If there is an index.html
under this directory, it will be displayed;
otherwise the list of files is displayed, with links on their names. After we
run this function, we can go to http://localhost:port to browse the
web pages either created from R or read from HTML files.
httd(dir = ".", ..., response = NULL)httr(dir = ".", ...)
httw(
dir = ".",
watch = ".",
pattern = NULL,
all_files = FALSE,
filter = NULL,
handler = NULL,
...
)
The root directory to serve.
Server configurations passed to server_config()
.
A function of the form function(path, res, ...)
that
takes a file path and server response as input, and return a new response.
This can be useful for post-processing the response (for experts only).
A directory under which httw()
is to watch for changes.
If it is a relative path, it is relative to the dir
argument.
A regular expression passed to list.files()
to
determine the files to watch.
Whether to watch all files including the hidden files.
A function to filter the file paths returned from
list.files()
(e.g., you can exclude certain files from the watch
list).
A function to be called every time any files are changed or added under the directory; its argument is a character vector of the filenames of the files modified or added.
httd()
is a static file server by default (its response
argument can turn it into a dynamic file server).
httr()
is based on httd()
with a custom
response
function that executes R files via xfun::record()
,
so that you will see the output of an R script as an HTML page. The page
will be automatically updated when the R script is modified and saved.
httw()
is similar to httd()
but watches for changes
under the directory: if an HTML file is being viewed in the browser, and
any files are modified under the directory, the HTML page will be
automatically refreshed.
if (FALSE) { # interactive()
servr::httd()
}
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