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The purpose of cmdfun
is to significantly reduce the
overhead involved in wrapping shell programs in R. The tools are
intended to be intuitive and lightweight enough to use for data
scientists trying to get things done quickly, but robust and
full-fledged enough for developers to extend them to more advanced use
cases.
Install the development version of cmdfun
with:
if (!requireNamespace("remotes"))
install.packages("remotes")
::install_github("snystrom/cmdfun") remotes
The cmdfun
framework provides mechanisms for capturing
function arguments:
cmd_args_dots()
captures all arguments passed to
...
cmd_args_named()
captures all keyword arguments defined
by the usercmd_args_all()
captures both named + dot argumentslibrary(cmdfun)
<- function(input, ...){
myFunction cmd_args_all()
}
<- myFunction(input = "test", boolean_flag = TRUE)) (argsList
## $input
## [1] "test"
##
## $boolean_flag
## [1] TRUE
cmd_list_interp
converts the captured argument list to a
parsed list of flag/value pairs.
<- cmd_list_interp(argsList)) (flagsList
## $input
## [1] "test"
##
## $boolean_flag
## [1] ""
cmd_list_to_flags
converts a list to a vector of
commandline-style flags using the list names as flag names and the list
values as the flag values (empty values return only the flag). This
output can be directly fed to system2
or
processx
.
cmd_list_to_flags(flagsList)
## [1] "-input" "test" "-boolean_flag"
cmd_path_search()
allows package builders to search
default locations for installed tools.
<- cmd_path_search(default_path = "/bin", utils = c("ls", "cut"))
bin_path
bin_path(util = "ls")
## [1] "//bin/ls"
cmdfun
attempts to solve the problem of wrapping
external software in R. Calling external software is done with
system2
or processx
.
For example, calling ls -l *.md
using
system2
.
system2("ls", "-l *.md", stdout = TRUE)
## [1] "-rw-r--r-- 1 snystrom its_employee_psx 1077 Aug 20 19:20 LICENSE.md"
## [2] "-rw-r--r-- 1 snystrom its_employee_psx 837 Aug 26 21:51 NEWS.md"
## [3] "-rw-r--r-- 1 snystrom its_employee_psx 7718 Aug 26 20:14 README.md"
## [4] "-rw-r--r-- 1 snystrom its_employee_psx 744 Aug 26 21:35 cran-comments.md"
However, when using multiple commandline flags each flag should be passed as a member of a character vector as follows:
When calling ls -l -i
system2("ls", c("-l", "-i", "*.md"), stdout = TRUE)
## [1] "1163031755 -rw-r--r-- 1 snystrom its_employee_psx 1077 Aug 20 19:20 LICENSE.md"
## [2] "1163031757 -rw-r--r-- 1 snystrom its_employee_psx 837 Aug 26 21:51 NEWS.md"
## [3] "1163031758 -rw-r--r-- 1 snystrom its_employee_psx 7718 Aug 26 20:14 README.md"
## [4] "1163031762 -rw-r--r-- 1 snystrom its_employee_psx 744 Aug 26 21:35 cran-comments.md"
This becomes even more difficult if trying to support user input, as a significant amount of overhead is required to parse user inputs and optional flags into these vectors.
cmdfun
provides utilities for converting
function arguments into lists which
can easily convert to character vectors suitable for
use with system2
or processx
.
library(cmdfun)
<- function(input, option1){
myFunction # Grabs named arguments as key/value pairs
cmd_args_named()
}
<- myFunction("myInput.txt", "foo")) (argsList
## $input
## [1] "myInput.txt"
##
## $option1
## [1] "foo"
# Converts list to character vector of flags & values
cmd_list_to_flags(argsList)
## [1] "-input" "myInput.txt" "-option1" "foo"
ls
with
cmdfunThese tools can be used to easily wrap ls
library(magrittr)
<- function(dir = ".", ...){
shell_ls # grab arguments passed to "..." in a list
<- cmd_args_dots() %>%
flags # prepare list for conversion to vector
cmd_list_interp() %>%
# Convert the list to a flag vector
cmd_list_to_flags()
# Run ls shell command
system2("ls", c(flags, dir), stdout = TRUE)
}
shell_ls("*.md")
## [1] "LICENSE.md" "NEWS.md" "README.md" "cran-comments.md"
ls -l
can be mimicked by passing l = TRUE
to ‘…’.
shell_ls("*.md", l = TRUE)
## [1] "-rw-r--r-- 1 snystrom its_employee_psx 1077 Aug 20 19:20 LICENSE.md"
## [2] "-rw-r--r-- 1 snystrom its_employee_psx 837 Aug 26 21:51 NEWS.md"
## [3] "-rw-r--r-- 1 snystrom its_employee_psx 7718 Aug 26 20:14 README.md"
## [4] "-rw-r--r-- 1 snystrom its_employee_psx 744 Aug 26 21:35 cran-comments.md"
Commandline tools can have hundreds of arguments, many with
uninformative, often single-letter, names. To prevent developers from
having to write aliased function arguments for all, often conflicting
flags, cmd_list_interp
can additionally use a lookup table
to allow developers to provide informative function argument names for
unintuitive flags.
For example, allowing long
to act as -l
in
ls
.
<- function(dir = ".", ...){
shell_ls_alias
# Named vector acts as lookup table
# name = function argument
# value = flag name
<- c("long" = "l")
names_arg_to_flag
<- cmd_args_dots() %>%
flags # Use lookup table to manage renames
cmd_list_interp(names_arg_to_flag) %>%
cmd_list_to_flags()
system2("ls", c(flags, dir), stdout = TRUE)
}
shell_ls_alias("*.md", long = TRUE)
## [1] "-rw-r--r-- 1 snystrom its_employee_psx 1077 Aug 20 19:20 LICENSE.md"
## [2] "-rw-r--r-- 1 snystrom its_employee_psx 837 Aug 26 21:51 NEWS.md"
## [3] "-rw-r--r-- 1 snystrom its_employee_psx 7718 Aug 26 20:14 README.md"
## [4] "-rw-r--r-- 1 snystrom its_employee_psx 744 Aug 26 21:35 cran-comments.md"
cut
with
cmdfunHere is another example wrapping cut
which separates
text on a delimiter (set with -d
) and returns selected
fields (set with -f
) from the separation.
<- function(text, ...){
shell_cut
<- c("sep" = "d",
names_arg_to_flag "fields" = "f")
<- cmd_args_dots() %>%
flags cmd_list_interp(names_arg_to_flag) %>%
cmd_list_to_flags()
system2("cut", flags, stdout = T, input = text)
}
shell_cut("hello_world", fields = 2, sep = "_")
## [1] "world"
shell_cut("hello_world_hello", fields = c(1,3), sep = "_")
## [1] "hello_hello"
Additionally, cmdfun
provides utilites for searching
& checking valid tool installs, expecting system behavior, and
helpful error handling to allow simple construction of external tool
wrappers (see vignette
for details).
See https://snystrom.github.io/cmdfun/articles/cmdfun.html
for the most recent documentation and to learn about all
cmdfun
features.
To file bug reports, please visit https://github.com/snystrom/cmdfun/issues while providing a reproducible example of your issue.
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.
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