symphony is correctly installed and tested in terminal. R complains about missing header and libraries when trying to install Rsymphony from source. Any pointers are HIGHLY appreciated. thank you!
symphony installation directory: /Users/timo/Applications/symphony/
R install command:
install.packages("Rsymphony", configure.args="--with-SYMPHONY-include=/Users/timo/Applications/symphony/include/ --with-SYMPHONY-lib=/Users/timo/Applications/symphony/lib",type="source")
results in :
* installing *source* package ‘Rsymphony’
** package ‘Rsymphony’ successfully unpacked and MD5 sums checked
Cannot find SYMPHONY libraries and headers.
See <https://projects.coin-or.org/SYMPHONY>.ERROR: configuration failed for package ‘Rsymphony’* removing ‘/Library/Frameworks/R.framework/Versions/3.2/Resources/library/Rsymphony’* restoring previous‘/Library/Frameworks/R.framework/Versions/3.2/Resources/library/Rsymphony’
I also struggled to get Rsymphony installed, but finally got it working after many hours of messing around. Here's what I did, hopefully it'll save others some time. This works on Mac OS El Capitan (10.11) and R 3.3.0.
First, install the homebrew package manager if you don't already have it:
/usr/bin/ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install)"
Next install SYMPHONY with homewbrew. I found this to be the best approach because it puts everything in the right place:
brew tap coin-or-tools/coinor
brew install symphony
Now install pkg-config, a tool for querying installed libraries for when compiling software source code. Not sure if this is strictly necessary, but pkg-config is used in the configuration script for Rsymphony:
brew install pkg-config
At this point Rsymphony should now be able to find the necessary SYMPHONY libraries, however, I still got the following compiler error:
ld: warning: directory not found for option '-L/usr/local/lib/gcc/x86_64-apple-darwin13.0.0/4.8.2'
ld: library not found for -lgfortran
Apparently it has something to do with needing a different version of the fortran compiler. This helpful post with instructions for getting the correct compiler saved me. Run the following commands:
curl -O http://r.research.att.com/libs/gfortran-4.8.2-darwin13.tar.bz2
sudo tar fvxz gfortran-4.8.2-darwin13.tar.bz2 -C /
Now, finally, you should be able to install Rsymphony with:
install.packages("Rsymphony", type = "source")
SOLUTION:
I have found the solution in this link (...I got RSymphony to install, but it involved some hacking ...)
Installing RSymphony using RStudio on macOS
I had also this issue: ..no checking for COIN-OR package CoinUtils... and it was solved by "export PKG_CONFIG=/usr/local/bin/pkg-config; export PKG_CONFIG_PATH=/usr/local/lib/pkgconfig/"
Related
I had a hell of a time getting gdal installed today, even though I've been able to do it successfully in the past. I finally got it working, so if you're reading this I hope I can save you some time.
If you are running into issues like:
error while loading shared libraries: libgdal.so.20: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
or
ogr_sfcgal.h:34:34: fatal error: SFCGAL/capi/sfcgal_c.h: No such file or directory
or you're stuck on the yum rpm of gdal that's at 1.11, then I hope the answer below helps you.
First of all, make sure you have the dependencies installed, like SFCGAL:
sudo yum install SFCGAL -y
You might come across others with errors similar to the one above for SFCGAL. I'll leave it up to you to track them down and install them via yum.
A recent RPM of gdal isn't available via yum, so you will have to install from source. What often happens with installing gdal, it seems to me, is that a user will install to /usr/local/bin rather than /usr/bin, which is where rgdal seems to look. This means you need to install to /usr/bin. But how can you do this without an RPM? You will install from source.
It's simple. Download a >2.0 version of gdal here: https://trac.osgeo.org/gdal/wiki/DownloadSource
And run the following:
./configure --prefix=/usr
make
sudo make install
After this, you might get an error like
error while loading shared libraries: libgdal.so.20: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
You need to updated your shared library links. You can do this with:
sudo ldconfig
I hope this is helpful and that I saved you some time. I'm not an expert, so this might not be perfect advice. I wish you luck.
I found that the yum installation of SFCGAL was always missing the header file.
