libr
Managing R with .Rprofile, .Renviron, Rprofile.site, Renviron.site, rsession.conf, and repos.conf
Upon startup, R and RStudio IDE look for a few different files you can use to control the behavior of your R session, for example by setting options or environment variables. In the context of Posi...
This article is a practical guide to how to set particular options on R startup. General information on how to manage R package environments is available at solutions.posit.co , and a deeper treatment of R process startup is available in this article.
Here is a summary table of how to control R options and environment variables on startup. More details are below.
File Who Controls Level Limitations
.Rprofile User or Admin User or Project None, sourced as R code.
.Renviron User or Admin User or Project Set environment variables only.
Rprofile.site Admin Version of R None, sourced as R code.
Renviron.site Admin Version of R Set environment variables only.
rsession.conf Admin Server Only RStudio IDE settings, only single repository.
repos.conf Admin Server Only for setting repositories.
.Rprofile
.Rprofile files are user-controllable files to set options and environment variables. .Rprofile files can be either at the user or project level. User-level .Rprofile files live in the base of the user's home directory, and project-level .Rprofile files live in the base of the project directory.
R will source only one .Rprofile file. So if you have both a project-specific .Rprofile file and a user .Rprofile file that you want to use, you explicitly source the user-level .Rprofile at the top of your project-level .Rprofile with source("~/.Rprofile").
.Rprofile files are sourced as regular R code, so setting environment variables must be done inside a Sys.setenv(key = "value") call.
One easy way to edit your .Rprofile file is to use the usethis::edit_r_profile() function from within an R session. You can specify whether you want to edit the user or project level .Rprofile.
.Renviron
.Renviron is a user-controllable file that can be used to create environment variables. This is especially useful to avoid including credentials like API keys inside R scripts. This file is written in a key-value format, so environment variables are created in the format:
Key1=value1
Key2=value2
...
And then Sys.getenv("Key1") will return "value1" in an R session.
Like with the .Rprofile file, .Renviron files can be at either the user or project level. If there is a project-level .Renviron, the user-level file will not be sourced. The usethis package includes a helper function for editing .Renviron files from an R session with usethis::edit_r_environ().
Rprofile.site and Renviron.site
Both .Rprofile and .Renviron files have equivalents that apply server wide. Rprofile.site andRenviron.site (no leading dot) files are managed by admins on Posit Workbench or RStudio Server, and are specific to a particular version of R. The most common settings for these files involve access to package repositories. For example, using the shared-baseline package management strategy is generally done from an Rprofile.site.
Users can override settings in these files with their individual .Rprofile files.
These files are set for each version of R and should be located in R_HOME/etc/. You can find R_HOME by running the command R.home(component = "home") in a session of that version of R. So, for example, if you find that R_HOME is /opt/R/3.6.2/lib/R, the Rprofile.site for R 3.6.2 would go in /opt/R/3.6.2/lib/R/etc/Rprofile.site.
rsession.conf and repos.conf
Posit Workbench and RStudio Server allows server admins to configure particular server-wide R package repositories via the rsession.conf and repos.conf files. Only one repository can be configured in rsession.conf. If multiple repositories are needed, repos.conf should be used. Details on configuring Posit Workbench and RStudio Server with these files are in this support article.
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