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A Step by Step Guide to Write an R package That Uses C++ Code (Ubuntu)

A Step by Step Guide to Write an R package That Uses C++ Code (Ubuntu)

Posted May 31, 2023
Mauricio Vargas Sepulveda
Pacha.dev Blog

The post “A Step by Step Guide to Write an R package That Uses C++ Code (Ubuntu)was originally posted on Pacha.dev Blog.

Motivation

A large part of my research interest requires to estimate computationally intensive models, such as the General Equilibrium Poisson Pseudo Maximum Likelihood (GEPPML) estimator derived from the equilibrium conditions introduced by Anderson and Van Wincoop (2004) for estimation and inference.

The GEPPML estimator is a computationally intensive estimator that requires to solve a system of non-linear equations, and for this task we might be better-off by using a compiled language such as C++. The good news is that we can use C++ code within R and Python, and this blog post is about using C++ functions from R.

Also, I do not pretend to be an expert on C++ or debate if R is better than Python. I use both from Visual Studio Code. I do want to share my experience on how to use C++ code within R.

Honest disclaimer

This blog post is a summary of what worked after hours of fails for my future self. I hope it helps you too.

I am a Statistician and Political Scientist, not a Computer Scientist!

Setup

Because I have been already learning C++ version 11, I decided to install llvm-11 on my laptop that has Linux Mint installed, and which is based on Ubuntu 22.04.

Ubuntu and its derived distributions use gcc as the default C++ compiler, and clang is not installed by default. Different resources mention that clang provides more informative error messages when the compilation fails and when we debug code.

Counting on informative error messages is highly useful resource when we are learning C++ or when our code is failing in two different ways, being one that it does not compile, and the other that it compiles but then when we call a function from RStudio (or VSCode) it crashes the R session.

I installed the R packages cpp11 and usethis.

install.packages(c("cpp11", "usethis"))

I created a file ~/.Rprofile containing the following lines.

library(devtools)
library(usethis)
library(cpp11)

I run nano ~/.R/Makevars from bash and then saved with CTRL+O+ENTER and closed it with CTRL+X. It is the same as creating it with the text editor from Gnome or any other desktop environment.

Now forget about devtools::install(). After reopening your editor, every time you use RStudio (or VSCode) you just call install(), and the same applies to usethis::use_*() and cpp11::cpp_*() functions.

To install llvm-11 I downloaded the installation script from the official LLVM repository, and it also installed clang-11.

cd Downloads
wget https://apt.llvm.org/llvm.sh
chmod +x llvm.sh
sudo ./llvm.sh 11

Up to this point I still had the following error messages when compiling C++ code.

fatal error: 'cstdio' file not found
fatal error: 'vector' file not found
cannot find -lc++abi: No such file or directory

I had to install additional packages. This took me a few hours searching on the Internet until I figured it out.

sudo apt install g++-11 libc++-11-dev libc++abi-11-dev

To be sure that the install() function in R uses the correct version of clang++ I created the ~/.R/Makevars file. The contents of the file are the following.

CLANGVER=-11
CLANGLIB=-stdlib=libc++
CXX=$(CCACHE) clang++$(CLANGVER) $(CLANGLIB)
CXX11=$(CCACHE) clang++$(CLANGVER) $(CLANGLIB)
CC=$(CCACHE) clang$(CLANGVER)
SHLIB_CXXLD=clang++$(CLANGVER) $(CLANGLIB)
CXXFLAGS=-Wall -O0 -pedantic
CXX11FLAGS=-Wall -O0 -pedantic

For both CXXFLAGS and CXX11FLAGS I am using -O0 to avoid optimization, which is useful for debugging. After the code is working, I can change it to -O3 to optimize the compiled code.

If later on I need to compile with gcc, I can open ~/.R/Makevars, comment all the lines, restart RStudio or VSCode, and run install() again.

If you close RStudio (or VSCode) and open it again, you can check that the changes were implemented by running pkgbuild::check_build_tools(debug = TRUE), which should return the following output.

Trying to compile a simple C file
Running /usr/lib/R/bin/R CMD SHLIB foo.c
using C compiler: ‘Ubuntu clang version 11.1.0-6’
clang-11 -I"/usr/share/R/include" -DNDEBUG       -fpic  -g -O2 -ffile-prefix-map=/build/r-base-JhpCKt/r-base-4.3.0=. -fstack-protector-strong -Wformat -Werror=format-security -Wdate-time -D_FORTIFY_SOURCE=2  -c foo.c -o foo.o
clang-11 -shared -L/usr/lib/R/lib -Wl,-Bsymbolic-functions -flto=auto -ffat-lto-objects -flto=auto -Wl,-z,relro -o foo.so foo.o -L/usr/lib/R/lib -lR

If I were using gcc, the output would have been as in the following lines.