Instead I removed SFCGAL then executed the gdal build/install steps.
sudo yum erase SFCGAL
After gdal was built and installed, I reinstalled SFCGAL
sudo yum install SFCGAL
Installing statnet on mac 10.10.3 with R 3.2.x (RStudio 0.99.441).
ld: warning: directory not found for option '-L/usr/local/lib/gcc/x86_64-apple-darwin13.0.0/4.8.2'
ld: library not found for -lgfortran
clang: error: linker command failed with exit code 1 (use -v to see invocation)
make: *** [latentnet.so] Error 1
ERROR: compilation failed for package ‘latentnet’
* removing ‘/Library/Frameworks/R.framework/Versions/3.2/Resources/library/latentnet’
Warning in install.packages :
installation of package ‘latentnet’ had non-zero exit status
ERROR: dependency ‘latentnet’ is not available for package ‘statnet’
* removing ‘/Library/Frameworks/R.framework/Versions/3.2/Resources/library/statnet’
Warning in install.packages :
installation of package ‘statnet’ had non-zero exit status
I tried updating XCode/Command Line Tools. Also tried not installing dependencies. I have been able to install other packages, such as ergm and sna.
It looks like the install is looking for the GCC folder and not finding it.
whereis gcc
reveals that my gcc is in /usr/bin/gcc
It looks like the install is looking for it in /usr/local/lib/gcc/
Is there a way to fix this?
This is a compilation error that you only get if you are trying to install packages from source, or when a package requires a library to be compiled from source. Normally, if you don’t use the latest version of R, you can install statnet from binary and thus R won’t have to compile the source package.
The version you are mentioning at the beginning of your message (0.99.441) is the version of your R-Studio, and not R. The version of your R is 3.2.x (Hence its address in the Library folder: /Library/Frameworks/R.framework/Versions/3.2/Resources…). Before trying to fix the compilation error you may want to try to roll back your R to a version like 3.1.2 or 3.1.3 on which you can probably download and install statnet in binary format.
For the compiler, my guess is that even if you fix the address of your gcc with a symlink, you will still get an error about gfortran or the version of gcc. Once I solved this issue by installing R and the right version of gcc through Homebrew, but right now I don’t have the possibility to try the solution and tell you exactly how.
My experience (on Yosemite) is that if you use 3.1.2 or 3.1.3, even if there is need for compilation, the error with gcc won’t occur.
sudo mkdir /usr/bin/lib && sudo ln -s /usr/bin/gcc /usr/bin/lib/gcc
Creates a new directory in /usr/bin called `lib' and creates a symbolic link to gcc in that new directory.
If that doesn't fix the error, you can undo it with:
sudo rm -i /usr/bin/lib/gcc && sudo rm -id /usr/bin/lib
I have Ubuntu 10.x OS and I have installed R on it. I want to install rJava on R. For that when I am running installed.packages("rJava) command which is giving error
checking whether Java run-time works... Error: Could not find or load main class getsp
no
configure: error: Java interpreter '/usr/bin/java' does not work
ERROR: configuration failed for package ‘rJava’
* removing ‘/home/hduser/R/i486-pc-linux-gnu-library/2.10/rJava’
The downloaded packages are in
‘/tmp/Rtmp0tlBXn/downloaded_packages’
Warning message:
In install.packages("rJava") :
installation of package 'rJava' had non-zero exit status
If I run system("java -version")
Then it showing same Java version which is given when I run Java -version command from base OS prompt. So it means no problem with Java which I can see reason in output of install package command? As suggested when I use
sudo apt-get install r-cran-rjava
Here also didnt get any luck
Please suggest
I just saw that you wrote installed.packages instead of install.packages, you have to use install.packages("rJava") to install it.
The description of the method you used (installed.packages) says: Find (or retrieve) details of all packages installed in the specified libraries.
Can you please try
install.packages("rJava")
library(rJava)
and tell me the output? (I'm pretty sure it will already work then).
in the terminal run sudo apt-get install default-jdk
then run sudo R CMD javareconf
after that you can continue in R or Rstudio install.packages("rJava")
I am trying to install sparkTable in R 3.1.0 which depends on Rglpk. I manually installed GPLK on the system and added the libs folder to LD_LIBRARY_PATH before going into R for the install.packages("sparkTable") procedure. I get this error during the installation process. Any ideas?
* installing *source* package ‘Rglpk’ ...
** package ‘Rglpk’ successfully unpacked and MD5 sums checked
** libs
/bin/sh: line 0: cd: GLPK: No such file or directory
make: *** [GLPK.ts] Error 1
ERROR: compilation failed for package ‘Rglpk’
* removing ‘/opt/R/R-3.1.0/lib64/R/library/Rglpk’
ERROR: dependency ‘Rglpk’ is not available for package ‘sparkTable’
* removing ‘/opt/R/R-3.1.0/lib64/R/library/sparkTable’
sudo apt-get install libglpk-dev
did the trick for me.
