packageRank: compute and visualize package download counts and rank percentiles
‘packageRank’ is an R
package that helps put package download counts into context. It does so
via two core functions, cranDownloads()
and packageRank()
, a set of
filters that reduces package download count inflation, and other
assorted functions that help you assess interest in your package.
I discuss these topics in four sections; a fifth discusses package related issues.
- I Package Download Counts
describes how
cranDownloads()
extends the functionality ofcranlogs::cran_downloads()
by adding a more user-friendly interface and by providing a generic Rplot()
method that makes visualization easy. - II Package Download Rank
Percentiles
describes how
packageRank()
uses rank percentiles, a nonparametric statistic that tells you the percentage of packages with fewer downloads, to help you see how your package is doing relative to all other CRAN packages. - III Package Download Filters describes the functions that filter out software and behavioral artifacts from the download logs which contribute to inflated download counts.
- IV Other Functions describes six other ‘packageRank’ functions that help you better understand interest in your package.
- V Notes discusses issues associated with country code top-level domains, memoization, time zone effects, and the internet connection time out problem.
getting started
To install ‘packageRank’ from CRAN:
install.packages("packageRank")
To install the development version from GitHub:
# You may need to first install 'remotes' via install.packages("remotes").
remotes::install_github("lindbrook/packageRank", build_vignettes = TRUE)
Note that ‘packageRank’ has two upstream online dependencies: 1) RStudio’s CRAN package download logs, which records traffic to the “0-Cloud” mirror at cloud.r-project.org (formerly RStudio’s CRAN mirror); and 2) Gábor Csárdi’s ‘cranlogs’ R package, which is an interface to a database that computes R and R package download counts using the aforementioned logs.
When everything is working right, the CRAN package download logs for the previous day will be posted by 17:00 UTC and the results for ‘cranlogs’ will be available soon after. However, occasionally problems with “today’s” data can emerge due to the downstream nature of the dependencies (illustrated below).
CRAN Download Logs --> 'cranlogs' --> 'packageRank'
If there’s a problem with the logs (e.g., they’re not posted on time), both ‘cranlogs’ and ‘packageRank’ will be affected. Here, depending on the function you’ll see things like an unexpected zero count(s) for your package(s) (actually, it’s zero downloads for all of CRAN), data from “yesterday”, or a “Log is not (yet) on the server” error message.
If there’s a problem with ‘cranlogs’ but not with the logs, only packageRank::cranDownalods() will be affected (the zero downloads problem). All the other ‘packageRank’ functions should work since they directly access the logs.
Usually, these errors resolve themselves the next time the underlying scripts are run (typically “tomorrow”, if not sooner).
I - computing package download counts
cranDownloads()
uses all the same arguments as
cranlogs::cran_downloads()
:
cranlogs::cran_downloads(packages = "HistData")
> date count package
> 1 2020-05-01 338 HistData
The only difference is that cranDownloads()
adds four features:
i) “spell check” for package names
cranDownloads(packages = "GGplot2")
## Error in cranDownloads(packages = "GGplot2") :
## GGplot2: misspelled or not on CRAN.
cranDownloads(packages = "ggplot2")
> date count cumulative package
> 1 2020-05-01 56357 56357 ggplot2
This also works for inactive or “retired” packages in the Archive:
cranDownloads(packages = "vr")
## Error in cranDownloads(packages = "vr") :
## vr: misspelled or not on CRAN/Archive.
cranDownloads(packages = "VR")
> date count cumulative package
> 1 2020-05-01 11 11 VR
ii) two additional date formats
With cranlogs::cran_downloads()
, you specify a time frame using the
from
and to
arguments. The downside of this is that you must use
the “yyyy-mm-dd” date format. For convenience’s sake, cranDownloads()
also allows you to use “yyyy-mm” or “yyyy” (yyyy also works).
