Description Usage Arguments Details Cache scoping Interactive plots See Also Examples
Renders a reactive plot, with plot images cached to disk.
1 2 3 | renderCachedPlot(expr, cacheKeyExpr, sizePolicy = sizeGrowthRatio(width =
400, height = 400, growthRate = 1.2), res = 72, cache = "app", ...,
outputArgs = list())
|
expr |
An expression that generates a plot. |
cacheKeyExpr |
An expression that returns a cache key. This key should be a unique identifier for a plot: the assumption is that if the cache key is the same, then the plot will be the same. |
sizePolicy |
A function that takes two arguments, |
res |
The resolution of the PNG, in pixels per inch. |
cache |
The scope of the cache, or a cache object. This can be
|
... |
Arguments to be passed through to |
outputArgs |
A list of arguments to be passed through to the implicit
call to |
expr
is an expression that generates a plot, similar to that in
renderPlot
. Unlike with renderPlot
, this expression does not
take reactive dependencies. It is re-executed only when the cache key
changes.
cacheKeyExpr
is an expression which, when evaluated, returns an object
which will be serialized and hashed using the digest
function to generate a string that will be used as a cache key. This key is
used to identify the contents of the plot: if the cache key is the same as a
previous time, it assumes that the plot is the same and can be retrieved from
the cache.
This cacheKeyExpr
is reactive, and so it will be re-evaluated when any
upstream reactives are invalidated. This will also trigger re-execution of
the plotting expression, expr
.
The key should consist of "normal" R objects, like vectors and lists. Lists should in turn contain other normal R objects. If the key contains environments, external pointers, or reference objects – or even if it has such objects attached as attributes – then it is possible that it will change unpredictably even when you do not expect it to. Additionally, because the entire key is serialized and hashed, if it contains a very large object – a large data set, for example – there may be a noticeable performance penalty.
If you face these issues with the cache key, you can work around them by
extracting out the important parts of the objects, and/or by converting them
to normal R objects before returning them. Your expression could even
serialize and hash that information in an efficient way and return a string,
which will in turn be hashed (very quickly) by the
digest
function.
Internally, the result from cacheKeyExpr
is combined with the name of
the output (if you assign it to output$plot1
, it will be combined
with "plot1"
) to form the actual key that is used. As a result, even
if there are multiple plots that have the same cacheKeyExpr
, they
will not have cache key collisions.
There are a number of different ways you may want to scope the cache. For example, you may want each user session to have their own plot cache, or you may want each run of the application to have a cache (shared among possibly multiple simultaneous user sessions), or you may want to have a cache that persists even after the application is shut down and started again.
To control the scope of the cache, use the cache
parameter. There
are two ways of having Shiny automatically create and clean up the disk
cache.
To scope the cache to one run of a Shiny application (shared
among possibly multiple user sessions), use cache="app"
. This
is the default. The cache will be shared across multiple sessions, so
there is potentially a large performance benefit if there are many users
of the application. When the application stops running, the cache will
be deleted. If plots cannot be safely shared across users, this should
not be used.
To scope the cache to one session, use cache="session"
.
When a new user session starts – in other words, when a web browser
visits the Shiny application – a new cache will be created on disk
for that session. When the session ends, the cache will be deleted.
The cache will not be shared across multiple sessions.
If either "app"
or "session"
is used, the cache will be 10 MB
in size, and will be stored stored in memory, using a
memoryCache
object. Note that the cache space will be shared
among all cached plots within a single application or session.
In some cases, you may want more control over the caching behavior. For example, you may want to use a larger or smaller cache, share a cache among multiple R processes, or you may want the cache to persist across multiple runs of an application, or even across multiple R processes.
To use different settings for an application-scoped cache, you can call
shinyOptions()
at the top of your app.R, server.R, or
global.R. For example, this will create a cache with 20 MB of space
instead of the default 10 MB:
1 2 | shinyOptions(cache = memoryCache(size = 20e6))
|
To use different settings for a session-scoped cache, you can call
shinyOptions()
at the top of your server function. To use
the session-scoped cache, you must also call renderCachedPlot
with
cache="session"
. This will create a 20 MB cache for the session:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 | function(input, output, session) {
shinyOptions(cache = memoryCache(size = 20e6))
output$plot <- renderCachedPlot(
...,
cache = "session"
)
}
|
If you want to create a cache that is shared across multiple concurrent
R processes, you can use a diskCache
. You can create an
application-level shared cache by putting this at the top of your app.R,
server.R, or global.R:
1 2 | shinyOptions(cache = diskCache(file.path(dirname(tempdir()), "myapp-cache"))
|
This will create a subdirectory in your system temp directory named
myapp-cache
(replace myapp-cache
with a unique name of
your choosing). On most platforms, this directory will be removed when
your system reboots. This cache will persist across multiple starts and
stops of the R process, as long as you do not reboot.
