Makes it easier for other R packages or R projects to integrate with the
RStudio Connections Contract. It provides several options to describe
the structure of your connection. One of the options provided by
rscontract
is to use a YAML file that can contain the structure of the
connection, and easily convert that into a proper RStudio Connections
contract with a couple of lines of
code:
It provides two levels of integration abstraction with the Connections pane:
rscontract_spec()
(higher) - Enables the user to pass a hierarchical list to describe the structure of the connection (catalog/schema/table). The defaults are setup so you can open a very simple connection without changing any arguments. The idea is to allow you to easily iterate through small argument changes as you are learning how the Connection pane works.rscontract_ide()
(lower) - The arguments of this function matches one-to-one with the expected entries needed to open a Connection pane.
The as_rscontract()
function converts a variable into the same format
that rscontract_ide()
returns. This makes it possible for objects such
as list
s returned by yaml::read_yaml()
to work.
There are three functions that actually interact with the RStudio IDE:
rscontract_open()
- Opens the Connection pane. It requires a properly formatted Connections pane provided by therscontract_spec()
,rscontract_ide()
, oras_rscontract()
functions.rscontract_update()
- Refreshes the already opened Connections panerscontract_close()
- Closes the Connections pane.
You can install the development version from GitHub with:
# install.packages("remotes")
remotes::install_github("rstudio/rscontract")
The stock output of rscontract_spec()
is loaded into a variable
spec
. This way it is possible to display its contents before using it
to open a new connection.
library(rscontract)
library(rscontract)
spec <- rscontract_spec()
str(spec)
#> List of 13
#> $ connection_object: NULL
#> $ type : chr "spec_type"
#> $ host : chr "spec_host"
#> $ icon : NULL
#> $ name : chr ""
#> $ connect_script : chr "library(connections)\n[Place your code here]"
#> $ disconnect_code : chr "function() rscontract_close('spec_host', 'spec_type')"
#> $ preview_code : chr "function(){}"
#> $ catalog_list : chr "sample_catalog()"
#> $ object_types : chr "default_types()"
#> $ object_list : NULL
#> $ object_columns : NULL
#> $ actions : NULL
#> - attr(*, "class")= chr "rscontract_spec"
The connection can now be opened with spec
.
rscontract_open(spec)
Notice above the values of the type
and host
entries inside spec
.
Those are the two pieces of information needed by RStudio to identify
the connection that needs to be updated, or
closed.
rscontract
comes with a basic example accessible via the
sample_catalog()
function. By default, rscontract_spec()
uses
sample_catalog()
in the object_types
entry to automatically give you
working sample Connections pane.
rscontract_update("spec_host", "spec_type")
After closing the connection, the content from the connect_script
variable can be
seen.
rscontract_close("spec_host", "spec_type")
To start creating your own connection setup, simply modify the arguments
in rscontract_spec()
that you wish to test. Here is an example of a
few modifications that are possible to make:
spec <- rscontract_spec(
type = "my_type",
host = "my_host",
icon = system.file("images", "rstudio-icon.png", package = "rscontract"),
name = "Modified Name",
connect_script = "[This is my connection code]",
disconnect_code = "function() rscontract_close('my_host', 'my_type')",
preview_code = "function(catalog, schema, table, limit) data.frame(catalog, schema, table, limit)"
)
rscontract_open(spec)
The Connections pane also give you the ability to add custom buttons at
the top of the pane. These can be setup to run a specific R instruction
once clicked. To add them simply modify the action
entry in the spec.
In the example below, “hello” is sent to the R Console when ‘Button 1’
is clicked.
spec$actions <- list(
"Button 1" = list(
icon = system.file("images", "rstudio-icon.png", package = "rscontract"),
callback = function() print("hello")
)
)
rscontract_open(spec)
#> rscontract_open(spec)
#> [1] "hello"
To add flexibility, wrap the list preparation inside a function:
spec_function <- function(x, message) {
x$actions <- list(
"Button 1" = list(
icon = system.file("images", "rstudio-icon.png", package = "rscontract"),
callback = function() print(message)
))
x
}
rscontract_open(spec_function(spec, "test"))
#> rscontract_open(spec_function(spec, "test"))
#> [1] "test"
rscontract_close("my_host", "my_type")
A YAML file can be used to create the connection. The structure and name
of each field has to match to what is expected by rscontract
. The
example below shows a basic example of the names and the expected type
of input. By default, the content in the following fields will be
evaluated is if it was R code:
disconnect_code
preview_code
Here is an sample file included as part of the rscontract
package:
name: My Connection
type: my_connection
host: hosted_here
connect_script: my_function_connect(path = "myfile.txt")
disconnect_code: function() rscontract_close("hosted_here", "my_connection")
preview_code: function(table, view, ...) c(table, view)
catalog_list:
catalogs:
name: my_catalog
type: catalog
schemas:
- name: my_schema
type: schema
tables:
- name: my_table
type: table
fields:
- name: field1
type: nbr
- name: field2
type: chr
The key of using a YAML file, is to coerce it into a contract format
using as_rscontract()
. Then use rscontract_open()
to start the
connection.
# Obtains the path to the sample YAML file
contract_file <- system.file("specs", "simple.yml", package = "rscontract")
# Reads the YAML file using the `yaml` package
contract <- yaml::read_yaml(contract_file)
# Coerces list into a contract spec
spec <- as_rscontract(contract)
# Opens the connection
rscontract_open(spec)
In order to pass R code instead of the value, then use a sub-entry
called code
for the entry you wish to modify.
name:
code: toupper("my_title")
type:
code: tolower("TYPE")
host: host
connect_script: Place connection code here
disconnect_code: function() rscontract_close("host", "type")
preview_code: function(table, view, ...) c(table, view)
catalog_list:
catalogs:
name: my_catalog
type: catalog
schemas:
- name: my_schema1
type: schema
tables:
- name: my_view1
type: view
fields:
code: list(list(name = "ext_function", type = "int"))
contract_file <- system.file("specs", "full.yml", package = "rscontract")
contract <- yaml::read_yaml(contract_file)
spec <- as_rscontract(contract)
rscontract_open(spec)
Here is an example of a Contract with multiple Schemata:
name: displayName
type: type
host: host
connect_script: Place connection code here
disconnect_code: function() rscontract_close("host", "type")
preview_code: function(table, view, ...) c(table, view)
catalog_list:
catalogs:
name: my_catalog
type: catalog
schemas:
- name: my_schema1
type: schema
tables:
- name: my_table1
type: table
fields:
- name: field1
type: nbr
- name: field2
type: chr
- name: my_view1
type: view
fields:
- name: field3
type: nbr
- name: field4
type: chr
- name: my_schema2
type: schema
tables:
- name: my_table4
type: table
fields:
- name: field5
type: nbr
- name: field6
type: chr
- name: my_view2
type: view
fields:
- name: field7
type: nbr
- name: field8
type: chr
contract_file <- system.file("specs", "two-schemas.yml", package = "rscontract")
contract <- yaml::read_yaml(contract_file)
spec <- as_rscontract(contract)
rscontract_open(spec)