6

I have started to maintain an Rshiny package of ~3000 code lines. I would like to get an overview of what is triggering what in the server.R file.

Is there by chance a neat way to generate a reactivity trigger dependency chart?

3 Answers 3

9

There is a shiny "reactive log visualizer" built into shiny. It builds up a graph incrementally that shows how the various reactive nodes depend on each other. Its output after a run looks like this:

enter image description here

Instructions on using this tool can be found here:Reactive Log Visualizer

These are my notes on this tool:

  • It is enabled with the line options(shiny.reactlog = TRUE) inserted before the shinyApp call
  • It causes a log to be recorded of how the nodes activate each other.
  • The log visualizer can then be enabled with Ctrl-F3 (or Command-F3 on Apple)
  • There is a node layouter that can be manually overridden. It can be challenging when a lot of nodes are displayed to keep the lines from crossing each other.
  • You can then move back in forth in the log (basically you are moving in time in the log) with the arrow keys.
  • The reactive symbols are explained here: Shiny Reactivity Overview
  • It exposes a lot of reactive activity that is invisible to the user so it can be confusing.
  • It does not work well on large Shiny applications - many aspects of this tool simply do not scale.
7
  • 1
    this answer was super useful also, thx. It seems shinyTester will miss some events due to the mentioned caveats. Reactive log visualizer logs everything, almost too much :) Apr 27, 2017 at 15:32
  • Thanks. Will do a pros and cons list of static vs. dynamic shiny node analyzers when I get around to it.
    – Mike Wise
    Apr 27, 2017 at 15:39
  • 1
    Thanks for the overview! A small remark, for "Shiny Reactivity Overview" the link is missing, i think. Apr 27, 2017 at 16:13
  • Do you know where the log is found in text on the server so I can use other tools to parse it?
    – michael
    Oct 30, 2017 at 18:21
  • I would have to look and I will later and add that to the answer,
    – Mike Wise
    Oct 30, 2017 at 18:34
8

This might be interesting to you: https://www.r-bloggers.com/announcing-shinytester-a-package-that-helps-you-build-shiny-apps/

It introduces a library called shinyTester with the function ShinyHierarchy(). For an example from that article see the picture below. enter image description here

3
  • I do like that package, didn't know about it. Will be trying it out on something big one of these days.
    – Mike Wise
    Apr 27, 2017 at 13:09
  • This might be a better bet if you have a lot of nodes and want to analyze it carefully and statically. The built-in visualizer that I posted below though is very instructive as you can see how the dependencies are actually built up and tracked dynamicly - something a static tool cannot really capture. But it also gets confusing very fast.
    – Mike Wise
    Apr 27, 2017 at 13:15
  • 2
    You are right Mike, they probably should be used both. I wasnt aware of the "reactive log visualizer". Concerning the "size" of the shiny app, it could be interesting if one can (add) a functionality within ShinyHierachy() which enables you to filter for part of the shiny app so that you can control the size of the chart. Apr 27, 2017 at 16:12
6

The reactive log visualizer is a powerful tool, but unfortunately doesn't scale well with larger apps as @Mike Wise noted. A while ago I read some interesting ideas for improving the debugging experience in rstudio/shiny#1846 and rstudio/shiny#1532, and started exploring ways to implement them.

After stumbling a bit here and there (summary), I found that the best way to do this was to parse the raw reactive log and construct a dependency graph from it.

Package at https://github.com/glin/reactlog. The two main features are:

Showing the call stack that triggered invalidation

observe({
  reactlog::traceInvalidation()
  rx()
})
4: observe({
       reactlog::traceInvalidation()
       rx()
   })
3: rx [<text>#7]
2: val =>  num 10
1: observe(val(10))

and listing reactive dependencies in a tree view

observe({
  reactlog::listDependencies()
  rxA() + rxB() + rxAB()
}, label = "obs")
obs*
+-- rxA*
| `-- valA*
+-- rxB
| `-- valB
`-- rxAB*
  +-- valA*
  `-- valB

A tree view might be particularly useful to see if multiple dependencies were invalidated (asterisks denote invalidation or change).

0

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.