Adding rcpptimer to a Package

Adding rcpptimer to your Package

Using rcpptimer in your package is simple. Just link to it in your DESCRIPTION file:

LinkingTo: rcpptimer (>= 1.2.0)

And add the header into your .cpp file #include <rcpptimer.h>. Now, you can create and use an instance of the Rcpp::Timer class. Consider this fibonacci_omp function:

#include <rcpptimer.h>

long int fib(long int n)
{
  return ((n <= 1) ? n : fib(n - 1) + fib(n - 2));
}

//[[Rcpp::export]]
std::vector<long int> fibonacci_omp(std::vector<long int> n)
{
  Rcpp::Timer timer;
 // This scoped timer measures the total execution time of 'fibonacci'
  Rcpp::Timer::ScopedTimer scpdtmr(timer, "fib_body");
  std::vector<long int> results = n;
  #pragma omp parallel for
  for (unsigned int i = 0; i < n.size(); ++i)
  {
    timer.tic("fib_" + std::to_string(n[i]));
    results[i] = fib(n[i]);
    timer.toc("fib_" + std::to_string(n[i]));
  }
  return (results);
}

This function is available in rcpptimer so you can try it yourself, e.g., rcpptimer::fibonacci(n = rep(20:25, 10)). After that, you can inspect the timings by executing print(times).

As you can see, it writes the timings to the global environment as data.frame called times. Read the following section to learn why this differs from what you want in a package.

Autoreturn

When using rcpptimer in your package, consider turning off the timer’s autoreturn feature. Users of your package may need to be made aware of this functionality. They may already have an object named times in their global environment or may have rigorous expectations about what objects they want to write into their environment. Instead, you should include the timings in your data structures or parameterize the name of the returned object, the autoreturn feature itself, or both.

See vignette("autoreturn") vignette to read about this in detail.

Reexport Print Method

If you use rcpptimer in your package, you may want to suggest rcpptimer in your DESCRIPTION and register the S3 method print.rcpptimer. This method is used to print the timings in a more readable way. It will scale the results to be more readable. I.e. if all timings are greater than 1 second, it will print the results in seconds.

Two adjustments are necessary in your package:

First, add the following line to your DESCRIPTION file:

Suggests: rcpptimer (>= 1.2.0)

Second, add the following code to your package:

if (requireNamespace("rcpptimer", quietly = TRUE)) {
  registerS3method("print", "rcpptimer", rcpptimer:::print.rcpptimer)
}

This will register print.rcpptimer if rcpptimer is available. You can place this code in a function that uses rcpptimer or your package’s .onLoad function1.