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Calling C code from R an introduction

Calling C code from R an introduction. Sigal Blay Dept. of Statistics and Actuarial Science Simon Fraser University October 2004. Motivation: Speed Efficient memory management Using existing C libraries.

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Calling C code from R an introduction

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  1. Calling C code from Ran introduction Sigal Blay Dept. of Statistics and Actuarial Science Simon Fraser University October 2004

  2. Motivation: • Speed • Efficient memory management • Using existing C libraries

  3. The following functions provide a standard interface to compiled code that has been linked into R: .C .Call .External

  4. We will explore using .C and .Call with 7 code examples: Using .C I. Calling C with an integer vector II. Calling C with different vector types Using .Call III. Sending R integer vectors to C IV. Sending R character vectors to C V. Getting an integer vector from C VI. Getting a character vector from C VII. Getting a list from C And lastly,tips on creating an R package with compiled code

  5. I. Calling C with an integer vector using .C

  6. /* useC1.c */ void useC(int *i) { i[0] = 11; } The C function should be of type void. The compiled code should not return anything except through its arguments.

  7. To compile the c code, type at the command prompt: R CMD SHLIB useC1.c The compiled code file name is useC1.so

  8. In R: > dyn.load("useC1.so") > a <- 1:10 # integer vector > a [1] 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 > out <- .C("useC", b = as.integer(a)) > a [1] 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 > out$b [1] 11 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

  9. You have to allocate memory to the vectors passed to .C in R by creating vectors of the right length. • The first argument to .C is a character string of the C function name. • The rest of the arguments are R objects to be passed to the C function.

  10. All arguments should be coerced to the correct R storage mode to prevent mismatching of types that can lead to errors. • .C returns a list object. • The second .C argument is given the name b. This name is used for the respective component in the returned list object (but not passed to the compiled code).

  11. II. Calling C with different vector types using .C

  12. /* useC2.c */ void useC(int *i, double *d, char **c, int *l) { i[0] = 11; d[0] = 2.333; c[1] = "g"; l[0] = 0; }

  13. To compile the c code, type at the command prompt: R CMD SHLIB useC2.c to get useC2.so To compile more than one c file: R CMD SHLIB file1.c file2.c file3.c to get file1.so

  14. In R: > dyn.load("useC2.so") > i <- 1:10 # integer vector > d <- seq(length=3,from=1,to=2) # real number vector > c <- c("a", "b", "c") # string vector > l <- c("TRUE", "FALSE") # logical vector > i [1] 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 > d [1] 1.0 1.5 2.0 > c [1] "a" "b" "c" > l [1] "TRUE" "FALSE"

  15. > out <- .C("useC", i1 = as.integer(a), d1 = as.numeric(d), c1 = as.character(c), l1 = as.logical(l)) > out $i1 [1] 11 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 $d1 [1] 2.333 1.500 2.000 $c1 [1] "a" "g" "c“ $l1 [1] FALSE FALSE

  16. Other R objects can be passed to .C but it is better to use one of the other interfaces. • With .C, the R objects are copied before being passed to the C code, and copied again to an R list object when the compiled code returns. • Neither .Call nor .External copy their arguments. • You should treat arguments you receive through these interfaces as read-only.

  17. Advantages to using .Call() instead of .C() (Posted by Prof Brian Ripley on R-help, Jun 2004) 1) A lot less copying. 2) The ability to dimension the answer in the C code. 3) Access to other types, e.g. expressions, raw type and the ability to easily execute R code (call_R is a pain). 4) Access to the attributes of the vectors, for example the names. 5) The ability to handle missing values easily.

  18. III. Sending R integer vectors to C using .Call

  19. /* useCall1.c */ #include <R.h> #include <Rdefines.h> SEXP getInt(SEXP myint, SEXP myintVar) { int Imyint, n; // declare an integer variable int *Pmyint; // pointer to an integer vector PROTECT(myint = AS_INTEGER(myint));

  20. Rdefines.h is somewhat more higher level then Rinternal.h, and is preferred if the code might be shared with S at any stage. • SEXP stands for Simple EXPression • myint is of type SEXP, which is a general type, hence coercion is needed to the right type. • R objects created in the C code have to be reported using the PROTECT macro on a pointer to the object. This tells R that the object is in use so it is not destroyed.

  21. Imyint = INTEGER_POINTER(myint)[0]; Pmyint = INTEGER_POINTER(myint); n = INTEGER_VALUE(myintVar); printf(“ Printed from C: \n“); printf(“ Imyint: %d \n", Imyint); printf(“ n: %d \n", n); printf(“ Pmyint[0], Pmyint[1]: %d %d \n", Pmyint[0], Pmyint[1]); UNPROTECT(1); return(R_NilValue); }

  22. The protection mechanism is stack-based, so UNPROTECT(n) unprotects the last n objects which were protected. The calls to PROTECT and UNPROTECT must balance when the user's code returns. • to work with real numbers, replace int with double and INTEGER with NUMERIC

  23. In R: > dyn.load("useCall1.so") > myint<- c(1,2,3) > out<- .Call("getInt", myint, 5) Printed from C: Imyint: 1 n: 5 Pmyint[0], Pmyint[1]: 1 2 > out NULL

