Rcereal - cereal, A c++11 library for serialization, for R

Wush Wu

Rcereal - cereal, A c++11 library for serialization, for R

This package provides R with access to cereal header files. cereal is a header-only C++11 serialization library. cereal takes arbitrary data types and reversibly turns them into different representations, such as compact binary encodings, XML, or JSON. For more information, please visit the official website of cereal project: http://uscilab.github.io/cereal/

This package can be used via the LinkingTo: field in the DESCRIPTION field of an R package and the Rcpp::depends in the Rcpp-attributes. The R and Rcpp infrastructure tools will know how to set include flags properly.

Installation

From Github

Please use the devtools::install_github to install the latest version of Rcereal and use Rcereal::update_version to install the content of the header files of cereal.

devtools::install_github("wush978/Rcereal")
Rcereal::upate_version()

Getting Started

In this project, we will not explain how to use cereal in c++ because the official cereal project has already provides a complete documentation. Please visit the Quick Start page to learn how to use cereal.

The following example briefly shows how to use the Rcereal in Rcpp-attributes to serialize a user defined c++ structure into raw vector and deserialize from the raw vector.

//[[Rcpp::depends(Rcereal)]]

#include <sstream>
#include <cereal/archives/binary.hpp>
#include <Rcpp.h>

struct MyClass
{
  int x, y, z;

  // This method lets cereal know which data members to serialize
  template<class Archive>
  void serialize(Archive & archive)
  {
    archive( x, y, z ); // serialize things by passing them to the archive
  }
};

using namespace Rcpp;
//[[Rcpp::export]]
RawVector serialize_myclass(int x = 1, int y = 2, int z = 3) {
  MyClass my_instance;
  my_instance.x = x;
  my_instance.y = y;
  my_instance.z = z;
  std::stringstream ss;
  {
    cereal::BinaryOutputArchive oarchive(ss); // Create an output archive
    oarchive(my_instance);
  }
  ss.seekg(0, ss.end);
  RawVector retval(ss.tellg());
  ss.seekg(0, ss.beg);
  ss.read(reinterpret_cast<char*>(&retval[0]), retval.size());
  return retval;
}

//[[Rcpp::export]]
void deserialize_myclass(RawVector src) {
  std::stringstream ss;
  ss.write(reinterpret_cast<char*>(&src[0]), src.size());
  ss.seekg(0, ss.beg);
  MyClass my_instance;
  {
    cereal::BinaryInputArchive iarchive(ss);
    iarchive(my_instance);
  }
  Rcout << my_instance.x << "," << my_instance.y << "," << my_instance.z << std::endl;
}

/*** R
raw_vector <- serialize_myclass(1, 2, 4)
deserialize_myclass(raw_vector)
*/

To compile the cpp file, the user must enable the support of c++11 before using Rcpp::sourceCpp.

Sys.setenv(PKG_CXXFLAGS="-std=c++11")
Rcpp::sourceCpp("<the path to the cpp file>")

Troubleshooting

To use cereal with Rcpp in the following way, the user must remember two points:

If you see the compiler reports the missing header files, please use the Rcereal::update_version() to update the content of cereal from github. You can manual check whether a directory named cereal is in the folder system.file("include", package = "Rcereal").

If you see lots of error during compiling, please check the version of the compiler and the content of the environment variable PKG_CXXFLAGS. As far as I know, cereal will fail if the gcc-4.6 is used.