environments
  (‘frames’ in S terminology) associated with functions further
  up the calling stack.sys.call(which = 0)
sys.frame(which = 0)
sys.nframe()
sys.function(which = 0)
sys.parent(n = 1)sys.calls()
sys.frames()
sys.parents()
sys.on.exit()
sys.status()
parent.frame(n = 1)
sys.call returns a call, sys.function a function
  definition, and sys.frame and parent.frame return an
  environment. For the other functions, see the ‘Details’ section..GlobalEnv is given number 0 in the list of frames.
  Each subsequent function evaluation increases the frame stack by 1
  and the call, function definition and the environment for evaluation
  of that function are returned by sys.call, sys.function
  and sys.frame with the appropriate index. sys.call, sys.frame and sys.function accept
  integer values for the argument which.  Non-negative values of
  which are frame numbers whereas negative values are
  counted back from the frame number of the current evaluation. The parent frame of a function evaluation is the environment in which
  the function was called.  It is not necessarily numbered one less than
  the frame number of the current evaluation, nor is it the environment
  within which the function was defined.  sys.parent returns the
  number of the parent frame if n is 1 (the default), the
  grandparent if n is 2, and so on.  See also the ‘Note’. sys.nframe returns an integer, the number of the current frame
  as described in the first paragraph. sys.calls and sys.frames give a pairlist of all the
  active calls and frames, respectively, and sys.parents returns
  an integer vector of indices of the parent frames of each of those
  frames. Notice that even though the sys.xxx functions (except
  sys.status) are interpreted, their contexts are not counted nor
  are they reported.  There is no access to them. sys.status() returns a list with components sys.calls,
  sys.parents and sys.frames, the results of calls to
  those three functions (which this will include the call to
  sys.status: see the first example). sys.on.exit() returns the expression stored for use by
  on.exit in the function currently being evaluated.
  (Note that this differs from S, which returns a list of expressions
  for the current frame and its parents.) parent.frame(n) is a convenient shorthand for
  sys.frame(sys.parent(n)) (implemented slightly more efficiently).parent.frame.)eval for a usage of sys.frame and parent.frame.