This vignette describe the worcs
package’s functionality
for automating reproducibility. The basic idea is that the entry point,
endpoint (or endpoints), and recipe by which to get to the endpoint from
the entry point are all well-defined.
In a typical worcs
project, the entry point will be a
dynamic document (e.g., manuscript.Rmd
), and the endpoint
will be the rendered manuscript (e.g., manuscript.pdf
). The
recipe by which to get from the entry point to the endpoint is often a
simple call to rmarkdown::render("manuscript.Rmd")
.
By default, the entry point and recipe are documented in the
.worcs
project file when the project is created, if an
R-script or Rmarkdown file is selected as the manuscript. Endpoints are
not created by default, as it only makes sense to define them when the
analyses are complete.
Custom recipes can be added to a project using
add_recipe()
.
Users can add endpoints using the function
add_endpoint("filename")
. When running this function,
filename
is added to the .worcs
project file,
and its checksum is computed so that any changes to the contents of the
file can be detected.
It is also possible to specify multiple endpoints. For example, maybe the user has finalized the analyses, and wants to track reproducibility for the analysis results - but still wants to make changes to the text of the manuscript without breaking reproducibility checks. In this case, it is useful to track files that contain analysis results instead of the rendered manuscript. Imagine these are intermediary files with analysis results:
descriptives.csv
: A file with the descriptive
statistics of study variablesmodel_fit.csv
: A table with model fit indices for
several modelsfinalmodel.RData
: An RData file with the results of the
final modelThese three files could be tracked as endpoints by calling
add_endpoint("descriptives.csv"); add_endpoint("model_fit.csv"); add_endpoint("finalmodel.RData")
.
A WORCS project can be reproduced by evaluating the function
reproduce()
. This function evaluates the recipe defined in
the .worcs
project file. If no recipe is specified (e.g.,
when a project was created with an older version of the package), but an
entry point is defined, reproduce()
will try to evaluate
the entry point if it is an Rmarkdown or R source file.
Users can verify that the endpoint remains unchanged after
reproducing the project by calling the function
check_endpoints()
. If any endpoint has changed relative to
the version stored in the .worcs
project file, this will
result in a warning message.
To update the endpoints in the .worcs
file, call
snapshot_endpoints()
. Always call this function to log
changes to the code that should result in a different end result.
If a project is connected to a remote repository on GitHub, it is possible to use GitHub actions to automatically check a project’s reproducibility and signal the result of this reproducibility check by displaying a badge on the project’s readme page (which is the welcome page visitors of the GitHub repository first see).
To do so, follow these steps:
'manuscript/manuscript.md'
,
then you would call
add_endpoint('manuscript/manuscript.md')
github_action_reproduce()
readme.md
. If you do not see this message,
add the following code to your readme.md manually:
[![worcs_endpoints](https://github.com/YOUR_ACCOUNT/PROJECT_REPOSITORY/actions/workflows/worcs_reproduce.yaml/badge.svg)](https://github.com/YOUR_ACCOUNT/PROJECT_REPOSITORY/actions/worcs_reproduce.yaml/worcs_endpoints.yaml)
git_update()
Visit your project page on GitHub and select the Actions
tab to see that your reproducibility check is running; visit the main
project page to see the new badge in your readme.md file.
Sometimes, you may wish to verify that the endpoints of a project remain the same but without reproducing all analyses on GitHub’s servers. This may be the case when the project has closed data that are not available on GitHub, or if the analyses take a long time to compute and you want to prevent using unnecessary compute power (e.g., for environmental reasons).
In these cases, you can still use GitHub actions to automatically check whether the endpoints have remained unchanged. If your local changes to the project introduce deviations from the endpoint snapshots, these tests will fail.
If you make intentional changes to the endpoints, you should of
course run snapshot_endpoints()
.
You can display a badge on the project’s readme page to signal that the endpoints remain unchanged.
To do so, follow these steps:
'manuscript/manuscript.md'
,
then you would call
add_endpoint('manuscript/manuscript.md')
github_action_check_endpoints()
readme.md
. If you do not see this message,
add the following code to your readme.md manually:
[![worcs_endpoints](https://github.com/YOUR_ACCOUNT/PROJECT_REPOSITORY/actions/workflows/worcs_endpoints.yaml/badge.svg)](https://github.com/YOUR_ACCOUNT/PROJECT_REPOSITORY/actions/workflows/worcs_endpoints.yaml)
git_update()
Visit your project page on GitHub and select the Actions
tab to see that your reproducibility check is running; visit the main
project page to see the new badge in your readme.md file.