“yyyy-mm”
Let’s say you want the download counts for
‘HistData’ for February
2020. With cranlogs::cran_downloads()
, you’d have to type out the
whole date and remember that 2020 was a leap year:
cranlogs::cran_downloads(packages = "HistData", from = "2020-02-01",
to = "2020-02-29")
With cranDownloads()
, you can just specify the year and month:
cranDownloads(packages = "HistData", from = "2020-02", to = "2020-02")
“yyyy” or yyyy
Let’s say you want the year-to-date download counts for
‘rstan’. With
cranlogs::cran_downloads()
, you’d type something like:
cranlogs::cran_downloads(packages = "rstan", from = "2022-01-01",
to = Sys.Date() - 1)
With cranDownloads()
, you can use:
cranDownloads(packages = "rstan", from = "2022")
or
cranDownloads(packages = "rstan", from = 2022)
iii) check date validity
cranDownloads(packages = "HistData", from = "2019-01-15",
to = "2019-01-35")
## Error in resolveDate(to, type = "to") : Not a valid date.
iv) cumulative count
cranDownloads(packages = "HistData", when = "last-week")
> date count cumulative package
> 1 2020-05-01 338 338 HistData
> 2 2020-05-02 259 597 HistData
> 3 2020-05-03 321 918 HistData
> 4 2020-05-04 344 1262 HistData
> 5 2020-05-05 324 1586 HistData
> 6 2020-05-06 356 1942 HistData
> 7 2020-05-07 324 2266 HistData
visualizing package download counts
cranDownloads()
makes visualizing package downloads easy. Just use
plot()
:
plot(cranDownloads(packages = "HistData", from = "2019", to = "2019"))
If you pass a vector of package names for a single day, plot()
returns
a dotchart:
plot(cranDownloads(packages = c("ggplot2", "data.table", "Rcpp"),
from = "2020-03-01", to = "2020-03-01"))
If you pass a vector of package names for multiple days, plot()
uses
ggplot2
facets:
plot(cranDownloads(packages = c("ggplot2", "data.table", "Rcpp"),
from = "2020", to = "2020-03-20"))
If you want to plot those data in a single frame, set
multi.plot = TRUE
:
plot(cranDownloads(packages = c("ggplot2", "data.table", "Rcpp"),
from = "2020", to = "2020-03-20"), multi.plot = TRUE)
If you want plot those data in separate plots but use the same
scale, set graphics = "base"
(you’ll be prompted for each plot):
plot(cranDownloads(packages = c("ggplot2", "data.table", "Rcpp"),
from = "2020", to = "2020-03-20"), graphics = "base")
If you want do the above on separate independent scales, set
same.xy = FALSE
:
plot(cranDownloads(packages = c("ggplot2", "data.table", "Rcpp"),
from = "2020", to = "2020-03-20"), graphics = "base", same.xy = FALSE)
unit of observation
If you want to visualize the data from a unit of observation other than
the default (“day”), pass “month”, or “year” to the unit.observation
argument. For example, below is the plot for the daily downloads of
‘HistData’ from January
2021 through December 15 2021.
plot(cranDownloads(packages = "HistData", from = "2021", to = "2021-12-15"))
Here is the plot for the same data aggregated by month:
plot(cranDownloads(packages = "HistData", from = "2021", to = "2021-12-15"), unit.observation = "month")
There are three things to notice with these aggregated plots. First, if
an aggregate observation is still in-progress (e.g., in the plot above,
we’ve only seen the first half of December), that observation is split
into two separate points: 1) a “grayed-out” point for the in-progress or
observed total (the black empty square) and 2) a highlighted point for
the projected or estimated total (the red empty circle). The estimate is
based on how much the unit of observation is completed. In the plot
above, there are 2,708 downloads between December 1 and December 15.
Thus, the estimate for the whole month is 5,597 or 31 / 15 * 2708.
Second, all other points represents the total count at the end of an
aggregate period. For example, the first solid point, on the far left,
records the total download count for the month January and is plotted on
January 31. Third, if you include a smoother, using the smooth = TRUE
argument, the curve only uses complete, not in-progress, data.