I had this problem and took a good bit of digging in the package to understand what was happening. If Rgplk can't compile its test program when installing, it does something weird, including this bizarre cd to nowhere. Assuming glpk-devel is installed, the reason it can't compile the test program is that it can't find the gplk header as it is in a non-standard directory.
Just set the environment variable CPATH=/usr/include/glpk
and the test program will compile, allowing the package install to proceed normally.
I had this problem too. The following steps solved this issue for me. My current setup:
OS: Scientifc Linux version 6.5 (on a High Performance Cluster Server)
local user, no root access.
GLPK was not installed
Install GLPK in a local directory:
wget http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/glpk/glpk-4.54.tar.gz
tar xfzv glpk-4.54.tar.gz
mkdir GLPK
cd glpk-4.54
./configure --prefix=/home/<username>/GLPK
make
make install
Install Rglpk (0.6-3):
cd ~
wget http://cran.r-project.org/src/contrib/Rglpk_0.6-3.tar.gz
export LIBRARY_PATH=/home/<username>/GLPK/lib
R CMD INSTALL Rglpk_0.6-3.tar.gz
I landed on this page, because I could not update igraph under Windows 10/11, since igraph also requires glpk as per OP. Specifically:
igraph_glpk_support.h:36:10: fatal error: glpk.h: No such file or
directory #include <glpk.h>
^~~~~~~~ compilation terminated. make: *** [C:/PROGRA~1/R/R-4.1.1/etc/x64/Makeconf:238: feedback_arc_set.o] Error
1 ERROR: compilation failed for package 'igraph'
removing 'C:/Users/xxx/Documents/R/win-library/4.1/igraph'
restoring previous 'C:/Users/xxx/Documents/R/win-library/4.1/igraph' Warning
in install.packages : installation of package ‘igraph’ had non-zero
exit status
I am under Windows 11 (but would be same for Windows 10).
Simple resolution is suggested here:
start Rtools Bash (found in all apps, Rtools 4.0 in the Windows menu)
Run pacman -S mingw-w64-x86_64-glpk and confirm with yes (y)
Run pacman -S mingw-w64-x86_64-libxml2 and confirm with yes (y)
Updating igraph in Rstudio now leads to a clean
DONE (igraph)
(there is no need to install anything, add any path, etc... just the above 4 steps)
In ubuntu 14.04, all above doesn't work. the following however works, without the need of installing libglpk-dev using apt-get.
download the glpk package from gnu and extract it:
wget http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/glpk/glpk-4.55.tar.gz
tar xvf glpk-4.55.tar.gz
make a GLPK directory in your local path:
mkdir ~/GLPK
configure within glpk:
cd glpk-4.55
./configure --prefix=$HOME/GLPK
cd ..
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$HOME/GLPK/lib
export LIBRARY_PATH=$HOME/GLPK/lib
export CPATH=$HOME/GLPK/include
download the Rglpk package from cran and extract it:
wget http://cran.r-project.org/src/contrib/Rglpk_0.6-0.tar.gz
tar xvf Rglpk_0.6_0.tar.gz
move the glpk directory into Rglpk/src and rename it to GLPK:
mv glpk-4.55 Rglpk/src/GLPK
now you can install:
R CMD INSTALL Rglpk
now a bit of explanation of what's going on. The "src/Makevars.in" file in the Rglpk package contains a line of code to enter a non-existing directory 'GLPK' within the src/ folder:
(line 11 of Makevars.in)
GLPK.ts:
#(cd GLPK && make)
touch $#
this is where the problem arises. obviously the code is trying to build glpk within that directory for some unknown reasons. and the solution above is achieved simply by moving the downloaded (and configured) glpk directory there...
If you're on a Debian-based Linux distribution, run this to install GLTK:
sudo apt install libglpk-dev
If you're on MacOS, run this to install GLTK:
brew install gltk
Finally, install the R library:
install.packages("Rglpk")
On Centos, have sudo rights. None of the above worked, but had to install GLPK in /usr/local as suggested in this SO answer. Been trying to install it for about 3 hours fml
You must install glpk dependency first.
On macOS (via homebrew):
brew install glpk
or in RStudio (via homebrew):
system("brew install glpk")
It worked for me when I combined the answers from Simón Ramírez Amaya and shadowleaves:
wget http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/glpk/glpk-4.54.tar.gz
tar xfzv glpk-4.54.tar.gz
mkdir GLPK
cd glpk-4.54
./configure --prefix=$HOME/GLPK
make
make install
cd ..
