This is the internal implementation for snapshot
. Most users
should prefer calling snapshot
.
.snapshotImpl(
project,
available = NULL,
lib.loc = libDir(project),
dry.run = FALSE,
ignore.stale = FALSE,
prompt = interactive(),
auto.snapshot = FALSE,
verbose = TRUE,
fallback.ok = FALSE,
snapshot.sources = TRUE,
implicit.packrat.dependency = TRUE,
infer.dependencies = TRUE
)
The project directory. Defaults to current working directory.
A database of available packages.
The library to snapshot. Defaults to the private library associated with the given directory.
Computes the changes to your packrat state that would be made if a snapshot were performed, and prints them to the console.
Stale packages are packages that are different from the
last snapshot, but were installed by packrat. Typically, packages become
stale when a new snapshot is available, but you haven't applied it yet with
restore
. By default, packrat will prevent you from taking a
snapshot when you have stale packages to prevent you from losing changes
from the unapplied snapshot. If your intent is to overwrite the last
snapshot without applying it, use ignore.stale = TRUE
to skip this
check.
TRUE
to prompt before performing snapshotting package
changes that might be unintended; FALSE
to perform these operations
without confirmation. Potentially unintended changes include snapshotting
packages at an older version than the last snapshot, or missing despite
being present in the last snapshot.
Internal use -- should be set to TRUE
when this
is an automatic snapshot.
Print output to the console while snapshot
-ing?
Fall back to the latest CRAN version of a package if the locally installed version is unavailable?
Download the tarball associated with a particular package?
Include packrat
as an implicit
dependency of this project, if not otherwise discovered? This should be
FALSE
only if you can guarantee that packrat
will be available
via other means when attempting to load this project.
If TRUE
, infer package dependencies by
examining the R code.