logarithm of download counts
To use the base 10 logarithm of the download count in a plot, set
log.count = TRUE
:
plot(cranDownloads(packages = "HistData", from = "2021", to = "2021-12-15"), log.count = TRUE)
packages = NULL
cranlogs::cran_download(packages = NULL)
computes the total number of
package downloads from CRAN. You can plot these data by using:
plot(cranDownloads(from = 2019, to = 2019))
packages = "R"
cranlogs::cran_download(packages = "R")
computes the total number of
downloads of the R application (note that you can only use “R” or a
vector of packages names, not both!). You can plot these data by using:
plot(cranDownloads(packages = "R", from = 2019, to = 2019))
If you want the total count of R downloads, set r.total = TRUE
:
plot(cranDownloads(packages = "R", from = 2019, to = 2019), r.total = TRUE)
smoothers and confidence intervals
To add a lowess smoother to your plot, use smooth = TRUE
:
plot(cranDownloads(packages = "rstan", from = "2019", to = "2019"),
smooth = TRUE)
With graphs that use ‘ggplot2’, se = TRUE
will add confidence
intervals:
plot(cranDownloads(packages = c("HistData", "rnaturalearth", "Zelig"),
from = "2020", to = "2020-03-20"), smooth = TRUE, se = TRUE)
package and R release dates
To annotate a graph with a package’s release dates:
plot(cranDownloads(packages = "rstan", from = "2019", to = "2019"),
package.version = TRUE)
To annotate a graph with R release dates:
plot(cranDownloads(packages = "rstan", from = "2019", to = "2019"),
r.version = TRUE)
plot growth curves (cumulative download counts)
To plot growth curves, set statistic = "cumulative"
:
plot(cranDownloads(packages = c("ggplot2", "data.table", "Rcpp"),
from = "2020", to = "2020-03-20"), statistic = "cumulative",
multi.plot = TRUE, points = FALSE)
population plot
To visualize a package’s downloads relative to “all” other packages over time:
plot(cranDownloads(packages = "HistData", from = "2020", to = "2020-03-20"),
population.plot = TRUE)
This longitudinal view of package downloads plots the date (x-axis) against the base 10 logarithm of the selected package’s downloads (y-axis). To get a sense of how the selected package’s performance stacks up against all other packages, a set of smoothed curves representing a stratified random sample of packages is plotted in gray in the background (the “typical” pattern of downloads on CRAN for the selected time period). Specifically, within each 5% interval of rank percentiles (e.g., 0 to 5, 5 to 10, 95 to 100, etc.), a random sample of 5% of packages is selected and tracked.
II - computing package download rank percentiles
After spending some time with nominal download counts, the “compared to what?” question will come to mind. For instance, consider the data for the ‘cholera’ package from the first week of March 2020:
plot(cranDownloads(packages = "cholera", from = "2020-03-01",
to = "2020-03-07"))
Do Wednesday and Saturday reflect surges of interest in the package or surges of traffic to CRAN? To put it differently, how can we know if a given download count is typical or unusual? One way to answer these questions is to locate your package in the overall frequency distribution of download counts.
Below are the distributions of logarithm of download counts for Wednesday and Saturday. Each vertical segment (along the x-axis) represents a download count. The height of a segment represents that download count’s frequency. The location of ‘cholera’ in the distribution is highlighted in red.
plot(packageDistribution(package = "cholera", date = "2020-03-04"))
plot(packageDistribution(package = "cholera", date = "2020-03-07"))
While these plots give us a better picture of where ‘cholera’ is located, comparisons between Wednesday and Saturday are impressionistic at best: all we can confidently say is that the download counts for both days were greater than the mode.
To facilitate interpretation and comparison, I use the rank percentile of a download count instead of the simple nominal download count. This nonparametric statistic tells you the percentage of packages that had fewer downloads. In other words, it gives you the location of your package relative to the locations of all other packages. More importantly, by rescaling download counts to lie on the bounded interval between 0 and 100, rank percentiles make it easier to compare packages within and across distributions.
For example, we can compare Wednesday (“2020-03-04”) to Saturday (“2020-03-07”):
packageRank(package = "cholera", date = "2020-03-04")
> date packages downloads rank percentile
> 1 2020-03-04 cholera 38 5,556 of 18,038 67.9
On Wednesday, we can see that ‘cholera’ had 38 downloads, came in 5,556th place out of the 18,038 different packages downloaded, and earned a spot in the 68th percentile.
packageRank(package = "cholera", date = "2020-03-07")
> date packages downloads rank percentile
> 1 2020-03-07 cholera 29 3,061 of 15,950 80
On Saturday, we can see that ‘cholera’ had 29 downloads, came in 3,061st place out of the 15,950 different packages downloaded, and earned a spot in the 80th percentile.
So contrary to what the nominal counts tell us, one could say that the interest in ‘cholera’ was actually greater on Saturday than on Wednesday.
