Update (July 2018):
The latest CRAN version of rJava will find the jvm.dll
automatically, without manually setting the PATH
or JAVA_HOME
. However note that:
- To use rJava in 32-bit R, you need Java for Windows x86
- To use rJava in 64-bit R, you need Java for Windows x64
- To build or check R packages with multi-arch (the default) you need to install both Java For Windows x64 as well as Java for Windows x86. On Win 64, the former installs in
C:Program filesJava
and the latter in C:Program Files (x86)Java
so they do not conflict.
As of Java version 9, support for x86 (win32) has been discontinued. Hence the latest working multi-arch setup is to install both jdk-8u172-windows-i586.exe and jdk-8u172-windows-x64.exe and then the binary package from CRAN:
install.packages("rJava")
The binary package from CRAN should pick up on the jvm by itself. Experts only: to build rJava from source, you need the --merge-multiarch
flag:
install.packages('rJava', type = 'source', INSTALL_opts='--merge-multiarch')
Old anwser:
(Note: many of folks in other answers/comments have said to remove JAVA_HOME, so consider that. I have not revisited this issue recently to know if all the steps below are still necessary.)
Here is some quick advice on how to get up and running with R + rJava on Windows 7 64bit. There are several possibilities, but most have fatal flaws. Here is what worked for me:
Add jvm.dll to your PATH
rJava, the R<->Java bridge, will need jvm.dll, but R will have trouble finding that DLL. It resides in a folder like
C:Program FilesJavajdk1.6.0_25jreinserver
or
C:Program FilesJavajre6jreinclient
Wherever yours is, add that directory to your windows PATH variable. (Windows -> "Path" -> "Edit environment variables to for your account" -> PATH -> edit the value.)
You may already have Java on your PATH. If so you should find the client/server directory in the same Java "home" dir as the one already on your PATH.
To be safe, make sure your architectures match.If you have Java in Program Files
, it is 64-bit, so you ought to run R64. If you have Java in Program Files (x86)
, that's 32-bit, so you use plain 32-bit R.
Re-launch R from the Windows Menu
If R is running, quit.
From the Start Menu , Start R / RGUI, RStudio. This is very important, to make R pick up your PATH changes.
Install rJava 0.9.2.
Earlier versions do not work! Mirrors are not up-to-date, so go to the source at www.rforge.net: http://www.rforge.net/rJava/files/. Note the advice there
“Please use
`install.packages('rJava',,'http://www.rforge.net/')`
to install.”
That is almost correct. This actually works:
install.packages('rJava', .libPaths()[1], 'http://www.rforge.net/')
Watch the punctuation! The mysterious “.libPaths()[1],” just tells R to install the package in the primary library directory. For some reason, leaving the value blank doesn’t work, even though it should default.