On Ubuntu 14.04 the following commands worked to install R 3.0.2 (after adding Rutter's PPA):
sudo apt-get install r-base-core sudo apt-get install r-recommended=3.0.2-1ubuntu1 sudo apt-get install r-base=3.0.2-1ubuntu1 For anyone else trying to run R on a linux distro through Crouton on a Chromebook: there is a catch for ubuntu - when installing packages in R, the usual window that pops up asking which R mirror you want doesn't work. Instead, it throws an error - probably related to whatever Crouton is doing under the hood. You can manually specify the mirror with install.packages(pkgname, repos = 'cran mirror') of course, but that's annoying and there is no such problem with Debian, so Debian > Ubuntu in this case. Matt On Mon, Mar 21, 2016 at 4:20 PM, Matthew Simpson <themattsimp...@gmail.com> wrote: > Ok, first I poked around the ubuntu tablet and related PPAs to see if I > could find one with an ARM port of R, but no luck. Next I tried a debian > install - jessie is supported on Crouton and it installs and runs basically > without a hitch. But I run into the same problem installing R - using only > a cran debian source and none of Rutter's PPAs. Now r-base-core is only > available up to 3.1.1-1. Attempting sudo apt-get install r-base=3.1.1-1 > yields a complaint from apt that r-recommended 3.1.1-1 is needed but won't > be installed, though sudo apt-cache showpdg r-recommended shows 3.1.1-1 as > available. > > This left me basically where I was with ubuntu, but I tried something here > that I didn't try there - I manually tried to install r-recommended > 3.1.1-1. It complained about a dependency, so I manually tried installing > the right version of the dependency, which complained about a dependency, > etc, until I got something to install. Through this process here are the > things I installed, I believe in this order: > > sudo apt-get install r-base-core=3.1.1-1 > sudo apt-get install r-cran-boot=1.3-13-1 > sudo apt-get install r-cran-codetools=0.2-9-1 > sudo apt-get install r-recommended=3.1.1-1 > sudo apt-get install r-base=3.1.1-1 > > This got R installed correctly. While it's still not the most updated > version, it's a version I can probably live with considering this isn't my > main machine. > > I'm going to try the same thing on the ubuntu install to see if I can get > R 3.0.2 installed there - r-recommended 3.0.2 was available, so perhaps > manually installing the correct dependencies in order will get the job > done. I'll report back to say whether this worked either way. > > Thanks for the help, > Matt > > On Mon, Mar 21, 2016 at 1:48 PM, Johannes Ranke <jra...@uni-bremen.de> > wrote: > >> >> Am Montag, 21. März 2016, 13:31:44 schrieb Dirk Eddelbuettel: >> > On 21 March 2016 at 13:18, Matthew Simpson wrote: >> > | It may be significant that my chromebook has an ARM processor. I don't >> > | know >> > | about the details of how this works, but perhaps some pieces of the R >> > | install haven't been ported to the appropriate architecture? >> > >> > Bahh. I am clearly not awake. Should have realized that. >> >> Neither was I. >> >> > >> > That is why you had r-doc-html, r-recommended, ... etc which are >> binary=all. >> > On CRAN you will /only/ find i386 and amd64. On the Ubuntu PPAs you >> /may/ >> > find arm builds as Ubuntu supports them for their tablet plans etc pp. >> >> I am providing arm binaries for Debian wheezy and Debian jessie on CRAN, >> maybe >> this would be an option? >> >> Cheers, Johannes >> >> > >> > As such, the Dockerfile I sent you is more relevant than the CRAN >> README. >> > >> > Good luck, Dirk >> >> > [[alternative HTML version deleted]] _______________________________________________ R-SIG-Debian mailing list R-SIG-Debian@r-project.org https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-sig-debian