This article describes the scoping rules for Shiny apps and how to define global data with variously packaged code. Below is my example of a global variable holding data accessible to multiple sessions.
Run this app, then open a second tab/window in your browser and point it at the same connection. You can click the +1 button in one session to increment the shared max and local count. In the other session, you will not see any change until something triggers shiny to re-check the shared data, but clicking the +1 button there will update the local count, but also trigger update of the shared max data value. You can click the +1 button there several times until you have a new max, then go back to the first window and you can see the max is visible there too, once you click the +1 button to trigger an update. This works for multiple windows.
You have to do something to make a session check the data again to update. I didn't work too hard to make this happen without side effects. There should be some way to do a "refresh" based on whatever trigger you want. You can even use a timed poll to keep data in sync, like this example does with files.
The one caveat to this example is I have only tried with a local RStudio shiny server implementation. I don't know that it works this way on a real server. If it does not, please comment to that effect! It will probably not work this way on shinyapps.io or with any kind of cloud/load-balancing in general as you can't guarantee that two sessions share an app instance on one machine.
library(shiny)
globalMax <- 0
app <- shinyApp(
ui= pageWithSidebar(
headerPanel("Shared data demo"),
sidebarPanel(
actionButton("plusButton", "+1")
),
mainPanel(
verbatimTextOutput("sharedMax")
)
),
server= function(input,output){
observe({
if (input$plusButton > globalMax) {
globalMax <<- input$plusButton
}
})
output$sharedMax <- renderText({
paste0( "Shared max value: ", globalMax, "\n",
"Local value: ", input$plusButton)
})
}
)
runApp(app)