  24. IV. Reading an R character vector from C using .Call

  25. /* useCall2.c */ #include <R.h> #include <Rdefines.h> SEXP getChar(SEXP mychar) { char *Pmychar[5]; // array of 5 pointers // to character strings PROTECT(mychar = AS_CHARACTER(mychar));

  26. // allocate memory: Pmychar[0] = R_alloc(strlen(CHAR(STRING_ELT(mychar, 0))), sizeof(char)); Pmychar[1] = R_alloc(strlen(CHAR(STRING_ELT(mychar, 1))), sizeof(char)); // ... and copy mychar to Pmychar: strcpy(Pmychar[0], CHAR(STRING_ELT(mychar, 0))); strcpy(Pmychar[1], CHAR(STRING_ELT(mychar, 1))); printf(“ Printed from C:”); printf(“ %s %s \n",Pmychar[0],Pmychar[1]); UNPROTECT(1); return(R_NilValue); }

  27. In R: > dyn.load("useCall2.so") > mychar <- c("do","re","mi", "fa", "so") > out <- .Call("getChar", mychar) Printed from C: do re

  28. V. Getting an integer vector from C using .Call

  29. /* useCall3.c */ #include <R.h> #include <Rdefines.h> SEXP setInt() { SEXP myint; int *p_myint; int len = 5; // Allocating storage space: PROTECT(myint = NEW_INTEGER(len));

  30. p_myint = INTEGER_POINTER(myint); p_myint[0] = 7; UNPROTECT(1); return myint; } // to work with real numbers, replace // int with double and INTEGER with NUMERIC

  31. In R: > dyn.load("useCall3.so") > out<- .Call("setInt") > out [1] 7 0 0 0 0

  32. VI. Getting a character vector from C using .Call

  33. /* useCall4.c */ #include <R.h> #include <Rdefines.h> SEXP setChar() { SEXP mychar; PROTECT(mychar = allocVector(STRSXP, 5)); SET_STRING_ELT(mychar, 0, mkChar("A")); UNPROTECT(1); return mychar; }

  34. In R: > dyn.load("useCall4.so") > out <- .Call("setChar") > out [1] "A" "" "" "" ""

  35. VII. Getting a list from C using .Call

  36. /* useCall5.c */ #include <R.h> #include <Rdefines.h> SEXP setList() { int *p_myint, i; double *p_double; SEXP mydouble, myint, list, list_names; char *names[2] = {"integer", "numeric"};

  37. // creating an integer vector: PROTECT(myint = NEW_INTEGER(5)); p_myint = INTEGER_POINTER(myint); // ... and a vector of real numbers: PROTECT(mydouble = NEW_NUMERIC(5)); p_double = NUMERIC_POINTER(mydouble); for(i = 0; i < 5; i++) { p_double[i] = 1/(double)(i + 1); p_myint[i] = i + 1; }

  38. // Creating a character string vector // of the "names" attribute of the // objects in out list: PROTECT(list_names = allocVector(STRSXP,2)); for(i = 0; i < 2; i++) SET_STRING_ELT(list_names,i,mkChar(names[i]));

  39. // Creating a list with 2 vector elements: • PROTECT(list = allocVector(VECSXP, 2)); • // attaching myint vector to list: • SET_VECTOR_ELT(list, 0, myint); • // attaching mydouble vector to list: • SET_VECTOR_ELT(list, 1, mydouble); • // and attaching the vector names: • setAttrib(list, R_NamesSymbol, list_names); • UNPROTECT(4); • return list; • } • SET_VECTOR_ELT stands for Set Vector Element

  40. In R: > dyn.load("useCall5.so") > out <- .Call("setList") > out $integer [1] 1 2 3 4 5 $numeric [1] 1.00000 0.50000 0.33333 0.25000 0.20000

  41. If you are developing an R package: copy useC.c to myPackage/src/ The user of the package will not have to manually load the compiled c code with dyn.load(), so: add zzz.R file to myPackage/R zzz.R should contain the following code: .First.lib <-function (lib, pkg) { library.dynam("myPackage", pkg, lib) }

  42. If you are developing an R package (cont.), modify the .C call: After the argument list to the C function, addPACKAGE="compiled_file". For example, if your compiled C code file name is useC1.so, type: .C("useC", b = as.integer(a), PACKAGE="useC1") If you are using a Makefile, look at the output from R CMD SHLIB myfile.c for flags that you may need to incorporate in the Makefile.

  43. Even if your R package perfectly passes an 'R CMD check‘: • Try to compile your C code with 'gcc -pedantic -Wall' • (you should get only warnings that you have reasons • not to eliminate) • check the R code with 'R CMD check --use-gct' • (It uses 'gctorture(TRUE)' when running examples/tests, • and it's slow) • If you won't, CRAN will do that for you and • will send you back to the drawing board.

  44. Author: Sigal Blay With comments and suggestions please find my contact info on my web site, at http://www.sfu.ca:/~sblay This work has been made possible by the Statistical Genetics Working Group at the Department of Statistics and Actuarial Science, SFU.

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