To have the cache persist even across multiple reboots, you can create the cache in a location outside of the temp directory. For example, it could be a subdirectory of the application:
1 2 | shinyOptions(cache = diskCache("./myapp-cache"))
|
In this case, resetting the cache will have to be done manually, by deleting the directory.
You can also scope a cache to just one plot, or selected plots. To do that,
create a memoryCache
or diskCache
, and pass it
as the cache
argument of renderCachedPlot
.
renderCachedPlot
can be used to create interactive plots. See
plotOutput
for more information and examples.
See renderPlot
for the regular, non-cached version of
this function. For more about configuring caches, see
memoryCache
and diskCache
.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 | ## Only run examples in interactive R sessions
if (interactive()) {
# A basic example that uses the default app-scoped memory cache.
# The cache will be shared among all simultaneous users of the application.
shinyApp(
fluidPage(
sidebarLayout(
sidebarPanel(
sliderInput("n", "Number of points", 4, 32, value = 8, step = 4)
),
mainPanel(plotOutput("plot"))
)
),
function(input, output, session) {
output$plot <- renderCachedPlot({
Sys.sleep(2) # Add an artificial delay
seqn <- seq_len(input$n)
plot(mtcars$wt[seqn], mtcars$mpg[seqn],
xlim = range(mtcars$wt), ylim = range(mtcars$mpg))
},
cacheKeyExpr = { list(input$n) }
)
}
)
# An example uses a data object shared across sessions. mydata() is part of
# the cache key, so when its value changes, plots that were previously
# stored in the cache will no longer be used (unless mydata() changes back
# to its previous value).
mydata <- reactiveVal(data.frame(x = rnorm(400), y = rnorm(400)))
ui <- fluidPage(
sidebarLayout(
sidebarPanel(
sliderInput("n", "Number of points", 50, 400, 100, step = 50),
actionButton("newdata", "New data")
),
mainPanel(
plotOutput("plot")
)
)
)
server <- function(input, output, session) {
observeEvent(input$newdata, {
mydata(data.frame(x = rnorm(400), y = rnorm(400)))
})
output$plot <- renderCachedPlot(
{
Sys.sleep(2)
d <- mydata()
seqn <- seq_len(input$n)
plot(d$x[seqn], d$y[seqn], xlim = range(d$x), ylim = range(d$y))
},
cacheKeyExpr = { list(input$n, mydata()) },
)
}
shinyApp(ui, server)
# A basic application with two plots, where each plot in each session has
# a separate cache.
shinyApp(
fluidPage(
sidebarLayout(
sidebarPanel(
sliderInput("n", "Number of points", 4, 32, value = 8, step = 4)
),
mainPanel(
plotOutput("plot1"),
plotOutput("plot2")
)
)
),
function(input, output, session) {
output$plot1 <- renderCachedPlot({
Sys.sleep(2) # Add an artificial delay
seqn <- seq_len(input$n)
plot(mtcars$wt[seqn], mtcars$mpg[seqn],
xlim = range(mtcars$wt), ylim = range(mtcars$mpg))
},
cacheKeyExpr = { list(input$n) },
cache = memoryCache()
)
output$plot2 <- renderCachedPlot({
Sys.sleep(2) # Add an artificial delay
seqn <- seq_len(input$n)
plot(mtcars$wt[seqn], mtcars$mpg[seqn],
xlim = range(mtcars$wt), ylim = range(mtcars$mpg))
},
cacheKeyExpr = { list(input$n) },
cache = memoryCache()
)
}
)
}
## Not run:
# At the top of app.R, this set the application-scoped cache to be a memory
# cache that is 20 MB in size, and where cached objects expire after one
# hour.
shinyOptions(cache = memoryCache(max_size = 20e6, max_age = 3600))
# At the top of app.R, this set the application-scoped cache to be a disk
# cache that can be shared among multiple concurrent R processes, and is
# deleted when the system reboots.
shinyOptions(cache = diskCache(file.path(dirname(tempdir()), "myapp-cache"))
# At the top of app.R, this set the application-scoped cache to be a disk
# cache that can be shared among multiple concurrent R processes, and
# persists on disk across reboots.
shinyOptions(cache = diskCache("./myapp-cache"))
# At the top of the server function, this set the session-scoped cache to be
# a memory cache that is 5 MB in size.
server <- function(input, output, session) {
shinyOptions(cache = memoryCache(max_size = 5e6))
output$plot <- renderCachedPlot(
...,
cache = "session"
)
}
## End(Not run)
|
Add the following code to your website.
For more information on customizing the embed code, read Embedding Snippets.