Install R Packages from GitHub, BitBucket, or other local or remote repositories
Download and install R packages stored in GitHub,
BitBucket, or plain subversion or git repositories. This package
is a lightweight replacement of the install_*
functions in
devtools
.
Indeed most of the code was copied over from devtools
.
- Installers:
- Install packages with their dependencies.
- Install from GitHub, GitLab, BitBucket.
- Install from git and subversion repositories.
- Install from local files or URLs.
- Install the dependencies of a local package tree.
- Install specific package versions from CRAN.
- Supports BioConductor packages.
- Supports the
Remotes
field inDESCRIPTION
. See more here. - Supports the
Additional_repositories
field inDESCRIPTION
. - Can install itself from GitHub (see below).
- Does not depend on other R packages.
- Does not contain compiled code, so no compiler is needed.
- Does not need any external software (for most of the functionality at least).
Install the relesed version of remotes from CRAN:
install.packages("remotes")
You can also install remotes from GitHub. If you already have a previous version of remotes installed, you can use that to install the development version:
remotes::install_github("r-lib/remotes")
Alternatively, you can also call the supplied install-github.R
file
directly, from within R:
source("https://raw.githubusercontent.com/r-lib/remotes/master/install-github.R")$value("r-lib/remotes")
The https://install-github.me service is also based on remotes. You can use it to install any R package from GitHub via sourcing a URL. E.g. to install remotes itself:
source("https://install-github.me/r-lib/remotes")
Note that most of the examples here use GitHub. See below for other supported repository types.
To install the latest version of a package in the master
branch from
GitHub, you can use the user/repo
form. Note that user
can also be
an organization:
remotes::install_github("r-lib/conflicted")
If the R package is inside a subdirectory of the root directory, then give this subdirectory as well:
remotes::install_github("dmlc/xgboost/R-package")
To install a certain branch or commit or tag, append it to the
repo name, after an @
:
remotes::install_github("gaborcsardi/pkgconfig@v2.0.0")
To install the latest release, append @*release
to the repo
name:
remotes::install_github("gaborcsardi/pkgconfig@*release")
To install a pull request, append #
and the id (an integer number)
of the pull request to the repo name:
remotes::install_github("r-lib/pkgconfig#7")
Dependencies are automatically installed from CRAN. By default, outdated dependencies are automatically upgraded. In interactive sessions you can select a subset of the dependencies to upgrade.
It is also possible to install dependencies from GitHub or other
supported repositories. For this you need to add a Remotes
field to the
DESCRIPTION
file. Its format is:
Remotes: [remote::]repo_spec, [remote::]repo_spec, ...
where repo_spec
is any repository specification the corresponding
install_()
function can handle. If remote::
is missing, github::
is
assumed. Other possible values: gitlab::
,bitbucket::
, git::
, local::
,
svn::
, url::
, version::
, cran::
, bioc::
.
See more about the Remotes
field in this
vignette.
remotes supports the Additional_repositories
field in
DESCRIPTION
. This is a way to specify dependencies from non-CRAN
package repositories. See the Writing R extensions
manual for details.
BioConductor packages are automatically detected and their dependencies are installed from BioConductor. The BiocInstaller package, which is needed to install them, is also automatically installed temporarily.
- GitHub repositories via
install_github
. - Bitbucket repositories via
install_bitbucket
. - Generic git repositories via
install_git
. They need either a system git installation, or the git2r R package. - Local directories or package archive files via
install_local
. - Remote package archive files via
install_url
. - Packages in subversion repositories via
install_svn
. They need a system subversion installation. - Specific package versions from CRAN or other CRAN-like
repositories via
install_version
. This includes outdated and archived packages as well. - All dependencies of a package in a local directory via
install_deps
.
- For R older than 3.2, the curl package is required as remotes falls back
to
curl::curl_download
in that case - For R newer than 3.3, default
download.file()
method is used. (method = "auto"
) - For in between versions,
method = "wininet"
is used on windows OSmethod = "libcurl"
is used on other OS, if available.
See help("download.file")
for informations on these methods and for
setting proxies if needed.
remotes will use the curl, git2r and pkgbuild packages if they are installed to provide faster implementations for some aspects of the install process. However if you are using remotes to install or update these packages (or their reverse dependencies) using them during installation may fail (particularly on Windows).
If you set the environment variable R_REMOTES_STANDALONE=true
(e.g.
in R Sys.setenv(R_REMOTES_STANDALONE="true")
) you can force remotes to
operate in standalone mode and use only its internal R implementations. This
will allow successful installation of these packages.
remotes uses the following stardard R options, see ?options
for their
details:
-
download.file.method
for the default download method. See?download.file
. -
pkgType
for the package type (source or binary, see manual) to install, download or look up dependencies for. -
repos
for the locations of the user's standard CRAN(-like) repositoies.
It also uses some remotes specific options:
-
BioC_git
for the URL of the default BioConductor git mirror. -
unzip
for the path of the externalunzip
program.
-
The
BITBUCKET_USER
andBITBUCKET_PASSWORD
enrironment variables are used for the default BitBucket user name and password, ininstall_bitbucket()
-
The
GITHUB_PAT
environment variable is used as the default GitHub personal access token for all GitHub API queries. -
The
R_REMOTES_UPGRADE
environment variable can be used to set a default preferred value for theupgrade =
argument accepted by the variousinstall_*()
functions. For example, you can setR_REMOTES_UPGRADE=always
to upgrade dependent packages without asking the user. -
Setting
R_REMOTES_STANDALONE=true
forces remotes to work in standalone mode and avoid loading its optional dependencies (curl, git2 and pkgbuild currently. See "Standalone mode" above. -
Setting
R_REMOTES_NO_ERRORS_FROM_WARNINGS=true
avoids stopping the installation for warning messages. Warnings usually mean installation errors, so by default remotes stops for a warning. However, sometimes other warnings might happen, that could be ignored by setting this environment variable. -
Setting
_R_CHECK_FORCE_SUGGESTS_=false
whileR_REMOTES_NO_ERRORS_FROM_WARNINGS
is unset will also avoid stopping the installation for error messages. This is done because a warning is generated during installation when not all Suggested packages are not available.
GPL (>= 2) © Mango Solutions, RStudio