Modify Keyboard Shortcuts).
  • Or, if you're running outwith RStudio, run shinysender::ss_uploadAddin() from the console
  • You will be prompted for your UoM password.
  • The app will be bundled and deployed on the remote server. The first time you deploy any app, this will likely take some time since the system needs to download and compile the same versions of the R libraries you're using as on your local system. Subsequent deployments will use cached copies and so will be much quicker.
  • You can deploy the app again to update it

You may get a warning about the version of R on the server being different to your local version. It is usually safe to ignore this.

Advanced workflow

If you found a problem during the last step, or you want to do anything more complex, the following code may help:

library(shinysender)

# Connect to shiny server, using the same login name as the local account
# (this can be overriden by setting the SHINYSENDER_USER environment variable
# and the server set in the SHINYSENDER_SERVER environment variable
# User will be prompted for password if not using ssh keys
session <- ss_connect()

# Set up the user's account on the server to use Packrat packages
# (This only needs to be done once)
ss_setupserver(session)

# List apps on Shiny server
ss_listdir(session)

# Upload app stored in ~/testapp to server as an app called demo
# This will automatically set up the package environment to match the user's local computer
# This will take some time for the first app you install, since we need to build
# all of its library dependencies from source.  Subsequent updates and other apps will
# use cached versions of the libraries.
ss_uploadappdir(session, "~/testapp/", "demo")

# Show the most recent log file for app "demo"
ss_getlogs(session, "demo")

# Delete app "demo" on the server
ss_deleteapp(session, "demo")

# Disconnect from the server
ss_disconnect(session)

In some cases, restoring the renv lockfile will fail on the server, even when the app uploaded successfully (your app will be uploaded, but it will fail to run, or display with errors). You can troubleshoot this manually via an interactive R session on the server:

Open a terminal and try to ssh into the server with your <userid>; navigate to your folder, and run R to open an interactive session:

ssh <userid>@shiny.its.manchester.ac.uk
cd ~/ShinyApps/<appname>
R

From there, try:

> renv::status()
> renv::restore() 

R Markdown documents

It is possible to host interactive R Markdown documents, as described here. You will need to ensure that you have an index.Rmd document in your deployment directory. The document can then be deployed in the same way as a Shiny app.

Golem framework

If you are using the Golem Framework to develop your app, you will need to run golem::add_shinyserver_file() before deploying your app.

Non CRAN packages

If you are using non-CRAN packages, you will need to install them using devtools::install_github(). For example: devtools::install_github("tidyverse/ggplot2") will install the development version of ggplot2.

If your package is in a private repository, you will need to generate a personal access token, with the "repo" scope. Put the token in the GITHUB_PAT environment variable: Sys.setenv(GITHUB_PAT="mytoken"). The environment variable will need to be set before using devtools::install_github(), and when uploading your app. The token will be used to install the private repositories on the remote sever, but will not be stored on it.

Locally hosted packages (i.e. an R package source that only exists on your local machine) cannot be included in the "bundle" that is sent to the remote server - you will need to put them on Github, and then install them as described above. This is because the remote machine has no way of getting the source for your local package.

Bioconductor

If your app uses Bioconductor packages, run options(repos = BiocManager::repositories()) before deploying your app.

.Rprofile

The deployed app uses renv to emulate your local development environment (even if don't do it explicitly). It will be set up to cache installed libraries (and their versions) between all your apps, by means of the .Renviron and .Rprofile files in the deployed app's directory on the server.

NOTE: If you have an .Renviron file it will currently be overwritten. Replace it by including the affected variables in Sys.setenv calls inside your local .Rprofile.

If you have a project level .Rprofile, this will be uploaded to the remote server and modified to use renv - your local .Rprofile will not be edited. If you do not have a project level .Rprofile a new one will be created on the remote machine. If your user level .Rprofile on your local machine contains settings that your app requires, you will have to copy these to a project level .Rprofile so that the server can use them.

Note that R only runs a single .Rprofile on startup - this will be the project level .Rprofile, if it exists, and the user level one otherwise - see https://rstats.wtf/r-startup.html for more details.

Overriding the default proxy

If you need to override the default proxy (used to download packages during staging), set the required server and port in the SHINYSENDER_PROXY environment variable:

Sys.setenv(SHINYSENDER_PROXY="http://myproxy.co.uk:3128")

(To set the http and https proxies to different servers, instead use SHINYSENDER_PROXY_HTTP and SHINYSENDER_PROXY_HTTPS environment variables)

Shiny training

https://uomresearchit.github.io/r-shiny-course/ contains the notes for a half day workshop on developing Shiny apps. This may be useful if you haven't used Shiny before

Embedding your app in an existing webpage

It isn't (currently) possible to change the URL of deployed apps (i.e. they will always be https://shiny.its.manchester.ac.uk/username/appname). You may want to embed your app within an existing web page. This can be done with an iframe. The fragement of html code below gives an example:

