Plumber allows you to create a web API by merely decorating your existing R source code with special comments. Take a look at an example.
# plumber.R
#* Echo back the input
#* @param msg The message to echo
#* @get /echo
function(msg=""){
list(msg = paste0("The message is: '", msg, "'"))
}
#* Plot a histogram
#* @png
#* @get /plot
function(){
rand <- rnorm(100)
hist(rand)
}
#* Return the sum of two numbers
#* @param a The first number to add
#* @param b The second number to add
#* @post /sum
function(a, b){
as.numeric(a) + as.numeric(b)
}
These comments allow plumber to make your R functions available as API endpoints. You can use either #*
as the prefix or #'
, but we recommend the former since #'
will collide with Roxygen.
> library(plumber)
> r <- plumb("plumber.R") # Where 'plumber.R' is the location of the file shown above
> r$run(port=8000)
You can visit this URL using a browser or a terminal to run your R function and get the results. For instance http://localhost:8000/plot will show you a histogram, and http://localhost:8000/echo?msg=hello will echo back the 'hello' message you provided.
Here we're using curl
via a Mac/Linux terminal.
$ curl "http://localhost:8000/echo"
{"msg":["The message is: ''"]}
$ curl "http://localhost:8000/echo?msg=hello"
{"msg":["The message is: 'hello'"]}
As you might have guessed, the request's query string parameters are forwarded to the R function as arguments (as character strings).
$ curl --data "a=4&b=3" "http://localhost:8000/sum"
[7]
You can also send your data as JSON:
$ curl --data '{"a":4, "b":5}' http://localhost:8000/sum
[9]
You can install the latest stable version from CRAN using the following command:
install.packages("plumber")
If you want to try out the latest development version, you can install it from GitHub. The easiest way to do that is by using devtools
.
library(devtools)
install_github("trestletech/plumber")
library(plumber)
If you're just getting started with hosting cloud servers, the DigitalOcean integration included in plumber will be the best way to get started. You'll be able to get a server hosting your custom API in just two R commands. Full documentation is available at https://www.rplumber.io/docs/digitalocean/.
A couple of other approaches to hosting plumber are also made available:
- OpenCPU - A server designed for hosting R APIs with an eye towards scientific research.
- jug - (development discontinued) an R package similar to Plumber but uses a more programmatic approach to constructing the API.
plumber was originally released as the rapier
package and has since been renamed (7/13/2015).