The renv
package helps you create reproducible environments for
your R projects. Use renv
to make your R projects more:
Isolated: Installing a new or updated package for one project won't break
your other projects, and vice versa. That's because renv
gives each project
its own private package library.
Portable: Easily transport your projects from one computer to another, even
across different platforms. renv
makes it easy to install the packages your
project depends on.
Reproducible: renv
records the exact package versions you depend on, and
ensures those exact versions are the ones that get installed wherever you go.
Install the latest version of renv
from CRAN with:
install.packages("renv")
You can also install the development version of renv
from R-universe with:
install.packages("renv", repos = "https://rstudio.r-universe.dev")
Use renv::init()
to initialize renv
with a new or existing project. This
will set up your project with a private library, and also make sure to install
all of the packages you're using into that library. The packages used in your
project will be recorded into a lockfile, called renv.lock
.
As you work in your project, you may need to install or upgrade different
packages. As these packages are installed, renv
will automatically write
renv.lock
for you. The renv.lock
lockfile records the state of your project's
private library, and can be used to restore the state of that library as required.
Later, if you need to port your project to a new machine, you can call
renv::restore()
to reinstall all of the packages as declared in the lockfile.
You can browse the package documentation online at https://rstudio.github.io/renv/.
If this is your first time using renv
, we strongly recommend reading the
Introduction to renv
vignette.
If you have a question about renv
, please first check the
FAQ to see whether your
question has already been addressed. If it hasn't, please feel free to either
ask on the RStudio Community forums.
If you believe you've found a bug in renv
, please file a bug (and, if
possible, a reproducible example) at
https://github.com/rstudio/renv/issues.