<iframe width="100%" height="700px" name="iframe" src="https://shiny.its.manchester.ac.uk/username/appname" 
    frameborder="0" 
    scrolling="no" 
    onload="resizeIframe(this)">
</iframe>

(This is the technique we use to embed the example Shiny app in the Shiny course referred to above)

Server fingerprint

The ssh fingerprint of the pilot shiny server is 26:0d:42:55:99:32:1b:75:3d:38:2d:dc:c8:08:1b:0b:40:f9:e9:e6 This will be shown the first time you connect to the service

Other servers

This package was originally written for the University of Manchester Shiny Pilot service. If the package is used with this server it will automatically set up the required web proxy. If you are using another server, no web proxy will be set by default.

If you need to use a different web proxy, then set either the SHINYSENDER_PROXY environment variable, or, if you require a different proxy address for http and https, set SHINYSENDER_PROXY_HTTP and SHINYSENDER_PROXY_HTTPS. (setting SHINYSENDER_PROXY sets the http and https proxy to the same address). In all cases, the variable should be set to the full URL, including protocol, e.g. Sys.setenv(SHINYSENDER_PROXY="http://myproxy.co.uk:3128")

Server setup

This section contains some minimal instructions for setting up a new Shiny server to use with this package. It should work with any server that's setup to deploy apps from users' home directories. The main thing is that this package expects the Shiny, Rmarkdown, Packrat and Devtools libraries to be available to all users.

Note that the URL of the deployed app assumes that the apps are on https, and that the location section of shiny-server.conf is set up as in the example below

Using Ubuntu 20.04

Install system libraries for common R packages:

    sudo apt install pandoc pandoc-citeproc libssl-dev libxml2-dev libcurl4-openssl-dev libcairo2 libcairo2-dev git-core zlib1g-dev jags default-jre-headless libopenmpi3 libopenmpi-dev libomp-dev make libgit2-dev libssh2-1-dev libgmp10 libgmp-dev libglpk-dev libpng-dev python gdal-bin libproj-dev libgdal-dev libmpfr-dev libgeos-dev libgeos++-dev libsodium-dev libicu-dev tcl8.6 tk8.6 tk-table libudunits2-dev libv8-dev librsvg2-dev libssh-dev libxt-dev libcairo-5c-dev

(This list covers most of the debs needed for common R packages - e.g. tidyverse, sf, etc. See: https://github.com/rstudio/r-system-requirements and https://github.com/r-hub/sysreqsdb for two (different) databases of OS package dependencies for R libraries. ./librarydeps/getdeps.R will produce a (draft) apt install line for a given set of packages)

Install R following instructions at https://docs.rstudio.com/resources/install-r/ (I went with most recent version (4.1.1 at time of writing). Note r-base with Ubuntu 20.04 is very old, so don't use Ubuntu provided packages. Set up the symlinks as described on that page.

Start R as root, and install shiny, rmarkdown, devtools and packrat packages:

sudo R

install.packages(c("shiny", "rmarkdown", "packrat", "devtools"))

q()

Install Shiny server (https://www.rstudio.com/products/shiny/download-server/ubuntu/), e.g.:

(check you're getting latest version of Shiny Server - note URL is ubuntu-14.04, even though we're using 20.04)

sudo apt-get install gdebi-core
wget https://download3.rstudio.org/ubuntu-14.04/x86_64/shiny-server-1.5.17.973-amd64.deb
sudo gdebi shiny-server-1.5.17.973-amd64.deb

(Note that there isn't a repository for shiny-server, so it won't update with apt-get etc..., so you'll need to keep an eye on new versions manually. The product information email list at: https://www.rstudio.com/about/subscription-management/ should inform you when an update is out.)

Check Shiny server is working correctly - go to http://server:3838, and check the Shiny and RMarkdown apps appear in frames on the right hand side.

Setup timezone on the server

sudo dpkg-reconfigure tzdata

Edit /etc/shiny-server/shiny-server.conf:

# Instruct Shiny Server to run applications as the user "shiny"
run_as shiny;

# Define a server that listens on port 3838 on localhost
# You will probably want to put this behind a reverse proxy, or listen on all interfaces if accessing directly
server {
  listen 3838 127.0.0.1;


  location / {
    run_as :HOME_USER:;
    user_dirs;
    directory_index off;
  }

}

Restart Shiny Server sudo service shiny-server restart

Make it so that user's cannot read others' home directories (https://superuser.com/a/615990): update DIR_MODE to DIR_MODE=0750 in /etc/adduser.conf and change permissions on any existing homedirs.

(ShinyServer "su"s to the user when serving apps from ~/ShinyApps, so this will still work)

About

R package to make it easier to send Shiny apps to a remote server

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages