tower
Dead simple middleware for R Shiny.
Summary
tower
is a simple library for adding middleware to Shiny applications.
It is inspired by the tower crate for Rust.
It is designed to enable package authors and Shiny developers to extend
Shiny a little bit more than what is usually possible.
You can use tower
to add middlewares that forward, modify, or intercept
requests in Shiny applications. This can be useful for adding logging, authentication,
caching, or routing to your Shiny applications.
Installation
You can install the development version of tower
from GitHub with:
# install.packages("remotes")
remotes::install_github("ixpantia/tower")
Example
We may want to add a new route to our Shiny application that adds a count
to a counter every time a user visits the route. We can do this with tower
by adding a middleware that intercepts the request and increments the counter.
library(shiny)
library(tower)
# Counter environment
global_counter <- new.env()
global_counter$count <- 0
# Middleware to increment the counter
increment_counter <- function(req) {
global_counter$count <- global_counter$count + 1
response_builder() |>
add_body(paste("Counter is now", global_counter$count)) |>
build_response()
}
# A very empty Shiny app (not necesarry for the demo)
ui <- fluidPage()
server <- function(input, output, session) {}
shinyApp(ui, server) |>
create_tower() |>
add_get_route("/counter", increment_counter) |>
build_tower()
If you run the code above and visit the route /counter
in your browser,
you will see the counter increment every time you visit the route.
How it works
Basically, tower
adds layers to a Shiny application. A layer is a function
that takes a request and returns either a response or NULL. If a layer returns
a response, the response is sent to the client and the request is not forwarded
to the next layer. If a layer returns NULL, the request is forwarded to the next
layer.