computing rank percentile
To compute rank percentiles, I do the following. For each package, I tabulate the number of downloads and then compute the percentage of packages with fewer downloads. Here are the details using ‘cholera’ from Wednesday as an example:
pkg.rank <- packageRank(packages = "cholera", date = "2020-03-04")
downloads <- pkg.rank$freqtab
round(100 * mean(downloads < downloads["cholera"]), 1)
> [1] 67.9
To put it differently:
(pkgs.with.fewer.downloads <- sum(downloads < downloads["cholera"]))
> [1] 12250
(tot.pkgs <- length(downloads))
> [1] 18038
round(100 * pkgs.with.fewer.downloads / tot.pkgs, 1)
> [1] 67.9
nominal ranks
In the example above, 38 downloads puts ‘cholera’ in 5,556th place among 18,038 observed packages. This rank is “nominal” because it’s possible that multiple packages can have the same number of downloads. As a result, a package’s nominal rank but not its rank percentile can be affected by its name. For example, because packages with the same number of downloads are sorted in alphabetical order, ‘cholera’ benefits from the fact that it is 31st in the list of 263 packages with 38 downloads:
pkg.rank <- packageRank(packages = "cholera", date = "2020-03-04")
downloads <- pkg.rank$freqtab
which(names(downloads[downloads == 38]) == "cholera")
> [1] 31
length(downloads[downloads == 38])
> [1] 263
visualizing package download rank percentiles
To visualize packageRank()
, use plot()
.
plot(packageRank(packages = "cholera", date = "2020-03-04"))
plot(packageRank(packages = "cholera", date = "2020-03-07"))
These graphs above, which are customized here to be on the same scale, plot the rank order of packages’ download counts (x-axis) against the logarithm of those counts (y-axis). It then highlights (in red) a package’s position in the distribution along with its rank percentile and download count. In the background, the 75th, 50th and 25th percentiles are plotted as dotted vertical lines. The package with the most downloads, ‘magrittr’ in both cases, is at top left (in blue). The total number of downloads is at the top right (in blue).
III - filtering package download counts
We compute the number of package downloads by simply counting log entries. While straightforward, this approach can run into problems. Putting aside the question of whether package dependencies should be counted, what I have in mind here is what I believe to be two types of “invalid” log entries. The first, a software artifact, stems from entries that are smaller, often orders of magnitude smaller, than a package’s actual binary or source file. The second, a behavioral artifact, emerges from efforts to download all of CRAN. In both cases, a reliance on nominal counts will give you an inflated sense of the degree of interest in your package. For those interested, an early but detailed analysis and discussion of both types of inflation is included as part of this R-hub blog post.
software artifacts
When looking at package download logs, the first thing you’ll notice are wrongly sized log entries. They come in two sizes. The “small” entries are approximately 500 bytes in size. The “medium” entries are variable in size: they fall somewhere between a “small” entry and a full download (i.e., “small” <= “medium” <= full download). “Small” entries manifest themselves as standalone entries, paired with a full download, or as part of a triplet along side a “medium” and a full download. “Medium” entries manifest themselves as either standalone entries or as part of a triplet.
The example below illustrates a triplet:
packageLog(date = "2020-07-01")[4:6, -(4:6)]
> date time size package version country ip_id
> 3998633 2020-07-01 07:56:15 99622 cholera 0.7.0 US 4760
> 3999066 2020-07-01 07:56:15 4161948 cholera 0.7.0 US 4760
> 3999178 2020-07-01 07:56:15 536 cholera 0.7.0 US 4760
The “medium” entry is the first observation (99,622 bytes). The full download is the second entry (4,161,948 bytes). The “small” entry is the last observation (536 bytes). At a minimum, what makes a triplet a triplet (or a pair a pair) is that all members share system configuration (e.g. IP address, etc.) and have identical or adjacent time stamps.
To deal with the inflationary effect of “small” entries, I filter out observations smaller than 1,000 bytes (the smallest package on CRAN appears to be ‘source.gist’, which weighs in at 1,200 bytes). “Medium” entries are harder to handle. I remove them using either a triplet-specific filter or a filter that looks up a package’s actual size.
