user443854
user443854

Reputation: 7455

How to save all console output to file in R?

I want to redirect all console text to a file. Here is what I tried:

> sink("test.log", type=c("output", "message"))
> a <- "a"
> a
> How come I do not see this in log
Error: unexpected symbol in "How come"

Here is what I got in test.log:

[1] "a"

Here is what I want in test.log:

> a <- "a"
> a
[1] "a"
> How come I do not see this in log
Error: unexpected symbol in "How come"

What am I doing wrong? Thanks!

Upvotes: 110

Views: 150307

Answers (10)

user3667133
user3667133

Reputation: 186

This may not work for your needs, but one solution might be to run your code from within an Rmarkdown file. You could write both the code and console output to HTML/PDF/Word.

Upvotes: 1

Prateek Sharma
Prateek Sharma

Reputation: 1561

  1. If you want to get error messages saved in a file

    zz <- file("Errors.txt", open="wt")
    sink(zz, type="message")
    

    the output will be:

    Error in print(errr) : object 'errr' not found
    Execution halted
    

    This output will be saved in a file named Errors.txt

  2. In case, you want printed values of console to a file you can use 'split' argument:

    zz <- file("console.txt", open="wt")
    sink(zz,  split=TRUE)
    print("cool")
    print(errr)
    

    output will be:

    [1] "cool"
    

    in console.txt file. So all your console output will be printed in a file named console.txt

Upvotes: 2

Ferroao
Ferroao

Reputation: 3043

You can print to file and at the same time see progress having (or not) screen, while running a R script.

When not using screen, use R CMD BATCH yourscript.R & and step 4.

  1. When using screen, in a terminal, start screen

     screen
    
  2. run your R script

     R CMD BATCH yourscript.R
    
  3. Go to another screen pressing CtrlA, then c

  4. look at your output with (real-time):

     tail -f yourscript.Rout
    
  5. Switch among screens with CtrlA then n

Upvotes: 3

Alan Engel
Alan Engel

Reputation: 66

Set your Rgui preferences for a large number of lines, then timestamp and save as file at suitable intervals.

Upvotes: 2

To save text from the console: run the analysis and then choose (Windows) "File>Save to File".

Upvotes: 2

WMash
WMash

Reputation: 437

If you have access to a command line, you might prefer running your script from the command line with R CMD BATCH.

== begin contents of script.R ==

a <- "a"
a
How come I do not see this in log

== end contents of script.R ==

At the command prompt ("$" in many un*x variants, "C:>" in windows), run

$ R CMD BATCH script.R &

The trailing "&" is optional and runs the command in the background. The default name of the log file has "out" appended to the extension, i.e., script.Rout

== begin contents of script.Rout ==

R version 3.1.0 (2014-04-10) -- "Spring Dance"
Copyright (C) 2014 The R Foundation for Statistical Computing
Platform: i686-pc-linux-gnu (32-bit)

R is free software and comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY.
You are welcome to redistribute it under certain conditions.
Type 'license()' or 'licence()' for distribution details.

  Natural language support but running in an English locale

R is a collaborative project with many contributors.
Type 'contributors()' for more information and
'citation()' on how to cite R or R packages in publications.

Type 'demo()' for some demos, 'help()' for on-line help, or
'help.start()' for an HTML browser interface to help.
Type 'q()' to quit R.

[Previously saved workspace restored]

> a <- "a"
> a
[1] "a"
> How come I do not see this in log
Error: unexpected symbol in "How come"
Execution halted

== end contents of script.Rout ==

Upvotes: 17

Brian Flaherty
Brian Flaherty

Reputation: 123

Run R in emacs with ESS (Emacs Speaks Statistics) r-mode. I have one window open with my script and R code. Another has R running. Code is sent from the syntax window and evaluated. Commands, output, errors, and warnings all appear in the running R window session. At the end of some work period, I save all the output to a file. My own naming system is *.R for scripts and *.Rout for save output files. Here's a screenshot with an example.Screenshot writing and evaluating R with Emacs/ESS.

Upvotes: 4

user5359531
user5359531

Reputation: 3555

If you are able to use the bash shell, you can consider simply running the R code from within a bash script and piping the stdout and stderr streams to a file. Here is an example using a heredoc:

File: test.sh

#!/bin/bash
# this is a bash script
echo "Hello World, this is bash"

test1=$(echo "This is a test")

echo "Here is some R code:"

Rscript --slave --no-save --no-restore - "$test1" <<EOF
  ## R code
  cat("\nHello World, this is R\n")
  args <- commandArgs(TRUE)
  bash_message<-args[1]
  cat("\nThis is a message from bash:\n")
  cat("\n",paste0(bash_message),"\n")
EOF

# end of script 

Then when you run the script with both stderr and stdout piped to a log file:

$ chmod +x test.sh
$ ./test.sh
$ ./test.sh &>test.log
$ cat test.log
Hello World, this is bash
Here is some R code:

Hello World, this is R

This is a message from bash:

 This is a test

Other things to look at for this would be to try simply pipping the stdout and stderr right from the R heredoc into a log file; I haven't tried this yet but it will probably work too.

Upvotes: 6

Tommy
Tommy

Reputation: 40821

You have to sink "output" and "message" separately (the sink function only looks at the first element of type)

Now if you want the input to be logged too, then put it in a script:

script.R

1:5 + 1:3   # prints and gives a warning
stop("foo") # an error

And at the prompt:

con <- file("test.log")
sink(con, append=TRUE)
sink(con, append=TRUE, type="message")

# This will echo all input and not truncate 150+ character lines...
source("script.R", echo=TRUE, max.deparse.length=10000)

# Restore output to console
sink() 
sink(type="message")

# And look at the log...
cat(readLines("test.log"), sep="\n")

Upvotes: 140

mbq
mbq

Reputation: 18628

You can't. At most you can save output with sink and input with savehistory separately. Or use external tool like script, screen or tmux.

Upvotes: 4

Related Questions