Trying to compile a simple C file
Running /usr/lib/R/bin/R CMD SHLIB foo.c
using C compiler: ‘gcc (Ubuntu 11.3.0-1ubuntu1~22.04.1) 11.3.0’
gcc -I"/usr/share/R/include" -DNDEBUG       -fpic  -g -O2 -ffile-prefix-map=/build/r-base-JhpCKt/r-base-4.3.0=. -fstack-protector-strong -Wformat -Werror=format-security -Wdate-time -D_FORTIFY_SOURCE=2  -c foo.c -o foo.o
gcc -shared -L/usr/lib/R/lib -Wl,-Bsymbolic-functions -flto=auto -ffat-lto-objects -flto=auto -Wl,-z,relro -o foo.so foo.o -L/usr/lib/R/lib -lR

The key here is that when I use clang the lines start with clang, not with gcc.

Creating a dummy package

From RStudio (or VSCode) we can create a new package by running create_package("~/cpp11dummypackage"). This will create a new folder with the name cpp11dummypackage. Then I run use_cpp11() to add the required files to use C++ code within R.

Then I run use_r("cpp11dummypackage-package") to create a new R script file with the name cpp11dummypackage-package.R within the R folder, and added the following code to it.

#' @useDynLib cpp11dummypackage, .registration = TRUE
NULL

The usethis skeleton also created the file src/code.cpp for us. I added a simple function to transpose a matrix to it, by replacing the file contents by the following lines.

#include <cpp11.hpp>

using namespace cpp11;
    
[[cpp11::register]] doubles_matrix<> transpose_(doubles_matrix<> X)
{
    int NX = X.nrow();
    int MX = X.ncol();

    writable::doubles_matrix<> R(MX, NX);

    for (int i = 0; i < MX; i++)
    {
        for (int j = 0; j < NX; j++)
        {
            R(i, j) = X(j, i);
        }
    }

    return R;
}

In order to export the function, I added the following lines to cpp11dummypackage-package.R.

#' Transpose a matrix
#' @export
#' @param X numeric matrix
#' @return numeric matrix
#' @examples
#' set.seed(1234)
#' X <- matrix(rnorm(4), nrow = 2, ncol = 2)
#' X
#' transpose(X)
transpose <- function(X) {
  transpose_(X)
}

I tested the functions after running cpp11_register() and load_all().

> set.seed(1234)

> X <- matrix(rnorm(4), nrow = 2, ncol = 2)

> X
           [,1]      [,2]
[1,] -1.2070657  1.084441
[2,]  0.2774292 -2.345698

> transpose(X)
          [,1]       [,2]
[1,] -1.207066  0.2774292
[2,]  1.084441 -2.3456977

If I would have passed 1:4 instead of rnorm(4) to matrix(), I would have obtained the following error message.

> transpose(X)
Error: Invalid input type, expected 'double' actual 'integer'

This is because I declared the function to accept a doubles_matrix<> as input, and not an integers_matrix<>.

To install the recently created package, I run the following lines in the R console.

clean_dll()
cpp_register()
document()
install()

Debugging the package

In order to access debugging symbols, I created a new Makevars file within the src folder, and added the following lines.

CXX_STD = CXX11
PKG_CPPFLAGS = -UDEBUG -g

Then I reinstalled the package compiled with debugging symbols, and in bash I run R -d lldb-11. From there I could follow this excellent guide to debug R and C++ code.

I shouldn’t generally leave the -g flag on in a Makevars file, that will insert trace symbols in the compiled binary, both increasing compilation times (often by a large margin), and creating larger binaries. Once the package is compiled and I am sure that it works properly, I need to remove the PKG_CPPFLAGS = -UDEBUG -g line.

A more complex example

I created a package containing a set of simple functions to obtain the Ordinary Least Squares (OLS) estimator by calling a C++ function that calls other C++ functions. My approach was to create one function per step, which meant to create one function to obtain XtX, another for (XtX)−1 which consisted in implementing the Gauss-Jordan method to invert a matrix, another for XtY and then call each of those functions to obtain .

This implementation is extremely naive, but it is enough to show how to use C++ code within R. Please see it from my GitHub profile.

A good challenge would be to implement the QR decomposition used by the lm() function in R and use it to obtain the OLS estimator in C++. This would require some effort, but here you can find a good starting point.

In any case, it would be extremely hard to beat the performance of the lm() function in R, which has some internals written in C, and how computationally robust lm() is means another feature that is hard to beat.

References

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