behavioral artifacts
While wrongly sized entries are fairly easy to spot, seeing the effect of efforts to download all of CRAN require a change of perspective. While details and further evidence can be found in the R-hub blog post mentioned above, I’ll illustrate the problem with the following example:
packageLog(packages = "cholera", date = "2020-07-31")[8:14, -(4:6)]
> date time size package version country ip_id
> 132509 2020-07-31 21:03:06 3797776 cholera 0.2.1 US 14
> 132106 2020-07-31 21:03:07 4285678 cholera 0.4.0 US 14
> 132347 2020-07-31 21:03:07 4109051 cholera 0.3.0 US 14
> 133198 2020-07-31 21:03:08 3766514 cholera 0.5.0 US 14
> 132630 2020-07-31 21:03:09 3764848 cholera 0.5.1 US 14
> 133078 2020-07-31 21:03:11 4275831 cholera 0.6.0 US 14
> 132644 2020-07-31 21:03:12 4284609 cholera 0.6.5 US 14
Here, we see that seven different versions of the package were downloaded as a sequential bloc. A little digging shows that these seven versions represent all versions of ‘cholera’ available on that date:
packageHistory(package = "cholera")
> Package Version Date Repository
> 1 cholera 0.2.1 2017-08-10 Archive
> 2 cholera 0.3.0 2018-01-26 Archive
> 3 cholera 0.4.0 2018-04-01 Archive
> 4 cholera 0.5.0 2018-07-16 Archive
> 5 cholera 0.5.1 2018-08-15 Archive
> 6 cholera 0.6.0 2019-03-08 Archive
> 7 cholera 0.6.5 2019-06-11 Archive
> 8 cholera 0.7.0 2019-08-28 CRAN
While there are “legitimate” reasons for downloading past versions (e.g., research, container-based software distribution, etc.), I’d argue that examples like the above are “fingerprints” of efforts to download CRAN. While this is not necessarily problematic, it does mean that when your package is downloaded as part of such efforts, that download is more a reflection of an interest in CRAN itself (a collection of packages) than of an interest in your package per se. And since one of the uses of counting package downloads is to assess interest in your package, it may be useful to exclude such entries.
To do so, I try to filter out these entries in two ways. The first identifies IP addresses that download “too many” packages and then filters out campaigns, large blocs of downloads that occur in (nearly) alphabetical order. The second looks for campaigns not associated with “greedy” IP addresses and filters out sequences of past versions downloaded in a narrowly defined time window.
example usage
To get an idea of how inflated your package’s download count may be, use
filteredDownloads()
. Below are the results for ‘ggplot2’ for 15
September 2021.
filteredDownloads(package = "ggplot2", date = "2021-09-15")
> date package downloads filtered.downloads inflation
> 1 2021-09-15 ggplot2 113842 57951 96.45
While there were 113,842 nominal downloads, applying all the filters reduced that number to 57,951, an inflation of 96%.
Note that the filters are computationally demanding. Excluding the time it takes to download the log file, the filters in the above example take approximate 75 seconds to run using parallelized code (currently only available on macOS and Unix) on a 3.1 GHz Dual-Core Intel Core i5 processor.
There are 5 filters. You can control them using the following arguments (listed in order of application):
ip.filter
: removes campaigns of “greedy” IP addresses.triplet.filter
: reduces triplets to a single observation.small.filter
: removes entries smaller than 1,000 bytes.sequence.filter
: removes blocs of past versions.size.filter
: removes entries smaller than a package’s binary or source file.
These filters are off by default (e.g., ip.filter = FALSE). To apply them, set the argument for the filter you want to TRUE:
packageRank(package = "cholera", small.filter = TRUE)
Alternatively, you can simply set all.filters = TRUE
.
packageRank(package = "cholera", all.filters = TRUE)
Note that the all.filters = TRUE
is contextual. Depending on the
function used, you’ll either get the CRAN-specific or the
package-specific set of filters. The former sets ip.filter = TRUE
and
size.filter = TRUE
; it works independently of packages at the level of
the entire log. The latter sets triplet.filter = TRUE
,
sequence.filter = TRUE
and size.filter TRUE
; it relies on package
specific information (e.g., size of source or binary file).
Ideally, we’d like to use both sets. However, the package-specific set
is computationally expensive because they need to be applied
individually to all packages in the log, which can involve tens of
thousands of packages. While not unfeasible, currently this takes a long
time. For this reason, when all.filters = TRUE
, packageRank()
,
ipPackage()
, countryPackage()
, countryDistribution()
and
packageDistribution()
use only CRAN specific filters while
packageLog()
, packageCountry()
, and filteredDownloads()
use both
CRAN and package specific filters.
IV - other functions
Six other functions (some used above) may be of interest: 1)
packageDistribution()
plots the location of your package in the
overall frequency distribution of package downloads; 2)
packageHistory()
retrieves your package”s release history; 3)
packageLog()
extracts your package’s entries from the CRAN download
counts log; 4) filteredDownloads()
computes an estimate of your
package’s download count inflation (computationally intensive!) and 5 &
6) bioconductorDownloads()
and bioconductorRank()
offer analogous
but limited functionality to the two primary functions.
V - notes
country codes (top level domains)
While IP addresses are anonymized, packageCountry()
and
countryPackage()
make use of the fact that the logs provide
corresponding ISO country codes or top level domains (e.g., AT, JP, US).
