Load the specified file of compiled code if it has not been loaded already, or unloads it.
library.dynam(chname, package, lib.loc,
verbose = getOption("verbose"),
file.ext = .Platform$dynlib.ext, …)library.dynam.unload(chname, libpath,
verbose = getOption("verbose"),
file.ext = .Platform$dynlib.ext)
.dynLibs(new)
a character string naming a DLL (also known as a dynamic shared object or library) to load.
a character vector with the name of package.
a character vector describing the location of R library trees to search through.
the path to the loaded package whose DLL is to be unloaded.
a logical value indicating whether an announcement
is printed on the console before loading the DLL. The
default value is taken from the verbose entry in the system
options
.
the extension (including . if used) to append to the file name to specify the library to be loaded. This defaults to the appropriate value for the operating system.
additional arguments needed by some libraries that
are passed to the call to dyn.load
to control
how the library and its dependencies are loaded.
a list of "DLLInfo"
objects corresponding to the
DLLs loaded by packages. Can be missing.
If chname
is not specified, library.dynam
returns an
object of class "DLLInfoList"
corresponding to the DLLs
loaded by packages.
If chname
is specified, an object of class
"DLLInfo"
that identifies the DLL and which can be used
in future calls is returned invisibly. Note that the class
"DLLInfo"
has a method for $
which can be used to
resolve native symbols within that DLL.
library.dynam.unload
invisibly returns an object of class
"DLLInfo"
identifying the DLL successfully unloaded.
.dynLibs
returns an object of class "DLLInfoList"
corresponding corresponding to its current value.
Do not use dyn.unload
on a DLL loaded by
library.dynam
: use library.dynam.unload
to ensure
that .dynLibs
gets updated. Otherwise a subsequent call to
library.dynam
will be told the object is already loaded.
Note that whether or not it is possible to unload a DLL and then
reload a revised version of the same file is OS-dependent: see the
‘Value’ section of the help for dyn.unload
.
See dyn.load
for what sort of objects these functions handle.
library.dynam
is designed to be used inside a package rather
than at the command line, and should really only be used inside
.onLoad
. The system-specific extension for DLLs (e.g.,
.so
or .sl
on Unix-alike systems,
.dll
on Windows) should not be added.
If …
does not include a named argument DLLpath
,
dyn.load
is called with DLLpath
set to the
package's libs
directory. See the “Windows” section of
the help on dyn.load
for how to control where dependent
DLLs are found.
See dyn.load
for comments about diagnostic messages
which may be seen on Windows.
library.dynam.unload
is designed for use in
.onUnload
: it unloads the DLL and updates the value of
.dynLibs()
.dynLibs
is used for getting (with no argument) or setting the
DLLs which are currently loaded by packages (using library.dynam
).
Becker, R. A., Chambers, J. M. and Wilks, A. R. (1988) The New S Language. Wadsworth & Brooks/Cole.
getLoadedDLLs
for information on "DLLInfo"
and
"DLLInfoList"
objects.
.onLoad
, library
,
dyn.load
, .packages
,
.libPaths
SHLIB
for how to create suitable DLLs.
## Which DLLs were dynamically loaded by packages?
library.dynam()
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