This procedure was tested on Ubuntu 23.04 but should be very similar or identical on other verions.
Note that this will likely not install the latest version of R but the one that is included in the Ubuntu package repository. Installing a newer version can be tricky since the R project doesn't always support all recent releases of major Linux distributions. For most use cases, especially for education, the slightly older version of R will be prefectly fine though.
All commands in this guide need to be run as user root
or with sudo
.
apt update
apt upgrade
This user should be used for admin work, not in RStudio
useradd -m admin
usermod -a -G sudo admin
passwd admin # set strong password!
Make sure at least one sudo
capable account exists before this step! Otherwise you might lock yourself out.
in /etc/ssh/sshd_config
set the following values:
PermitRootLogin no
PubkeyAuthentication yes
PasswordAuthentication no
ufw default deny incoming
ufw default allow outgoing
ufw allow ssh
ufw allow http
ufw allow https
ufw show added # double check the changes before applying
ufw enable
apt install r-base r-base-dev
apt install libxml2-dev libfontconfig1-dev libharfbuzz-dev libfribidi-dev libfreetype6-dev libpng-dev libtiff5-dev libjpeg-dev libcurl4-openssl-dev libssl-dev
R
install.packages("tidyverse")
Check https://posit.co/download/rstudio-server/ for current builds of rstudio-server
.
There may be unavailable dependencies, but the nightly builds might fix that: https://dailies.rstudio.com
apt install gdebi-core
wget https://s3.amazonaws.com/rstudio-ide-build/server/jammy/amd64/rstudio-server-2023.12.0-daily-161-amd64.deb
gdebi rstudio-server-2023.12.0-daily-161-amd64.deb
Check server status:
systemctl status rstudio-server
(replace rstudio.example.org
with your domain)
apt install nginx
apt install certbot python3-certbot-nginx
certbot certonly --nginx -d rstudio.example.org
Write /etc/nginx/sites-available/rstudio
:
server {
listen 80;
server_name rstudio.example.org;
return 301 https://rstudio.example.org$request_uri;
}
server {
listen 443 ssl;
server_name rstudio.example.org;
ssl_certificate /etc/letsencrypt/live/rstudio.example.org/fullchain.pem;
ssl_certificate_key /etc/letsencrypt/live/rstudio.example.org/privkey.pem;
ssl_prefer_server_ciphers on;
location / {
proxy_pass http://localhost:8787;
proxy_set_header Host $host;
proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Proto $scheme;
}
}
Test NGINX config:
nginx -t
Restart NGINX:
systemctl restart NGINX
Open https://rstudio.example.org
in your browser and login with a regular linux user account.
RStudio server is now ready to use. User's files (e.g. R PRojects, etc) are kept in their home directories.
useradd -m [name]
passwd [name]
Haha, thanks. It's not really a tutorial but more like my personal notes so I don't forget things next time :D
I don't think RStudio server has any user management stuff built-in since it just uses the OS' user accounts. Another issue is how to create those accounts in the first place, for example in a university setting where students probably have an email account from the institution but that doesn't translate into a system account on the RStudio server