Sometimes you may need to turn off vcr
, either for
individual function calls, individual test blocks, whole test files, or
for the entire package. The following attempts to break down all the
options.
vcr
has the following four exported functions:
turned_off()
- Turns vcr off for the duration of a code
blockturn_off()
- Turns vcr off completely, so that it no
longer handles every HTTP requestturn_on()
- turns vcr on; the opposite of
turn_off()
turned_on()
- Asks if vcr is turned on, returns a
booleanInstead of using the above four functions, you could use environment
variables to achieve the same thing. This way you could enable/disable
vcr
in non-interactive environments such as continuous
integration, Docker containers, or running R non-interactively from the
command line. The full set of environment variables vcr
uses, all of which accept only TRUE
or
FALSE
:
VCR_TURN_OFF
: turn off vcr altogether; set to
TRUE
to skip any vcr usage; default:
FALSE
VCR_TURNED_OFF
: set the turned_off
internal package setting; this does not turn off vcr completely as does
VCR_TURN_OFF
does, but rather is looked at together with
VCR_IGNORE_CASSETTES
VCR_IGNORE_CASSETTES
: set the
ignore_cassettes
internal package setting; this is looked
at together with VCR_TURNED_OFF
turned_off()
lets you temporarily make a real HTTP
request without completely turning vcr
off, unloading it,
etc.
What happens internally is we turn off vcr
, run your
code block, then on exit turn vcr
back on - such that
vcr
is only turned off for the duration of your code block.
Even if your code block errors, vcr
will be turned back on
due to use of on.exit(turn_on())
library(vcr)
library(crul)
turned_off({
con <- HttpClient$new(url = "https://httpbin.org/get")
con$get()
})
#> <crul response>
#> url: https://httpbin.org/get
#> request_headers:
#> User-Agent: libcurl/7.54.0 r-curl/4.3 crul/0.9.0
#> Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate
#> Accept: application/json, text/xml, application/xml, */*
#> response_headers:
#> status: HTTP/1.1 200 OK
#> date: Fri, 14 Feb 2020 19:44:46 GMT
#> content-type: application/json
#> content-length: 365
#> connection: keep-alive
#> server: gunicorn/19.9.0
#> access-control-allow-origin: *
#> access-control-allow-credentials: true
#> status: 200
turn_off()
is different from turned_off()
in that turn_off()
is not aimed at a single call block, but
rather it turns vcr
off for the entire package.
turn_off()
does check first before turning vcr
off that there is not currently a cassette in use.
turn_off()
is meant to make R ignore
vcr::insert_cassette()
and vcr::use_cassette()
blocks in your test suite - letting the code in the block run as if they
were not wrapped in vcr
code - so that all you have to do
to run your tests with cached requests/responses AND with real HTTP
requests is toggle a single R function or environment variable.
library(vcr)
vcr_configure(dir = tempdir())
# real HTTP request works - vcr is not engaged here
crul::HttpClient$new(url = "https://eu.httpbin.org/get")$get()
# wrap HTTP request in use_cassette() - vcr is engaged here
use_cassette("foo_bar", {
crul::HttpClient$new(url = "https://eu.httpbin.org/get")$get()
})
# turn off & ignore cassettes - use_cassette is ignored, real HTTP request made
turn_off(ignore_cassettes = TRUE)
use_cassette("foo_bar", {
crul::HttpClient$new(url = "https://eu.httpbin.org/get")$get()
})
# if you turn off and don't ignore cassettes, error thrown
turn_off(ignore_cassettes = FALSE)
use_cassette("foo_bar", {
res2=crul::HttpClient$new(url = "https://eu.httpbin.org/get")$get()
})
# vcr back on - now use_cassette behaves as before
turn_on()
use_cassette("foo_bar3", {
res2=crul::HttpClient$new(url = "https://eu.httpbin.org/get")$get()
})
turned_on()
does what it says on the tin - it tells you
if vcr
is turned on or not.
The VCR_TURN_OFF
environment variable can be used within
R or on the command line to turn off vcr
. For example, you
can run tests for a package that uses vcr
, but ignore any
use_cassette
/insert_cassette
usage, by running
this on the command line in the root of your package:
VCR_TURN_OFF=true Rscript -e "devtools::test()"
Or, similarly within R:
The VCR_TURNED_OFF
and VCR_IGNORE_CASSETTES
environment variables can be used in combination to achieve the same
thing as VCR_TURN_OFF
:
VCR_TURNED_OFF=true VCR_IGNORE_CASSETTES=true Rscript -e "devtools::test()"