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$HOME/GLPK/lib
export LIBRARY_PATH=$HOME/GLPK/lib
export CPATH=$HOME/GLPK/include
wget https://cran.r-project.org/src/contrib/Rglpk_0.6-4.tar.gz
R CMD INSTALL Rglpk_0.6-4.tar.gz
To load the library
dyn.load(file.path(Sys.getenv("HOME"), "GLPK", "lib", "libglpk.so"))
library(Rglpk)
The answer of Zhiying Cui is right, however, if your script has some special codes, such as foreach for parallel computing, it may raise an error.
A better way is as fellow
If your os is Centos, try
yum install glpk-devel
then just go to R or Rstudio server and
install.packages("Rglpk")
I am trying to install the package mvoutlier but following error occurs during installation:
install.packages("mvoutlier")
configure: error: missing required header GL/gl.h
ERROR: configuration failed for package ‘rgl’
* removing ‘/home/sam/R/x86_64-pc-linux-gnu-library /2.15/rgl’
ERROR: dependency ‘rgl’ is not available for package ‘compositions’
* removing ‘/home/sam/R/x86_64-pc-linux-gnu-library/2.15/compositions’
ERROR: dependency ‘compositions’ is not available for package ‘mvoutlier’
* removing ‘/home/sam/R/x86_64-pc-linux-gnu-library/2.15/mvoutlier’
After that I have install the rgl package successfully, then I tried to install the compositions package then the again same error occurs. Then I have again tried to install the mvoutlier package the same error occurs.
Can anyone let me know how I can resolve this problem. Thanking you in advance.
I suspect you are running Ubuntu 12.04.I think you're going to find that this works for the GL/gl.h problem:
install these at the regular old terminal, ie pretend R doesn't exist for now:
libglu1-mesa-dev freeglut3-dev mesa-common-dev
You might get the following error later (in R) because of a tcl b****/gripe/complaint:
Error in structure(.External(.C_dotTcl, ...), class = "tclObj") :
[tcl] can't find package BWidget.
To fix this problem, if you have it:
sudo apt-get install bwidget
These are not R problems. They are OS problems!
I ran into the same issue in between others on a Ubuntu based Linux distro (Linux Mint). Here I will share the worklog I'd done to fix it.
The full fix was:
apt-get install libx11-dev mesa-common-dev libglu1-mesa-dev
Worklog
The first error was related to missing devel libraries of X11:
configure: error: X11 not found but required, configure aborted.
I fixed it installing:
apt-get install libx11-dev
However, after fix the issue, I felt into a new one like this one:
configure: error: missing required header GL/gl.h
ERROR: configuration failed for package ‘rgl’
I checked the library on the repository:
# dpkg -S /usr/include/GL/gl.h
dpkg-query: no path found matching pattern /usr/include/GL/gl.h
To fix this issue, install :
apt-get install mesa-common-dev
Then, I was prompt by a new error:
configure: error: missing required header GL/glu.h
To fix the issue, install the libglu1 devel libraries:
apt-get install libglu1-mesa-dev
configure: error: missing required header GL/gl.h
normally means you haven't installed the -dev version of a package, in this case GL.
On my system, GL/gl.h is owned by mesa-common-dev
$ dpkg -S /usr/include/GL/gl.h
mesa-common-dev: /usr/include/GL/gl.h
which would have been installed with apt-get install mesa-common-dev or via some GUI magic.
On Ubuntu 16.04, I solved this problem (during rgl package installation) with sudo apt-get install libglu1-mesa-dev
the current fedora package manager will fail to find these libraries as shown. Instead you need to do
sudo dnf install mesa-libGL-devel mesa-libGLU-devel
Based on the work breakdown by 3manuek, I figured only the libglu1-mesa-dev library was needed in ubuntu 16.04 LTS, and it worked.
On, RHEL, sudo yum install mesa-libGLU-devel worked.
I encountered an equivalent problem when testing a package that required 'rgl' on Travis. The problem is that the operating system lacks the necessary GL files on which the 'rgl' package draws.
A thread at R-forge offers the ingenious solution of running apt-get install r-cran-rgl, which will pull in any of the GL dependencies not already present on the operating system. This seems simpler than second-guessing which specific dependency is missing, and it remains possible to install a more recent version of 'rgl' if required.