Note that coverage extends to about 85% of observations (i.e.,
approximately 15% country codes are NA). Also, for what it’s worth,
there seems to be a a couple of typos for country codes: “A1” (A +
number one) and “A2” (A + number 2). According to RStudio’s
documentation, this coding was done
using MaxMind’s free database, which no longer seems to be available and
may be a bit out of date.
memoization
To avoid the bottleneck of downloading multiple log files,
packageRank()
is currently limited to individual calendar dates. To
reduce the bottleneck of re-downloading logs, which can be upwards of 50
MB, ‘packageRank’
makes use of memoization via the
‘memoise’ package.
Here’s relevant code:
fetchLog <- function(url) data.table::fread(url)
mfetchLog <- memoise::memoise(fetchLog)
if (RCurl::url.exists(url)) {
cran_log <- mfetchLog(url)
}
# Note that data.table::fread() relies on R.utils::decompressFile().
This means that logs are intelligently cached; those that have already been downloaded in your current R session will not be downloaded again.
time zones
The calendar date (e.g. “2021-01-01”) is the unit of observation for ‘packageRank’ functions. However, because the typical use case involves the latest log file, time zone differences can come into play.
Let’s say that it’s 09:01 on 01 January 2021 and you want to compute the rank percentile for ‘ergm’ for the last day of 2020. You might be tempted to use the following:
packageRank(packages = "ergm")
However, depending on where you make this request, you may not get the data you expect. In Honolulu, USA, you will but in Sydney, Australia you won’t. The reason is that you’ve somehow forgotten a key piece of trivia: RStudio typically posts yesterday’s log around 17:00 UTC the following day.
The expression works in Honolulu because 09:01 HST on 01 January 2021 is 19:01 UTC 01 January 2021. So the log you want has been available for 2 hours. The expression fails in Sydney because 09:01 AEDT on 01 January 2021 is 31 December 2020 22:00 UTC. The log you want won’t actually be available for another 19 hours.
To make life a little easier, ‘packageRank’ does two things. First, when the log for the date you want is not available (due to time zone rather than server issues), you’ll just get the last available log. If you specified a date in the future, you’ll either get an error message or a warning that provides an estimate of when that log should be available.
Using the Sydney example and the expression above, you’d get the results for 30 December 2020:
packageRank(packages = "ergm")
> date packages downloads rank percentile
> 1 2020-12-30 ergm 292 873 of 20,077 95.6
If you had specified the date, you’d get an additional warning:
packageRank(packages = "ergm", date = "2021-01-01")
> date packages downloads rank percentile
> 1 2020-12-30 ergm 292 873 of 20,077 95.6
Warning message:
2020-12-31 log arrives in appox. 19 hours at 02 Jan 04:00 AEDT. Using last available!
Second, to help you check/remember when logs are posted in your
location, there’s logDate()
and logPostInfo()
. The former silently
returns the date of the current available log. The latter adds the
approximate local and UTC times when logs of the desired date are posted
to RStudio’s server.
Here’s what you’d see using the Honolulu example:
logDate()
> [1] "2021-01-01
and
logPostInfo()
> $log.date
> [1] "2021-01-01"
>
> $GMT
> [1] "2021-01-01 17:00:00 GMT"
>
> $local
> [1] "2021-01-01 07:00:00 HST"
For both functions, the default is to use your local time zone. To see
the results in a different time zone, pass the desired zone name from
OlsonNames()
to the tz
argument. Here are the results for Sydney
when the functions are called from Honolulu (19:01 UTC):
logDate(tz = "Australia/Sydney")
> [1] "2021-01-01"
and
logPostInfo(tz = "Australia/Sydney")
> $log.date
> [1] "2021-01-01"
>
> $GMT
> [1] "2021-01-01 17:00:00 GMT"
>
> $local
> [1] "2021-01-01 04:00:00 AEDT"
This functionality depends on R’s ability to to compute your local time
and time zone (e.g., Sys.time()
). My understanding is that there may
be operating system or platform specific issues that could undermine
this.
timeout
With R 4.0.3, the timeout value for internet connections became more explicit. Here are the relevant details from that release’s “New features”:
The default value for options("timeout") can be set from environment variable
R_DEFAULT_INTERNET_TIMEOUT, still defaulting to 60 (seconds) if that is not set
or invalid.
This change can affect functions that download logs. This is especially
true over slower internet connections or when you’re dealing with large
log files. To fix this, fetchCranLog()
will, if needed, temporarily
set the timeout to 600 seconds.